FIPEL light bulbs to replace LED lights, CFL lighting?
Imagine high-quality light that’s flicker-free, produced by light bulbs that don’t shatter, contain no mercury, and are cheap to produce. According to a variety of news reports today, these new FIPEL light bulbs (an acronym for “field-induced polymer electroluminescent”) may soon take the place of the compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) and the LED lamp. FIPEL lights are said to be twice as energy-efficient as CFL blubs, and on par with LEDs.
FIPEL lights use thin layers of plastic — “white-emitting polymer” — that glow when stimulated. The material is moldable to any shape, and the light can produce light of any color temperature desired. It can duplicate the spectrum of sunlight, for example, or produce exactly the color of light from the classic Incandescent light bulb, whatever people want.
Here one story from BBC News:
Plastic bulb development promises better quality light
And here’s another from Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, at whose Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials the FIPEL lights are being developed:
Taking the buzz out of office lights
Professor of physics Dr. David Carroll, the center’s director, tells the BBC that production runs could begin in 2013. It would seem that PureLux Inc. is the technology company which wil commercialize these advances.

