So, why can't I find many such products for sale? There are a couple of high-end companies like https://www.coelux.com/, but where's the mass market stuff? Is there an opportunity being overlooked here, or am I just missing something?
The higher end of LED is slowly getting there. The measurement one should be looking for there is CRI ("Color Rendering Index"). The sun has a CRI of 100. Any lightsource above 90 to 95 CRI is (to my experience) indistinguishable from daylight. The best stuff there currently is are (of course) the Skypanels by ARRI for laughable 6800 USD per panel (film equipment is expensive as usual).
Blasting a 2.5 kW HMI lamp ("Hydrargyrum medium-arc iodide lamp") trough a window from the outside is a good emulation of daylight. So good in fact that the poor souls shooting films inside will have their bodies in confusion as they exit the room and realize in horror that it is dark outside.
The electrical bill of anything emulating the sun is no joke tho.
[0] - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/amazon-men...
We've done a lot of research on lighting in pursuit of building a better webcam (our main product). We found the lights on the market (i) aren't very bright, (ii) aren't smart in any way, and (iii) are way too expensive for the functionality you're getting.
Personally, I use a 100 watt LED corn bulb but it's not very pretty.
We're considering building a light as our next product. Imagine: a light that's super bright, adapts its color and intensity to the weather / time of day / other lights in your room. (If anyone has ideas here, please reach out!)
Every home I’ve had (including starter apartments and a basement bedroom) was well lit by natural light. Offices have been more problematic, but decision makers generally aren’t effected by it, almost universally having window offices. Factories (at least the few I’ve been at) are often heavily lit with natural light via skylights.
That being said, there is probably a market in the higher end office design market and possibly for basements, like in the I like to make stuff video.
I think the problem then is “how do I design around/with this product.” Designers and builders roughly know how to use existing lighting products. How do you utilize this artificial sunlight product in your lighting design. Those wall mounted led windows look cool, but I’d be super annoyed if my desk were facing them. The fresnel lens looks nice in that accent position, but if it got in people’s eyes or strained them it’s a problem.
Finally, the two examples you showed are using stock led panels. As others have said, you can get some interesting effects from them, but I strongly suspect you’ll end up in the “uncanny valley” with that sort of lightning- the spectrum and consistency just isn’t quite right, the light doesn’t feel “warm” enough in the infrared, etc.
Try it out- see if you can get a lighting setup you and others love. I suspect the product is restricted to the high end currently because it’s genuinely hard to get right in a way that doesn’t feel cheap or artificial. But I’d love to be proven wrong.
That’s tough to do without either reabsorbing a lot of the light you created, or creating a large box to contain the light source.
One of the interesting DIY designs I’ve seen uses a surplus satellite dish, silvered, with an LED array at the focal point. The reflected light of the mirror is mostly parallel, but your light source is now 20+ inches deep.
I spent some time instead thinking about indirect light, like an artificial clerestory. Never did build anything though. When I moved I had plenty of natural light so I stopped trying.
All of that adds up to a fairly bulky and expensive piece of equipment which is why you only see a few high end companies producing them for a very niche market.
Hopefully this can be changed in the future by having the cost of high power LEDs come down even more. Maybe mass production of high quality lenses will be helped by developments in the VR field. There are some promising developments there with so called pancake lenses that could make things a lot smaller.
If you want one, you can build one following the video above. The result is quite stunning. I've never seen anything like it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8JrqH2oOTK4
The one above is an easier build that takes up less space.
The FDA does not regulate light boxes, so caveat emptor.
[1] https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/seasonal-affe...
My own personal theory is that there is a health epidemic related to lack of sunlight exposure from most people being indoors. And so in my fantasy future cities that I build in my head, there are ways that actual natural light is delivered without being blocked by windows, such as carefully monitored full spectrum and/or UV lighting.
Another related issue is the concept of a virtual window that you can see out of. I think this will also be a future trend, since windows increase heating requirements and again don't provide the key UV component of light. Also, for the majority of history, inexpensive cameras and displays did not exist.
So what I suggest is virtual windows that are thin OLEDs and follow the person to give them a different virtualized view of outside. Or using some light field or multiview technology. Along with full spectrum lighting. And not entirely related but I think it would be best in most areas to standardize on airtight construction, mechanical ventilation and energy/heat recovery ventilators.
A friend has the light tube in every room, I thought this was a good idea until I saw it. Everything was very cold and blueish, as if it was cloudy. I actually found it somewhat depressing.
Trying to generate sunlight that can fill a room like the sun is going to use a lot of power and generate heat. Also, the DIY youtube versions don't feel very realistic to me, it's probably a much harder (and expensive) problem to solve than just a fresnel lens.
edit: Watching another youtube video, it looks like the DIY versions are missing the "blue sky effect"
You can buy it or rent it. One is for 89€ or 1.99€/month. Four are for 299€.
I use it for several years and it's great, especially the night mode.
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1193255-REG/kino_flo_...
Light therapy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_therapy
There are various "corn bulb" LED products, but FWIU few of the products verifiably produce UVC light; and even fewer still are built from relatively new (full spectrum) UVC LEDs.
The Broan bath fans with SurfaceShield by Vyv bath fans produce ~"ultrablue" but not UVC or a detachable Chromecast Audio.
There are bulbs that switch from normal UVA to ultrablue and/or UVC on the second flIP of the circuit.
This makes me feel as if I was entitled for wanting/wasting a scarce resource.
There’s plenty of sunlight available and it’s not running out. Let’s just make more windows.
[1][2]
The big market for these things is hospitals. They operate 24/7, and tend to have many windowless interior rooms. Both patients and staff lose circadian rhythm in such timeless environments.
[2] https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/artificial-window-36758108
It is a hard problem to solve technically. Getting collimated light in a compact space, not wasting a ton of energy while having high cri and the right color temp or emulating Rayleigh scattering. The higher end products are also pretty large.
You might also find Daniel Rybakkens work interesting:
https://www.danielrybakken.com/surface_daylight.html
http://www.danielrybakken.com/daylight_comes_sideways_files/...
Seems priced for medical settings and high-end commercial kinds of projects.
Daylight is about 1000 watts per square meter, so having a 2mx2m window in 5 rooms of your house illuminated 10 hours per day with led lighting is about 200 kWh per day, which is 10x a typical Americans electric bill.
And that doesn't even include the infrared or UV that regular sunlight has, which you might want for sun tanning/warmth/realistic sun feel - including that would double the cost again.