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2010-06-25 |
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Editorial:
Equivalence claims in LED lighting
... How do you describe an LED "lightbulb", of any style or type, that delivers the equivalent light output "on the target" as would a 60-, 75- or 100-watt incandescent lamp for the use that it is intended, but which doesn't put out the total lumens or the distribution that...
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2012
SSL Summit Series keeps its focus to Smarter, Better Lighting
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October's New York City meet really hit the target, and we're picking up the
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Bridgelux Makes New Neutral White Light LED Arrays Commercially Available SSLDesign News StaffJune 25, 2010... Bridgelux Inc., of Livermore, California USA, announced the commercial availability of its ES and RS LED Array products in a neutral white color temperature (4100K). The new Array products extend Bridgelux add to the company's portfolio of Array products for high volume outdoor area and commercial lighting applications.
Neutral white is the latest addition to Bridgelux’s efficient ES Array Series providing light output options of 400, 800 and 1200 operational lumens. The company says that the new ES Array LED light engines deliver an increase of more than 40% in energy efficiency over previous neutral white product generations while dramatically reducing the price per lumen. The powerful neutral white RS Array delivers 3400 operational lumens, complementing the existing RS Array product line which offers 3100 lumens in warm white and 4500 lumens in cool white.
“Bridgelux is delivering a broad range of design options with efficacies that enable the development of lighting products that meet both market demands and global regulatory requirements,” said Jason Posselt, Bridgelux vice president of Marketing. “Our expanding portfolio reflects Bridgelux’s core strength – the ability to reduce design complexity and product development risk for our customers while aggressively driving down the cost of solid state lighting.”
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Osram Introduces Bendable LED light strips LEDsDeco Flex and Backlight Power LED Light Chains LIGHTimes News StaffJune 25, 2010...Osram has introduced a line of flexible, bendable LED light strips called LEDsDeco Flex
for design and decorative residential lighting. According to Osram, a selection of different colors and atmospheric lights can be selected using a remote control. Osram also announced the launch of Backlight Power LED light chains for illuminated advertising and backlighting of signs and logos. Working in combination with the new Backlight Power LED light chains, Osram introduced an online design tool called LED deSIGNer tool to enable backlighting for advertising and signs to be designed in just six steps. The online program is available at: www.osram.com/led-designer. Osram says that all of its LED modules for illuminated advertising can be used in the design program.
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June 25, 2010...Aixtron AG of Aachen, Germany reported a new order for one Crius deposition system from the University of Duisburg-Essen. The order was placed in the fourth quarter of 2009 and the system will be delivered in the second quarter of 2010. Aixtron indicated that its local support team will commission the new reactor at the University of Duisburg-Essen Semiconductor & Optoelectronics Center in Duisburg, Germany. The system will be supplied in a 3x2-inch configuration and comes equipped with a ARGUS multichannel pyrometer.
Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Franz-Josef Tegude, Chair of Semiconductor Technology, commented, “We selected the Aixtron CCS system as part of the University’s initiative to acquire a nitride material system for the nitride nanowire NaSoL Project." He added, "The NaSoL Project aims to achieve production of GaN- and (Al,Ga,In)N-based semiconductor nanowires for improved efficiency solar cells and LEDs. The Aixtron CCS system will provide us with a firm foundation for a smooth and rapid development program for all our partners.”
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Universal Display Awarded U.S. DOE SBIR Phase I Contract to Use Optical Enhancement to Increase White Phosphorescent OLED Efficacy SSLDesign News StaffJune 23, 2010...Universal Display Corporation of Ewing, New Jersey USA reports that the Company has been awarded a $99,927 SBIR Phase I contract from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Universal Display says that under this program, it intends to demonstrate a white phosphorescent OLED lighting panel that meets Energy Star criteria using an optical enhancement technique which improves outcoupling efficiency while preserving the thin, elegant form factor of the white OLED lighting panel.
The company has developed high-efficiency UniversalPHOLED phosphorescent OLED technology.
During the program, titled “Novel Optical Enhancement for Thin Phosphorescent OLED Lighting Panels,” Universal Display will employ a novel, thin, outcoupling technique that performs as well as thicker treatments, such as macro-extractors or outcoupling blocks which increase the amount of light that is emitted as useful light. The resulting white PHOLED lighting panel will both maintain its thin and light form factor and may improve panel efficacy by over 25 percent. In doing so the PHOLED panel would demonstrate significant advancement towards meeting the Energy Star Category B criteria for solid state lighting.
“As energy efficiency and eco-friendliness continue to influence consumer purchasing patterns, white OLED lighting panels are moving toward commercial reality as a leading potential solution for power-efficient and environmentally-benign solid state lighting,” said Steven V. Abramson, President and Chief Executive Officer of Universal Display. “Through ongoing support of the U.S. Department of Energy, we will focus on demonstrating the Energy Star performance criteria in a commercially-desirable product format. Designing a panel that offers excellent energy efficiency in a thin, attractive form factor is essential for broad market appeal.”
Dow Electronic Materials to Expand TMG Capacity to Serve LED Market LIGHTimes News StaffJune 22, 2010...Dow Electronic Materials, a business unit of Dow Advanced Materials, today announced a multi-phase plan to expand their TrimethylGallium (TMG) production capacity to meet the increasing global demand for the material in the electronics market. TMG is critical for the production of LEDs and other compound semi-based devices. The company points out that exceptionally high-quality materials and precise delivery of metalorganic precursors are essential to building reliable LEDs.
As part of the expansion plan, the company plans to add significant TMG capacity in the United States at existing facilities to quickly address short-term demand. In addition, Dow Electronic Materials will build a new metalorganic precursor manufacturing plant in Korea, which the company expects to begin operating in early 2011.
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Avago LED Lamps Support European Vertical Message Sign Regulation EN 12966-1 LIGHTimes News StaffJune 23, 2010...Avago Technologies of San Jose, California USA, announced that its 5mm high-brightness LED lamps support th European Standard EN 12966-1 for variable message traffic signs.
The company's new LED products to support the variable message traffic sign requirements for 15 degree and 30 degree viewing angles are the HLMP-Ex1A/1B-xxxDV (15 degrees) and HLMP-Ex3A/3B-xxxDV (30 degrees). These 5 mm extra bright LEDs have minimum luminous intensity ratings of 12,000 mcd and 5,500 mcd respectively and are available in red and amber colors.
Different sign applications require different viewing angle of the LEDs. Signs installed on highways, for example, require bright LEDs with a narrow beam width, but in cities with a requirement for short distance legibility a wide beam width LED is usually required.
According to Avago, outdoor message signs must typically operate for over ten years in a harsh, corrosive, and exposed working environment. Avago’s new, robust 15 and 30 degree viewing angle lamps are manufactured for outdoor signal and sign applications.
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Everlight, Epistar and TPV to Form LED Packaging Joint Venture LIGHTimes News StaffJune 17, 2010...Everlight Electronics, Epistar, and TPV Technology will establish a joint venture for LED chip packaging and LED light strip production in Fuzhou City in China's Fujian Province, according to the companies. TPV is a dominant LCD TV maker. So, Everlight is attempting to secure both orders and supply with the joint venture.
The total investment in the venture will be NT$800 million (US$24.79 million).
Of the total, Everlight will contribute 65 percent, TPV 25 perrcent, and Epistar 10 percent.
Earlier in June, Everlight, Amtran Technology, and LG display announced plans to jointly form another packaging facility in Wujiang City of Jiangsu Province, China.
Everlight says that the cooperation with Amtran and LG should allow it to secure orders and shipments to two of the world's largest TV vendors, Samsung Electronics and Vizio, which is affiliated to Amtran. (Ref: Coverage).
Everlight also reportedly invested in LED chipmakers Epistar, Formosa Epitaxy, Tekcore, and Huga Optotech to ensure LED chip supplies if and when demand for LED TV and lighting devices explodes as expected. Our news features are reported
by the LIGHTimes staff writers.
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Commentary & Perspective...
Equivalence claims in LED lighting Tom Griffiths - PublisherJune 25, 2010...How do you describe an LED "lightbulb", of any style or type, that delivers
the equivalent light output "on the target" as would a 60-, 75- or 100-watt
incandescent lamp for the use that it is intended, but which doesn't put out
the total lumens or the distribution that those "old bulbs" do? If you want
it to be part of the Energy Star program, you pretty much have to simply steer
clear of the topic. It's leading me to believe that the current Energy Star
program, as it applies to omnidirectional replacement lamps, is going to flop.
Some might argue, I think incorrectly, that in 2 or 3 years, it will be a moot
point anyway, since it won't really be a tough technical challenge to put out
the equivalent number of lumens, in an equivalent package, in an equivalent
distribution. While it may be true that it can be done, the better question
is, "Should it be done?" I mean, the whole point of solid state lighting
is that it can do the job of lighting our world better in a whole lot of ways,
mainly by delivering the right light, only where it's needed, using less energy.
It's probably important to veer off and share some perspective for a few paragraphs.
Make no mistake on what we're saying here. The intentions of the Energy Star
program are good, and the US Department of Energy, with its congressional mandate
to promote solid state lighting, has done a spectacular job overall of helping
to support the industry in developing some very useful metrics and methodologies
that will help lay the groundwork for more success sooner. And the DOE-crafted
version of the Energy Star SSL specifications will be very useful to set a series
of benchmarks that manufacturers will strive to meet and exceed to maximize
their credibility. At the same time, I'm predicting that it won't take long
to screw it all up if Energy Star is left fully in the hands of the EPA for
very long. That won't necessarily be the fault of the individuals involved,
but simply the natural result of the differing missions of the two agencies.
The DOE's related mission is fairly clear (from its website): The Department
of Energy's overarching mission is to advance the national, economic, and energy
security of the United States [and] to promote scientific and technological
innovation in support of that mission. The Environmental Protection Agency,
on the other hand, has a far different mission (also from its website): The
mission of EPA is to protect human health and to safeguard the natural environment
-- air, water and land -- upon which life depends. Anything about economic
considerations? Anything about energy? Anything about technology? Not that those
should necessarily be part of the agency's mission, as long as there are counterbalances
built into the overall structure. Someone has to start with the simple idea
of "let's make all the water clean and all the air pure". Picking
up "some of the trash here and there" shouldn't be the goal. Go after
all of it. From that starting point, the broad discussion needs to expand to
balancing what we want to do, what we need to do, and what we can afford to
do. Zero carbon emissions. Fine, whatever, but we kind of still need to produce
and transport food and goods, and be fairly free to pursue that "life,
liberty and pursuit of happiness". Runners expel far more CO2 than walkers
do, so we should outlaw running? I think not. It's a balance and the EPA is
charged with starting at the "stop" end of the scale. Again, nothing
wrong with that, I just don't think it bodes well for Energy Star to depend
on getting a balanced approach from an agency that doesn't have the balance
as part of its most basic mission. "Energy Star" becomes a defacto
"Environment Star" certification. "Emit less carbon and live
in the dark... mission accomplished!"
So let's right turn back into the LED lighting realm, setting aside any predictions
of colossal screw-ups to come and just considering the specs as they stand today.
People don't typically want light in the air, we want it "on" things.
Sometimes it's our books, or our workspace, or a counter, or sometimes it's
our wall or ceiling in order to create that level of ambient light that makes
us comfortable, or productive, or both. We get light from fixtures of different
types (or most properly "luminaires", which are the sum of the structure
that holds the light source, feeds it electricity, and the light source itself...
but I've mostly given up the semantic fight and use fixture and luminaire synonymously
to satisfy the search engines). We screw or plug bulbs (aka "lamps")
into the variety of fixtures that we've created, and those fixtures have been
built around the characteristics of the bulbs we've had access to. Some direct
light fairly well, either by depending on the design of the bulb to shape the
light internally (R's, PAR's and MR's) or by using the structure of the fixture
to reflect light out from the non-directional source (the strategy that high
efficiency fluorescent fixtures employ). The more directional, the more you
pay for it, since it requires more engineering, better materials and more precise
the manufacturing required. If "not wasting the lumens", and therefore
the energy, is important to you, you'll pay extra for that, which commercial
and industrial operators understand.
LEDs do that directionality thing quite naturally. You actually have the reverse
challenge, which is that you have to pay more to make the light omnidirectional.
That's the basis of the "LEDs are most competitive when you purpose-build
complete luminaires to do specific jobs" argument, and it is absolutely
true. And the vast-vast majority of tasks we want our lights to do are directional.
Sometimes broadly so, but still aimed at some subset of "everywhere".
The problem is, we have a whole bunch of fixtures in this world that have been
designed to make the best of the omnidirectional nature of our existing sources.
We're not tossing the majority of those sockets out. They're attached to fixtures
that great-grandma owned, or that are attached to our ceiling, so we're keeping
them. So should we try to fill those billions of existing sockets with something
that simply mimics the older, less efficient solutions, or with something that
does the job better? Obviously, we want to do the job better, and are really
only limited by certain practicalities of dealing with a manageable number of
product models, and clearly communicating to the customer what it's suited for.
Of course, more informed/educated customers are easier to communicate that to.
"Zonal lumens" make sense to lighting professionals, but not to the
average consumer.
So that's where the whole equivalence thing comes in. We've got a collective
chore ahead of us to simply get the concept shifted from watts, in incandescent
parlance, to lumens (with a big raspberry to the CFL producers, who did pretty
much nothing to help that cause over the last few decades...). The need to describe
things LED lighting, for a while, in terms of equivalence will be important
to aid consumer adoption. Thanks again go to the DOE for kicking off the Lighting
Facts label, which has created a model that the FTC is adopting as part
of new lightbulb labeling guidelines that have
just been announced, which are aimed squarely at that transition.
Unfortunately, Energy Star for integral replacement lamps requires a product
to pretty much "mimic" the zonal lumen performance of the lamp it's
claiming to replace. Fine for the more omnidirectional reflectors, but a real,
and I would submit, somewhat pointless challenge for the A19 style of "Edison"
lightbulb. I believe it will take something like minutes for commercial operators
to realize that they don't want screw-in lamps that replace the badly arranged
lumens of the old technology. If it's going in a recessed can, they want the
light down, with enough sideways so the source inside is pretty much invisible.
Instead of 10 watts to distribute the light "everywhere" a hotel would
prefer to invest 4 watts in a bedside lamp to shoot a little light up for ambiance,
a little sideways and the rest towards the bed where the occupant is reading.
Light where it belongs, so you need less lumens to do the job. It's the successful
premise of dedicated LED fixtures, and the buyers will figure that out pretty
quickly at the commercial level, and eventually for our homes.
That's where the current Energy Star requirement for omnidirectional replacements
gets in the way now, and based on EPA's handling of the Residential Light Fixtures
spec (with its "who cares that most of the light is lost in the fixture,
as long as the wasted light is created efficiently" approach), I expect
it to be more useless in the future. If you want to have products in Energy
Star, their equivalency claims are severely limited, throwing the more informed
commercial operators under the bus in the interest of not disappointing our
consumers (apparently consumers are a little behind in class, so rather than
give them extra tutoring, we've just going to bring everyone down to their level).
Meanwhile, SSL market growth is going to come soonest, and most importantly,
from that more informed commercial/industrial operator who knows they want lumens
where the want them, not replacement lamps, which will force many LED "lightbulb"
producers to opt-out of Energy Star, simply so they can address the commercial
market in the simplest way, by presenting common sense equivalency claims such
as "performs equivalent to a 60 watt A19 incandescent in downlight applications".
As long as those are made with integrity, and not with an intent to deceive
based on some technicality, it's going to be a good approach. It will also be
self-policing, as word of the less integrity-based claims will get out and those
companies will lose future business.
Fortunately, the FTC has declined to tackle the watt-equivalency claims, for
some good reasons, although not for the reasons outlined here. You can jump
straight to page 21-22 to see the discussion on that topic in the FTC's full
write up of the labeling initiative at http://www.ftc.gov/os/2010/06/P084206lamplabeling.pdf.
So what's the impact of companies opting out of Energy Star? As long as the
utilities and energy efficiency organizations continue their common sense approaches
that have not made Energy Star the sole criteria to qualify for energy saving
incentives, it's really not that much. While Energy Star brand awareness is
high, the actual penetration of Energy Star in lighting is pretty low. Based
on the current good specs (the DOE-driven ones outside of the A19 type), that
will likely grow well until energy efficiency organizations see that EPA attempts
to merge the specs will likely water them down to the point of uselessness in
the future. And for the omnidirectional ones... I'll predict that any company
with eyes on the commercial market will steer clear so they can market their
product most effectively.
Tying together the big picture of LED lighting is what the 2010-2011 SSL
Summit series is all about. Replacement lamp and retrofit market opportunities
will be in the highlighted in both New York, September 14-15, as well as next
January in LA. Speakers, sponsors and showcase participants are vetted to assure
their "truth in advertising" as well as "specs match the tests"
criteria, so you know you won't be wasting your high-level networking time with
pretenders. A quality event for quality participants -- www.SSLsummit.com If you have questions about
the solid state lighting and compound semiconductor industries or
have
news or views to share, we want to hear from you! Feel free to contact
us anytime.

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