Infrared LED array for heating?

AI Thread Summary
Infrared (IR) LED arrays can effectively generate heat, but their effectiveness varies by wavelength, skin color, and clothing. While commercial IR heat lamps exist and can provide focused warmth, they primarily heat the body parts directly facing them, making them less effective for overall room comfort compared to convection heating. There is limited research on the use of IR LEDs for residential heating, but prototypes are being developed to explore their potential. Filament lamps are noted for their efficiency in producing IR heat, although LEDs may offer advantages in durability and design. Overall, the discussion highlights the need for further exploration into the practical applications and efficiency of IR LED heating solutions.
IsleVegan
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We have LED arrays for visible lighting. What problems exist for using infrared LED arrays as a heat source for humans, like those in a residential settings?

Does effectiveness vary much by wavelength and skin color, clothing worn, etc?

Thanks. :-)
 
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Welcome to PF;
Short answer: "IR" and "heat" are not the same thing.
A quick check shows that LED heat lamps are commercially available, have you tried investigating their designs to help you with your question?
 
They do generate very useful and comfortable heat, and the beam can be focused with optics. I will soon get 10 full scale prototypes IR LED heating lamps - and I expect them to give some 5 C.

The questions you ask are very relevant, but there has been very little if any research into this area.
 
We have LED arrays for visible lighting. What problems exist for using infrared LED arrays as a heat source for humans, like those in a residential settings?

Radiant heaters (sometimes called "direct heaters") tend to be directional. So they do a good job of warming up the part of your body that faces them but perhaps not the bit in shadow. For all round comfort you generally do better to heat the air in the room using conduction/convection.

Radiant heaters have uses in car service workshops where it's too expensive to heat the air because the doors are opened regularly.
 
severin said:
They do generate very useful and comfortable heat, and the beam can be focused with optics. I will soon get 10 full scale prototypes IR LED heating lamps - and I expect them to give some 5 C.

The questions you ask are very relevant, but there has been very little if any research into this area.

I appreciate the encouragement. I quickly found a example of a hand held "pain relieving" ir wand with 72 LEDs. I have some ideas on this. Want to chat?
 
For producing IR, a standard filament lamp should work pretty well in most applications. I'm not sure why one would pay the extra cost of getting LEDs instead.
 
Redbelly98 said:
I'm not sure why one would pay the extra cost of getting LEDs instead.
That's a good point. The thing that makes a filament lamp unattractive as a light source is that its spectrum is largely IR. Its efficiency as an IR heating source makes it less unattractive. I would be interested to know how the overall losses (including a LV power source) for an IR array would compare with a filament with its supply.
There could be advantages for a LED as it could be more physically robust but I wonder about its operating temperature? You would be needing several tens of Watts and would the resulting temperature not be a problem.
 
IsleVegan said:
I appreciate the encouragement. I quickly found a example of a hand held "pain relieving" ir wand with 72 LEDs. I have some ideas on this. Want to chat?

Sure. I have done a lot of work on this - but too much on my own. The core of my idea is to use the IR LED as a focused means of heating. This could result in major energy savings on space heating. You may also google MIT "local heating" for a similar project - although they may not be active at this the moment.

How about your ideas?
 

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