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Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

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Page 1: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward
Page 2: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

ExponationAIA Provider Number: 70119700

Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E. ProjectLEDSSMW16-XXX

Tom Ward, Finelite, Inc03.28.17

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Page 3: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Credit(s) earned on completion of this course will be reported to AIA CES for AIA members. Certificates of Completion for both AIA members and non-AIA members are available upon request.

This course is registered with AIA CES for continuing professional education. As such, it does not include content that may be deemed or construed to be an approval or endorsement by the AIA of any material of construction or any method or manner ofhandling, using, distributing, or dealing in any material or product._______________________________________Questions related to specific materials, methods, and services will be addressed at the conclusion of this presentation.

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Page 4: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

The Department of Energy has initiated a research project to develop and test novel SSL luminaire designs for the classroom of the future. This presentation will present key findings from this research effort. Topics covered will include how major drivers such as new trends in lighting and controls, new trends in learning, new requirements for the classroom, and a new understanding of human centric lighting, change the way we need to light classrooms. The presentation will cover the DOE-proscribed goals for energy efficiency, teacher control over lighting intensity and CCT, lumen maintenance and color stability, luminaire performance and lighting levels on classroom desks and walls. After the presentation, the attendee will understand how to meet or exceed the DOE goals.

CourseDescription

LearningObjectives

1. Identify the challenges of lighting the classroom of the future with its multi-purpose spaces, advanced communications technologies, and multi-generational occupants and become familiar with the DOE design for the classroom of the future including layout, flexibility, and lifetime of materials and luminaires.

2. Examine the DOE performance goals including teacher control of intensity and color (CCT), balance of daylight and electric light, and centralized control.

3. Analyze the DOE performance metrics including luminaire efficacy (LPW), flicker and power quality, lifetime and color stability, and vertical and horizontal illuminance levels in the classroom.

4. Compare the results to date of room-level performance when lighting for students, for the aging eye, for audio/visual and whiteboard modes, to balance daylight, for maximum alertness and maximum calming.

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Page 5: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting the Classroom of the FuturePresented by: Tom Ward LC, IES Member Emeritus

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Page 6: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Start With:

Lighting

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Page 7: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting Has Quality

Project: Alexander Graham Bell Elementary SchoolLocation: Kirkland, WAArchitect: DLR Group

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Page 8: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting Value Has Changed Due to LEDs

Project: Sangre de Cristo SchoolLocation: Mosca, ColoradoArchitect: Klipp Architecture Planning Interiors

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Page 9: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting From LED Luminaires Should Last 50 Years

Project: DSST Conservatory Green Middle SchoolLocation: Denver, COArchitect: RB+B Architects

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Page 10: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting Can Become Part of the Structure

Project: Newark Tech - Essex County Vocational Technical SchoolLocation: Newark, NJArchitect: Comito Associates PC

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Lighting Can Be Tailored To The Space

Project: ChildServe CenterLocation: Johnston, IAArchitect: SVPA Architects

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Lighting Can Make The Space Dynamic

Project: Belmont University Two Oaks HallLocation: Nashville, TNArchitect: EOA Architects

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Then, Re-Think:

Learning

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Page 14: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Learning is Everywhere

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Page 15: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Learning is Individual

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Learning is Student Centric

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Learning is Multiple Small Groups

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Plan for Change:

Classroom

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Page 19: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Flat Panel Monitors

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Luminous Teaching Surface

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Tablets

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Streaming Content

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Movable Furniture

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Soft Furniture

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Whiteboards and Writeable Walls

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Student Presentations Replace Teacher Lectures

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Allow for Expanding Usage:

School & Community

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Community Use

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Lifelong Learning

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Page 30: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting The Classroom Of The Future

Introducing the 4-Step Research

Project

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Page 31: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 1: Classroom Design Selected

Out of thousands of

choices, the following illustrative layout was chosen.

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Page 32: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Layout Includes:

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Walls and Windows - 50-year Life:

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Things on The Wall – 10-year Life:

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Furniture Can Rearrange Daily:

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Page 36: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Furniture Can Rearrange Daily:

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Page 37: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Furniture Can Rearrange Daily:

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Furniture Can Rearrange Daily:

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Page 39: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 2: Set Performance Goals

- Teacher control of intensity and color (CCT)

- Balance daylight and electric light

- Local and central control

- Vertical and horizontal illuminance levels to ensure excellentquality light

- Performance Metrics:

o Luminaire efficacy (LPW)

o Flicker and power quality

o Lifetime and color stability

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Page 40: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 3: Research Activities

- Reviewed and selected the LED

- Built arrays for 2-source color tuning

- Built and tested multiple luminaires

- Developed and built plug-and-play controls

- Developed lighting layouts

- Constructed a full-sized mock-up classroom

- Installed the luminaires and controls

- Made measurements in the mock-up classroom

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Step 4: Verified Results

- LED package performance- LED Array performance- Luminaire performance- System performance- Room level performance

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Page 42: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

LED Package Performance

- Ra: 80 & 90 CRI- 167 LPW efficacy - CCTs: 2700K & 6500K- LM80 data- Commercially available

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Page 43: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

LED Array Performance

- Excellent spectrum quality

- 2700 – 6500K range- Multiple form factors- Plug-and-Play- Serviceable

2700K: CRI 83, R9 10 6500K: CRI 85, R9 19

Two Source 3500K: CRI 87, R9 36

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Page 44: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

TM30 90 CRI 2-Source Tunable White Array

2700KRF = 91RG = 101

3500KRF = 91RG = 103

6500KRF = 89RG = 101

Reference Illuminant Test Source

COLOR DISTORTION ICON 2700K

Reference Illuminant Test Source

COLOR DISTORTION ICON 3500K

Reference Illuminant Test Source

COLOR DISTORTION ICON 6500K

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Page 45: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 4: Research Results to Date

- Luminaire performance- Lumen maintenance- Color maintenance- Efficacy > 120 LPW- Styles: recessed, pendant and

whiteboard for both

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Page 46: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lifetime and Color Stability

0

0.001

0.002

0.003

0.004

0.005

0.006

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000D

elta

u’v

Time, hours

Mid-Power, LM-80 DataChromaticity Shift

55C, 100ma

Measured Performance

TM-21 Performance CalculationL90 > 100,000HL70 > 398,000H

Ts = 55ci = 100 ma

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Page 47: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 4: Research Results-to-DateSystem

DMX Central Control Example: Scheduling Events Reporting Administrative Tasks

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Page 48: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Step 4: Research Results-to-Date

Room Level Performance

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Page 49: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – “Window” Contribution (SF Bay Area June Gloom)

6 fc 1 fc2 fc

1 fc

2 fc

5 fc

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Page 50: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – Whiteboard Luminaire Contribution

+20fc+20fc

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Lighting – Ceiling + Whiteboard + “Daylight”CCT 4250K / Ceiling: 0.27 W/sq ft at 75% / Whiteboard: 0.19 W/sq ft at 100% / Total: 0.46 W/sq ft

51 fc

49 fc

40 fc

61 fc

30 fc

50 fc

35 fc

56 fc

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Page 52: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting To Balance Daylight – (Focus Group Input)CCT 5450K / Ceiling: 0.31 W/sq ft at 80% / Whiteboard: 0.19 W/sq ft at 100% / Total: 0.50 W/sq ft

56 fc

55 fc

56 fc

66 fc 32 fc

56 fc

54 fc

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Page 53: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – AV ModeCCT 3750K / Ceiling: 0.04 W/sq ft at 30% / Whiteboard: Off / Total: 0.04 W/sq ft

11 fc

9 fc

9 fc 6 fc

7 fc

5 fc

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Page 54: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – Screens and TabletsCCT 3750K / Ceiling: 0.17 W/sq ft at 60% / Whiteboard: 0.05 W/sq ft at 50% / Total: 0.22 W/sq ft

34 fc

31 fc

29 fc 19 fc

30 fc

24 fc

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Page 55: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – Maximum AlertnessCCT 6500K / Ceiling: 0.48 W/sq ft at 100% / Whiteboard: 0.19 W/sq ft at 100% / Total: 0.67 W/sq ft

88 fc

83 fc

83 fc 49 fc

82 fc

73 fc

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Page 56: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – Calming ModeCCT 2700K / Ceiling: 0.005 W/sq ft at 10% / Whiteboard: 0.002 at 10% / Total: 0.007 W/sq ft

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6 fc

5 fc

9 fc 5 fc

4 fc

6 fc

Page 57: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Lighting – Calming Mode

CCT 2700K 6500K

Ratio of Melanopic Stimulation

1 2.35

Eye Level Illuminance 5 fc 49 fc

Ratio 5 109 5

109

0

40

80

120

Calm Max Alert

Rel

ativ

e Va

lue

Pre-set

Equivalent Melanopic Lux

Calm

Max Alert

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Page 58: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

Next Steps Include:

– Completing stress tests on LED arrays

– Conducting additional focus groups

– Finalizing the user interface

– Documenting affordability

– Publishing the final report

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One Key Finding is Absolutely Clear

LEDs Make Quality

Lighting Affordable For

All Classrooms

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Schools Are Built To Last Decades

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LED Luminaires Should Last 50 years

Project: Alexander Graham Bell Elementary SchoolLocation: Kirkland, WAArchitect: DLR Group

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Long Life Changes the Value Equation

Proper LED luminaire and system design gives the school;- Decades without maintenance- Decades of lower energy costs- “Future Proof” operation

• Tunable White Available Today• Teacher can change pre-sets as teaching changes• Wall-mount and smart phone control• Local and Central Control• IoT enabled• Cost effective today and cost effective for tomorrow

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This Means We Must Educate, Educate, Educate

- No other building element has undergone such rapid change

- Massively more value at lower cost- School districts need to know this- Architects need to know this- Lighting Designers and Specifiers need to know this- Engineers need to know this- Contractors need to know this- Collaboration is needed to make this happen

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Page 64: Lighting the Classroom of the Future: a D.O.E Project by Tom Ward

This concludes The American Institute of Architects Continuing Education Systems Course

Finelite, Inc.30500 Whipple Road

Union City, CA 94587-1530

Ph (510) 441-1100Fax (510) 441-1510

Tom [email protected]

www.finelite.com

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Research Partners Include:- US DOE (DE-FOA-0001171)- RTI (lead researcher)- PNNL (expert advice)- Samsung (LEDs, monitors, data)- Finelite (full company support)