TECHLUMEN Design Guide Series

Lighting Controls & Smart Systems

A complete technical reference to wired and wireless control protocols, sensors, building management integration, and intelligent lighting design — from DALI-2 and D4i to IoT-enabled city-scale platforms.

1. Introduction & Regulatory Framework

Modern lighting design does not end at luminaire selection. The control system determines how light is delivered, adapted, and managed throughout a building's lifetime. Intelligent controls turn a static installation into a responsive, energy-efficient, and occupant-centred environment — reducing energy consumption by 30–70 % beyond LED-only savings and enabling data-driven facility management.

This guide covers every major control protocol and technology used in professional lighting: from the industry-standard DALI-2 bus to wireless mesh networks, from simple analogue dimming to city-scale IoT platforms. It is protocol-focused rather than space-specific, complementing TECHLUMEN's application guides (office, healthcare, education, warehouse, etc.) with the "how to control" layer.

Why Controls Matter

Energy Reduction
30–70 %
Beyond LED-only savings, via dimming, scheduling & occupancy
Occupant Satisfaction
+25 %
Personal control & tunable white improve comfort
Maintenance Cost
−40 %
Remote monitoring, fault alerts, predictive scheduling
Payback Period
2–5 yr
Typical ROI for sensor + DALI retrofit

Regulatory Landscape

European energy legislation increasingly requires lighting controls, not merely recommends them. The Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD 2024 recast) mandates building automation and control systems (BACS) for non-residential buildings above defined energy thresholds. National energy performance codes across EU member states translate this into specific requirements — each country has its own implementation timeline and minimum automation class.

ℹ Note on National Regulations Each EU member state has its own energy performance code implementing the EPBD. Designers must consult national requirements for minimum automation classes, mandatory sensor zones, and emergency lighting integration. The EN 15232 classes referenced in this guide provide the EU-wide framework.
Standard / DirectiveScopeControl Relevance
EPBD 2024 (EU recast)Building energy performanceMandates BACS for large non-residential buildings; defines Smart Readiness Indicator (SRI)
EN 15232-1Building automation impact on energyClasses A–D rating system for automation; baseline for national codes
IEC 62386 (series)DALI protocolParts 101–104 (system), 2xx (device types), 3xx (input devices/sensors)
IEC 62560Self-ballasted LED lampsSafety & compatibility for retrofit dimming
EN 12464-1 / -2Workplace lightingIlluminance levels that controls must maintain
EN 1838 / EN 50172Emergency lightingAutomatic transfer, testing, DALI-202 emergency gear
EN 50491 (series)HBES / BACS requirementsElectrical safety, EMC, environmental conditions for control devices
IEC 62442-3Energy performance of control gearStandby power limits for drivers and controllers
EU Reg. 2019/2020Ecodesign for light sourcesStandby < 0.5 W, control-gear efficiency minimums

2. Standards & Building Automation Classification

EN 15232-1 provides a classification framework that rates a building's automation level from D (no automation) to A (high energy performance with integrated smart controls). This classification directly influences the energy performance certificate and is referenced by national building codes across Europe.

EN 15232 Automation Classes — Lighting Functions

ClassDescriptionOccupancyDaylightDimmingSchedulingTypical Saving vs D
DNo automation (manual only)Baseline
CStandard automationAuto on/offBasic10–15 %
BAdvanced automationPresence + absenceSwitchingStepOptimised25–40 %
AHigh energy performancePresence + absence + zone linkingContinuous regulationContinuousAdaptive + CMS40–60 %
✓ Practical Impact Moving from Class D to Class A in a typical 5,000 m² office can reduce lighting energy from 25 kWh/m²·yr to under 8 kWh/m²·yr — a saving of over 85,000 kWh annually. At €0.20/kWh, this represents €17,000/yr in energy cost alone.

Smart Readiness Indicator (SRI)

Introduced by the EPBD recast, the Smart Readiness Indicator rates a building's technological capacity to interact with occupants and the energy grid. Lighting contributes to multiple SRI domains:

SRI DomainLighting ContributionTechnologies
Energy efficiency & demand responseLoad shedding, peak-shifting via schedulingDALI-2, CMS, astronomical clock
Comfort & wellbeingTunable white, personal dimming, circadian profilesDALI DT8, Casambi, HCL scenes
Predictive maintenanceLamp-hour tracking, fault reporting, driver diagnosticsD4i, DALI-2 diagnostics, CMS
Information to occupantsDashboards, app control, usage reportingIoT gateways, cloud CMS, BACnet
Grid flexibilityReal-time power adjustment on grid signalOpenADR, DALI broadcast dimming

3. Protocol Overview — Wired vs Wireless

Lighting control protocols fall into two broad families: wired bus systems (requiring dedicated control cabling) and wireless mesh or point-to-point networks. Each has distinct strengths, and modern installations frequently combine both — for example, DALI-2 wired backbone with Casambi wireless commissioning, or KNX building integration with DALI lighting subnets.

Figure 1 — Lighting Control Protocol Hierarchy
Lighting Control Protocols Wired Protocols Wireless Protocols DALI-2 / D4i IEC 62386 64 addresses, bidirectional Industry standard 0-10 V / 1-10 V Analogue dimming Unidirectional Simple, low cost DMX512 ANSI E1.11 512 channels Entertainment / RGBW KNX ISO 14543, building-wide Multi-trade integration Mains Dimming Phase-cut (TRIAC) Residential, retrofit Casambi Bluetooth mesh No gateway required App commissioning Zigbee 3.0 IEEE 802.15.4 Mesh, 65K nodes Gateway required BLE Mesh Bluetooth SIG 32K nodes Open standard EnOcean Energy harvesting Battery-free sensors LoRaWAN LPWAN, km range Outdoor / city-scale Quick Comparison Protocol Cabling Addresses Bidirectional Best For Cost DALI-2 2-wire bus 64 per line ✓ Yes Commercial / all €€ 0-10 V 2-wire + mains Broadcast ✗ No Simple dimming DMX512 5-pin / Cat5 512 ch/universe ✗ No* RGBW / facade €€ Casambi None (wireless) Mesh (250+) ✓ Yes Retrofit / flex €€ KNX TP / IP 65K+ (TP) ✓ Yes Multi-trade BMS €€€
Figure 1 — Overview of wired and wireless lighting control protocols. *RDM extends DMX with bidirectional capability.

Protocol Selection Criteria

CriterionWired (DALI, KNX, DMX)Wireless (Casambi, Zigbee, BLE)
New constructionPreferred — plan cabling during buildViable, but unnecessary if conduit available
Retrofit / renovationCostly if no existing bus cableIdeal — no cable disruption
Heritage / listed buildingsOften impractical (protected fabric)Preferred — minimal physical intervention
High reliability (hospitals, data centres)Preferred — no RF interference riskBackup wired recommended
Colour-changing / RGBWDMX512 primary; DALI DT8 growingCasambi, Zigbee support RGBW
Large campus / outdoorKNX backbone + DALI subnetsLoRaWAN for street; BLE mesh for zones
Commissioning flexibilityETS / DALI software requiredSmartphone app (Casambi, Zigbee hubs)
Long-term supportIEC/ISO standards, 20+ yr track recordVendor ecosystem dependent

4. DALI-2 & D4i Architecture

DALI (Digital Addressable Lighting Interface) is the dominant professional lighting control protocol worldwide. DALI-2, standardised in IEC 62386, introduced mandatory interoperability certification, input devices (Part 3xx — sensors, push buttons), and standardised colour control (DT8). D4i extends DALI-2 with in-luminaire power and energy data, enabling IoT-ready luminaires with a standardised data interface via the Zhaga Book 18 smart connector.

DALI-2 System Architecture

Figure 2 — DALI-2 System Wiring Architecture
DALI-2 Bus Power Supply DALI bus (2-wire, polarity-free) Application Controller Scenes, groups, scheduling Max 1 per DALI line DALI↔IP Gateway Ethernet / BACnet / KNX CMS connection Input Devices (Part 3) Sensors, switches, buttons Up to 64 instances Control Gear — Up to 64 Addresses per DALI Line LED Driver (DT6) Dimming, on/off Standard luminaires Address 0–63 Colour Driver (DT8) Tunable white / RGBW HCL, circadian Tc or XY colour Emergency (DT1) DALI-202 compliant Auto-test, battery data IEC 62386-202 D4i Driver Power + energy metering (Part 253) Luminaire data (Part 252) IoT-ready via Zhaga D4i Zhaga Book 18 — Smart Connector Standardised 4-pin socket on luminaire housing: DALI signal + 24 V DC power Enables snap-on sensors, BLE modules, or IoT nodes without rewiring Bus Voltage 16 V typ. (9.5–22.5 V) Bus Current 250 mA max Data Rate 1200 baud Max Cable Length 300 m (1.5 mm²)
Figure 2 — DALI-2 architecture showing bus power supply, application controller, IP gateway, input devices (Part 3), and four driver types including D4i with Zhaga Book 18 smart connector.

DALI-2 vs Legacy DALI (v1)

FeatureDALI v1 (IEC 60929 Annex E)DALI-2 (IEC 62386)
CertificationSelf-declarationMandatory DALI Alliance testing
InteroperabilityOften problematic between vendorsGuaranteed by certification
Input devicesNot standardisedPart 3xx — sensors, buttons, sliders
Colour controlNot standardDT8 — Tc, XY, RGBWAF
EmergencyBasicDT1 (Part 202) — auto-test, status reporting
DiagnosticsLimitedExtended memory banks, fault data
Multi-masterNot definedApplication + system controllers, collision avoidance

D4i — The IoT Extension

D4i adds three critical data channels to DALI-2 drivers, transforming each luminaire into a data point on the building network:

D4i Memory BankIEC 62386 PartData ProvidedBenefit
Luminaire dataPart 251Manufacturer, product ID, installation date, operating hoursAsset management & warranty tracking
Energy dataPart 252Active power (W), cumulative energy (Wh), operating timeSub-metering per luminaire
DiagnosticsPart 253LED module health, driver temperature, failure predictionsPredictive maintenance
💡 Zhaga-D4i: Future-Proofing A luminaire with a Zhaga Book 18 socket and D4i driver can accept snap-on sensor modules, BLE beacons, or IoT gateways years after installation — without opening the luminaire or re-wiring. This "smart connector" approach is the industry consensus for future-proofing lighting infrastructure.

DALI Design Rules

ParameterSpecificationDesign Implication
Addresses per line64 control gear + 64 input devicesPlan DALI lines by zone; add lines for larger floors
Groups16 per line (broadcast + 16 groups)Map to lighting zones: window, middle, corridor
Scenes16 per control gearPreset levels for different tasks (teaching, screen, exam)
Bus cable2-core, no polarity, max 300 m at 1.5 mm²Can share conduit with mains; no star/daisy/tree restriction
Bus power supply1 per DALI line, 16 V / 250 mAIntegrated in some controllers; standalone units available
Fade time0–90 s, logarithmic curveLogarithmic dimming follows human perception
Minimum dim level0.1 % (physical min) to 1 % typicalCheck driver spec for actual minimum
⚠ Common DALI Pitfall Do not exceed 64 control gear addresses per DALI line. In large open-plan offices, it is common to underestimate the device count. Plan separate DALI lines per zone and use a multi-line application controller or IP gateway to coordinate between them.

5. Analogue Protocols: 0-10 V, 1-10 V, Mains Dimming

Before digital buses, analogue voltage-based dimming was the only option. These protocols remain relevant in simple installations, retrofits, and residential applications. Understanding their limitations is essential for advising when to upgrade to DALI-2.

0-10 V vs 1-10 V

Feature0-10 V (IEC 60929 Annex A)1-10 V (IEC 60929 Annex E)
Signal range0 V = off, 10 V = 100 %1 V = minimum (~1–3 %), 10 V = 100 %
Source currentController sources current (active)Driver sources current (passive/sink)
Off state0 V = luminaire offRequires separate mains switching; 1 V = minimum (not off)
Wiring2-wire signal + mains2-wire signal + mains (switched)
DirectionUnidirectional onlyUnidirectional only
Max fixtures per controller~50 (current-limited)~50 (current-limited)
AddressingNone — broadcast onlyNone — broadcast only
Common useNorth America, AsiaEurope (traditional)
⚠ Analogue Limitation 0-10 V and 1-10 V are broadcast-only: all luminaires on a circuit dim together. There is no individual addressing, no feedback, and no fault reporting. For any installation requiring zone control, scene recall, or monitoring, DALI-2 is the minimum specification.

Mains (Phase-Cut) Dimming

Phase-cut dimming controls power by cutting part of each AC half-cycle. Two methods exist:

TypeMechanismLoad CompatibilityTypical Use
Leading-edge (TRIAC)Cuts start of half-cycleResistive, some LED drivers (check compatibility)Residential, hotels (retrofit)
Trailing-edge (MOSFET/IGBT)Cuts end of half-cycleLED-optimised, capacitive loadsModern residential, hospitality
ℹ LED Dimmer Compatibility LED driver and dimmer must be matched. Incompatible combinations cause flickering, audible buzz, limited range, or premature failure. Always check the driver manufacturer's compatibility list. Minimum load ratings apply — most TRIAC dimmers need ≥ 25 W; at 6 W per lamp, four lamps minimum per circuit.

6. DMX512 & KNX — Entertainment & Building Automation

DMX512 / RDM

DMX512 (ANSI E1.11) is the entertainment and architectural colour-changing protocol. Each "universe" carries 512 channels, with each channel an 8-bit value (0–255). An RGBW luminaire typically uses 4–7 channels (R, G, B, W, dimmer, strobe, mode).

ParameterDMX512RDM (E1.20)
DirectionUnidirectional (controller → fixtures)Bidirectional (added to DMX cable)
Channels512 per universeSame infrastructure
Refresh rate~44 Hz (full universe)Slower when polling
Cable5-pin XLR or Cat5 (EIA-485)Same
TopologyDaisy-chain, terminatedSame
AddressingDIP switches or menuRemote addressing & discovery
FeedbackNoneLamp hours, temperature, sensor data
Best forFaçade lighting, RGBW, media, stageSame + remote commissioning
💡 DMX over Ethernet For large installations (façade lighting, stadiums, media surfaces), Art-Net or sACN (E1.31) protocols carry hundreds of DMX universes over standard Ethernet infrastructure, enabling massive pixel counts with a single network cable.

KNX — Building-Wide Integration

KNX (ISO 14543-3) is a building automation bus protocol covering not only lighting but also HVAC, blinds, security, and energy management. It is the European standard for multi-trade building control, particularly in commercial and institutional buildings.

FeatureSpecification
MediumTP (twisted pair), IP, RF, PLC
TopologyLine → area → backbone (up to 65,536 devices)
ProgrammingETS (Engineering Tool Software) — certified integrators only
Data rate9600 baud (TP) / 100 Mbps (IP)
Lighting interfaceKNX/DALI gateway: KNX commands → DALI luminaires
StrengthsMulti-vendor interoperability, 20+ yr ecosystem, combined trades
WeaknessHigh engineering cost, specialist required for commissioning
ℹ KNX + DALI: The Standard Combination In commercial buildings, KNX typically operates at the building level (BMS, HVAC, blinds, access control) while DALI-2 manages the lighting subnet. A KNX/DALI gateway translates between the two, giving the BMS full visibility of lighting status and energy data while preserving DALI's per-luminaire control granularity.

7. Wireless: Casambi, Zigbee, Bluetooth Mesh & More

Wireless lighting control has matured rapidly, offering cable-free installation, smartphone commissioning, and cloud connectivity. The key technologies differ in mesh architecture, range, power consumption, and ecosystem openness.

Wireless Protocol Comparison

FeatureCasambiZigbee 3.0Bluetooth Mesh (SIG)EnOceanLoRaWAN
RadioBluetooth Low EnergyIEEE 802.15.4Bluetooth 5.xSub-GHz / BLESub-GHz LPWAN
MeshYes (proprietary stack)YesYes (SIG standard)No (star/repeater)No (star-of-stars)
Nodes per network250+ (typical)65,000 (theoretical)32,767~128 per gatewayThousands per gateway
Range (indoor)10–30 m per hop10–30 m per hop10–30 m per hop30 m (sub-GHz)2–5 km outdoor
Gateway neededNo (phone = gateway)Yes (coordinator)OptionalYesYes
CommissioningiOS/Android appHub + appApp / provisionerTeach-in buttonNetwork server
Cloud / remoteYes (Casambi cloud)Hub-dependentVia gatewayVia gatewayNative (network server)
Power sourceIn-driver moduleBattery or mainsBattery or mainsEnergy harvestingBattery (5–10 yr)
Best applicationRetail, hospitality, renovation, galleriesSmart home, campusOpen commercialSwitches, sensors (no battery)Street lighting, outdoor, city CMS
Open standardProprietaryOpen (Zigbee Alliance)Open (Bluetooth SIG)Open (EnOcean Alliance)Open (LoRa Alliance)

Casambi — In-Depth

Casambi is the most widely adopted wireless control platform in professional architectural lighting. It uses Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) with a proprietary mesh layer, requiring no dedicated gateway — any smartphone or tablet acts as the interface. The control module is typically embedded inside the LED driver or available as an external node (Casambi CBU).

Commissioning
App-based
iOS / Android, drag-and-drop grouping
Scenes & Animations
Unlimited
Time-based, daylight-linked, presence-triggered
Colour Control
Tunable / RGBW
CCT 1800–6500 K, full RGBW spectrum
Cloud Gateway
Optional
For remote access, scheduling, dashboards
✓ When to Specify Casambi Ideal for: renovations where no control cabling exists, retail and gallery environments needing flexible scene changes, hospitality projects where guests control via app, and small-to-medium commercial spaces. TECHLUMEN offers Casambi-ready drivers in the BONO-120, LUMO, and several other product families.

8. Sensors & Daylight Harvesting

Sensors are the eyes of the lighting control system — detecting presence, measuring ambient light, and in advanced systems, counting people or monitoring air quality. Correct sensor selection and placement is critical; a poorly positioned sensor can waste more energy than no sensor at all.

Sensor Types

Sensor TypeDetection MethodTypical RangeBest ApplicationLimitation
PIR (Passive Infrared)Body heat (IR radiation change)Ø 6–12 m (ceiling), 12–20 m (corridor lens)Offices, corridors, toiletsRequires movement; misses seated, still occupants
Microwave (HF)Doppler radar (5.8 GHz)Ø 8–20 m, through partitionsOpen plan, warehouses, stairwellsCan detect through thin walls (false triggers)
Dual-tech (PIR + HF)Both methods requiredCombination of aboveHigh-reliability zones, toiletsHigher cost; minor detection lag
UltrasonicSound waves (25–40 kHz)Ø 6–10 mPartitioned offices, restroomsAir currents, HVAC noise can cause false triggers
Photoelectric (lux)Ambient light levelN/A (point measurement)Daylight harvesting zonesPlacement critical — avoid direct sun, luminaire light
Combined (presence + lux)PIR/HF + photoelectricAs PIR/HFMost commercial applicationsSensor must be DALI-2 Part 303 for best integration

Sensor Placement Strategy

Figure 3 — Sensor Zone Placement in a Typical Open-Plan Office
↑ WINDOW WALL (south-facing) ↑ ZONE A — Window Daylight sensor + presence → continuous dimming to target 500 lux Potential saving: 40–60 % during daylight hours L Lux sensor (ceiling, facing desk plane) ZONE B — Middle Presence sensor + constant-light output → maintains 500 lux, off after vacancy timeout Potential saving: 20–30 % via occupancy P P Presence / absence (PIR, Ø 8 m) ZONE C — Corridor / Interior Presence-only control → auto-on to 100 %, auto-off after 10 min vacancy Potential saving: 50–70 % in intermittently occupied corridors P Long-range corridor lens (12–20 m) Meeting Room Dual-tech sensor Auto-on/off + scene panel D L = Lux / daylight sensor P = Presence / absence sensor D = Dual-technology (PIR+HF) = Daylight zone
Figure 3 — Sensor zoning in an open-plan office. Zone A (window) combines daylight + presence for maximum saving. Zone B (middle) uses presence-only. Zone C (corridor) uses long-range corridor lens with shorter timeout.

Daylight Harvesting

Daylight harvesting (also called daylight-linked dimming) continuously adjusts artificial light output to maintain a target illuminance on the work plane, compensating for available daylight. When properly implemented, it delivers the single largest energy saving of any control strategy — 40–60 % in perimeter zones.

ParameterRecommendation
Sensor orientationCeiling-mounted, facing downward toward the task plane — never pointing at windows or luminaires
Sensor position2/3 of the daylight zone depth from the window wall (e.g., at 4 m in a 6 m deep zone)
Regulation methodClosed-loop (sensor measures actual combined light on desk) preferred over open-loop (sensor measures daylight only)
Target setpointMaintained illuminance per EN 12464-1 (e.g., 500 lux for offices)
Fade rateSlow (30–60 s) to avoid perceptible dimming changes
Minimum output10–15 % (not off) — maintains presence of artificial light for occupant comfort
Dead band± 20 % around setpoint to prevent hunting / oscillation
⚠ Sensor Placement is Critical A lux sensor placed too close to the window overestimates daylight contribution, causing the rear of the zone to be under-lit. A sensor placed below a luminaire measures its own light and hunts between levels. Always mount the lux sensor at 2/3 depth, between luminaire rows, facing the task plane.

9. CMS, IoT & Cybersecurity

A Central Management System (CMS) transforms individual luminaires and sensors into a coordinated, monitored, and optimised network. At building scale this means a software dashboard; at city scale it encompasses thousands of street luminaires managed over LoRaWAN or cellular networks.

Figure 4 — CMS & IoT Lighting System Architecture
Field Level LED + DALI D4i Driver Sensors Casambi Node Zhaga Sensor Emergency Meter Gateway / Controller Level DALI↔IP Gateway KNX Controller BACnet / Modbus LoRa / Cell Gateway Building / Cloud Level BMS / SCADA Lighting CMS (Cloud) Energy Dashboard Smart City Platform User & Analytics Level Web Dashboard Mobile App Fault Alerts Energy Reports API / OpenADR
Figure 4 — Four-layer CMS/IoT architecture: field devices → gateways/controllers → cloud/BMS → user dashboards and analytics. Protocols and gateways connect the layers.

CMS Functions

FunctionDescriptionBenefit
Remote monitoringReal-time status of every luminaire (on/off, dim level, faults)Reduces site visits, enables rapid fault response
SchedulingTime-of-day, day-of-week, astronomical clock profilesAutomated dimming, night setback, holiday modes
Energy reportingPer-luminaire, per-zone, per-building kWh dataSub-metering for LEED/BREEAM, utility billing
Fault managementAutomatic alerts for lamp/driver failure, overheatingPredictive maintenance, reduced downtime
Firmware updatesOver-the-air (OTA) driver/sensor updatesFeature upgrades without rewiring
Demand responseGrid signal triggers load reduction (OpenADR)Revenue from grid services, peak avoidance
Occupancy analyticsSpace utilisation heatmaps from sensor dataFacility planning, desk sharing optimisation

Cybersecurity for Connected Lighting

As lighting systems connect to IP networks and cloud platforms, they become potential entry points for cyber threats. The following table outlines minimum security practices:

LayerThreatMitigation
Device (luminaire/sensor)Firmware tampering, backdoor accessSigned firmware, secure boot, disable unused ports
Network (DALI, IP, wireless)Eavesdropping, man-in-the-middleTLS 1.3 for IP links, BLE encryption, VLAN segmentation
GatewayUnauthorised access to controllerStrong passwords, 2FA, MAC filtering, firewall rules
Cloud / CMSData breach, account compromiseSOC 2 / ISO 27001 certified platforms, encrypted storage
PhysicalTampering with exposed controllersLocked enclosures, tamper alerts, IP-rated housings
⚠ VLAN Isolation is Essential Never place lighting controllers on the same network VLAN as corporate IT or building security. Lighting IoT devices should occupy a dedicated VLAN with firewall rules limiting traffic to the CMS server only. This contains any breach to the lighting subnet.

10. Energy Savings & Payback

The financial case for lighting controls is compelling, particularly when layered on top of LED upgrades. While LEDs reduce energy per lumen, controls reduce unnecessary operating hours and over-illumination — compounding the savings.

Control Strategy Savings Stack

Control StrategyTypical Saving (%)Applies ToInvestment Level
LED retrofit (baseline)40–60 %All spaces€€ (luminaires + drivers)
+ Occupancy sensing+20–30 %Corridors, toilets, meeting rooms, warehouses€ (sensors + wiring)
+ Daylight harvesting+20–40 %Perimeter zones (< 6 m from façade)€ (lux sensors)
+ Time scheduling+10–15 %All spaces (cleaning, security, night setback)€ (controller programming)
+ Task tuning+10–15 %Over-lit spaces (reduce max output to actual need)Free (commissioning adjustment)
+ Personal dimming+5–10 %Individual desks, private offices€ (wall panel or app)
Combined total vs legacy fluorescent70–85 %
✓ Real-World Example A 10,000 m² office building replacing T8 fluorescent (25 W/m²) with DALI-2 controlled LED (6 W/m² after controls): Energy saving = 190,000 kWh/yr → €38,000/yr at €0.20/kWh. With a total investment of €120,000 (luminaires + controls + commissioning), the simple payback is 3.2 years.

Payback Calculation Method

Step 1
Baseline
Measure or estimate existing kWh/yr (sub-metering, lighting power density × area × hours)
Step 2
LED Savings
Apply LED efficacy improvement (typically 50–60 % reduction)
Step 3
Control Savings
Apply control factors per strategy: occupancy, daylight, scheduling
Step 4
Payback
Investment ÷ annual saving (€) = simple payback (years)

EN 15232 Energy Impact Factors

Building TypeClass D → C (%)Class D → B (%)Class D → A (%)
Offices10 %28 %51 %
Lecture halls / classrooms8 %24 %46 %
Hospitals6 %18 %34 %
Hotels12 %32 %52 %
Retail14 %35 %56 %
Warehouses15 %38 %58 %

11. Common Mistakes

#MistakeConsequenceCorrect Practice
1Exceeding 64 DALI addresses per lineDevices fail to respond; commissioning failsPlan DALI lines early; count all control gear including emergency and sensors
2Lux sensor mounted under luminaireSensor reads its own light → hunting / oscillationMount between luminaire rows, at 2/3 daylight zone depth
3PIR sensor in toilet only detects entryLights turn off while occupant is in cubicleUse dual-tech sensor or multiple PIR with overlapping coverage
4Specifying 0-10 V where zone control is neededAll luminaires dim together; no individual controlSpecify DALI-2 for any multi-zone installation
5TRIAC dimmer with incompatible LED driverFlickering, audible buzz, limited dimming rangeMatch dimmer to driver compatibility list; prefer trailing-edge
6No VLAN segmentation for lighting IoTLighting network exposed to IT security threatsDedicate VLAN for lighting; firewall to CMS only
7Vacancy timeout too short (< 5 min)Frequent false-offs annoy occupants, reduce trust in system15–20 min for offices; 10 min for corridors; 30 min for classrooms
8Commissioning values left at factory defaultsOccupancy profiles, dim levels, scene presets not matched to actual spaceAlways commission on-site: walk-test sensors, calibrate lux, set scenes
9No standby power budget for controls1–3 W per luminaire standby erodes energy savingsSpecify drivers with < 0.5 W standby; D4i enables true off
10Mixing DALI v1 and DALI-2 on same lineInteroperability issues, inconsistent behaviourSpecify DALI-2 certified gear throughout; test before mass deployment

12. TECHLUMEN Control Capabilities

TECHLUMEN luminaires are designed for professional control integration. The following table summarises the control options available across the product range. All DALI and 0-10 V options support dimming; tunable white and RGBW are available on selected models.

Control Protocol Support by Product Family

ProductDALI-20-10 VBluetoothCasambiDMX512Tunable WhiteRGBWEmergency
QL-60 (panel)Em 3h
QL-12030 (panel)Em 3h
QUDO-60 (premium panel)✓ (tunable CCT)Em 3h
QUDO-60-AS (clinical)✓ (tunable CCT)Em 3h
VISION (anti-glare)✓ (tunable CCT)Em 3h
L-E-XT (linear)✓ (tunable CCT)Em 3h
DL-17 / DL-23 (downlight)Em 3h
VELISTI (sealed linear)Em 1h / 3h
HBR (high-bay)Em 3h
INDUS (industrial)
BONO-120 (gallery track)
LUMO (gallery track)
DROMOS (street)
FL-I-1 / FL-I-2 (floodlight)
TICO-RGBW (landscape)
QUADRO-M (projector)optional
iLO (solar)Autonomous
ℹ Note The INDUS range does not support DALI dimming or emergency packs. For sealed industrial applications requiring dimming and/or emergency, specify VELISTI (aluminium heavy-duty housing, DALI dimmable, LiFePO4 emergency 1h or 3h).

Recommended Control Configurations by Application

ApplicationRecommended ProtocolKey FeaturesTECHLUMEN Products
Open-plan officeDALI-2 + daylight sensorsZone dimming, occupancy, daylight harvesting, 5+ scenesQL-60, QUDO-60, VISION, L-E-XT
Classroom / lecture hallDALI-2 + wall panelScene recall (Teach, Screen, Exam, Clean), tunable white optionalQL-60, QL-12030, VISION, L-E-XT
Hospital wardDALI-2 DT8 + HCLCircadian profiles, patient bedhead control, nurse overrideQUDO-60-AS, VELISTI
Retail / galleryCasambi or DALI-2Flexible scene changes, app-based commissioning, track dimmingLUMO, BONO-120, L-E-XT
WarehouseDALI-2 + HF sensorsAisle-by-aisle occupancy, high-bay dimming, schedulingHBR, VELISTI
Street / urbanDALI-2 + LoRaWAN CMSMidnight dimming, astronomical clock, remote monitoringDROMOS, CIVITA
Façade / landscapeDMX512 / Art-NetRGBW colour changing, dynamic scenes, pixel controlTICO-RGBW, QUADRO-M, SPECTRA-2
Sports fieldDALI-2 + DMX512Instant on/off, broadcast dimming for TV flicker-free, pre-match rampFL-I-1, FL-I-2

Zhaga-D4i Ready Products

TECHLUMEN's outdoor luminaire range (DROMOS, CIVITA, CYCLOP-2, PERIUS) supports the Zhaga Book 18 socket, enabling snap-on sensor nodes, BLE beacons, or LoRaWAN gateways without opening the luminaire. This future-proofs the installation for CMS integration, traffic sensing, environmental monitoring, or air quality measurement — all from a single luminaire pole.

💡 Specification Tip When specifying DALI-2 products, always request DALI Alliance certification certificates from the driver manufacturer. The certification mark (DALI-2 logo) ensures tested interoperability. For IoT-ready installations, specify D4i drivers with Zhaga Book 18 to maximise future flexibility.

13. Frequently Asked Questions

Can I mix DALI-2 and legacy DALI v1 devices on the same bus?
Technically, DALI-2 is backward-compatible with DALI v1 at the electrical level — both share the same bus voltage and protocol fundamentals. However, DALI v1 devices were never interoperability-tested, so mixed systems may exhibit unpredictable behaviour with scene recall, colour commands (DT8), or extended diagnostics. Best practice: specify DALI-2 certified gear throughout. If legacy v1 devices must remain (e.g., partial retrofit), test the specific combination on-site before scaling up.
How many luminaires can Casambi control in a single network?
A single Casambi network can manage approximately 250 nodes in a Bluetooth mesh. For larger installations, Casambi supports "network sharing" and the Casambi Gateway (CGW) provides cloud connectivity for remote access. In practice, a retail store, gallery, or boutique hotel of 50–200 luminaires is well within a single network. Campus-wide deployments use multiple networks with gateway coordination.
Is wireless control reliable enough for hospitals and safety-critical spaces?
For general areas (corridors, waiting rooms, offices within hospitals), wireless control such as Casambi or BLE Mesh is increasingly used and reliable. However, for safety-critical spaces — operating theatres, intensive care, emergency routes — wired DALI-2 remains the recommended specification due to deterministic response times and immunity to RF interference. Emergency lighting must comply with EN 1838 and should always use DALI-202 wired connections with automatic self-test capability.
What is the difference between D4i and Zhaga Book 18?
They are complementary, not competing, standards. D4i defines the data interface inside the luminaire: additional memory banks in the DALI-2 driver that report energy, diagnostics, and asset data. Zhaga Book 18 defines the physical connector on the luminaire housing: a standardised 4-pin socket that carries DALI signal and 24 V DC power. Together, a "Zhaga-D4i" luminaire allows snap-on sensor modules to access rich data from the D4i driver through the Zhaga connector — creating an IoT-ready lighting point.
How do I justify the cost of DALI-2 controls versus simple on/off switching?
The incremental cost of DALI-2 drivers over non-dimmable drivers is typically €3–8 per luminaire. A DALI power supply and controller add €200–600 per zone. In a 100-luminaire office, the total controls premium might be €2,000–4,000. Against annual energy savings of €5,000–15,000 (from dimming + occupancy + daylight harvesting), the controls investment pays back within 6–18 months. Additionally, DALI-2 provides fault reporting, scene management, emergency test automation, and future IoT-readiness — features with significant operational value beyond energy savings alone.
Can TECHLUMEN luminaires be integrated with KNX building management systems?
Yes. All TECHLUMEN DALI-2 compatible products can be controlled via a KNX/DALI gateway. The gateway translates KNX commands (from the building's central BMS) into DALI instructions for the luminaires — dimming, scene recall, colour temperature changes, and status feedback. This is the standard approach in commercial buildings: KNX for the building backbone (HVAC, blinds, access), DALI-2 for the lighting subnet. Consult TECHLUMEN's technical team for gateway recommendations.