Talk:Light-emitting capacitor

Best Inventions of 2006
This sentence:

"CeeLite's LEC was named one of TIME's "Best Inventions of 2006."[1][2]

strikes me as being very close to an advertisement. Should we dump it?--Ken McE 22:47, 27 November 2006 (UTC)

very efficient
"The light is bright white, as natural as an incandescent light. It can be faded easily (or automatically) for lower power consumption. It can be printed in any size, or pattern. To produce the same amount of light as a 100 watt bulb, you need about a half-meter square of the substance, but at the highest output level, the lifespan of the device is significantly lowered to around 5000 hours. If you have a meter squared, you can produce the same amount of light with a longer life-span than a fluorescent bulb (about 10,000 hours). Yes, a square meter is a large chunk of wall space, but if you just look up, you can see that you've got plenty of room for several square meters of LEC.

The really good news, of course, is that they consume less power per lumen than anything on the market today. That half-power, square meter will only eat up five watts of power, significantly below 12 watts a fluorescent bulb with the same light output.

...poster stands with LEC backlights starting from $56.59 for 8.5" x 11" sheets." -69.87.203.202 21:58, 11 May 2007 (UTC)

Another LEC Definition
I've seen LEC stand for "light-emitting electrochemical cells". Can anyone shed any light on this?24.83.148.131 (talk) 12:02, 25 March 2008 (UTC)BeeCier