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9 Posts tagged with the new_technology tag
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The speed at which LED lumen output is increasing is staggering. Bridgelux has just released an LED with 135 lumen/W. They were able to get commercial grade performance from a silicon substrate LED for the first time in the industry. A single 1.5mm diameter LED operated at 350mA has output 135 lumens (4730K) at 2.9V. In the industry silicon carbide and sapphire substrates used to create epitaxial wafer, but the materials and process are expensive. Bridgelux went with low cost gallium nitride, grown, wafers from 150 - 300 mm diameters, with a 75% reduction in cost, in comparison.


 

The Bridgelux CEO, Bill Watkins, has this to say about the tech, "The significantly reduced cost-structures enabled by Silicon-based LED technology will continue to deliver dramatic reductions in the up-front capital investment required for solid state lighting. In as little as two to three years, even the most price-sensitive markets, such as commercial and office lighting, residential applications, and retrofit lamps will seamlessly and rapidly convert to solid state lighting.”


 

We will see these emerge in 2-3 years.


 

Eavesdropper

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LED socket from Tyco

Posted by Eavesdropper Feb 24, 2011

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Tyco now is providing a solderless LED socket that is compatible with Philips Lumileds Luxeon S series. A good idea, but quite myopic with the limiting to a single series. However, I am sure solderless copycats are on the way. The socket has a 24 AWG wire terminal plug. 98% of the light is unobstructed and the socket is designed to use Ledil reflectors, and the fixture is connected to a heatsink, and a second optic can be attached, and the whole product is UL-1977 compliant, which overall makes it easy to adopt into a new design. Tyco is betting on Phillips LEDs to be adopted. That's a big gamble.



Eavesdropper

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There is a major push to get the highest luminous efficancy in the LED business. Sharp has the industries first 25W class 91lm/W LED. This LED is being geared towards store displays and product spotlighting. The key features are 2370 lm luminous flux and high color rendering index (Ra) of 83. The color rendering was designed to show off product colors thruthfully. A 15W class LED is also being offered for those who need less light.



Eavesdropper

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University  of Michigan researcher Jinsang Kim and his team demonstrated a material that shines with phosphorescence in an organic compund. Normally this effect is only seen in artificial metalic compounds, the team's organic crystals radiate a green, blue, yellow, and orange color under ultraviolet light. To show different colors the chemical composition is altered. They are hoping that this discovery will help improve the current OLED (organic LEDs) and SSL. The quantum yield of this new phosphoric device approaches 55%. This is a measure of the efficienct of converting energy to photon. This material is primarily based on Aromatic Carbonyls (carbon and oxygen) that form strong halogen bonds. The molecules get tightly packed in the crystal, supress vibration, and heat losses as the excited electrons move states. The goal is to use this tech in OLED to replace the current use of precious metals in fabrication. Good luck Kim!



Eavesdropper

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A team of scientists at the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, or JAIST for short, led by Tatsuya Shimoda, a professor at the JAIST School of Materials Science, has created an amorphous silicon photovoltaic cell by applying a liquid Si. This ‘world's first’ inphotovoltaics has a conversion efficiency of 1.79% which, when applied to a pin-type cell whose i-layer was made with the coating process, according to JAIST researchers. They also have hopes that when the efficiency of the amorphous silicon photovoltaic cells improves in the future, it may become possible to mass-produce the Si PV cells by using a roll-to-roll method. The research group started with cyclopentasilane, a liquid Si, but they did not reveal any further specifics of the liquid Si. We do know that it was developed by emitting ultraviolet rays at CPS in a carbon hydrogen solvent in order to polymerize part of the CPS to make a polysilane. This Liquid Si was developed during the period between 2006 and 2007. More details of the development process were not made public. The pin-type amorphous Si PV cells were put on the glass substrate by using a new coating process, which allowed the p- and n-layers to be formed by using the chemical vapor deposition method. The conversion efficiency of the cell that has their p-, i- and n-layers formed by using this coating process was 0.51%. This is tempered by the fact that the thickness of the new cell's i-layer is 120nm. This makes them significantly thinner than the amounts found in existing amorphous Si PV cells, which have a thickness of 250nm. Researchers at JAIST believe that if this thickness is increased the efficiency will improve.


Eavesdropper

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Verbatim, a subsidiary of Mitsubishi Chemical, plans to reveal the world’s first commercially-available OLED lighting panels that are color tunable, white-tone tunable and dimmable. The company’s OLED display will be created in partnership with lighting designer Satoshi Uchihara, who has designed World Heritage Site installations, such as Kinkakuji, in Kyoto, Japan. The display will incorporate what Verbatim believes is one of the world’s largest OLED panels, measuring 14 x 14 cm. Verbatim says that its OLEDs enable lighting designers to express their creativity in many different physical forms, including walls of light. “By tuning the color and intensity of light, the emotional impact of the lighting scheme can be changed to reflect the mood required for the environment,” said the company. For example, bright, white light may be desirable in the morning but more subdued, relaxing lighting with muted colors may be preferable towards the end of the day. Verbatim has already introduced a series of LED lamps as direct replacements for conventional lighting in residential and commercial applications. Bases include E27, E14, GU5.3 and GU10, and the focus is on warm-white, dimmable products. The lamps are equipped with a Temperature Control System to keep the lamp electronics from overheating. Verbatim’s parent company, Mitsubishi Chemical, has developed white LEDs based on violet-emitting LED chips, as discussed by the company at Light+Building 2010. Violet (405 nm) light is combined with red, green and blue phosphors to produce white LED light with a color-rendering index (CRI) that is typically over 90 and can be as high as 98. Verbatim says that it is working on LED lamps based on violet-chip technology, as well as a series of LED modules, and these products are expected to be available sometime this year.


Eavesdropper

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Ford Kerosene Car Lamp

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Calcium Carbide Car Lamp

 

Original automotive headlights burned kerosene, had a chimney, needed to be lit and extinguished.  Headlight innovations around the same time gave calcium carbide generators, with a controlled water drip, produced Acetylene Gas, which, when burned, produced intense light, greatly improving a car's nighttime vision. 

 

Today we don't have to re-fuel our headlights. Instead we enjoy LED lamps rated at 50,000 hrs, or 5 years of continual operation. In the past 2-3 years the industry has made great strides in integrating high performance LEDs in all vehicles. From side markers, to taillights, to the interior LEDs are becoming the standard. Like the LED lightbulb replacing standard bulbs, all auto lamps are headed to obsolescence.

 

The "holy grail" of automotive lighting has been to replace headlight lamps with an LED solution. A legitimate LED swap has been completely unheard of until now. The doors have flung open with the recent milestone in LED brightness output of 100 lumens per Watt, and further with some manufacturers demonstrating 200 lm/W in laboratories. Cars need over 800 lumens for proper headlight usage, and these LEDs are up to the task. For example, a single Cree XLamp XP-G series LED can provide 400 Lumens at 1A and over 130 lm/W at 350mA. Driving the LED at 1A produces the maximum amount of heat, the number one issue with LED systems.

 

However, price has completely blocked the wide automotive adoption of LEDs. Just a few years ago, a single LED would cost $5.00 USD, in the past year has dropped to $1.00 USD. The sweet spot of price and ease of manufacturing should be hit in the coming 12 months. Despite initial cost, overall lifetime cost and environmental impact will over pay for itself. A regular halogen lamp, single beam, requires 55 watts (240 watts on high beam). The more efficient Xenon lamp needs 35 watts. Average power input need for LED lamps comes in at 28 watts per beam. The overall efficiency is only getting better. Volkswagen plans to introduce OSRAM Joule JFL2 LED systems into their headlamps promising only 19 watts per beam. Environmental impact also pushes adoption. On conventional cars, with LED lamps, 196 grams of carbon dioxide per 100Km (62 miles), compared to 768 grams per 100Km with halogen bulbs.

 

Plug-in and Hybrid vehicles benefit the most from LED lamp adoption. Up to 6 miles is added to a hybrid car's electric only range with the use of LED headlights. 19-28 watts is a far cry from the 55 - 240 watts needed with halogen bulbs. Toyota/Lexus was the first to offer LED lamps as an option, followed by Audi, Cadallac, and 2011 has most car manufacturers promising LED options. Most LEDs options are used for daytime running lights at the moment, but full beam implementation is close. As brightness levels increase and modules prices decrease, adoption for full headlight usage will become market standard. As of 2011, 3rd generation Toyota Prius, Nissan Leaf, and Mitsubishi i-MiEV will have full beam LED headlight options.

 

Efficiently driving and regulating an array of LEDs in a headlight is the main design difficulty. A few ICs are available now to drop right into the application. Linear Technologies has a DC/DC converter, LT3956, designed to operate as a constant-current and constant-voltage regulator, ideal for high brightness/high driving current LEDs. In particular, a 25 W white LED headlight lamp can be configures with 18 of the Cree XLamp XP (130lm/W at 350mA) series elements. The LT3956 outputs a PWM signal ranging from 100kHz to 1MHz, giving the user a dimmable ratio of 3000:1. Due to its tunable features, the LT3956EUHE#PBF is up to a 94% efficient. Drives LEDs in Boost, Buck Mode, Buck-Boost Mode, SEPIC or Flyback Topology. However the 6% in efficiency, or 1.5W (25W*0.06), is dissipated as heat, even with the UHE package (5mm x 6mm) heat-sinking is inevitable.

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Another option is the Renesas LED headlight driver, μPD168891, which can provide constant-current control for up to 12 LEDs in series. Renesas's IC has built in overcurrent protection, diagnostic functions, emergency shutoff to prevent current issues, and is in a 48-pin VQFN package to reduce heat generation.  A few others ICs exist, but no one chip is the end-all option in this fledgling industry. Choosing the right components is based on individual design requirements, and should be chosen accordingly.


A mere 100 years after the kerosene headlight, the automotive lighting has grown to be an over 10 Billion USD industry. Electrically efficient high lumen LEDs made it possible, and more of them are coming every quarter. With few components available in this relatively new automotive LED Lighting industry, the brave and the willing to get up to speed in a very short amount of time. Very few times in technological advances can someone start at the leading edge of an industry without extensive training. The building blocks are here, they just need someone to put them together.

 

Cabe

 

Personal automotive lighting design story:

 

I started in the automotive industry designing a side (turn) lamp systems for a future hybrid.  What I discovered is nothing more than V = I*R is needed for me to begin that career path. At first I was meticulous and cautions about power regulation, but eventually it came down to just matching a resistor to a LED ( R = V/I ). A later incarnation of my circuit used a driver IC like mentioned above, all I had was a datasheet. The prototype was finished and on its way to being part of the LED Auto Revolution. I will say with my first hand  experience, the industry needs more engineers.

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Osram Opto Semiconductors has raised the efficiency of its high-performance red light-emitting diode (LED) by 30% under laboratory conditions. This record-setting efficiency was achieved through optimization of the chips. The improved LED is currently more efficient than any other diode that operates at the same wavelength. Red LEDs are used in vehicle taillights and brake lights, for example, and for illuminating buildings and stages. They are also used to generate one of the base colors in small projectors, and in combination with white LEDs, they produce a very comfortable warm white light for illuminating interiors. The efficiency increase means the units now achieve a higher light output at the same level of power consumption. However, their application not only saves energy but also space, since fewer diodes can now produce the same brightness. In order to achieve a high level of output efficiency, the chip’s internal and surface structures must be designed in such a manner as to ensure that as little light as possible is reflected and absorbed in the chip. In developing the new chip, Osram engineers improved the material properties and output efficiency of their high-performance thin-film chips. The result is a prototype of a red Golden Dragon Plus LED that emits at a wavelength of 615 nanometers (nm) and delivers 119 lumens of light per watt at a current of 350 milliamperes. Its high efficiency of 44% also reduces waste heat by nearly 50% as compared to previous LED versions. This, in turn, reduces the need for cooling, and also means that the designs can be made smaller. Because casting resin in the housing also affects light output, unencapsulated chips benefit even more from the improvements. Plans call for the new technology to be transferred from the lab into production as quickly as possible. Osram developers also expect to achieve further significant efficiency increases, as the potential for material improvement and the optimization of output efficiency has yet to be exhausted.


Eavesdropper

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Global Lighting Technologies is introducing a new range of LED-based edge-lit illumination solutions to expand its offerings beyond LCDs, keyboards and keypads and into areas of egress lighting and general illumination. GLT is enhancing the advantages of LED illumination with a new range of edge-lighting solutions utilizing high efficiency LEDs that focus the light into a high-performance backlight, or light guide. Because the LEDs are located on the edge of the light guide, there is better optical control for color and uniformity, fewer LEDs, better repeatability, and the thinnest possible lighting solution. These new illumination solutions from GLT include edge-illuminated LED backlight panels for egress lighting and exit signs, downlighting, as well as under-cabinet, splash, desk task lighting, refrigeration, and cabinet illumination solutions (such as medical cabinets). “Edge-lit LED illumination has moved well beyond its established turf in backlighting portable and handheld product displays, and so has GLT,” said VP & General Manager David DeAgazio, referring to the company’s long-established success in super-efficient, ultra-thin BLU (backlighting unit) designs for a wide range of backlit displays.


Eavesdropper