Tryg
09-21-07, 03:21 PM
http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20070921/139483/
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View Full Version : Now 420 lumens from 8 watts! LED Tryg 09-21-07, 03:21 PM http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20070921/139483/ JayP 09-22-07, 01:44 AM That is not the most efficient LED. The most efficent LED produces about 129 lumens per watt for cool white: http://biz.yahoo.com/pz/070913/126607.html welwynnick 09-22-07, 08:35 AM Both results are very good, but not comparable. The more light you force out of LED, the less efficient it becomes. The 129 lm/W LED was indeed only putting out about 129 lm. I don't get the impression that sheer power or efficiency is the issue. For our purposes the light has to come at the wanted wavelengths, and there seems to be a challenge in getting sufficient power for red light. In any event, I expect what will actually serve our purposes will be an array or LEDs, rather than a single device (or an RGB triplet). IIRC Seimens announced a 1000 lumen LED (http://www.siemens.com/index.jsp?sdc_p=d1184570i1184794lmn1182567o1439373pFEcfs2t4u 20z2)a few months ago. I think that was an array, but it might be worth checking. Since three manufacturers have already introduced LED RPTVs, which I blieve use LED arrays, it suggests that FPs might not be that far behind. Well, my fingers are crossed, anyway. Nick 15.03.07 | Osram has developed a small light-emitting diode spotlight that achieves an output of more than 1,000 lumens for the first time. That’s brighter than a 50-watt halogen lamp, thereby making the device suitable for a broad range of general lighting applications. The Ostar Lighting LED, which will be launched on the market this summer, can provide sufficient light for a desk from a height of two meters, for example. Its small size also enables the creation of completely new lamp shapes. A lumen (lm) is the unit of measurement for the amount of light emitted by a light source. A 60-watt light bulb emits 730 lm, while a 50-watt halogen lamp has an output of approximately 900 lm. To achieve the 1,000 lm output for the tiny Ostar Lighting LED, the experts at Siemens’ Osram subsidiary employed a sophisticated system for high chip-packing density, whereby the researchers managed to integrate six high-performance LED lighting chips into the unit’s small housing. Each chip has an area of only one square millimeter, which makes for very concentrated overall luminosity. Different types of LEDs are used today in various areas, for example as background lighting in cell phone displays, as well as in car turn-signal lights, brake lights, and daytime running lights. The benefits are obvious: The diodes are extremely small and consume little energy because they efficiently convert electricity into light. The Ostar Lighting LED, for example, produces 75 lumens per watt at 350 milli-amperes of operating current — much more than an incandescent lamp, which only converts a fraction of the electricity supplied into light, with the rest lost as heat energy. In addition, LEDs contain no lead or mercury, which makes them very environmentally friendly. They also last around ten times longer than halogen lamps and 50 times longer than incandescent lamps, thereby helping to significantly reduce maintenance costs. For many years, however, LEDs were unsuited for room lighting applications because they weren’t bright enough. The Ostar Lighting LED marks a further step toward suitability for such applications. Osram has already supplied a Migros supermarket in the Swiss canton of St. Gallen with 18,000 Golden Dragon LEDs, which have a lower output than the Ostar Lighting units. These LEDs emit neither UV rays nor heat, which means they have virtually no negative impact on delicate grocery items such as milk, meat, fruit and vegetables. brbrbr1 03-02-08, 09:59 AM The same firm as in the first post, just 5 months later. Nearly 100% increase. World’s Highest Brightness of 900 lm at 10-watt (http://www.compoundsemi.com/documents/articles/cldoc/9723.html) |