I was thinking about LEDs used for general lighting.
Personally I don't like them for general lighting, but that is just me.
I will keep my fluorescents until the energy police come and get them.
But here is a idea. (may be)
What if you had a big store like a Walmart and used LEDs for general lighting?
But not the normal LED lighting like today.
What if a lighting fixture was made that used for example: a one foot wide by eight foot long flat hollow aluminum plate with many LEDs affixed to it using heat conducting compound like transistors use to one side only.
The flat side with the LEDs facing down.
The fixtures would be in a similar row layout as used in the Walmart's today.
But...
The fixtures are connected together in series with piping between each flat aluminum plate that a fluid could be pumped through.
The rows of fixtures in series piping and the rows at the ends in parallel piping.
The pumped fluid is then run through a remote fan coil arrangement for store heating in the winter and in the summer switched to vent to the outside air for heat removal from the fluid so to remove the heat from the lighting fixtures to lessen the load on the stores air-conditioning units.
This way you could run the LEDs at maximum output and they would still be cool and long lasting, plus use the removed heat to help heat the store in the colder months and remove the fixture heat load off the AC units in the summer months.
Plus with the full light output now available from the LEDs, they could be turned upside down and the light reflect off the inside of the fixture to diffuse the light so as not to have that horrible
"sparkle" effect.
Energy savings all the way around.
A win win situation.
Would this work?