I know there have been discussions on these forums of LEDs as light sensors, but I don't remember seeing one used like this.
Fig. 1 **broken link removed** is a night light that uses the same LED for sensing and for illumination. I breadboarded it, and it worked. I'm not sure how useful it would be, but it demonstrates the principle nicely.
Fig. 2 supposedly works in the opposite fashion, but I didn't test it.
EDIT: Here is a more complicated, earlier version of the same idea.
I've had this kind of idea before but I've never implemented it as I haven't needed to.
The 7555 timer idea looks good but it does have a high standby current at 7.5mA. There must be a way to build it so it uses next to no current when in standby mode.
I haven't analysed the more complicated idea but it looks more efficient.
When that second circuit came out in EDN I built one using a very small PIC. The OP-90 can be replaced by the comparator or the ADC in the PIC. I think the LED produced 20 to 30mV if you keep the load very low. That is only 1 to 2 DAC steps.
The Cmos 7555 IC has a current consumption spec that has no note. So it could be with the output high, low or with it actually timing.
Cmos logic ICs draw almost no current when their outputs are high or low.
The ones with a Schmitt-trigger input draw some current in their input Mosfets when they are active which might also happen in a Cmos 7555.
I know that, what I was talking about has nothing to do with the power consumption of the IC but the circuit as a whole. You need to look at the bigger picture rather than just what the 7555 is doing.
Look at the schematic, R1 and R2 dissipate power even when pin 3 is low. This means the circuit will consume 9/1210 = 7.438mA which is far too high for standby operation.
Good, you reduces the wasteful current in the resistors.
But the battery will still need to be replaced every week and there isn't enough wide-angle light for a night light.
It will just be a guiding light like airports use to mark the runways at night for landing aircraft.
Good, you reduces the wasteful current in the resistors.
But the battery will still need to be replaced every week and there isn't enough wide-angle light for a night light.
It will just be a guiding light like airports use to mark the runways at night for landing aircraft.
I have several < $ 2.00 LED night lights, they light is greenish in color. And they give off enough light to allow you to move around without bumping into things. Because the light is greenish you can look straight at them at close range and not loose you night vision. Like over the counter in a small bathroom.
I have never understood why car headlights are white and not blue!
Don't you think I know the difference? Maybe the light is more blue.
I know the ones you are talking about but that is NOT what I am talking about.
I forgot to mention the obvious that they have diffusers on them.
I have lived with them for several years now and they are great.
Good, you reduces the wasteful current in the resistors.
But the battery will still need to be replaced every week and there isn't enough wide-angle light for a night light.
It will just be a guiding light like airports use to mark the runways at night for landing aircraft.
My night lights are 5W incandescent outdoors Christmas tree bulbs. They have an LDR that turns them off in the daytime. They shine all around and don't blind you. Each bulb lasts about 6 months.
I have never seen a solar street light.
The solar panel will need to be huge and expensive.
There must be many expensive high power LEDs.
There must be a huge battery so that it can light all night after a week or more of clouds.
A solar garden light has a small cheap solar panel, a single small LED, a single Ni-Cad battery cell and a few parts to stepup the voltage. Some add an LDR to turn it off in the daylight and others use the solar panel to detect the daylight.