But I wonder what is supposed to be novel there?
The IR reflection lamps are on the mass market since 2000, produced by practically all major lamp makers (well, till some of them decided to even stop manufacturing some of those products). The first experiments were here in 70's (and even at MIT), yielding
the first attempt to bring this concept to the market, although at that time not successful.
The concept does improve the efficacy by about 30..50% together with doubling the lamp life in real, mass produced lamps (so no just some scientific demonstrators). So for the same lamp life as standard halogens the potential is already double efficacy in real life and for a demonstrator even higher.
This article does describe just this performance, nothing better. The only difference is the use of flat assembly, but that is just one of the many ways to use that concept.