Study Confirms the Need to Keep LEDs Clean

bridge with illuminated streetlights

August 15, 2017

By Norma Frank

A 2014 Municipal Solid-State Lighting Consortium survey found that the average annual operating cost per outdoor roadway luminaire was $96 in energy and $72 in operations and maintenance. As the nation’s 26.5-plus million streetlights continue conversion to LED, maintenance savings resulting from LED’s superior longevity offers a significant reason to switch alongside energy savings.

In a maintenance column published in 2015, I pointed to a significant potential emerging issue with LED outdoor roadway and area lighting. Traditionally, HID luminaires are cleaned when they are relamped, limiting light loss imposed by luminaire dirt depreciation (LDD).  As stated above, LED luminaires promise much longer service life.  They may present a different failure mode based on output rather than mortality along a curve that in time produces a steady failure rate. As a result, LDD’s significance as a light loss factor may be much greater for LED roadway and area luminaires, potentially reducing useful life.

Designers need to account for this LDD in their designs. Operators need to mitigate it through cleaning. And manufacturers need to provide adequate cleaning recommendations. What had been missing was an evidence-based update of our understanding of LDD to account for LED technology. LED luminaires may contain features making them less prone to dirt and dust accumulation. However, big questions remain. What is the impact of LDD on average illuminance and illuminance uniformity for LED luminaires? How should they be cleaned?

The IES engaged the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute to study and quantify LDD in a range of LED roadway luminaire types. The resulting report, Measure and Report Luminaire Dirt Depreciation (LDD) in LED Luminaires for Street and Roadway Lighting Applications (IES RES-1-16), provides an excellent start to understanding this issue and making maintenance recommendations.

The study focused on the impact of LDD on average illuminance and light distribution projected onto the road for LED luminaires. Producing generalized LDD characterizations for LED luminaires proved challenging due to the many designs available on the market. Some products are similar to traditional luminaires, featuring lamping and reflectors shielded by a glass lens. Other products rely on LED modules aimed using internal reflection that may or may not be shielded by another media. The researchers reviewed 24 LED luminaires and found individually molded acrylic, moulded acrylic, molded glass or molded polycarbonate LED optics paired with flat glass, reflector or no luminaire optics. Half the luminaires featured individually molded acrylic LED optics with no luminaire optics. The manufacturers of these products recommended a variety of cleaning approaches, some none at all.

The researchers studied LDD for a range of LED luminaires in various environments, including in situ and within a laboratory.  In a pilot study, they collected before/after cleaning illuminance data for luminaires installed on the Virginia Smart Road.  Though manufacturers often recommend a dry rag or plain water for cleaning, the researchers found these methods are “not effective at removing dirt accumulation.”  They determined that cleaning acrylic and glass optics could be done safely using either a 70 percent isopropyl alcohol solution or a mild dish washing detergent solution, with the former being more effective at recovering LDD (unless the environment has significant salt content).  Pressure washing was found to be ineffective from the ground.

In the laboratory experiment, five LED luminaire types installed in a parking facility were removed and tested.  The researchers captured horizontal and vertical illuminance before and after applying a 70 percent alcohol solution wipe, measuring differences in average illuminance and uniformity. Meanwhile, before/after measurements were taken in several field installations, yielding additional data about LDD recovery based on cleaning at various ages, and with a variance in LDD discovered based on luminaire design/optics.

The study’s authors concluded LDD is different for LED luminaires than for HID luminaires, as well as between LED luminaire types, and that lighting designers and operators should regard it as potentially significant at end of life. While calling for further study to isolate environmental factors, they suggested minimum potential LDD rates for this application while also indicating potential change in uniformity:

  • +1 percent per year LDD and +1 percent per year uniformity change for luminaires with flat glass luminaire optics; and
  • +3 percent per year LDD and no uniformity change for luminaires with no luminaire optics.

For greater precision, the authors recommended annual LDD rates based on LED optics, specifically 1.8 percent for individually molded acrylic, 1 percent for molded acrylic, 3.8 percent for large individually molded acrylic, 2.2 percent for molded glass, and 3 percent for individually molded acrylic with no outer optics.

This critical study demonstrates that LDD can be a significant factor in LED roadway and area lighting installations.  As a recoverable light loss factor, LDD can and should be addressed by designers in design calculations and by operators through a group-cleaning schedule that occurs independent of relamping.

It’s only the beginning, however, of learning what we need to know about this critical aspect of operations. More research is needed to generate further useful information that will help ensure that LED lighting satisfies owner expectations throughout its useful life. Additional sampling in future studies, for example, may yield data sufficient to go beyond linear modeling and produce curves. Research needs to be continued to develop further evidenced-based maintenance recommendations for LED lighting that become best practices.

Download the IES study here.

Download the Virginia Tech study here.

Source: https://www.ies.org/lda/study-confirms-the-need-to-keep-leds

Published with the permission of IES Edmonton : https://iesedmonton.org/news/2017-6-23/study-confirms-the-need-to-keep-leds-clean

Related Articles


Changing Scene

  • March 3, 2026 - Leviton - Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) Announces Walter Lai as New Purchasing Manager

    Leviton – Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) Announces Walter Lai as New Purchasing Manager

    Leviton – Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) is excited to welcome Walter Lai CSCMP to the team as Purchasing Manager! Walter brings over 20 years of expertise in purchasing, inventory management, and supply chain operations. His strong background in supplier management, cost optimization, and leading cross-functional teams will be a tremendous asset as they continue to strengthen… Read More…

  • Feb 27, 2026 - Lumorphéa A Designer Lighting Exhibition by Mac’s II Agencies - March 5-15, 2026

    Lumorphéa: A Designer Lighting Exhibition by Mac’s II Agencies – March 5-15, 2026

    Lumorphéa has arrived. Rooted in metamorphosis, Lumorphéa explores the transformative power of light — how it reshapes perception, emotion, and space. Not simply display, but experience. From March 5–15, The Gallery George becomes a living, tactile lighting gallery where product, art, and application collide. Curated installations, project imagery, and sculptural lighting moments invite you to… Read More…


Design

  • CSC LED: Why Blue Light at Night Is a Problem & How Amber Optics Solve It

    CSC LED: Why Blue Light at Night Is a Problem & How Amber Optics Solve It

    Outdoor lighting plays a critical role in safety, visibility, and security—but not all light is created equal. In recent years, increased awareness around blue-rich white light has raised important questions about its impact on human health, wildlife, and the night sky. As municipalities, designers, and property owners look for better solutions, Amber Optics are becoming… Read More…

  • RENO Lighting Highlights Rittal Canada Lighting Project

    RENO Lighting Highlights Rittal Canada Lighting Project

    It’s great to see projects grow from one phase to the next! RENO Lighting has partnered with Rittal Canada to supply lighting for their new office and warehouse. As the renovation continues, they are proud to showcase the next step in their transformation. From industrial environments to modern workplaces, each phase requires thoughtful lighting design… Read More…


New Products

  • NEXLEDS: 3CCT Post Top Light – NX-3PT-150W-X-DV-A-Y

    NEXLEDS: 3CCT Post Top Light – NX-3PT-150W-X-DV-A-Y

    NEXLEDS provides an efficient and adaptable lighting solution with the 3CCT Post Top Light. This fixture offers high luminous efficacy, IP65, as well as power tunable and CCT switchable options, granting enhanced visibility, security and safety in exterior spaces. The 3CCT Post Top luminaire is ideal for applications such as parking lots, walkways, campuses, and… Read More…

  • Dals: Boulevard Architectural Linear Collection

    Dals: Boulevard Architectural Linear Collection

    Dals Boulevard is more than a fixture, it’s a complete architectural system. A single, disciplined line of light moves effortlessly from ceiling to wall, from interior to exterior, creating continuity across every space it touches. One system, expressed four ways, unified by proportion, performance, and purpose. Available in standard 120V or multi-voltage configurations (120, 277,… Read More…