Skip to main content

Lighten up with Nyx Hemera

Nyx Hemera Technologies says that its new ILCAM2 power line illuminance photometer can help reduce tunnel lighting energy consumption and boost green credentials
November 19, 2021 Read time: 2 mins

 

The ILCAM2 - part of the TLACS (tunnel lighting addressable control system) solution - measures the level of illuminance within road tunnels and underpass bores to ensure interior light levels are continuously maintained to improve lighting conditions for drivers.

The ILCAM2 is used in road tunnels within the TLACS-EM system and in underpasses with the TLACS-U. It sends the illuminance values to a lighting control cabinet using power line communication on existing power cables.

The ILCAM2 uses a highly light-sensitive photocell – silicon photo diode - filtered to provide a spectral response close to that of the average human eye in order to react to changes in light levels within the tunnel environment. The unit measures the illuminance over a standard range of 0-20,000 lux (maximum), which can be scaled to meet user requirements.

The unit is contained in a rugged painted stainless steel 316 container and has an operational temperature range from -30ºC to +70ºC. It is also CIE and IES approved or measurement technology.

Power line communication doesn't require the installation of additional control wires for control and monitoring: it uses the existing powerline cables. This means important savings on the installation time, on wires and connectors and on maintenance of the lighting system.

“With over 30 years in developing power line applications, it was obvious for Nyx’s team to improve its ILCAM with a power line version,” said Pierre Longtin, president of Nyx Hemera Technologies, based in Quebec City, Canada. “The ILCAM2 was created mainly for long tunnels as it helps save on installation time, related manpower and the cost of cables that could run for miles in such infrastructure.”

The unit is contained in a rugged painted stainless steel 316 container and has an operational temperature range from -30ºC to +70ºC. It is also CIE and IES approved or measurement technology.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Stop it with SmogStop from Envision SQ
    October 9, 2019
    Canadian company Envision SQ says that it has created a photocatalytic pollution barrier for highways that cuts NOx and VOCs in half
  • Advancing asphalt plant technology
    June 9, 2016
    Advances in asphalt plant technology were in major evidence at the bauma 2016 exhibition in Munich - Mike Woof writes One of the most apparent developments at bauma 2016 was the strong focus on asphalt plant technology. The massive physical presence of the asphalt plants could be seen from a distance, right across the showground, particularly the 50m-high machine Benninghoven had opted to exhibit. However, other plant systems from rival firms Ammann, Lintec and Marini, as well as Turkish company E-MAK, c
  • Innovative low temperature asphalt and aggregate options and advances
    May 16, 2014
    Studies show the asphalt sector has options for materials use that can lower costs and emissions, as well as increasing the use of recycling One study in the UK led by the Carbon Trust and Lafarge Tarmac has found that low temperature asphalt (LTA) could be used as an alternative to conventional asphalt on roads. Conventional asphalt is made when aggregates and bitumen are bound together at temperatures of between 180ºC-190ºC. However, the trial found that the alternative is able to bond road materia
  • Mullum Mullum Valley untouched by progress
    July 20, 2012
    Preserving the unspoiled Mullum Mullum Valley was the major consideration when deciding to build a traffic tunnel The answer to one of the major issues facing construction of the A$2.5 billion EastLink route in Australia was simple: construct a tunnel. While it was expensive, those involved realised they had little option but to go underground to protect the environmentally sensitive Mullum Mullum Valley, an untouched area of wood and bushland in Melbourne. EastLink, the 39km toll road project on the easter