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Research

Berger does not just use its know-how to implement complex tasks, but also
creates
new know-how through own research in the field of lighting technology.
One example from the more recent past:
Together with four medium-sized companies and four universities and
with
financial support from the Federal Ministry of Research Berger
has been
developing energy-efficient, mercury-free low-pressure lamps.
The aim of
the national research project is to create a pollutant-free
product, which is
not dependent on temperatures, that owing to its
low construction depth
(maximum thickness of 2cm) offers architects
new possibilities for design in
order for example to integrate neon
writing into façades in an even more
harmonious manner. The approaches
for energy-saving and pollutant-free
discharge lamps which are known
from lighting technology, such as xenon
lamps for automobile headlamps
are also examined with regard to their
suitability for the purposes
of light advertising and further developed. The
disadvantages of
customary lights such as for example the restricted degree
of efficiency,
the dependency on temperatures or the use of harmful materials
such
as mercury are soon to be a thing of the past. In the test
series we test
using the inert gas xenon, that so far has been used
in automobile headlamps
and does not contain any pollutants. The
four companies which are integrated
into the tests respectively assume
responsibility for one sub-area. The internal
luminescent materials
are produced in Greifswald, the necessary ballasts in
Aachen and
the housing in Kamp-Lintfort. The universities in Jena, Greifswald,
Aachen and Karlsruhe on the other hand are occupied with the scientific
tests
of the lighting appliances.
Thomas Berger, qualified physicist runs the tests at Berger. Also
involved is the
Master of Engineering [Dipl. Ing.] Egon Seelbach,
who has extensive experience
in the field of plasma physics and vacuum
technology. After completion of the
project the aim is to be able
to fit beautifully designed façades with filigree neon
signs, which
in future after even brighter, safer and free of pollutants. And
Thomas
Berger, managing director of the Bergerit company, hopes that
it may even be
possible to also apply the knowledge to conventional
lamps.
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