A Summary of Artificial Illumination
as it Pertains to the Culture of Various Plants and
Animals Commonly Kept in Indoor Aquaria
Document History
Scope of this Document
Copyright Notice
Introduction
Light and Color
Natural Sunlight
Incandescent Lighting
Fluorescent Lighting
HID Lamps (incl. MH)
Sample Setups
Summary and Conclusion
Top
Document History:
- May. 1989: Written
- Nov. 1989: Major Revision, Posted
to UseNet aquaria newsgroups
- Oct. 1991: Printed in Aquatic
Gardners Bulletin
- Nov. 1992 Printed in Southern
California Killi Club bulletin
- Aug. 1995, Conversion to HTML by
Erik Olson
- Nov.1995, Minor revisions
- Aug.1996: Published in Killi Dirt,
bulletin of the Canadian
Killifish Association
- Aug. 1998: Added "Related Reading"
compiled by Stephan Boulet
Scope
of This Document
While mostly aimed at aquarists, this article is also
applicable to other people interested in growing things
under artificial light.
Copyright Notice
Copyright 1995 Richard J. Sexton
Freedom to distribute this article in
cyberspace for non commercial purposes is granted by the
authors, providing attribution is given. All other uses,
contact the author.
Introduction
There are a number of different approaches used for
illuminating aquaria. To make an informed decision as to
what type of lighting should be employed, the
fundamentals of light, color and lighting systems should
be understood. In this article we will examine the how
light is qualitatively appraised with respect to color
and intensity. Different lighting systems will be
examined, and most available types of lights will be
discussed. Examples of some "real world" lighting
systems will be given and analyzed with respect to
effectiveness, initial cost, operating expense and
longevity.
Top
LIGHT AND COLOR
What is light?
Visible light is that part of the
electro-magnetic spectrum that lies between the
wavelengths of ultraviolet and infrared. That's probably
more that you need to know for the purposes of home
aquaria.
White light is
all colors
When we see a rainbow, we are seeing white light split up
into it's component colors, hence the expression "all
the colors of the rainbow".
Sunlight is different in different
places in the world
Sunlight contains, more or less, equal portions of all
colors of sunlight. Northern sunlight, that is, sunlight
in areas north of the fortieth parallel, has more blue
than equatorial sunlight because of absorption of all
other colors, or wavelengths of light, by the
atmosphere.
Blue pictures
underwater
This is the same effect that causes underwater photos
taken below three feet to be so blue. Just as the
atmosphere absorbs non-blue light so does water, except
water absorbs non-blue light at a much greater rate.
Almost all non-blue light below three feet of water is
absorbed.
How is light
measured?
Light quality is expressed and measured in many ways.
Light color can be measured in degrees Kelvin (K) and
the color rendering index of a light source can be
measured and expressed as CRI.
Color
temperature - degrees K
White light can have different "warmth". A bit more
red/yellow and white light appears "warmer". A bit more
blue and light appears "cool". This can be
quantitatively assessed by the assigning of a color
temperature, given in degrees Kelvin. Think of color
temperature as the color of a block or iron as it is
heated to various high temperatures. A warm, reddish
light is around 3500 degrees Kelvin, and above 6000
degrees Kelvin the light takes on a bluish tone.
Sunlight is somewhere around 5000 degrees Kelvin. The
first part of the paragraph is misleading. Although
people may think of blue as a "cooler" color than red,
it is actually hotter. For the physicists out there,
iron is acting as a black body here.
Color rendering
index (CRI)
The color rendering index identifies the degree of color
shift objects undergo when illuminated by a particular
light source. In simpler terms, the CRI expresses the
degree to which a light source renders the true color
impression. The CRI is an index and ranges from 0 to
100. A light source having a CRI of 100 means objects
illuminated by it look like they're supposed to; that is
their natural color is not distorted. A light source
having a very low CRI would tend to make objects appear
to be a different shade or even color that they really
are. An example of light with a high CRI is, obviously,
sunlight. Some fluorescent tubes such as Daylight,
Chroma 65 or Vita-Lite have a very high CRI. Some light
sources such as Gro-Lux or sodium vapor lamps have very
low CRI's.
Top
NATURAL SUNLIGHT
Good light, free, but
hard to control
This is of course what fish and plants are used to, and it
can hardly be argued that this is anything less than the
most natural. However, coaxing enough sunlight into your
aquarium, from the top, rather than through the sides,
throughout the whole year, can be problematical.
Sunlight is the certainly the
cheapest way to illuminate an aquarium, although it is
unreliable and very difficult to regulate. This, of
course is subject to geographical variation. If you live
in California and have a skylight over an aquarium, you
might be getting enough light. If however, you live in
an area that does not get a lot of sunlight, and your
aquaria are stacked in rows in a basement you will
obviously need supplemental lighting.
Very few people use sunlight as a
primary lighting source, although it is often used as
supplemental lighting. Scrutinizing the photos of the
10,000 liter Dupla tank in the Horst and Kipper book
_The Optimum Aquarium_ you may notice that besides
having a number of powerful Metal Halide lamps there are
skylights for auxiliary lighting.
Top
INCANDESCENT LIGHTING
Cheap, low
quality light
Incandescent lights are the ubiquitous screw-in bulbs you
most likely have lighting your home. An Incandescent
bulb consists of a glass bulb, with a tungsten filament
in a near vacuum; just a small amount of argon or
krypton is present. When current flows through the
filament it heats up, and glows giving off both heat and
light.
Halogen bulbs
A variation of the incandescent bulb is the halogen bulb.
This is an improvement to incandescent bulbs invented by
GE in 1958 for the wing tip navigation lights of the
Boeing 707. In a regular incandescent bulb, the tungsten
filament evaporates, and over time the inside of the
bulb is coated with a fine coat of tungsten from
condensed tungsten vapor. This coating will severely
limit the light output of the bulb. In a halogen bulb, a
small amount of one of the halogens (Iodine or Bromine
are used) is present and combines with the evaporated
tungsten. This Tungsten Iodide or Tungsten Bromide
molecule has an affinity for the tungsten filament, and
returns there and splits. The tungsten from this
molecule returns to the filament while the halogen
returns to the atmosphere inside the bulb. This process
does not work unless the bulb jacket is at least 200
degrees Celsius. This is why halogen lamps are so hot,
and must be taken into consideration for aquarium
applications. Halogen lamps are 25-30% brighter than
regular incandescent bulbs. The halogen cycle, as it is
called, takes place in a very small capsule, as it is
easier to maintain the high temperature required for the
halogen cycle to operate in a smaller space. This
capsule is placed inside another glass capsule which
serves as the bulbs outer casing and although is still
plenty hot, is not as hot as 200 degrees Celsius.
Output spectra
is biased towards the red
The output spectrum of incandescent light, halogen or
regular, is biased heavily toward the red. Non halogen
bulbs have a color temperature of 2700K, while halogen
bulbs have a color temperature of 3000K - they are a
slightly more whitish light. Both have a CRI of 100. A
diagram of the spectra looks rather like a triangle,
starting with almost no output in the green and rising
at an almost linear rate to the far red and infra red.
Although incandescent bulbs are very inefficient, they
are a very good source of near and far red light which
is certainly very important. They are sometimes used as
supplements in systems which are deficient in the red
end of the spectra.
Efficiency
The two great disadvantages to incandescent lights are
their inefficiency - you don't get a lot of light
compared with how much energy you put apply. One saving
grace in this respect is that the efficiency increases
proportionally to the wattage, for example a single 100
watt bulb is much brighter than two 50 watt bulbs. The
energy that does not get converted to light is wasted by
being given off as heat. All but the smallest wattage
bulbs can generate an awful lot of heat, and this must
be taken into consideration. Another point to consider
is, because the heat is so great, a splash of water on a
hot bulb can shatter it.
Halogen bulbs are more efficient than
"regular" incandescent bulbs by virtue of remaining
brighter, longer; they still give off 95% of their
initial light output at the end of their lives, which
are about twice as long as regular incandescent bulbs.
They are also more expensive.
The great advantage of non halogen
bulbs is of course their extreme low cost for initial
purchase, and of course their great availability; you
can buy them anywhere. Halogen bulbs are on the average
5 to 10 times as expensive as their non halogen
counterparts and can usually be found at larger hardware
stores. Since their primary market is yuppie track
lighting they are usually found as spot or flood lights.
Of potential interest to aquarist is the low voltage
bulbs used in some track lighting systems. Operating as
12V, these bulbs are quite small and would be good to
use a supplemental light augmenting a fluorescent setup.
They are also the cheapest of halogen bulbs. While I
have seen them at $30 each in fancy designer light
stores, I have also seen them in Price Club at 3 for
$12. Sylvania makes a series of bulbs called Capsylite
that come in "regular" bulb shapes plus the large
parabolic reflectors sometimes used to illuminate the
outside of houses. Osram makes a large array of
different shapes and sizes, most of which look like the
vacuum tubes. They are probably the most useful to
aquarists because of their smaller size and wide range
of wattages; from low power bulbs all the way up to 150
watts. They are however not cheap and can be quite a
challenge to find somewhere that stocks them.
Longevity
Incandescent bulbs have a lifespan of about 1000 hours.
Halogen bulbs have a life of about 2000 hours. One
interesting personal note here; although regular
incandescent lights are rated at 1000 hours, we've all
had some bulbs that seem to burn on forever. The Guiness
book of world records lists the longest lasting light
bulb as being an incandescent bulb in a fire house in, I
believe Boston that is some 70+ years old; it is never
turned off, which is a key point. This is why your
parents always gave you hell for flicking the lights on
and off really quickly, the wear on the filament from
having current suddenly shot through it is quite great.
If you'll notice, most bulbs fail when turned on, not in
the middle of operation, or when they are turned off.
The halogen bulbs I have throughout my home seem to be
on a timer; when 2000 hours is up *poof*, they expire. I
curse them out, do a rough calculation and come to the
conclusion that their 2000 hours just expired.
Top
FLUORESCENT LIGHTING
Cheaper To Run,
More Expensive To Install
Fluorescent lights are very common in our day to day
lives. They are cheap to operate as they emit about four
times as much light per unit of electricity as
incandescent lights do. On the other hand they are more
complicated to install because they require a ballast to
operate. You may be familiar with the regular "cool
white" and "warm white" tubes sold in hardware stores
but what you may not know is that fluorescent tubes come
in hundreds of shapes, sizes and spectral output.
How They Work
Fluorescent lights work by placing an anode and a cathode
at opposite ends of a glass tube. Inside the tube is a
partial vacuum and a small amount of mercury vapor. When
energized, the mercury vapor is ionized and emits
ultraviolet radiation. The inside of the tube is coated
with a phosphor - a powder that "fluoresces" (gives off
light) when stimulated by ultraviolet radiation, thus
producing visible light. The chemical composition of the
phosphor determines the spectra or color of the emitted
light.
Replace Tubes
Every Six Months
Although fluorescent lights are very energy
efficient, there is a particularly nasty phenomenon
known as "cathode decay" that causes, over time, less
energy to be transferred through the mercury vapor. The
net effect is that the tube will emit less and less
light as it gets older. To all appearances, the tube
will put out the same amount of light until it suddenly
stops dead one day, (which can take years), but for all
practical purposes, because the drop off in light output
is an exponential decay, the tube should optimally be
replaced every six months or at the very least once a
year. Writing the installation date on the tube itself
with a permanent magic marker can be a big help here.
Types Of
Fluorescent Tubes
There are many different types of fluorescent tubes. They
differ in the physical size, composition of the phosphor
and the wattage. When fluorescent tube is mentioned the
standard T12 four foot tubes usually comes to mind. This
tube has a diameter of 1.5 inches and is available in
18", 24" 36", 48", 72" and 96" lengths. The T8 or "slimline"
fluorescent has a 1" diameter tube and is available in
24", 36" and 48" lengths. T12 tubes are also available
in U-shaped, that is a four foot tube is bent back on
itself so it forms a large U, and is about 24" long.
Circular tubes are available with several different
radii, and in several different types. In the last few
years, compact fluorescent tubes have become very
popular mostly as replacements for incandescent bulbs.
These tubes come in all sizes, from a 3" 5 watt bulb to
much larger bulbs that replace 40W four foot tubes, yet
are just one third of the size. The phosphor chemistry
is what makes the difference between a cool white and a
daylight tube and every tubes is available with a
dizzying array of choices in this area. Some of the most
useful tubes for aquarists with small tanks are the
5000K compact fluorescent tubes. T12 tubes are available
in HO (High Output) or VHO (Very High Output) which draw
more and much more current respectively, but produce
more light than regular T12 tubes. As the composition of
the phosphor changes so does the spectra of the visible
light being emitted by the tube. For aquarium use,
whether for illumination for plant growth or to simply
be able to see inside the tank only a small percentage
of the dozens of available tubes are appropriate. They
fall into the following broad categories: industrial,
full spectrum, daylight, plant growth, actinic,
tri-phosphor, special purpose and HO/VHO.
Use Four Foot
Tubes
Although fluorescent tubes come in many sizes, volume of
scale dictates that there is really only one size - the
T12 four foot length. Some ninety percent of all
fluorescent tubes made are this size, and because of
this volume, this is the cheapest size, although this
needs to be qualified. If you are buying tubes through
normal retail channels, the markup is generally high
enough that they can play with prices and a 24 inch tube
costs less than a 48 inch tube but more than an 18 inch
tube. If however you are buying tubes through other
channels, such as lighting distributors, you may find
that the four foot tube is cheaper than any other size.
T12 tubes that are smaller or larger will cost you more.
Additionally, the four foot size has the longest
lifespan and also the highest ratio of lumens (light
output) per watt. Thus, where space allows, use four
foot tubes. If there is not enough space for these,
individual compact fluorescents may be called for.
Manufacturers
In North America the "Big Three" in fluorescent tube
manufacturing are General Electric (GE), Sylvania and
Philips. They all make, almost without exception, the
same tubes, under different trade names although there
are some notable exceptions. Smaller and off-shore
manufacturers include Duro-test in the US and Osram who
make some tubes in North America and some in Europe.
There are a small number of specialty tube manufacturers
aimed specifically at the hobbyist aquarium market.
Industrial
Tubes
These tubes include the ubiquitous "cool white" and "warm
white" usually used in home and industrial lighting
applications. These tubes are tuned to produce the
brightest possible illumination for the least amount of
electricity. Since the human eye is most sensitive to
green, these tubes peak in the green portion of the
visible spectrum. In fact they rise and fall quite
sharply either side of the green peak. Warm white is
shifted a bit toward the red end of the spectrum thus
accounting for the "warmer" appearance.
If all you want to do is illuminate
your tank these tubes are fine. These tubes are cheap,
and they don't look terrible. Recent evidence suggests
that although plants require mostly red and blue light,
ANY light, in high concentration must be applied for the
plants to open their stomata thus permitting
respiration. This goes a long way toward explaining why
some people are able to grow beautiful aquarium plants
with just cool white and warm white tubes. Enough light,
of any type will grow plants. These tubes are far from
optimal however and they really are almost completely
devoid of the necessary red and blue portion of the
spectrum. If you can grow decent plants under these
lights, you will do even better under more appropriate
lights. These tubes are available anywhere fluorescent
tubes are sold and are the cheapest tubes available,
figure in 1990 US dollars these tubes cost between $1
and $2.
Daylight
Daylight tubes are the next big improvement in more
natural, (that is a more closer approximation of
sunlight) fluorescent tubes as a result of an improved
phosphor formulation. Although daylight tubes output a
spectra that although does not fully emulate sunlight,
it is significantly better than earlier cool white and
warm white tubes. These tubes are occasionally available
at hardware and department stores. They are not uncommon
and any lighting supplier should have them or be able to
order them. They cost a bit more than cool white, but
are not expensive. Figure about $3 to $4.
Plant Growth
Lights
Epitomized by the Sylvania Gro-Lux (tm) tube, plant growth
lights are, unlike all other fluorescent tubes, meant
solely for promoting plant growth; you won't find these
illuminating somebody's home or office - with one
exception. Where I work, a receptionist thought it would
be nice to have pink lighting in the lobby and ordered
and had installed some plant growth tubes. You do get
used to it, but they are most disconcerting when
initially encountered.
GE's version of this tube is called "Gro-N-Sho",
other plant growth tubes that are available are these
tubes relabelled for specialty pet/aquarium companies.
Gro-Lux type tubes have an output spectra with two large
spikes. One in the blue, and one in the red portion of
the spectra. There is almost no light emitted in any
other portion of the spectra and as such, they cast an
eerie purplish glow, and do not appear very bright. The
spikes in the red and blue occur quite abruptly and are
quite steep. This spectra was chosen as it matched the
absorption of visible light by chlorophyll in a test
tube. In the 50's a study was conducted on various
lighting types and phosphor formulation on plant growth,
the results of which were published in the book
"Lighting for Optimal Plant Growth" (Kent State Press)
The phosphor formulation of Gro-Lux type tubes was
improved upon. Instead of two steep abrupt spikes in the
red and blue, there are two slow rising large "bumps";
the peaks in the red and blue were not as high, nor did
they rise as sharply. Instead of concentrating all the
energy in these two narrow energy bands, the output was
tuned to a wider output spectra still however, centered
around red and blue. It became commercially available
from Sylvania as Gro-Lux Wide Spectrum; GE named theirs
Gro-N-Sho Wide Spectrum. These are more pinkish than
purple and are indeed what is in the lobby of the
building where I work.
Incidentally, you could never get
away with regular Gro-Lux (as opposed to Gro-Lux wide
spectrum) tubes in a lobby; they look dark, don't
illuminate well and are a very deep purple. The Wide
spectrum plant lights are brighter and don't look like a
60's psychedelic poster shop when used to illuminate a
room like a regular Gro-Lux would.
Philips makes a plant light they
named "Agro-Lite", which is a minor variant of the wide
spectrum Gro-Lux. They commissioned a study at a major
American university comparing their Agro-Lite to wide
spectrum plant lights. The Philips tube resulted in 2 -
10% greater growth in a variety of terrestrial food
crops when compared to other wide spectrum plant lights.
Since these tubes are quite commonly
used for (non aquatic) houseplants they are reasonably
common in hardware stores or nurseries, although what
typically happens is a store will only sell one vendors
fluorescent tubes. Even worse, they don't recognize the
difference between plant lights and wide spectrum plant
lights with the result being you will usually find plant
lights or wide spectrum plant lights from one
manufacturer in a store. Wide spectrum tubes are
reasonably inexpensive, although regular Gro-Lux type
tubes tend to be a bit more expensive still - the
chemical that makes up the phosphor which produces red
is the expensive part. In a pet shop these can be
between $10 and $20. From a lighting supplier a Gro-Lux
tube is about $9 while a wide spectrum tube is about $7.
Full Spectrum
Full spectrum tubes imitate, as closely as possible,
natural sunlight by emitting light in every spectral
range. All the different colors of visible light and a
very small amount of ultraviolet is emitted. The
Duro-Test Company produces "Vita-Lite" tubes. GE
produces "Chroma 50", Philips produces "Colortone 50",
Sylvania produces "Designer 5000K". All these tubes have
an output spectrum that is similar to sunlight - about
as close as modern chemistry can bring us. These tubes
try to imitate equatorial sunlight at noon, which has a
color temperature of around 5000K.
Noonday sunlight from northern climes
has a larger amount of blue in the spectrum, as has a
color temperature of 7500 Kelvin. Since the red pigment
in plants is limited by blue light these are sometimes
useful. Duro- Test sells a "Vita Lite 75", GE sells a
"Chroma 75" and Philips sells a "Colortone 75".
There is quite a disparity in
availability and price of these tubes. The Vita Lites
have very good distribution. They can be found in most
aquarium stores (and many pet stores as they are also
used for illuminating lizards who need the Vitamin D
from the ultraviolet light). The downside of this is
like anything you buy in a pet store that you can buy in
a hardware store, they price can be quite high when
buying them from a pet store: $15 - 20+. The same
Vita-Lite tube from a lighting supplier is about $7, and
the Chroma 75 I have obtained for less than $5. They are
nearly identical.
Tri-Phosphor
Philips makes the most popular range of T12 tri-phosphor
tubes, the "Ultralume" series. Recognizing that the
primary light colors are red, green and blue, Philips
made a tube that fluoresces very sharply only in these
three narrow wavelengths. The light emitted appears
white, and very bright. They are used primarily in
clothing stores because they completely lack emitted
ultra-violet, which bleaches clothes. Ultralumes come in
color temperatures of 3000, 3500, 4000, 4500, and 5000
which is accomplished by varying the amounts of red,
green and blue phosphors. Since red is the most
difficult color light to obtain from fluorescent tubes
and the Ultralume 35 has the most red, this is probably
the most interesting tube from our perspective.
Ultralumes are in the $7 range and can be found at
better pet/aquarium stores. Philips tubes seem to be
difficult to find in some areas, notably the West coast
although I have occasionally seen Ultralumes on sale in
department stores there. Again, a lighting supplier can
usually get any of these tubes.
Actinic
These tubes emit light only from the blue end of the
spectrum and are used in marine setups to supply the
blue that is missing from normal aquarium lighting but
is required by marine algae, anemones and corals. They
are usually only available from specialty aquarium
stores and are not cheap. They have little or no
application for growing freshwater aquarium plants.
Reflector and
Aperture
Of the large manufacturers of fluorescent tubes, only
Sylvania makes reflector and aperture tubes. Many of the
new aquarium specific tubes have reflectors, but have
little data to back up their assertion that the
reflector is worth the extra cost. Sylvania however, has
a data sheet on their reflector and aperture tubes.
Quoting from
the "Sylvania Engineering Bulletin O-338"
"Aperture and reflector fluorescent lamps differ
from standard fluorescent lamps in that they allow a
certain amount of control over the direction in which
the light is being sent. As sketched in Figure 1, a
reflective coating is placed between the outer glass and
the phosphor coating. This reflective coating provides
the direction control by reflecting most of the incident
light and directing it through the uncoated surface or
clear window of the aperture lamp."
"The total light output of reflector
lamps is actually less than that of standard lamps.
These lamps are intended for applications which can best
utilize their special light distribution. The light is
often too bright for direct illumination, but when used
with reflectors it can be a very effective means of
controlling the light."
Reflector tubes have a reflective
coating covering 235 (or 135) degrees of the interior.
Over that, they have a phosphor covering the entire
inside of the bulb.
Reflector lamps are available with a
235 degree or 135 degree internal reflector.
They are available in a number of
sizes in Cool White, while one is available in Gro-Lux
in a R/GRO/VHO 215 Watt 96" lamp.
Aperture lamps have a 330 or 300
degree reflective coating. They have a phosphor coating
covering 330 or 300 degrees of the lamp. There is a 30
or 60 degree clear glass opening or "aperture".
"The aperture lamp has a lower light
output that standard fluorescent lamps, because some of
the phosphor, which converts ultra violet to visible
light, has been removed. But when these lamps are used
with reflectors or lenses, they provide a very
concentrated beam, closely projected in one direction.
This allows more light to be delivered to a small area.
"Applications of the lamp are bridge
lighting from the rails, aircraft landing strips,
highways and approach ramps, billboards and sign
lighting, sport areas and marina lighting."
The aperture lamps are only available
in 3 models: 4 foot 30 degree aperture cool white, 4
foot 60 degree cool white, and 8 foot HO 30 degree cool
white.
Special Purpose
Beginning in 1990, specialty aquarium supply companies
began selling fluorescent tubes aimed specifically for
the aquarium market. These tubes are sold primarily for
the marine trade, as corals and anemones have even more
exacting requirements than freshwater aquarium plants.
The first to be introduced was the Triton tube made by
Thorn/EMI for Interpet (who were in turn bought by GE in
1990) tube from England. These are essentially a
tri-phosphor design but give off a pinkish light
reminiscent of wide spectrum plant lights. The output
spectra looks like a Gro-Lux with an additional green
spike. The amount of light they give off is quite
substantial - but so is the price. They start in the
$15-$20 range and go up. Essentially a "super Gro-Lux"
the Triton tube was significant in that it was the first
fluorescent tube designed specifically for aquarium use.
It is also significant in another respect. The
manufacturer claims the spectral output of the tube
degrades less than 10% over 7000 hours, a time period in
which a Gro-Lux type tube will have lost about 60 % of
it's light output. Also, unlike a regular fluorescent
tube, a triton will just refuse to start or light up
when it's life has expired (about 2 years). These
features are meant to address the cathode decay problem
and eliminate the need to change tubes.
It did not take long, however until
other small manufacturers jumped on the specialty
fluorescent tube bandwagon. Looking at the January 1991
Freshwater and Marine Aquarium magazine, there are no
less than 5 different specialty fluorescent tubes
advertised. There is the "Actinic Day" tube which is a
white tube with a fair amount of actinic (blue, in the
range of 380 - 480 nanometres) light as well. An ad for
the Actinic Day tubes compares the graph of their
spectral output to that of the Triton tube, with
naturally, the actinic day tube showing a more intense
spectrum. A few pages later is an ad for "Tritinic"
brand tubes that are similar in design - tri-phosphor
white with a good deal of actinic thrown in, and lo and
behold is a graph comparing them to Actinic Day tubes,
with of course the Tritinic tube having a yet more
intense output spectra. Competition for your fluorescent
tube dollar is fierce; it's a bloodbath out there.
The superwhite/actinic tubes have a
built in 180 degree reflector, which is simply a piece
of metal insides the tube that covers the top of the
tube so that all the light escapes directly out from the
bottom half of the tube. This is not a new trick, some
industrial tubes (such as 8 foot VHO Gro-Lux) do this,
but this is first tube for home use to employ such a
device.
These tubes are made in small
quantities for aquarium hobbyists and priced
accordingly. They are only available from aquarium
retailers and each cost $15+.
There is a specialty tube that is not
a recent introduction nor is it made for home aquaria.
Sylvania makes a "fluorescent incandescent" that emits
light much as an incandescent bulb does - mostly red and
near red. They are almost never stocked, and are not
cheap, about $10 US.
HO/VHO
HO refers to High Output, and VHO is Very High
Output. These tubes output more (and a lot more) light
by drawing more (and a lot more) current. They are more
expensive tubes to buy, require larger more expensive
ballasts and don't last as long. The conventional wisdom
in the aquarium trade about these tubes is that if you
need a lot of light then it's okay to use an HO, but the
VHO's are more bother than they're worth. Neither last
as long as regular tubes. A ballast for an 8 foot VHO
tube is an enormous black box that draws a lot of
current, and gets very hot. Even the tubes themselves
get hot. If you need this much light you should probably
be thinking about HID lamps. HO and VHO tubes come in
many sizes and types, such as cool white, warm white,
daylight, Gro-Lux and Gro-Lux wide spectrum
Longevity
Standard T12 four foot fluorescent tubes have about a
10,000 hour lifespan, but as stated earlier, their
usable life is much shorted because of decreased light
output over time. All other tubes are less (by about
half) than this, but again, it's a moot point as they
should be replaced every six months.
Top
HID
LAMPS
Now we're
getting serious
HID or High Intensity Discharge are the big bright lamps
you see in grocery stores, street lighting and
industrial lighting. They can be very large and draw a
lot of power. Indeed 2000 watt and 6000 watt lamps
exist, however small ones, down to 70 watts are
available.
Tradeoffs
These lamps produce a lot of light output quite
efficiently, however they can be quite expensive to
install initially and may require a fan for cooling in
the housing/reflector as they can produce phenomenal
amounts of heat. These lamps are used by aquarists who
need lots of light, such as marine reef tanks, of large
freshwater plant tanks.
HID lamps requite a ballast, and
almost every bulb requires it's own type of ballast. The
ballasts are expensive and bulky and are not something
you trot on down to the corner hardware store to pick
up, although larger hardware stores may have some; they
are usually reasonably priced. You'll have to go to a
lighting supplier for most of them however.
HID lamps are built like halogen
bulbs. A small capsule contains the vapor that an arc is
sent through. This capsule is in turn encased in the
much larger outer bulb body. There is quite a bit of UV
generated by the inner capsule that is filtered by the
outer capsule. All these bulbs carry warnings not to
operate them if the outer capsule is broken.
Types
There are three basic types of HID lamps: mercury vapor,
sodium vapor and metal halide.
Mercury vapor
When you see a bright light illuminating some industrial
building and it has a decided bluish cast - that's
mercury vapor. Mercury vapor lamps have an output
spectra that is almost entirely blue-white, with very
little red. Worse, the spectra is not continuous, there
are spectral peaks at certain wavelengths. These lamps,
although not useless - there is no doubt very good
results can be obtained with them - are equivalent to
cool white fluorescents. Yes they work, but why bother
going to this expense and trouble when other bulbs will
yield much greater success?
One interesting variation on this
theme is the self ballasted bulb. These bulbs (around
250 watts) require no ballast, they just screw into a
standard medium base (ie. incandescent) fixture and
voila, light. The downside is these bulbs are not as
efficient as regular mercury vapor lamps because they
use the resistive properties of the large filaments as a
ballast, and worse of all these bulbs are very
expensive, around $100 plus or minus $30. Of course with
mercury vapor lamps having a 10,000 hour lifespan the
high cost of the bulb must be considered in view of the
lack of expense for a ballast.
Sodium vapor
lamps
These lamps come in two varieties, high pressure sodium
and low pressure sodium, although this is rather a moot
point, as the light they output is monochromatic (pure)
yellow, and is all but useless in terms of aquaria. It's
rather a shame, as they are a full ten times more
efficient then incandescent bulbs, in fact these are the
most efficient bulbs made, and have a 24,000+ hour
lifespan. These are one of the cheapest HID bulbs to
purchase, and can be found in most hardware stores for
around $80 for bulb and ballast. Spare bulbs are around
$30. Recent advances in high pressure sodium bulbs such
as the Philips "Sun Agro" have improved output spectra,
and are quite popular for terrestrial plants, although
they haven't as yet gained great acceptance with aquatic
gardeners.
Metal Halide
Like sodium vapor, these lamps come in two versions,
regular and color corrected (HQI) versions. The HQI
versions have a uniform, sunlight like output spectra,
whereas the standard halide bulb has a lot of yellow,
some blue and not much red. Unlike sodium vapor, these
lamps are very useful to the aquarist needing a lot of
light. They can be found nominally in 250, 400, and 1000
watt sizes, from most manufacturers, but Osram also
makes a 70 watt and a 150 watt size. The 70 watt bulb is
only 2 x 3 inches, although is unfortunately a 3000K
color temperature bulb. You have to go to a 250 watt
bulb to get 5400K color temperature.
These bulbs range in life from 6000
to 10,000 hours. Bulbs are around $50, ballasts are
around $100.
Some sample setups
Obviously with a plethora of
different type of lighting systems to choose from,
trying to figure out what tube to use can be a
nightmare. Largely it depends on what you are trying to
illuminate, and what your budget it.
It also depends on what size tank you
are trying to illuminate, not so much as surface area or
footprint of the tank, but depth of the water. The
example setups below are for four 15 gallon tanks turned
sideways so that a four foot fixture across the top will
illuminate all of them. Double the amount of light for
deep tanks greater than 18 inches.
Many small aquariums have a small
plastic or metal hood that has one or two tube shaped
incandescent bulbs. For the bulbs to provide enough
light to grow plants they need to be of such high
wattage that there will be a severe and deleterious
effect of the fish by the massive amount of heat being
given off from the bulbs.
Incandescent illumination, although
inexpensive in initial setup cost is not recommended for
aquaria. The heat generated by these light bulbs almost
always adversely affects the temperature stability of an
aquarium. The cost to operate is fairly high, and the
quality of light is poor compared to every other
lighting system. Having said that I have seen some
setups using incandescent lights that worked well.
Plants were healthy, the tanks were not that hot. Be
that as it may, if you get good results with
incandescent lights you will get better results with
fluorescents. Some of the smaller halogen bulbs are
useful for supplementing fluorescent lights, as the
halogens, because they are still incandescent, put out
quite a bit of red light. Not only does this help to
balance the spectrum, but it has a more pleasant
esthetic appearance.
Theoretically a 300 or 500 watt
halogen lamp can be suspended a foot above the tank, and
this would provide enough light without cooking the
fish, but 500 watts is a lot of energy; a 175 watt metal
halide bulb will provide the same amount of light for a
lot less energy. The only practical use for incandescent
lights would be in a setup that was primarily
fluorescent. A couple of small halogen bulbs, if well
shielded from water splashes would provide the red light
so needed by plants.
Fluorescent lights are the most
economical way of lighting an aquarium in the long run.
Once the initial purchase of the fixture is made the low
cost of operation and long life of the tubes makes
fluorescent light very attractive. For a beginner tank
that has an incandescent fixture the new compact
fluorescent bulbs with integrated ballasts will, in many
cases, screw right into the existing incandescent
ballast. Bulbs for these are available from 2700K to
5000K color temperatures, although as of this writing
only Osram makes 5000K compact fluorescents.
The absolute cheapest setup is to buy
whatever fluorescent tubes are on sale at the local
hardware store. Usually cool white. This is far from the
best, but it will work. One cool white and one warm
white is a little better, although one plant growth
light and one daylight bulb is still a fairly cheap
setup, (both are well under $10) with quite good light
quality. For growing plants, a setup consisting of one
plant light, two wide spectrum plant lights and one
chroma 75 (or equivalent) will provide the right amount
of the correct type of light. Triton (or equivalent)
tubes could be used of cost is no object. If the pinkish
color is objectionable, two Ultralume 3500 and two
Ultralume 5000 can be used instead of the wide spectrum
plant lights.
For keeping African Cichlids, or any
other fish that is used to a lot of light, two (or four,
depending on preferences) chroma 75's can be used.
Low light fish such a killifish and
dwarf Cichlids will do best under two Gro-Lux or if they
have an abundance of plant cover, two Gro-Lux wide
spectrum tubes. These tubes will not frighten the fish
with a lot of light, and they should encourage good
plant growth to provide much needed cover from the
light. As an aside, I have kept certain killifish such
as Aphyosemion australe, A. gardneri, and A. sjoestedti
under the setup described above for plant growth and
they didn't seem to mind. Some species of fish do not
like a lot of light and in the wild will hide under
cover to avoid intense light. In an aquarium with bright
light and without some cover to take refuge they will be
as stressed as if they were forced in the wild from
their shady environ to an area on bright light.
Marine invertebrates and certain
freshwater plants have very large light requirements,
and for these, an HID lamp would probably be the most
appropriate. It is unlikely you could put enough
fluorescent tubes on top of the tank to supply enough
light, or if you could you may have spent so much on VHO
lamps and ballasts that it would have been cheaper to
install a halide lamp in the first place.
The cost of the HID lamps is pretty
large, and even worse, the more useful lamps to growers
of plants are even more expensive. Usually mercury vapor
or sodium vapor lamps are available at semi- reasonable
rates from hardware stores where they are sold as
security light; especially in rural areas. I have heard
of people trying sodium vapor lamps, but have never
heard of any success with them. People have had some
mixed success with mercury vapor lamps. Metal halide
lamps give very good results, but are the most expensive
and difficult to obtain of all the HID lamps.
For applications requiring a REALLY
BRIGHT light, the current GE lighting catalog lists a
10,000 watt carbon arc lamp used for lighthouses.
Summary and conclusions
Like everything else in life you get what you pay for.
Lighting systems can be built from apple juice cans and
incandescent fixtures for almost nothing, or the latest
and greatest in aquarium HID lighting can be ordered
from Germany.
For most people, fluorescent light
will be the reasonable compromise between cost and
quality of light. For a little bit of effort, the
specialized fluorescent tubes can be sought out with
only a little bit of time and a bit more money than the
ubiquitous cool whites hanging over the workbench.
Top
Related reading
Philips Lighting North America - The
Light Site
http://www.lighting.philips.com/nam/
GE 4-Foot T8 Lamps with Starcoat
http://www.ge.com/lighting/business/products/starcoab.htm
Fluorescent Lamp Replacements
http://www.ge.com/lighting/business/products/spspx.htm
OSRAM SYLVANIA Products - Reduced
Mercury OCTRON T8 Lamps
http://www.sylvania.com/ic/products/t8.htm
Aquatic Plants FAQ
http://www.cco.caltech.edu/~aquaria/Faq/plant.html
Aquarium.Net DIY Projects
http://www.aquarium.net/diy/DIYindex.shtm
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