Green LEDs no longer holding back high-power LED projectors?

May 15, 2008
Producing green LEDs with enough “poop” (output for all you engineering-types ;) ) to allow their use in high-powered projection systems has been a real drag. A company called Goldeneye thinks they have come up with the solution with their patented “light recycling” technology which they claim can produce over an RGB white output over 430 lumens per square-millimeter. That is quite a bit of light from an RGB HP LED module and Goldenye claims it’s an industry record. I don’t doubt it.

Kudos to goldeneye! Very kewl! 8)

Click here to read the article from LEDs Magazine

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OLEDs from Osram Offer Optimized Occular….uh….Did I say They’re Transparent?

January 3, 2008

It’s been awhile since I posted hasn’t it? Sorry. I had a baby in there somewhere and then the holidays came up. It’s good to be back. Well, looks like I missed that Osram is making some noise in the OLED industry with their new high-performance OLEDs that put out 20 lumens per watt with a brightness of 1000 candela per square meter (thats 1000 Nits for all you screen people out there). The really neat features here are that these white OLEDs are transparent (nearly) when off or on. Currently they’re about 55% transparent but Osram is looking to bump that up to 75% with further development. Light output for each side of the OLED can be individually controlled. Think of putting these things into cubicle walls so that during the day, they’re nearly clear like a window and at night, can emit some nice diffuse light into the cube for all your overnight “work” binges. Hey, why not have it emit tons of light OUT from the cube at night so you can get some sleep and blind anyone who comes by to check on your progress? Kewl! 8)

Checkout the full story at LEDs Magazine

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Finally, Germicidal UV LEDs for the Rest of Us!

November 29, 2007

I was recently asked if I knew where one could get Germicidal UVC LEDs since I had blogged about the technology a while back. Well, I do so I am blogging it here for all to see in case you may be interested. Now I am talking “commercially available” not some pie-in-the-sky R&D type of availability.

Sensor Electronic Technology (S.E.T.) is commercially shipping deep UV LEDs that they call UVTOP LEDs that range in output wavelength from 247 to 365 nm. The output power is typically 0.5 mW at 20 mA forward current. They are typically multi-die, single can LEDs mounted in TO-39 or TO-18 cans. The cans in this case are specially designed with internal reflectors to maximize output. The LEDs are available with or without ball or flat lenses to boost output power and narrow the beam profile.

Being as S.E.T. is the basically the only game in town right now (they have partnered with Seoul Semiconductor so I imagine we will start to see these coming out through Seoul’s distribution channels, especially in Asia and perhaps even see the die technology licensed off) you don’t really have a choice of deep UV LEDs so you’ll have to pay the gigantic price of nearly $300.00 each in single quantities for 250 nm LEDs (they get cheaper the further up toward the UVA you go).

Beyond price, this is still very good news for both S.E.T. and the rest of us in the LED industry since up until now, there wasn’t an alternative so kudos to S.E.T. for the way cool technology and making it available to the rest of us! 8)

Click here to check out the line of UVTOP deep UV LEDs from Sensor Electronic Technology, including datasheets and their pricelist.

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Novaled Produces Super Efficient, Super Bright, Superlicious OLEDs

November 13, 2007

OLED TechnologyNovaled has announced that they now have OLED panels capable of producing 1,000 candela per square meter with an efficiency of 35 lumens per watt with a reported lifetime of 100,000 hours. Thats no small feat. The Color Rendering Index (CRI) was 90. The testing was done with consideration for only the forward light emissions, that is to say all light coming out the back and the sides of the panel was blocked. This accurately mimics a real-world application since these are almost exclusively used ad backlights. Evidentally, they were able to crank up the brightness to 4,000 candela per square meter and the efficiency only dropped to 31lumens per watt with no change in color or CRI.

Kudos to Novaled! 8)

Click here to read the whole story on LEDS Magazine

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It’s a Bird..It’s A Plane…No It’s Novaled OLEDs of Steel!

October 23, 2007

I couldn’t resist. Sorry. ;) Interesting technology, really. Essentially you deposit OLEDs onto thin, electrically conductive, flexible steel instead of the current thin glass designs and presto-change’o! You’ve got LEDs that can be rolled out by the zillions rapidly onto gigantic rolls like steel for the automobile industry. Try that with glass. BLAM!

Click here to checkout the full Novaled and ArcelorMittal OLEDs on steel article.

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Deep UV Leds for Germicidal Water Treatment? Maybe…

October 3, 2007

 

WaterSorry it has been awhile since my last post. I was out of the office for awhile and came back to a massive pile of “this is THE top priority” projects to do. So here we go:

 

The NIST ATP Program which funds innovative R & D projects announced several LED-based awards for this year. Two of interest are the awards to Crystal IS, Inc. in NY and HexaTech, Inc. in NC. Both are working to develop efficient deep-UV LEDs. This is of particular interest because deep UV (normally referred to as UVC) is germicidal. That is to say, it can kill bacteria, certain viruses, and other contaminates. Traditionally UVC germicidal sterilizers and water purifiers use fluorescent or compact fluorescent type tubes (no phosphors are used so nothing is really fluorescing but they are the same type of lamp) mercury tubes to produce germicidal UVC at the 270nm (most effective wavelength) or 254nm (next most effective wavelength). While these traditional lamps are efficient and have a low cost to operate, they don’t like to function in cold environments and are bulky. In water purifiers that use them, they are typically encapsulated within a a chamber where the water can flow all around the tube to maximize exposure. When the lamp dies, you have to shutoff the water and dig the lamp out. If a company can produce UVC LEDs that have enough output for effective germicidal effect, it would mean that users of water purifiers and other remotely located UVC germicidal equipment would not have to change the light source nearly as often since LEDs have a typical lifetime of 20,000 hours and up although it will remain to be seen what the lifetime of a deep UV LED will be. There is also a huge potential for energy savings, particularly when multiple water purifiers are used. Municipal water treatment plants will uses 100′s or thousands of low-pressure mercury water purifiers (this number can be reduced to 10′s or 100′s if medium-pressure mercury purifiers are used) depending on the amount of water flow. Assuming the output of the LEDs is good enough and efficient enough, municipal water treatment facilities could see massive energy savings. Cost will be a big issue. right now low-pressure mercury lamps are fairly cheap, but LEDs will likely be quite expensive. They may come in at around the same price as medium-pressure lamps. Who knows. Even beyond the cost, municipal treatment plants will save massive amounts of cash on reduced maintenance costs by not having to tear down purifiers all the time to replace tubes. LEDs also function with no ill effects in cold environments so cold water rushing around them will not shorten their life. Also, fluorescent type mercury tubes don’t like to be turned off and on (it shortens their life) where LEDs don’t care. So if a plant operator needs to shut things down, it doesn’t matter. They can do it as many times as they want, it won’t shorten the LED lifecycle, although it may shorten theirs.

Anyrate, these projects are slated for a 3 year run so it will be awhile to see if anything becomes of them. I’m keeping my fingers crossed.

Here’s my last thought about deep UV LEDs: take a handful of deep UV LEDs and stick them in one of these multi-LED flashlights you see all over the place now and voila!You have an instant, portable spot tanning booth! Uh…maybe not. :)

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Cree to Obsolete The Light Bulb?

September 7, 2007

Hmmmm….could be. Cree just announced they have achieved 1000+ lumens from a single-die XLamp LED driven at 4 Amps yielding a luminous efficacy of 72 lumens/watt which is about the same output level of a standard fluorescent lamp. Wowza! That is a lot of light but at the same time, that is a lot of current when you consider that most of today, commercially released high-power LEDs are driven at about 350 mA. I would really like to see the cooling that was employed. I’m thinking cryogenic perhaps or BHF’s (Big Honking Fans) maybe? How long did the XLamp last before it ruptured the space-time continuum and disappeared or melted into a pool of molten semiconductor?

Anyrate, the disclosure is very positive news for Cree and the LED industry at large. It’s only a matter of time now before LEDs are the defacto-standard in home lighting.

Click here to read the entire story

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Osram supplies LEDs for street lights, unveils new Golden Dragon

September 5, 2007

Osram just released a new Golden Dragon LED with oval-shaped lenses with 20 or 40 degree viewing angles specifically for roadway illumination. Head over to my Architectural Lighting Blog to get the rest of the story. Hopefully I’m not dating myself with the Lucky Charms joke I posted. Let me know. :mrgreen:

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Nano-sized UV Leds

August 29, 2007

New Fabrication Technique Yields Nanoscale UV LEDs
It’s really neat when the rest of the world is all a buzz about super high-brightness LEDs and LED modules that are big and bright enough to burn you facial silhouette into concrete that the boys at NIST, University of Maryland, and Howard University have cooked up nano-sized LEDs. Nanotechnology is still one of those voodoo technologies that has only realized limited commercial success in a very limited selection of applications but, perhaps, with the advent of nano-sized solid-state lighting that may change. Interesting that UV was the chosen wavelength. Since 365 nm is a typical UVA phototherapy wavelength, maybe medical applications should be included on the list of viable uses for these things. I envision doctors releasing into the bloodstream an army of nano-robots equipped with nano-scale UV LEDs capable of treating persistent skin conditions with micro-bursts of locally concentrated UV, internally! How cool is that? Well, I’m guessing we’re a long ways away from anything like that but it’s fun to think about. :)

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