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2006-03-02
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Editorial: Foxes Prefer the Lights Be Less Bright
 
... Does the brightness of our compound semi (CS) and solid state lighting (SSL) industries' blue LED indicator lights on computers and on the little black or gray boxes strewn around your home office ever bother you at night? Do you find yourself putting duct tape over them so you...
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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.


Commentary...
Foxes Prefer the Lights Be Less Bright

 
... Does the brightness of our compound semi (CS) and solid state lighting (SSL) industries' blue LED indicator lights on computers and on the little black or gray boxes strewn around your home office ever bother you at night? Do you find yourself putting duct tape over them so you...

View the full story at the bottom of the current news page, or if this is a back issue, go here...

Osram and Avago Sign Cross License Patent Agreement

March 2, 2006...Osram Opto Semiconductors of Böblingen, Germany and Avago Technologies of San Jose, California USA have signed a limited cross-license patent agreement for white LED and LED system technology. Under the agreement Osram Opto has granted Avago a patent license for several patents to manufacture and sell blue LEDs with special conversion technology (such as a phosphor) to produce a white LED. On the other side of the deal, Avago has granted Osram a patent license for LED systems including their systems for projection and flat-panel LCDs.

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Philips Opens Life-Size Urban Lighting Test and Showcase Facility
LIGHTimes Staff

March 2, 2006...Royal Philips Electronics of Amsterdam, the Netherlands has opened a new facility at its Outdoor Lighting Application Center (OLAC), near Lyon, France, to allow designers, architects and city officials to test and showcase lighting including LEDs in urban areas. Philips indicated that they created the life-size city environment built on the existing OLAC site to allow visitors a complete tour of how LED lighting can enhance the appeal of urban areas. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Epistar Orders Five More Aixtron GaN Reactors in High Volume Production Ramp
LIGHTimes Staff

March 2, 2006...Taiwan-based Epistar, now considered one of the largest advanced LED manufacturers, has purchased five more gallium nitride (GaN) epitaxy reactors from Aixtron. Included in the order is one of Aixtron's new AIX 2800G4 Planetary Reacter with 42x2” capacity and four of the AIX 2600G3 HT Planetary Reactors with 24x2” capacity. Aixtron of Aachen, Germany expects to generate full revenues from the order within 2006. Epistar continues to expand its capacity since its acquisition of United Epitaxy Company. (Ref: Coverage).In late 2005 Digitimes reported that the company struggled to meet LED demand, especially for LCD backlighting applications. (Ref: Coverage). LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Intematix Licenses Phosphor Technology to Kingbright; Kingbright Adds to Cree Patent License
Scott McMahan

February 28, 2006...Kingbright, a Taiwan-based maker of LEDs has now licensed Intematix’s phosphor technology and has added it to the white LED formula patent they recently licensed from from Cree. (Ref: Coverage). Kingbright, a maker of discrete LEDs and LED components, can now reportedly produce non-infringing white LEDs in safe waters away from the great white shark, Nichia. Wen Joe Song, Kingbright president and CEO, said of their recent agreement with Cree, “Our target market includes major U.S. and multi-national companies for which avoiding intellectual property disputes is critical.” Speaking of the Intematix license agreement he said, “We have integrated our own unique packaging technologies with CREE chips and Intematix phosphor to deliver the optimal performance, as well as the best value, into the competitive global marketplace.”

Kingbright’s newly licensed, Intematix phosphors include the White Lightning NY450/ NY460 product line which Intematix recently expanded to include warm white. Kingbright has licensed Cree technology for years, but just recently licensed their white LED technology. (Ref: Coverage). Other companies around the world have delved headlong into relatively clear but shark infested white LED patent waters. The ones who weren’t careful were bitten with sharp patent lawsuits. While Cree, Osram, and Nichia are on the lookout for patent infringement in the white LED realm, Nichia remains the great white shark, “Jaws”, since it is the most vigilant and dangerous of the three. SecondPage members can see the extended version of the article. Scott Mc.

The Fox Group Delivers 15mm Epi-ready AlN Substrates
Jo Ann McDonald, founding editor

March 1, 2006...A North American-based vertical supplier of GaN LEDs and wide bandgap (WBG) substrates called The Fox Group has emerged from five years of relative quiet to officially announce that they're now delivering 15mm epi-ready aluminum nitride (AlN) substrates. Officially incorporated in Piedmont, California, with the substrate work being done in Deer Park, New York and the LED manufacturing in Montreal, Canada, The Fox Group is now officially on everyone's radar screen. According to the company news release, The Fox Group's monocrystalline AlN substrates disks are sliced from boules grown by a proprietary, modified vapor transport, "true-bulk crystal growth process" based on the company's core USA patents, that the company underscores are for their robust, reusable crucibles for high-temp, crystal growth. Those patent numbers and links to the full patent are 6,547,877 (tantalum) and 6,537,371 (niobium).

As one can see by reading those patents, The Fox Group has been closely aligned with outstanding and well-known Russian wide bandgap (WBG) specialists in St. Petersburg. Co-founder and CTO of The Fox Group is Heikki Helava, who divides his time between Deer Park, New York, the California HQ and Montreal. The company got its start five years ago with incentives from the Quebec government. CEO of The Fox Group is Barney O'Meara, who spends the majority of his time in the Canadian facility. Prior to joining The Fox Group, O'Meara worked with Russian technologists for 20 years in East to West tech transfer, thus the ties with the company's Russian partners, a group headed by Yury Alexandrovich Vodakov. According to Mr. O'Meara, "We've put together an especially strong IP portfolio with nine US patents awarded to date, the key ones being our tantalum and niobium patents" (cited and linked to, above).

In a conversation with Barney O'Meara and Bob Tobin, Fox's new director of sales & marketing, development of the company's blue (460nm) and UV LED work currently underway in Montreal was also discussed. They are producing blue LEDs of excellent color consistency and color stability, which is desired for indoor use, and also producing UV LEDs in the 350-365nm range. More details about the company and their LED work can be found in our March 1st McDonald Report editorial. In that conversation, Bob Tobin underscored that "target applications for their AlGaN LEDs are for indoor signs, displays, and indicator lamps and that company is very interested in working strategically with companies anxious to optimize The Fox Group's UV products for medical, curing and purification applications." Bob Tobin, who was formerly with AXT and Aixtron can be reached in California at tel: +1 925-980-5645 and email: sales@thefoxgroupinc.com. Their website is undergoing a major overhaul and you'll undoubtedly be hearing a lot more from them, so stay tuned to www.thefoxgroupinc.com.

TecStar to Distribute Luminous Devices’ RPTV Lighting Technology
LIGHTimes Staff

February 27, 2006...In a landmark agreement, Tecstar will distribute Luminous Devices’ PhlatLight chipsets for illuminating rear projection television displays (RPTVs) throughout Japan. Luminous Devices of Woburn, Massachusetts USA is reportedly the only maker of solid state light engines for RPTVs. According to Luminous Devices, Techstar Co., a division of Macnica, Inc., will enable just-in-time supply requirements of their customers in Japan, and will later add sales and technical support for Luminous’ RPTV light engines in Japan.

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Everlight Predicts Slow Growth Amid Falling Prices

February 27, 2006...Revenues at Everlight Electronics are expected to grow 10 percent during the second quarter of the fiscal year, according to a Digitimes article. In the article, Everlight commented that SMD shipments were flat, and shipments of other devices fell during the fourth quarter. The company expects the growth to come from LEDs for handsets, despite an industry-wide slowdown in handset backlight demand. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

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Commentary & Perspective...

Foxes Prefer the Lights Be Less Bright

March 1, 2006...Does the brightness of our compound semi (CS) and solid state lighting (SSL) industries' blue LED indicator lights on computers and on the little black or gray boxes strewn around your home office ever bother you at night? Do you find yourself putting duct tape over them so you don't feel like they're doing something they shouldn't be when they're supposed to be "resting?" Do those intense violet/white LEDs in "modern" decorative and architectural lighting make you feel like a fox caught in an auto's headlights on a country highway? High brightness LEDs have their obvious and very applaudable applications, but what about the softer, more subtle blue and white lights? Who's producing those... and how are they doing it? And who's making a serious attempt at commercializing UV LEDs these days?

I really liked the original blue LEDs made in pre-GaN days. I saw them first in elevators. Nice color. Soft. Subtle. They helped make you patient, which comes in handy when in an elevator. Everything seems to have gone high intensity lately (including the business scene), with an emphasis on squeezing as much of the light out of the die as possible while eliminating most of the profit on the other end, transferring even more squeeze onto the suppliers. And there doesn't seem to be nearly as much focus on UV LEDs as I thought there'd be by this time. Perhaps if there'd been more production of more subtle blue, white and efficient UV LEDs, the market revenue numbers might still be in double digits. We'd also have more of those gentle blues and whites warming our nights, and more UV LEDs fielded into medical, curing, and purification applications.

On the occasion of the release of news that their 15mm epi-ready AlN substrates are on the market (ref: March 1, 2006 coverage), I had the pleasure of getting to know The Fox Group better. They're obviously really into aluminum. In addition to their new aluminum nitride (AlN) substrates, which are moving out of their Deer Park, New York doors in the USA, The Fox Group has AlGaN-based emitters in production in their Canadian facility. These are then being packaged in Asia. Seems that, if you want to make your blue spectrum LEDs really bright, you use indium (In) and you grow them, exacting layer by careful layer, in MOCVD reactors. If you want to make them less expensively and grow the die faster... and you're after color consistency rather than brightness, you turn to the method called HVPE. Principals from The Fox Group and Technologies and Devices International Inc. (TDI) in Silver Springs, Maryland USA wrote a paper about the HVPE process, which TDI licenses to The Fox Group, back in Dec. of 2004 for IOP's CS magazine. You can access it online under the title: HVPE offers alternative route to AlGaN-based UV emitters. Note the heavy-hitting author names of: TDI's Vladimir Dmitriev and Alexander Usikov, and Heikki Helava and Barney O'Meara of The Fox Group.

While The Fox Group has been putting their R&D team to work for five long years, they only recently came on my radar screen. Typical of teams spread over various physical locations, they've been doing excellent, creative R&D, but they weren't really very proactive... until now. Then again, when you're in R&D mode for longer than you may have originally anticipated, it's not a bad idea to stay "below the radar" until you're actually shipping products. The Fox Group was cofounded by Heikki Helava, who serves now as CTO. Many of you may know Heikki from his years at AXT in the 1990s. He's a great technologist, writer, and cheerleader for all things nitride related.

Not only is Fox licensing the LED growth technology from Vladimir Dmitriev's group at TDI, but Fox also has other outstanding Russians on their strategic team who originally hailed from Ioffee Institute. Vladimir was one of the original three group leaders at Ioffee, and his team became Cree's Eastern European division before forming TDI. Note that the names, headed by Yury Alexandrovich Vodakov, are listed on the key USA patents cited in the March 1, 2006 coverage. What I like best about Fox's approach to blue LEDs is that they're not competing with the big guns who are going after the usual SSL holy grails. They're focusing on the not-so-bright blues and are setting their sights towards the mainstream UV-LED applications, using what they feel is a practical, aluminum-based production method.

HVPE, as championed for years by TDI, stands for Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy. Like MOCVD, it sometimes goes by other names (in the case of MOCVD, "OMVPE" and "MOVPE" are also used). HVPE is sometimes called Chloride Hydride Vapor Phase Epitaxy. It's a mature, low-cost epitaxial technique that uses HCl (hydrogen chloride) gas flowing over hot Group III metals to form metal chlorides. The metal chlorides react with Group V metal hydrides to form III-V compounds. In the case of GaN (gallium nitride) the "metal" hydride is NH3 (ammonia). I'm told HVPE isn't as precisely controllable as MOCVD, but when you're not going for the high brightness, MOCVD isn't all that necessary. What you get with HVPE, according to the experts, is excellent color consistency and color stability. Vladimir gave a presentation of the process at one of our 101 workshops, which is still available on video.

The Fox Group's key is in the use of aluminum instead of indium, and according to Fox, aluminum is what gets you to UV's desired wavelengths of 350 to 365nm. I wrote about the UV opportunities in a McD Report last March, titled "Water Water Everywhere" following an inspiring presentation by GE's Michael Sutsko at our Wide Bandgap Business Opportunities Workshop in December at CS Outlook (the precursor to CS Vision, which we'll be holding in April 27/28 2006 in Vancouver BC). I encourage you to re-read Water Water Everywhere where you can learn more about this promising field. And then, like The Fox Group, give me a call and let me know if your team is climbing on the not-so-bright blue and/or the UV LED bandwagon.

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