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2010-06-09
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Editorial: Driving down the costs - Part 2
 
... In Part 1 of this series, we mentioned that one of the common questions we get from those outside of the "chip head" side of the industry is, "Why don't they just make the LEDs (and/or solar cells) cheaper? We offered the conclusion that at the lower level of...
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For the latest news dedicated to LEDs in general lighting, tune to Solid State Lighting Design. Applications updates, the latest luminaires and wins, subsystems and componentry in support of lighting in and around the built environment, it's all there!


2012 SSL Summit Series keeps its focus to Smarter, Better Lighting

Launched in 2008, the SSL Summit has tweaked its mission to facilitate a future of better lighting. October's New York City meet really hit the target, and we're picking up the pace for LA/Long Beach April 3-4, 2012. The Summit brings together key lighting influencers with industry thought leaders, pioneers, and innovators from the across the solid state lighting eco-system to engage their visions of the future of lighting.

Quality is the gate, the future is the focus... Showcase participants and sponsors are vetted to separate the wheat from the chaff... Look into the series information at www.SSLsummit.com for the details. Sponsorships and showcase positions are available now, and event registration will open in early January.


Polaroid to Revive with Home Electronics Including LED Backlit TVs
LIGHTimes News Staff

June 9, 2010...Polaroid, the once mighty producer of camera and photography products may get a new lease on life with the help of AMW Latin America (AMW LA). Polaroid announced the signing of a five-year exclusive licensing agreement with AMW LA, a manufacturer and distributor of consumer electronics in 25 countries in Latin America. Under the terms of the agreement, AMW LA will develop a wide range of Polaroid branded home electronics including standalone and portable LED backlit TVs, home theater systems and DVD and Blu-ray players as well as home theater accessories. Polaroid expects the new products from AMW LA to contribute an estimated $300 million in sales in the next four years. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Mitsubishi Electric Installs Main Diamond Vision Screen at Hakodate Racecourse
LIGHTimes News Staff

June 8, 2010...Mitsubishi Electric reports that it has completed installation of a 17m x 7m Diamond Vision LED screen that will serve as the main display at Hakodate Racecourse. The main display system in Hakodate, Hokkaido Japan, features high brightness LEDs aligned in a 10 mm dot pitch. According to the company, the split-screen display can simultaneously showcase two screens of content, such as live footage of a race or the paddock on one screen and race odds and other data on the other.

The display will begin operating on the day of Hakodate Racecourse's grand opening of a new stand, June 19, 2010. The display will replace the old facility’s CRT main display, also built and installed by Mitsubishi Electric Corporation in 1996.

Hakodate Racecourse also has a 15m x 8m, 659-inch Diamond Vision screen featuring LEDs aligned in 8mm dot pitch. Mitsubishi Electric installed the display known as the "Paddock Theater" on February 27, 2010. It shows both live images and racing odds from other racecourses for off-track betting.

Mitsubishi Electric's most recent display installation at a racetrack was a massive 4,255-inch screen at Meydan Racecourse in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in January 2010.

Nichia Warns of Red-Emitting Phosphors that Infringe its Patents
LIGHTimes News Staff

June 8, 2010...Nichia has issued a public warning about patent infringement that the company has found of its patents regarding phosphors that emit red light. Nichia points out that it has many (jointly-owned patent) applications in Japan, USA, Europe, China, Korea, and Taiwan concerning these particular phosphors represented by the general formula of CaAlSiN3:Eu These relate to CASN phosphor, S-CASN phosphor, and LEDs using these phosphors. The company lists 15 Japanese, US, and European, patents related to the specific phosphor formulations.

Nichia says it has never licensed any of these patents to others. Despite this, Nichia says its CASN phosphor and S-CASN phosphor have been manufactured in large quantities without its authority, and LEDs using these phosphors also have been manufactured in large quantities. Nichia then said it expects that these patents will be respected.

Presumably, the company found products from another company that utilize the same phosphor formulation to emit red light. Nichia did not divulge whose products were allegedly infringing its red emitting phosphor patents.

Nichia's list of relevant patents includes: JP4414821, JP4415065, JP4422653, JP4511849, JP4511885, US7252788, US7273568, US7432647, US7476337, US7476338, EP1568753, EP1630219 (As of 2010/6/7).

Ostendo & Oxford Instruments-TDI Now Offering Semi-Polar GaN Wafers for LED & LD Device Makers
LIGHTimes News Staff

June 4, 2010...Ostendo Technologies of Carlsbad, California and Technologies and Devices International, Inc. (TDI) of Oxfordshire, UK., part of the Oxford Instruments Group, have announced the availability of Semi-Polar (11-22) GaN layer on sapphire substrate wafers using Ostendo's proprietary design and TDI's proprietary Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy (HVPE) technology. Ostendo technologies produces Curved LED backlit displays.

This joint development now provides the opportunity to leading High Brightness HBLED and Laser Diode developers to increase optical efficiency significantly compared with structures grown on conventional c-plane GaN substrates. With TDI's HVPE technology the semi-polar GaN can be utilized in high brightness LEDs, laser diodes, and high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs). LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Everlight Electronics, LG Display and AmTRAN to Form Joint LED Packaging Firm
SSLDesign News Staff

June 4, 2010...LED packaging company, Everlight Electronics, announced a joint venture for a new LED packaging company in WeJiang City, JiangSu Province, China. The joint venture will be with LG Display, an innovator of TFT-LCD technology, and AmTRAN Technology, a computer display and flat panel TV manufacturer. The new packaging firm will provide LED Packaging for the LED/LCD TV Market

Everlight will contribute its extensive and long-term LED packaging know-how and management expertise; LG Display will contribute expertise as a leading manufacturer of LCD display technology and products; and AmTRAN will offer R&D and manufacturing. The companies plan to collaborate and share resources to provide LEDs for the LED-backlit TV market.

The new company plans to start operations and mass production at the end of $2010. The joint company will be funded USD$ 30 million in financing. The participating companies hope to tap into the fast growing LED backlight market.

Sony Wraps Flexible OLED Screen Around Pencil for Demonstration

June 4, 2010...Sony demonstrated a new prototype OLED screen by showing it working while being wrapped around a pencil several times. The technology for the screen is based on a new kind of organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) that uses a new semiconducting material with eight times the current modulation rate of existing OTFTs, according to a Fast Company article This makes the display powerful. Additionally, in an impressive design feat, the display driver's technology is built entirely out of OTFTs themselves instead of using conventional solid chips in black plastic. The display drivers are integrated into the actual panel the display itself is made on. All of the electronics was fabricated on a a super-thin (20 micron-thick) substrate, that is flexible enough to be repeatedly rolled and stretched around a 4mm diameter tube, as well as being stretched.

The display is only a prototype and it obviously has failed pixels and stripes, because of not yet perfected and optimized fabrication process, but it boasts a 432 by 240 pixel screen at 121 pixels per inch at a full 16 million color range. The Fast Company article pointed out that the device fabrication is made with a rolling printing process which might ultimately allow it to be made relatively inexpensively.

New Luxeon Rebel LEDs Boast Tighter Binning and Better Performance
LIGHTimes News Staff

June 2, 2010...Philips Lumileds announced the release of two new Luxeon Rebel LEDs with correlated color temperatures (CCTs) of 2700K and 3000K respectively. According to Philips the new LEDs expand the company's portfolio for indoor illumination applications in hotels, shops, restaurants, and homes. The emitters use Philips' latest thin film flip chip (TFFC) and proprietary Lumiramic phosphor technologies. Philips says that the new LEDs can operate at the high operating temperatures found in applications like recessed lamps while setting efficacy benchmarks.

Philips also contends that implementing its Lumiramic phosphor technology reduces (tightens) the white binning space. The tighter binning moves the company's LEDs one step closer toward the company's goal of freeing customers from white color binning while providing superior color uniformity and raising the standard for light quality. Philips boasts in fact that the new Luxeon Rebel LEDs come in what it says is the industry's smallest and most consistent, white binning space. More specific data about the LEDs can be found at Philips Lumileds.com. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

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Commentary & Perspective...

Driving down the costs - Part 2
Tom Griffiths - Publisher

May 27, 2010...In Part 1 of this series, we mentioned that one of the common questions we get from those outside of the "chip head" side of the industry is, "Why don't they just make the LEDs (and/or solar cells) cheaper? We offered the conclusion that at the lower level of the technology supply chain, rocket science is involved. Cost reductions are happening, but it is a process of innovation that follows an evolutionary path, helped along with some occasional breakthroughs. Here in the second of this two-part commentary, we'll cover what's happening to move those costs down in the middle of the supply chain which will help bring down the costs of the LED "bulbs", luminaires and even your flat screen TV.

LEDs, the other rocket science... It wasn't that long ago that packaged "lighting quality" LEDs were running at $10 for 100 lumens, or 10-cents per lumen (remember, blue and white weren't commercially available until around 2003). Announcements in the last few months have shown us 2-cents per lumen (Cree), then 1.5-cents (Bridgelux), and most recently less than 1-cent for warm white (Intematix, part of today's news). It's assured that Philips, Osram, Nichia and others out there aren't standing pat at 10-cents per, they just didn't happen to specifically promote the price in the their announcements. That's a factor of 10 decrease in something like 5 years.

A couple of key areas are driving that improvement, including manufacturing process efficiencies at the underlying equipment and material level (discussed in Part I) and progressive improvements in the LED designs, most notably in the area of light extraction.

It might be helpful for those that live higher on the chain, including luminaire manufacturers and lighting decision makers, to catch some basic LED tech-level stuff to understand why it's worth being patient, and to help decode some of the messaging that the LED manufacturers educate us with. Without going to too deep a level (trust me, I'm not qualified), there are two basic elements of making LEDs more efficient. One is generating photons, and the other is getting them out of there. Buzz words like "internal quantum efficiency" and others are used to describe some of these interactions. Much of the light generation hurdle has been accomplished in the material rocket-science that underpins this stuff, as witnessed by recent announcements of lab results for white LEDs of over 200 white lumens per watt. It's generally agreed that there is a little bit over 300 white lumens "hiding" in a watt of energy (we specify it as white, since lumens are a measure of the human eye's reactivity to the spectrum, and white balances that out, although there are ways to skew that, such as going towards the greenish which our eyes are more sensitive to). If we've made it to 200 out of the 300, it is assured that the material is generating more than 200 lumens worth since the "extraction" portion is far from perfectly efficient.

Getting the light out... When it comes to extraction, there are a number of avenues being pursued, including the use of more reflective materials "around" and under the light emitting surface, shaping surfaces, channeling (things like Luminus Devices PhlatLight with "Phlat" deriving from their "photonic lattice" approach) and integrating "optics" effectively down to the surface of the LED chip itself (LED producer Illumitex recently made their commercial debut citing that integration as their special mojo). There is also progress continuing in the phosphors that convert the typical blue LED source light into the other colors in the spectrum. New nanophosphors ("quantum dots") offer an interesting development, as their nanometer scale materials don't scatter back much, if any, of the photons that hit it, suggesting a 15+% improvement in conversion efficiencies right there. Improvements also continue in getting the heat away from the emitting surface. As long as there is less than 100% efficiency, the leftover is heat, and semiconductors don't like too much of it. The more more you can dissipate away from the emitting surface, the more light you can pack into a smaller space. It's all still rocket-science, and continuing with that same combination of steady progress and breakthroughs.

Drivers and power... LED lighting is not made up of just LEDs and a wire. LEDs run on low voltages, and most prefer DC, although AC LEDs are available and do save one step in the power-conditioning process. There's room for improvement in both drivers (which feed and control the LEDs) and power supplies (which feed the drivers, and can actually be integrated with the drivers into an amazingly small package - ref recent Lightfair commentary). From what I understand of it, this isn't an area that's rocket science, per se, but more driven by demands for high quality, but without the volume (right now) to match. Highly reliable power control chips aren't anything new, and have often been driven by a variety of military, medical and other high-precision, high-reliability applications. That obviously shifts the required value curve away from "lots and cheap" to "few and whatever saves lives". Progress will be natural, and as mentioned in my last column, we're already looking at capable solutions for "LED lightbulbs", such as NXP is offering, in the sub-$1 range. What needs to happen is for the lamp and luminaire manufacturers to employ nothing but high-quality solutions, and for the industry ("us-all", as we say in Texan), to start holding itself accountable with the, "Whose driver?" inquiry becoming as commonplace as, "Whose LEDs?" has become. Increasing volume and standard semiconductor creativity will solve this one.

Optics and heat... LED lighting also isn't just made up of electricity. There are also optics, heat management and environmental management (dust, humidity, water, etc.) issues that are all progressing in terms of both cost and capability. Companies like Carclo and Fraen are doing a lot to bring both standard and custom optic solutions to the SSL manufacturers. Need a 60-degree optic designed to work with the Luxeon Rebel? Got it. Need a bank of matching optics to fit an array of Cree's latest? No sweat. Volume and a natural tendency to settle on some more popular form factors will drive those costs right on down. Heat management is an interesting frontier, in that it can help address both the aspects of getting more light in less space (which is a selling point for LED lights) as well as assisting in the environmental packaging. Standard approaches use different metals to get the heat immediately away from the LEDs, and then to dissipate them into the surrounding air (which proves to be an interesting discussion in itself when you think about how to get heat out of electronics when you're in the near vacuum of space... but I diverge).

The challenge of metal is that the more "fins" or vents you add, the more opportunity there is for contamination and for those heat dissipating channels to get plugged up (look inside your computer sometime... and remember you're breathing part of that stuff in before it got sucked into there). Contamination leads to less ability to dissipate the heat, which decreases efficiency and lifetime. Two interesting approaches to helping manufacturers have hit our radar scope this last year. One is from Nuventix, a fairly new Austin, Texas-based company that has targeted SSL for it's Synjet active thermal management technology. Think of it as small, ultra-high frequency speakers that vibrate the air in a synchronized fashion to create an actual directional flow. Way more reliable, and quieter than fans, but still forcing heat where you want it go. In a different direction, we've had the chance for a little dialog with GrafTech International, which uses special graphite technologies as highly-efficient passive heat spreaders. Imagine a cobrahead streetlight, with a good sized surface area, and lots of exposure to the elements. With GrafTech's solution, you mount bond the heat generating LED array to the graphite surface, which wraps around the inside top and sides of the fixture. The magic is that spreads the heat pretty evenly over the whole of the graphite, which then transmits to the whole of the outer casing, suggesting the opportunity to drop the fins and other debris-susceptible exterior extrusions, as well as greatly simplifying the thermal design.

Integrated lamps, luminaires and even TVs... As we mentioned last time, we might never get to the $5 LED lightbulb, but not because we can't, but rather because we don't want to. If a solution offers more value than its predecessors, and improves on efficiency and/or saves on lifetime costs, why should it have to sell for a price that makes it a "no brainer" in terms of simple acquisition costs. I can buy a good ranch-capable horse for somewhat less than a used dirt bike and for a lot less than a decent 4-wheel drive truck (apples to apples with the horse, you know). The truck does almost every job better. PCs created a whole new set of efficiencies and entertainment possibilities, and manufacturers have figured out that they really didn't need to keep coming down in price much below $500 to keep them moving into households across the world. They hit the value point at $500 and have stayed there, with features and capabilities being added, rather than prices proceeding lower.

We can expect to see much the same approach in LED lighting, whether at the replacement lamp (aka "bulb") or at the luminaire ("fixture plus lamp") level. The first phase of that will be the cost reduction phase, driven by the underlying technology, as well as simple manufacturing efficiencies as production capacity and sales volumes both increase. Phase 2 will kick in when we hit "the price point", whatever that may be for the particular end product we're talking about. That's actually a series of price points, that will define "cheap" from "higher end", with each having it's appropriate value story and applications. For replacement lamps, $10-$20 will probably be as far as it needs to go, and then the features will start to pick up. More light, smaller package, better color. Heck, we heard a really interesting indication from one of the Japanese companies that they intend to bring out light bulbs with remote controls so that you can turn it on, then change the color at will, with the eventual intention for sensors in the house to decide your mood and adjust the ambiance for you. So do they feed you more blue when you're feeling blue, or do they brighten the light to brighten your mood? For now, we'll suffice it to say that we've not even tapped much of the end-products' innovation curve. The new light cometh...

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