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LED 20120301 Mar 2012
LED 20120301 Mar 2012
MARCH 2012
LEDsmagazine.com
Manufacturing
SIL track focuses on
cost reduction P.27
SIL 2012
Lighting and Market
tracks P.32 & P.39
Markets
Growth in LED
lighting P.21
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ISSUE 50
2012
march LED lighting from Nualight enhances the
appeal of produce in a supermarket display
cabinet. The company has signed a major
deal with Sainsbury’s, a UK food retailer –
see pages 10 and 46.
features
21 MARKETS columns/departments
LED lighting market to grow while LED component
market goes flat 4 COMMENTARY Tim Whitaker
Laura Peters and Maury Wright Test to find the best color metric
39 LIGHTING
SSL must still clear hurdles to enable mass
Lynk Labs unveils new Tesla AC-
LED packages at SIL 2012
adoption of LED lighting LEDtronics lights Carpinteria
Maury Wright
17 FUNDING+PROGRAMS
51
Global Lighting Association
INDOOR LIGHTING aims to be more pro-active
LED lighting highlights the food at San Diego Life-cycle energy consumption
burger restaurant of LED lamps compares well
Maury Wright EPA introduces TM-21 calculator
DOE updates specifications for
57 SSL ECOSYSTEMS troffers, parking-lot luminaires
Ecosystems meeting paints future picture of
intelligent SSL systems 64 LAST WORD Maury Wright
Laura Peters ZigBee standards are ready to
support lighting-control applications
commentary
I
EDITOR laurap@pennwell.com
MARKETING MANAGER Luba Hrynyk
PRESENTATION MANAGER Kelli Mylchreest
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Mari Rodriguez
’m writing this piece in the relatively quiet presumably, TC 1-69 would have approved SENIOR ILLUSTRATOR Christopher Hipp
period between two major events on our it. Voicing an alternative opinion, the Light- AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT Jayne Sears-Renfer
calendar; Strategies in Light (SIL), which ing Research Center (LRC) advocates a two-
took place in February, and Light+Building, metric system that combines CRI with the
the biennial tradeshow that will hit gamut-area index (GAI) metric. Quoted on EDITORIAL OFFICES PennWell Corporation,
LEDs Magazine
Frankfurt in mid April. You’ll find extensive page 40, the LRC’s Jean Paul Freyssinier 98 Spit Brook Road, LL-1
coverage in this issue of all three conference says that “no single metric can characterize Nashua, NH 03062-5737
tracks at SIL (pages 27, 32 and 39), as well color rendering.” Tel: +1 603 891-0123
Fax: +1 603 891-0574
as the most recent updates on the LED and One of the comments on our website high- www.ledsmagazine.com
lighting markets from Strategies Unlimited lights another issue: the goals of the CIE are SALES OFFICES
(page 21). principally scientific, and not necessarily SALES MANAGER Mary Donnelly
(US EAST COAST) maryd@pennwell.com
Market numbers aside, one of the most- aligned with developing metrics that help
Tel. +1 603 891 9398
discussed topics at SIL was color-render- the lighting industry. Good for them, you SALES MANAGER Allison O’Connor
ing index (CRI). There seems to be general might say. But in that case, perhaps the (US WEST COAST) allison@jagmediasales.com
Tel. +1 480 991 9109
agreement that this much-derided met- lighting industry needs to be more proac-
SALES MANAGER Joanna Hook
ric is not up to the job for LEDs, but there tive if it wants a useful metric. One way to (EUROPE) joannah@pennwell.com
is a lack of consensus on what it should be do this is to test some of the different met- Tel. +44(0)117 946 7262
SALES MANAGER Manami Konishi
replaced with. In our last issue, my colleague rics in real-world scenarios, rather than rely- (JAPAN) konishi-manami@ics-inc.co.jp
Maury Wright used the Last Word column ing on calculations. Theoretical data are all Tel: +81 3 3219 3641
(www.ledsmagazine.com/features/9/2/11) to very well, but I’d like to see data where the SALES MANAGER Mark Mak
(CHINA & HONG KONG) markm@actintl.com.hk
bemoan the failure of the CIE technical com- calculated score is correlated with the pref- Tel: +852 2838 6298
mittee TC 1-69 to reach agreement on what erences expressed by lighting experts using SALES MANAGER Diana Wei
could replace CRI. The column suggested products in the field. (TAIWAN) diana@arco.com.tw
Tel: 886-2-2396-5128 ext:270
there could be various political or self-inter- Which brings me to a fi nal point: which- SALES MANAGER Young Baek
est reasons for the absence of a decision by ever metric (or combination) eventually (KOREA) ymedia@chol.com
Tel: +82 2 2273 4818
TC 1-69. But this wasn’t why the column was supersedes CRI, it will only have limited
CORPORATE OFFICERS
written; our main thrust was to encourage usefulness. Lighting specifiers will not sim- CHAIRMAN Frank T. Lauinger
some kind of resolution to the issue. ply look at the number and trust it, with- PRESIDENT AND CEO Robert F. Biolchini
CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Mark C. Wilmoth
The CIE seems to recognize the need for out fi rst evaluating the lamp or luminaire
TECHNOLOGY GROUP
a revised approach, and in fact went so far in the intended application. A metric of
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT Christine A. Shaw
as to write an official response to our arti- this kind helps to narrow down the prod- & PUBLISHING DIRECTOR
cle which explained the activities of TC uct options that should be considered, but a SENIOR VP OF AUDIENCE Gloria S. Adams
DEVELOPMENT
1-69 from their point of view. But, at the better metric will certainly make this pro-
SUBSCRIPTIONS: For subscription inquiries:
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their piece, citing internal disagreements Fax: +1 847 291-4816;
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One of the main alternatives considered
Copyright © 2012 PennWell Corp (ISSN 2156-633X). All rights
by TC 1-69 is color-quality scale (CQS), but reserved. Contents of this publication may not be reproduced in any
form without prior written consent of Publishers.
despite being popular in some quarters it Tim Whitaker, EDITOR
clearly doesn’t tick all the boxes – otherwise, twhitaker@pennwell.com
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Aluminology... SM
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FEATURED events
| online Phosphor Global Summit 2012
March 20-22, 2012
Scottsdale, AZ, USA
Webcasts: LEDucation 6
March 21, 2012
Identifying Unique Testing New York City, USA
ADVERTISERS index
American Bright Optoelectronics............. 15 Labsphere Inc. ...................................... 36 Seoul Semiconductor Co. Ltd. ................. 8
Arc Solid State Lighting Corp. ................ 58 Ledlink Optics Inc. ................................. 11 Shanxi Guangyu LED Lighting Co. Ltd. .... 28
Arlon Silicone Technologies .................... 14 LightFair International............................. 50 Sharp Electronics Europe GmbH ............. 35
Beautiful Light Tech................................ 13 Linear Technology ................................ CV3 Shenzhen Baikang Optical Co. Ltd. ........ 20
Carclo Technical Plastics ........................ 46 Matrix Lighting Limited, Hong Kong....... CV2 Shenzhen Bang-Bell Electronics Co. Ltd. .. 54
Cree Inc. ............................................. CV4 MBN GmbH............................................ 29 Shenzhen Refond ................................... 12
Daejin DMP ............................................ 47 Optronics Laboratories ........................... 48 Optoelectronics Co. Ltd.
EBV Elektronik ....................................... 19 Osram Opto-Semiconductors GmbH ....... 25 Signcomplex Limited .............................. 37
Edison Opto Corporation ........................ 43 Philips Lumileds ....................................... 2 The Bergquist Company ......................... 23
Ellsworth Adhesives ............................... 60 Posco LED ............................................. 55 The Korean Consulate General ............... 31
Fin-Core Corp. ....................................... 18 Premier Farnell UK Ltd. .......................... 38 Thomas Research Products...................... 7
Global Lighting Technologies .................. 44 Proto Labs Inc. ...................................... 16 Tridonic GmbH & CO KG ......................... 41
Instruments Systems GmbH................... 26 Renesas Electronics Europe GmbH .......... 1 Underwriters Laboratories ...................... 45
Inventronics (Hangzhou) Co. Ltd. ........... 49 Sapa Industrial......................................... 5 Vossloh-Schwabe Deutschland GmbH .... 62
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LEDoptions@thomasresearchproducts.com
www.thomasresearchproducts.com
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𰀪𰁏𰁕𰁓𰁐𰁅𰁖𰁄𰁊𰁏𰁈𰀁𰀢𰁄𰁓𰁊𰁄𰁉𰀓
𰀸𰁊𰁕𰁉𰀁𰀯𰁐𰀁𰀢𰀤𰀐𰀥𰀤𰀁𰀥𰁓𰁊𰁗𰁆𰁓
𰂘𰀃𰀍𰀰𰀥𰀴𰀧𰀣𰀵𰀧𰀦𰀃𰀐𰀫𰀨𰀧𰀵𰀲𰀣𰀰
𰂘𰀃𰀍𰀰𰀥𰀴𰀧𰀣𰀵𰀧𰀦𰀃𰀮𰀣𰀯𰀲𰀃𰀧𰀨𰀨𰀫𰀥𰀫𰀧𰀰𰀥𰀻𰀃𰁪𰀃𰀲𰀱𰀹𰀧𰀴𰀃𰀨𰀣𰀥𰀶𰀱𰀴𰀃𰂠𰀃𰁎𰁔𰁍𰁉𰀃𰁫
𰂘𰀃𰀈𰀧𰀵𰀫𰀩𰀰𰀃𰀊𰀮𰀧𰀺𰀫𰀤𰀫𰀮𰀫𰀶𰀻
𰂘𰀃𰀇𰀱𰀵𰀶𰀃𰀴𰀧𰀦𰀷𰀥𰀣𰀶𰀫𰀱𰀰𰀃𰀫𰀰𰀃𰀦𰀧𰀵𰀫𰀩𰀰𰀫𰀰𰀩𰀃𰀣𰀰𰀦𰀃𰀯𰀣𰀰𰀷𰀨𰀣𰀥𰀶𰀷𰀴𰀫𰀰𰀩𰀃𰀮𰀫𰀩𰀪𰀶𰀃𰀤𰀷𰀮𰀤𰀵
𰂘𰀃𰀗𰀲𰀧𰀧𰀦𰀃𰀶𰀫𰀯𰀧𰀃𰀶𰀱𰀃𰀯𰀣𰀴𰀭𰀧𰀶 ____________
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news views
STRATEGIES IN LIGHT
COLLABORATION AC-LEDS
news+views
RETAIL LIGHTING Seoul from page 9 Lee said the Acrich2 design can provide
applause from the audience. a better power factor and less total har-
Nualight selected as LED Lee stated that these additional com- monic distortion. “We can reduce the heat
lighting partner to Sainsbury's ponents can cause LED lamp failures. In sink, protect the environment and provide
Nualight, an Ireland-based specialist in LED tests, Seoul determined that many of the more design freedom,” he said.
lighting for food retail, has been selected by other LED lamps reached temperatures of Acrich AC-LED modules use an inte-
Sainsbury's, a UK-based supermarket chain, 70°C to 82°C during operation. Lee stated grated circuit to provide power condition-
to be its partner for a significant LED light- that even though companies typically ing and circuit protection. In recent weeks,
ing program in refrigerated cases across all claim lamp lifetimes of 35,000 or 50,000 Seoul Semiconductor has made several
new and refurbished stores. Nualight will hours, it can be reduced to 10,000 hours or product announcements in the Acrich2
supply Sainsbury's with LED lighting for less due to these operating temperatures. family including a linear module designed
low- and medium-temperature and spe- Moreover, tested power factor of the LEDs as a fluorescent-tube replacement. ◀
ciality cases in all new stores. As well as ranged greatly, from 54% to over 90%. MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/26
enhancing the merchandising impact of the
food displays, Nualight's lighting will sup-
port Sainsbury's targets to reduce its carbon general-illumination applications. The new news/9/3/1).
_______ The program will use a retro-
emissions. funding is coming from Xiamen, China-based fit module, containing a single Bridgelux
Harold Allen from Sainsbury's said that Kaistar Lighting, a joint venture between LED array, which can be installed in exist-
LED lighting would “help to bring the qual- LED-chip maker Epistar Corporation and ing cobra-head lights. The installation will
ity food proposition to life…Lighting is used Shenzhen Kaifa Technology Company (www. ___ require the removal of the existing ballast
strategically to create the unique Sainsbury's ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/15). Bridgelux and socket, but does not require municipal-
store ambience and bring out the best qual- CEO Bill Watkins said, “Kaistar’s cost-com- ities to dispose of the housing. The North-
ities in the food on display in our stores.” ◀ petitive manufacturing capabilities com- ern California cities of Livermore (pictured)
MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/31 bined with Bridgelux’s high-performance and Dublin have installed the modules and
packaging solutions will continue to drive are serving as demonstration sites for the
PATENTS down the cost of solid-state technology for partnership. ◀
general lighting, helping to more rapidly
Toyoda Gosei files LED patent expand the market for LED.” AC LEDS
lawsuits against Formosa Epitaxy Previous investments in Bridgelux have
Japan-based LED maker Toyoda Gosei Co., included a $60 million series E round in Lynk Labs unveils new Tesla AC-
Ltd. has fi led a patent-infringement lawsuit August 2011. Bridgelux is optimizing a gal- LED packages at SIL 2012
in Taoyuan District Court of Taiwan against lium-nitride-on-silicon (GaN-on-Si) manu- Lynk Labs Inc., a developer of AC-driven
Formosa Epitaxy Inc. (Forepi), an LED-chip facturing process that it believes can signif- LEDs for general lighting, demonstrated
manufacturer based in Taoyuan County, icantly reduce the cost of LEDs. a broad line-up of AC-LED components
Taiwan. The lawsuit alleges that Forepi is In related news, Bridgelux has partnered with various power and voltage options at
infringing two Toyoda Gosei patents relat- with Chevron Energy Solutions to offer the recent Strategies in Light 2012 confer-
ing to GaN-based LEDs, and seeks an injunc- municipalities a low-cost path to street- ence. The company’s Tesla AC-LED pack-
tion against various Forepi LED products. light retrofits (www.ledsmagazine.com/ ages included products designed to oper-
Toyoda Gosei also filed a patent-infringe- ate from low-voltage
ment lawsuit in the US District Court, North- (12-48V) direct AC and
ern District of California. Th is lawsuit also others operating from
alleges infringement by Forepi of eight Toyoda high-voltage (50-240V)
Gosei LED chip patents and seeks damages rectified AC. The pack-
and an injunction against various Forepi LED ages are available in vari-
products, amongst other remedies. ◀ ous power, CCT and lumen
MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/28 levels (www.ledsmaga-
___________
zine.com/news/9/2/25).
_______________
FINANCING As well as the new Tesla
AC-LED packages and
Bridgelux gets $25 million BriteDriver power supply/
in new funding driver solutions, Lynk also
Bridgelux has raised an additional $25 introduced a new “Lamp-
million in investment capital to further On-Chip” technology. “The
its research and development of LEDs for new 12V AC-LED single
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chip is part of Lynk Labs’ core patented Recreation Department. “I think the con-
AC-LED technology integrated onto a sin- sensus is that the new bulbs produce [less
gle low-voltage chip through a joint devel- glare], are easier on the eyes, and have a
opment between Lynk Labs and Epistar very appropriate color temperature for our
Corp,” said Mike Miskin, Lynk Labs’ presi- needs.” The project utilized lamps with a
dent & CEO. CCT of 3000K.
Lynk also introduced “warm-on-dim” The LEDtronics LED30HPS-600-SIW-
technology, allowing the company to pro- 002-BU lamps are designed for use in post-
vide AC-LED light engines and COB (chip- top applications and are essentially retrofit
on-board) packages which, when dimmed lamps that directly replace HPS bulbs with
with standard dimmers, provide a similar the lamps to fit into the existing pendants an E26 base. ◀
quality of light to incandescent lamps. Like mounted at the end of a goose-neck arm on MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/33
incandescents, the CCT decreases when the light poles.
light intensity is dimmed (www.ledsmaga-
__________ The city expects the retrofit to deliver an BUSINESS
zine.com/news/9/2/34).
______________ ◀ 80% energy saving equating to a $11,600
saving on its annual power bill. The new LED products make up 18%
OUTDOOR LIGHTING lights are installed on Linden and Carpin- of lighting sales at Philips
teria avenues and along the city’s Amtrak Philips has revealed that LED products now
LEDtronics lights Carpinteria train platform (pictured). constitute 18% of total lighting sales while
Late last year, the city of Carpinteria, “The LEDtronics lamps fit into the exist- it continues to introduce new LED fami-
California, completed a retrofit of 199 high- ing light fi xtures with only minor modi- lies. In the fourth quarter of 2011, sales in
pressure sodium (HPS) decorative lights fications and look great,” said Matthew the lighting business were €2.072 billion
with 29W LED lamps. LEDtronics designed Roberts, director of the city’s Parks and from a company-wide total of €6.7 billion
_________
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(w w w.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/1). 2011, Philips’ total sales for lighting were 240-lm, 5W version priced at $4.95 and the
The company stated that its LED-based €7.64 billion, of which 5%, or €380 million 360-lm 6W version priced at $6.95. These
sales (including packaged LEDs, lamps (approx. $500 million) came from packaged Pharox BLU lamps, which do not support
and luminaires) grew 37% compared to Q4 LEDs (i.e. Lumileds). dimming and come with a one-year war-
2010, reaching €373 million for Q4 2011. At Strategies in Light, Lumileds intro- ranty, are the fi rst products in what will
Philips’ overall lighting sales for the quar- duced three new LED families: Luxeon M become three separate product families. The
ter increased 7% year-on-year, driven by is a family of multichip, 8W, 12V packages, dimmable Pharox XL and Pro product lines
double-digit sales growth in the lamps and while Luxeon K is a family of LED arrays will carry a three-year 35,000-hour warranty
automotive groups, but this was partly off- (pictured), with between 4 and 24 LEDs, and the latter will also include Energy Star
set by a sales decrease at Lumileds, the com- and a typical flux at 700 mA ranging from qualification.
pany’s LED-manufacturing subsidiary. In 620 to 4455 lm, measured at 85°C. Lumileds The lamps are designed for low lumen-
also introduced a new high-voltage Luxeon output applications. Lemnis co-founder
H package, designed to operate at 100V or Warner Philips said the typical home will
200V, which is offered as a light source for have eight to a dozen sockets in which the
GU10 and other small-form-factor lamps light levels would be serviceable. Philips said
(www.ledsmagazine.com/press/34266). ◀ he is using the new lamps in some recessed
cans in the kitchen and dining areas of his
LED LAMPS own home as well as in closet lighting and in
bedside table lamps.
Lemnis Lighting introduces The Pharox BLU 200 and 300 lamps use
low-cost LED retrofit lamps four and six LEDs, respectively, which
Lemnis Lighting has introduced a new line point predominantly upward from the base
of LED lamps in its Pharox family with the according to Philips. Lemnis calls the lamps
Who is ?
Arlon has provided specialty Silicone materials for over
60 years. Arlon serves Public transportation, Mil/Aerospace,
Power generation, and Flex heater markets.
What you can expect from Arlon:
• On Time deliveries
• Excellent Resource for future design considerations
Arlon also provides silicone based thermally conductive insulators (Protect™)
and thermally conductive PCB substrates (StaCool™).
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omnidirectional with a 320° beam pattern. control light distribu-
But Philips readily admitted that the flux tion in the installed
distribution is not even and that the lamps fixtures. Those TIR
can perform better in applications with optics eliminate light
some directional requirements. ◀ spill for the outdoor
MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/22 sources and enable
the station to meet
RETAIL LIGHTING local light-pollution
ordinances.
Cree lights gas station Sti l l, econom ics
and food mart are also important
The Highland Chevron gas station and and the savings are
ExtraMile food mart have been renovated attributable to both
indoor and out with Cree LED-based lumi- retrofit. Barman said, “The high-quality the indoor and outdoor lighting. Indoors,
naires to provide 70% energy savings. LED light makes everything appear brighter 27 Cree 304-series pendant SSL luminaires
Outdoors in the gas station canopy, the ret- and safer – and that translates into a better replaced 330W fluorescent fi xtures.
rofit encompasses a total of twenty-four customer experience.” Barman expects the retrofit to achieve
105W Cree (BetaLED) 304-series recessed The Oregon area is known for environ- payback in 2.5 years. According to Cree,
canopy lights that replaced 368W metal- mental sensitivity and green practices, and the lighting retrofit will allow the station
halide (MH) fi xtures. that influenced the LED choice. and mart to consume one third less energy,
The owner of the station, Bob Barman, Cree also noted that the NanoOptic total in total, relative to a typical 24-hour conve-
cited light quality, economic, and environ- internal reflection (TIR) lenses, which were nience store and gas station. ◀
mental benefits attributable to the lighting originally developed by BetaLED, tightly MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/19
𰀥𰁕𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁌𰁄𰁑𰁗𰀃𰀶𰁒𰁏𰁘𰁗𰁌𰁒𰁑𰀑
𰀤𰀦𰀃𰀤𰁕𰁊𰁘𰁖𰀃𰀯𰁌𰁊𰁋𰁗𰀃𰀨𰁑𰁊𰁌𰁑𰁈
𰀤𰁙𰁄𰁌𰁏𰁄𰁅𰁏𰁈𰀃𰁌𰁑𰀃𰁄𰀃𰁙𰁄𰁕𰁌𰁈𰁗𰁜𰀃𰁒𰁉𰀃𰁖𰁋𰁄𰁓𰁈𰁖𰀃𰁄𰁑𰁇𰀃𰁚𰁄𰁗𰁗𰁄𰁊𰁈𰁖𰀏𰀃
𰀤𰁕𰁊𰁘𰁖𰀃𰀯𰁌𰁊𰁋𰁗𰀃𰀨𰁑𰁊𰁌𰁑𰁈𰁖𰀃𰁄𰁕𰁈𰀃𰁗𰁋𰁈𰀃𰁌𰁇𰁈𰁄𰁏𰀃𰁖𰁒𰁘𰁕𰁆𰁈𰀃𰁉𰁒𰁕𰀃
𰀲𰀨𰀰𰀃𰁊𰁈𰁑𰁈𰁕𰁄𰁏𰀃𰁏𰁌𰁊𰁋𰁗𰁌𰁑𰁊𰀃𰁄𰁓𰁓𰁏𰁌𰁆𰁄𰁗𰁌𰁒𰁑𰁖𰀑
𰀧𰁌𰁕𰁈𰁆𰁗𰀃𰀔𰀕𰀓𰀹𰀤𰀦𰀃𰁆𰁒𰁑𰁑𰁈𰁆𰁗𰁌𰁒𰁑
𰀤𰁇𰁙𰁄𰁑𰁆𰁈𰁇𰀃𰀦𰁋𰁌𰁓𰀃𰁒𰁑𰀃𰀥𰁒𰁄𰁕𰁇𰀃𰀷𰁈𰁆𰁋𰁑𰁒𰁏𰁒𰁊𰁜
𰀫𰁌𰁊𰁋𰀃𰀯𰁘𰁐𰁌𰁑𰁒𰁘𰁖𰀃𰀨𰁉𰁉𰁌𰁆𰁄𰁆𰁜
𰀵𰁒𰀫𰀶𰀃𰀦𰁒𰁐𰁓𰁏𰁌𰁄𰁑𰁗
𰀛𰀙𰀙𰀑𰀘𰀖𰀖𰀑𰀘𰀘𰀛𰀛 𰁄𰁐𰁈𰁕𰁌𰁆𰁄𰁑𰁅𰁕𰁌𰁊𰁋𰁗𰁏𰁈𰁇𰀑𰁆𰁒𰁐
________________
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funding
programs Life-cycle energy
consumption of LED
lamps compares well
The US Department of Energy (DOE)
has published a report that compared
the energy consumed over the entire
life-cycle for LED lamps, compact flu-
orescent lamps (CFLs), and incandes-
Global Lighting Association cent lamps. The report states that the
average life-cycle energy consumption
aims to be more proactive of LED lamps and CFLs is similar and
is about one quarter of the fi gure for
incandescent lamps. However, if LED
In mid March, the Global Lighting Forum communicating with government authori- lamps meet their performance targets
(GLF; www.globallightingforum.org) under- ties and other stakeholders. In this lobbying by 2015 their life-cycle energy use is
went a name change to become the Global role, the GLF provides governments with rel- expected to decrease by approximately
Lighting Association (GLA) and also adopted evant product and market information. one-half.
a more proactive approach to promoting the As an example, Denneman discussed The report entitled “Review of the
use of energy-efficient lighting, including but the phase-out of incandescent lamps that Life-Cycle Energy Consumption of
not limited to LED-based lighting. has now been initiated in various countries Incandescent, Compact Fluorescent
The GLF was established in 2007 as an and regions around the world. For a govern- and LED Lamps” is based on existing
“association of associations” – GLF mem- ment to initiate a phase-out, “there must be literature that assesses the life-cycle of
bers are national or regional lighting orga- an [energy-efficient] alternative available,” lighting products.
nizations, each made he said, “but the situa- The report is the fi rst installment of
up of multiple lighting tion is different accord- a larger DOE project to assess the life-
companies. Among the ing to the market in cycle and environmental costs of differ-
GLF’s members are the that particular coun- ent lighting technologies. It looks at the
European Lamp Com- try or region.” Also, said manufacturing, transportation, use,
panies Federation (ELC), the US-based Denneman, it would be impossible if all coun- and disposal of the products.
National Electrical Manufacturers Associ- tries were to try to initiate a ban at the exact Also, the “use” stage of all three types
ation (NEMA) and the Japan Electric Lamp same moment, as there would be insufficient of lamps represents the most energy-
Manufacturers Association (JELMA). Asso- capacity. Similarly, manufacturers might be intensive life-cycle stage, accounting
ciations from China, Taiwan, Brazil, India faced with a large spike in demand that would for 90 percent of total life-cycle energy,
and Australia are also represented. not be sustained in the longer term. The GLF on average. This is followed by the
Jan Denneman, GLF president, told LEDs is positioned to give advice on such issues on manufacturing and transport phases,
Magazine that the GLF was formed to share behalf of the lighting industry, since it repre- respectively. Transportation typically
knowledge of global trends and legislative sents over 5000 lighting manufacturers with represents less than one percent of life-
developments in lighting, and also to share combined annual sales of $50 billion. cycle energy use for all lamp types.
information about the activities of the indi- The GLF formed an LED Working Group Most of the uncertainty in life-cycle
vidual associations. “There were lots of bilat- in October 2010 (www.ledsmagazine.com/ energy consumption of an LED lamp
eral discussions between associations,” said news/7/10/18),
_________ and Denneman says that centers on the manufacturing of the
Denneman. “So it was suggested to bring there are many issues to be addressed with LED package, which is estimated at
them together at the same time to share solid-state lighting, such as poor-quality anywhere from 0.1% to 27% of life-cycle
information and also save travel costs.” products and consumer dissatisfaction. energy use, with an average of 7%.
The initial focus of the group was energy The GLF’s role would be to share experi- In the larger DOE study, life-cycle
efficiency, but was soon extended to perfor- ences in areas such as consumer education, analysis of an LED lamp will con-
mance and quality, as well as areas such as or market-surveillance and quality-assur- sider the direct and indirect material
standardization and legislation. As well as ance programs, and develop consensus on and process inputs to fabricate, ship,
sharing knowledge, the GLF aims to initi- best practices that could be implemented at operate, and dispose of the lamp. ◀
ate policies and actions on areas of com- the national or regional level by the GLF’s MORE: www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/30
mon interest, and to seek opportunities for members. ◀
funding programs
__________
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𰀯𰀨𰀧𰀃𰁌𰁗𰀃𰁅𰁈𰀃𰀺𰁋𰁌𰁗𰁈𰀑𰀑𰀑
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Baikang - Professional
LED Lenses & Reflectors
Manufacturer
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__________ +
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E
lla Shum, director of LED research
of Strategies Unlimited based in
Mountain View, CA, kicked off this
year's Strategies in Light (SIL) conference
with her LED market forecast as the opener
of the HB-LED Market track. Shum said she
expects revenues from packaged LEDs to be
relatively flat in the coming years as good
growth in LED lighting is offset by decreas-
ing revenues in other applications. The mar-
ket for LED components (i.e. packaged LEDs)
in the lighting market grew 44% from $1.2
billion in 2010 to $1.8 billion in 2011.
Shum tracks the packaged LED market,
which does not include LED chips or end
products. The worldwide packaged LED
market grew nearly 10% from $11.3 billion
in 2010 to $12.5 billion in 2011. Fig. 1 shows
the packaged LED market by application
segment.
Strategies Unlimited also tracks the solid- Ella Shum of Strategies Unlimited discusses the LED market at SIL.
state lighting (SSL) industry. Vrinda Bhan-
darkar, director of research for LED light- (predominantly used in backlighting), has for the greatest portion of overall LED
ing at Strategies Unlimited and conference put pressure on revenue growth, while unit component revenues (30%) followed by
co-chair, provided a review and forecast of growth continues to rise. Korea (26%) and then Taiwan and South-
the LED lighting industry at SIL – see below. The upside to such price decreases is more east Asia (19%).
Shum, also an SIL conference co-chair, rapid adoption of LEDs in lighting, mobile,
stated that the most significant change in automotive, signage, and backlighting seg- LED growth by segment
the LED market in 2011 was the price drop ments. As will be discussed, LED lighting Mobile applications including mobile
in LED components. The average cool-white revenues more than tripled in three years. phones, notebooks, tablets and portable
1W LED package fell in price from $13 per DVD players, made up the largest LED seg-
kilolumen to $6/klm in one year. Shum Top performers ment at $3.4 billion. In the mobile phone
stated that in general the number of LEDs The top ten manufacturers accounted for market, OLEDs are beginning to sup-
required for a given application is drop- 68% of all LED component sales in 2011 but plant LED-backlit LCD displays (Fig. 2).
ping, and prices are dropping even faster. 75% of total sales in 2010. In 2011, the top However, the reduced market for LEDs in
Price reductions, combined with an over- three LED manufacturers each had revenues mobile phones is compensated by growing
supply of low- and medium-power LEDs exceeding $1 billion. The companies in the demand in tablets. Shum said the two prod-
top ten were the same in 2011 as 2010 but the ucts that matter the most in terms of tablet
MAURY WRIGHT and LAURA PETERS are order was slightly different (Table 1). volume are the iPad2, which uses 36 LEDs,
Senior Technical Editors with LEDs Magazine. Packaged LED makers in Japan accounted and the Kindle Fire, which uses 20 LEDs.
Total: US$12.5B and she expects this percentage to only Essentially flat sales are expected for 2013
increase. and 2014, projected at $13.3 billion and
In automotive lighting, Strategies Unlim- $13.1 billion, respectively.
Others ited is forecasting a 34% compound annual
14% growth rate (CAGR) from 2011 to 2016 for LED lighting on the rise
Mobile
Auto 27% front exterior headlamps. Automakers are The LEDs in Lighting track at SIL com-
9%
also using LED-based interior lighting, menced with a plenary session in which
Sign including instrument panels using back- Vrinda Bhandarkar reported LED Lighting
11%
Backlight lighting, and have started introducing LED- revenue of $9.4 billion in 2011 and projected
Li
Lighting TV/monitor
15% 24% backlit decorative panels. OLEDs are being an industry-wide CAGR of 20% through
considered as sunroof materials, with some 2016. In her talk entitled “Global Lighting
future designs showing OLED windows that Transformation,” Bhandarkar opened by
Source: also function as solar panels. stating, “The rate at which we use energy
Strategies Unlimited
now is unsustainable.” And that energy-
FIG. 1. Revenue from packaged LEDs by LED manufacturers’ response conservation theme pervaded the discus-
application in 2011. Shum said that LED manu-
facturers are reacting to pric- Units (M)
A higher-resolution iPad3, which has yet ing pressures in various ways. 1200
to be introduced, is expected to use 80 or Companies are differentiating 1000
more LEDs. their products based on the
800
The LED revenue for TV and monitor quality of the light produced, OLED smart phone
backlights was $3 billion in 2011, but is pro- including higher CRIs. She 600
jected to drop substantially by 2016. “At the also mentioned the inclusion of 400
one end, manufacturers continue to pur- embedded controls in packages LED smart phone
sue high-end edge-lit displays, such as the and testing of LED packages at 200
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Total: US$9.4B
69%.” Bhandarkar placed LEDs as being only 5-10% of the general
lighting market, and that is why SSL was able to experience tremen- Entertainment 3% Off-grid 3%
dous growth in a down market. The SSL lighting market almost dou- Emergency 4%
bled from $5.5 billion in 2010 to the 2011 level of $9.4 billion. Outdoor roadway/area Commercial/industrial
5% 25%
The presentation included a review of the LED lighting market by
Retail display
application segment (Fig. 4). The commercial and industrial segment 9%
showed the highest growth last year, and accounted for 25% of the
Residential
total market in 2011. Some niches such as portable lighting includ- 9%
ing flashlights are essentially 100% LED at this point. Retrofit lamps Architectural
17%
accounted for only 13% of the revenue in 2011 – down percentage- Consumer portable
wise from 15% in 2010. But the retrofit numbers are way up in terms 13%
Source:
of actual revenue due to the overall market growth. Strategies Unlimited Replacement lamp 13%
Bhandarkar summed up the state of LED lighting saying, “No one
is questioning whether LEDs will be there or not.” The former skepti- FIG. 4. The $9.4 billion LED lighting market in 2011.
cal view of the technology has largely disappeared and the primary
driver for LED uptake is energy efficiency. Revenue (US$B)
The presentation included a few product-specific market statistics. 19 %
20 R=
Bhandarkar said the price of LED downlights, retrofit lamps, and 18 CAG
Luminaires
street lights dropped 15-20% in 2011. Globally, she said the industry 16
14
sold 23 million LED recessed downlights. She said that those sales
12
were “not only in the US and Europe but also in Japan and other 10
parts of Asia.” 8
Different lighting segments and market factors are driving 6
4 CAGR = 23 %
uptake of different SSL product types. Bhandarkar said that the
2 Replacement lamp
commercial segment has driven adoption of directional LED PAR 0
lamps. Price is far more important for omnidirectional A19 lamps 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
where consumers will ultimately become the driving force and
where retailers establishing new low pricing levels will deter- FIG. 5. Strategies Unlimited projects robust growth for both the
mine deployment. Bhandarkar said, “People could think about LED retrofit lamp and luminaire markets.
a $10 bulb,” implying a threshold at which the typical consumer
would consider LED lighting and which was achieved in low-end She pointed out the widely-debated DOE efficiency guidelines that
lamps in 2011. have taken effect in the US (www.ledsmagazine.com/news/8/12/18).
Moreover, others countries and regions including the UK, Korea, the
Efficiency drives LED uptake European Union, Canada, Australia, and others are implementing
There are numerous reasons that LEDs will continue on a growth lamp-efficiency requirements.
path, according to Bhandarkar, but most come back to efficiency. In the long term, Bhandarkar projected that LEDs will be the
only clearly viable solution to the energy issue. She said
Revenue (US$B) CAGR = -0.2% many people expect a transition to halogen sources, but
14 $13.3B $13.3B $13.1B that increasingly-stringent guidelines in the US would
$12.5B $12.7B $12.3B Totals
result in a phase-out of halogen between 2014 and 2016.
12
Others Fluorescent technologies including compact fluores-
10 Auto cent lamps (CFLs) also have a shaky future. Bhandarkar
said that in general fluorescent technology provides a
8
Lighting good quantity of light, reasonable efficiency, and in some
6 products acceptable light quality. Still, she noted that low
Sign cost has been the driver of all fluorescent lighting usage.
4
And the rare-earth quotas being imposed by China are
Mobile
2 raising fluorescent pricing (www.ledsmagazine.com/
Backlight TV/ features/8/2/7).
_________
0 monitor
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Bhandarkar also discussed additional character-
Source: Strategies Unlimited
istics of LEDs that can compound energy savings. She
said, “LEDs become the most flexible technology that
FIG. 3. The LED market forecast is relatively flat, with growth in LED can use controls easily” and of course controls and dim-
lighting being offset by revenue decreases in other markets. ming increase the potential for savings. Bhandarkar also
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we do not know how the market will react to price declines.” The With a maximum driving current of 1.5 A, a broad range of
projected combined CAGR for all LED lighting products is 20% color temperatures and color rendering indexes, OSLON®
through 2016. Square opens up new opportunities in indoor lighting.
Bhandarkar said that her projections rely on less-aggressive esti- Thanks to its long lifetime, extremely robust design and an
impressive efficacy OSLON® Square is also perfect for out-
mation of price decline relative to data that the DOE has presented. door lighting – even under the harshest conditions. With its
The DOE has used a relative cost index of 100 to represent the cost footprint of only 3 mm × 3 mm it provides greater freedom
of an LED lamp or luminaire in 2010. By 2015 the DOE projects a for creating compact and efficient designs.
reduction of 80% to a relative index of 20. Bhandarkar expects a
more moderate 13-15% decline each year, and that would equate to
an index in the range of 38 to 43 by 2015.
Bhandarkar concluded by pointing out that the LED retrofit mar-
ket will quickly become a commodity market. She said that all fac-
tors including rebates and purchase incentives are pushing the seg-
ment toward commoditization, low cost, and broad adoption. “If
you are going to be in the lamps market, you have to be part of the
mass market,” she said.
Bhandarkar sees the luminaire market quite differently, noting
that we are just at the stage of having lighting manufacturers install
LED sources in legacy form factors. She expects LEDs, as a disrup-
tive technology, to result in new form factors and new ways of think-
ing about light. Bhandarkar said, “For the first time you have con-
trol over quantity of light. You can tweak the quantity of light. And
you can control it wherever you want.” Those factors, according to
Bhandarkar, provide LEDs with a tremendous advantage over other
light sources.
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light measurement
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T
he LED Manufacturing track at LED manufacturing supply and demand SE Asia Europe and Mideast
Strategies in Light 2012 featured The changing global landscape of LED man- 3% 1%
several speakers who primarily ufacturing was discussed by Karen Savala, Americas
6%
focused on cost-reduction methods in LED president of SEMI America. SEMI has esti-
manufacturing. Topics included the impor- mated that there are 142 LED fabs in oper-
Taiwan
tance of moving to larger-diameter wafers ation worldwide, up from 64 facilities in Korea 28%
to the use of materials that can withstand 2006. Capacity in 2012 is estimated at 1.57 19%
higher-temperature LED operation. million (4-inch-equivalent) wafers per
Iain Black, VP of manufacturing engi- month, with the global distribution shown
China Japan
neering and innovation at Philips Lumileds, in Fig. 1. Taiwan has the greatest LED chip- 21% 22%
provided the fi rst of two keynote talks. He manufacturing capacity, followed by Japan
stated that the complexity of LED products and China.
and applications and the diverse array of Savala commented that some of the Source: SEMI
customers in the illumination market make recent build-up in China has been put on
low-cost LED manufacturing a tremendous hold due to falling LED prices and over- FIG. 1. Global distribution of LED fab
challenge. “There are numerous applica- supply concerns. “We see some overcapac- capacity.
tions and thousands of LEDs that need to ity, but we believe this will be a short-term
be matched together,” he said. issue,” she said. Savala also provided an by inviting the audience to download the
As a result, Black stated that Lumileds update of sapphire substrate prices, which Manufacturing Roadmap for Solid-state
is moving toward more standardized LED had fallen to a new low of $10 per 2-inch sub- Lighting Research & Development (www. ____
products that become differentiated toward strate by the end of 2011 (Fig. 2). ssl.energy.gov/techroadmaps.html) and to
the end of the manufacturing process. “This Industry standards provide one path to actively participate in its on-going revision.
will simplify the front-end processes, where cost reduction in LED manufacturing. Sav- He stated that the industry is essentially on
the capital outlay is the greatest, while also ala noted that currently there are over 30 schedule with the roadmap to achieve LED
reducing the number of different die types.” different 6-inch sapphire-wafer products efficacy of 176 lm/W in 2012 with a price of
Black continued, “We still will have cus- on the market. In 2010, SEMI organized the $6/klm (cool white). Brodrick cited two pri-
tom solutions in cases of very large custom- HB-LED standards committee and there are orities in the roadmap, which are the devel-
ers or niche products, but the practice of currently four task forces for LED manufac- opment of flexible and cost-effective manu-
customizing single-die emitters for light- turing. The mission is to develop geometric facturing methods for LED modules, light
ing is no longer practical.” standards for 6-inch sapphire wafers (cur- engines and luminaires as well as high-
In addition, the company is building rently in the ballot stage); defi ne substrate- speed, non-destructive test equipment
highly-configurable manufacturing lines to carrier geometries and interfaces for auto- and standardized test procedures for key
achieve the necessary flexibility. Lumileds mation; investigate the allowable impurities stages in the manufacturing process. For
is in the process of expanding its LED back- and defect levels for 6-inch sapphire wafers; LED luminaires, a 20× reduction in man-
end assembly facility in Penang, Malaysia. and identify appropriate ESH (environmen- ufacturing cost is projected between 2010
The all-LED-lit facility is aimed at comple- tal, safety and health) guidelines for LED and 2020 (Fig. 3).
tion in mid-2012. manufacturing. Brodrick emphasized that cost reduction,
while maintaining high-quality manufac-
Manufacturing roadmap on schedule turing, all comes down to one metric: bin-
LAURA PETERS is a Senior Technical Editor Jim Brodrick, the US DOE’s solid-state ning yield. The DOE is funding programs in
with LEDs Magazine. lighting program manager, began his talk upstream process control, non-destructive
testing, manufacturing automa- Two-inch sapphire substrate price ($) world’s largest semiconductor
tion, and advanced packaging 40 foundry company. He answered
schemes that can lead to higher 35 his own question in the affi rma-
30
binning yields. In packaging, tive, stating that many high-pro-
25
Brodrick said that higher levels 20 ductivity processes can be trans-
of component integration are 15 ferred from semiconductor to
needed, and that LED companies 10 LED manufacturing.
5
will in general move to wafer- 0
Firstly, he said, there is a need
scale packaging for cost reasons. 1 2 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 for an integrated development
200 2009 2010 2011
He noted that of the DOE’s Source: SEMI environment in LED manufac-
total SSL program, worth $114 turing that includes device and
FIG. 2. Two-inch sapphire substrate price.
million in 2011, 31% is dedicated process simulation, similar to
to OLED-related activities. The what exists in semiconductor
roadmap calls for a reduction in OLED the focus areas for cost reduction include manufacturing. “The GaN industry has not
luminaire manufacturing cost from around better utilization of materials, reduced had enough databases to build the infra-
$230/klm in 2012 to under $20/klm in 2020. organic layer cost and improved encapsu- structure, so many developments have been
“High-speed, low-cost, thin-fi lm deposition lation methods. empirical,” he stated.
for OLED production probably will require TSMC plans to bring fully automated
new tool platforms,” said Brodrick. He Wafer size increases 8-inch manufacturing processes to LED
added that developments in large-screen Jacob Tarn, president of TSMC Solid State manufacturing. For instance, Tarn talked
OLED-based displays, including large-scale Lighting Ltd, presented a talk entitled “Can about growing epilayers on 4-inch or 6-inch
deposition methods and automation, should a major semiconductor player accelerate the substrates, then transferring the GaN-based
benefit the OLED lighting market. Some of LED cost-reduction curve?” TSMC is the epilayers to 8-inch wafers using wafer bond-
____________ ________
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ing. Then, fi nal processing – including met- Relative manufacturing cost in brightness and color of
allization, passivation, phosphor coating 1.0 LEDs. To date, Rubicon
Optics
and lens molding – can be performed, fol- 0. has shipped over 230,000
Assembly
lowed by wafer dicing and testing. In terms 6-inch polished sapphire
0.8
of process and equipment control, main- Driver wafers.
0.
stays of the semiconductor process control
0.6
world, including run-to-run control, data Mechanical/Thermal Tool productivity
0.5
mining and equipment tracking, can be Thomas Uhrmann of EV
applied to LED manufacturing. 0.4 Group cited lithographic
Beyond these steps, Tarn suggested that 0.3 patterning as a key cost-
LED packages
perhaps optics can be developed for mul- 0.2 reduction area for LED
tiple LED emitters, and that control func- 0.1 manufacturers. Some
tions might be integrated at the LED chip 0.0 of the parameters that
Source: DOE 2010 2012 2015 2020
or package level. affect patterning yield
Raja Parvez, CEO of Rubicon Technology, include warpage and
then talked about the advantages of pro- FIG. 3. LED luminaire roadmap targets. poor visibility of align-
gressing to larger-diameter sapphire sub- ment marks due to the
strates as well as recent industry trends. quality large-diameter substrate material light-scattering properties of LED wafers.
He said that there are essentially five major and that at the wafer level, flatness and In this area, 1× steppers compete with prox-
producers of sapphire wafers, who all added defect-free manufacturing are much more imity aligners.
capacity in the last year, leading to signifi- difficult to achieve. Improved wafer flatness In LED fabs with different wafer sizes,
cant price reduction. However, he contends has been correlated with more consistent tools must be capable of handling differ-
that few manufacturers can provide high- lithographic results and greater consistency ent wafer sizes with minimal changeover
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time. In evaluating equipment purchases, one of the challenges in LED manufacturing higher temperatures than the prevail-
Uhrmann advised that users should evalu- is identifying which process steps impart ing material used today, a polycarbonate.
ate not only the cost of ownership of the tool the greatest variation in lumen output and Finally, thermal-interface materials made
(in $ per wafer) but also its footprint effi- color of the LED. He also said that more LED of silicone can be screen printed and cut
ciency (wafers per hour per square meter). manufacturers are interested in performing to virtually any shape to provide stress
Many LED manufacturers are now purs- LED testing at elevated temperatures. He relief, shock dampening and/or heat trans-
ing vertical LED structures, which may be stated that thermal control is a challenge, fer in a variety of LED lamp and luminaire
capable of higher light-extraction efficiency whether the test is performed at the wafer, applications.
than lateral designs, while providing good die or module level. Scharpf added that test-
heat conduction to the submount assem- ing at elevated temperatures will increase Packaging cost
bly or package, according to Uhrmann. For test times because an equilibrium condition Ilkan Cokgor of Everlight Electronics
these structures, EV Group has developed must be achieved. He further warned that focused his talk on processes for plastic
a variety of eutectic bonding and transient leaded chip car-
liquid-phase bonding processes capable of Epi cost reduction Cumulative rier (PLCC) pack-
per unit area (%) impact (%)
withstanding high temperature cycling in ages. PLCCs are
the latter process steps. 30 120 low-cost sur-
face-mount pack-
Defect and yield management 25 100 ages that have not
Abdul Lateef, CEO of Plasma-Therm, a 20 80 developed a repu-
maker of plasma-enhanced CVD (PECVD) tation for reliabil-
tools, discussed the demand for better data 15 60 ity in LED packag-
management from LED manufacturers. He ing until recently.
10 40
provided an example of how in-situ metrol- These packages
ogy is helping to automate the process. “We 5 20 distribute heat and
have equipped our PECVD tools with opti- light through spa-
0 0
cal emission interferometry which uses the .5 X 5 X 5 X .5 X .8 X .5 X .5 X .8 X .5 X 3X tially distributed
i n ) 1 ) 1.2 ) 1.2 rs) 0 2) 0 yr) 0 F) 1 yr) 0 s) 1 2) 1.
light from the plasma to monitor film thick- b /W /$M e (h /cm hrs
/ B / n
r/m
LEDs.
m T ($ (ru
ness,” he said. ( 2n ss (lm 2/hr tim ies ($ ost ( lity (M sum. rval m2/h Cokgor pointed
eld ne (cm ery ilit rc bi on nte . (c
Mike Plisinski of Rudolph Technolo- Yi ght eff. ecov d ut rato Relia nd c PM i . eff to several recent
i n e sa rsp
Br apex R
sa Op Source:
gies also discussed the theme of metrology C Ga p are F loo Rudolph Technologies improvements in
S
and yield management methods. He said PLCC packages.
“Epi engineers have little visibility into FIG. 4. Contributors to epi cost reduction. These include a
the impact of epi on downstream LED pro- modified primary
cesses.” Plisinski suggested a concentration if an LED undergoes self-heating, operating optic; a new alloy nitridation process that
of process-control resources at the epitax- wavelength is likely to shift and measured improves the crystal structure of the phos-
ial process level. Fig. 4 shows that LED yield flux can change significantly. phor material and improves brightness;
and light output have the greatest impact and new sidewall etching and patterned-
on overall epi cost reduction. Thermal management sapphire-substrate processes on the chips.
LED manufacturers can use automatic Geoff Gardner of Dow Corning talked The PLCC also uses a die-attach material
defect classification to classify defects into about innovations in silicone technology with higher thermal conductivity (0.8 W/
type and cross-reference this data with as applied to LEDs. Silicone is perhaps best mK) and a higher efficiency reflector.
yield management to separate harmful known for its use as an LED chip encapsu- Ravi Bhatkal of Cookson Electronics
from nuisance defects. “We’ve seen cases lant. Garner said the company has devel- discussed some of the thermal challenges
where certain defect types, regardless of oped silicone with a higher refractive index associated with using package, submount
size, always impact yield, whereas other specifically for high-power LEDs. “Any LED and board materials that all have differ-
types do not,” said Plisinski. He said that above 0.5 watt is going to require a higher- ent coefficients of thermal expansion. Fast
inspection recipes can then be tuned to refractive-index material capable of with- temperature changes induce more thermal
detect the critical defects. He also empha- standing high operating temperatures,” stress and can lead to creep failures. He
sized that the investment in process-con- he said. suggested a combination of relevant mate-
trol tools should scale with production Silicone is also used for injection-molded rial stack design, thermal modeling and
capacity. secondary optics such as total-internal- advanced thermal cycling tests to provide a
Next, Dan Scharpf of Labsphere talked reflection lenses. In the case of remote- mapping function between accelerated test
about optical testing of LEDs. He said that phosphor optics, silicone can withstand results and estimated useful lifetime.
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Key Features
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A
s usual, Strategies in Light opened suffering much less relative droop (the drop- China has set various targets for 2015,
with a review of the HB-LED mar- off in efficiency at higher current densities). by when it aims to be “one of the leading
ket and a forecast for the years to There are a whole range of ways in which the nations for SSL,” said Wu. These targets
come, provided by market-research com- GaN-on-GaN LEDs are different from more include LED efficiency of 150 lm/W in mass
pany Strategies Unlimited. Th is year’s pre- conventional devices, not least the trian- production and 200 lm/W in R&D, with a
sentation by Ella Shum, LED practice direc- gular chip-shape that Soraa is using. But a price of 30 RMB/klm (under $5/klm). The
tor and conference co-chair, provided the number of observers were skeptical that the Chinese government is investing heavily
biggest talking point of the whole three-day MR16 lamps could be offered at a competi- to develop and strengthen the SSL supply
event, when it was revealed that the over- tive price, due to the high cost of the GaN chain, enhance public awareness of SSL, and
all market for packaged LED components is starting material. For more on Soraa, see launch a national SSL standards committee.
likely to stay roughly flat from 2012 through www.ledsmagazine.com/news/9/2/18. Also, the “10 cities, 10,000 LED products”
2016. The strong growth in lighting applica- demonstration project will be extended
tions for LEDs will be offset by the decline in China’s LED industry to 37 cities.
revenue from the backlighting segment, said Following Shum’s talk, the HB-LED Market Wu said that the Chinese LED indus-
Shum. Further details can be found on page track continued with presentations on the try is maturing rapidly,
21. Shum’s talk opened the plenary session LED industry in China and in Korea. Wu and there is plenty
of the HB-LED Markets track, one of three Ling, general secretary of the China Solid- of work being
parallel tracks at Strategies in Light. The State Lighting Alliance (CSA), spoke about done to build
LEDs in Lighting track is discussed on page the continued development and expansion
39, while the LED Manufacturing track (new of China’s SSL industry, which she said had
this year) is covered on page 27. revenues of RMB156 billion ($24.8 bn) in 2011,
and grew by 30% year-on-year. This was split
GaN-on-GaN LEDs into RMB6.5 bn ($1 bn) for epitaxial wafers
Soraa, a stealthy start-up, chose Strategies and chips, RMB28.5 bn ($4.5 bn) for packaged
in Light to make its fi rst public appear- LEDs, and RMB121 bn ($19 bn) for end prod-
ance. CEO Eric Kim revealed the compa- ucts. General lighting and landscape light-
ny’s fi rst products: a series of MR16 LED ing were the biggest application areas, at
lamps designed to replace 40W or 50W hal- 25% and 24% of the total respectively, fol-
ogens (Fig. 1). However, the company’s core lowed by backlighting (18%) and display
innovation is to develop GaN-on-GaN LEDs, screens (14%).
and Kim said that Soraa’s fab in Fremont, As is often the case with China, many
California, is in “full production mode.” of the numbers quoted by Wu were vast:
Because the LED material has a 1000-fold for example, she said that newly-built
reduction in dislocation density, the GaN- residential areas will create demand for
on-GaN LEDs can be driven much harder 1.2-1.5 million street lights every year
(250 A/cm²) than traditional LEDs, while for the next 20-30 years.
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LEDsmagazine.com
LEDsmagazine.c
___________ MARCH 2012 33
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Automotive headlights
A small numbers of car and even motorbikes
now have full-LED headlamps (Fig. 3), but
Dirk Vanderhaeghen of Philips Lumileds
predicted that penetration will increase in
the next few years. He said that 2013 would
see the fi rst headlights requiring a single
LED module per headlight for a low-beam
solution. This will reduce both cost and sys-
tem complexity, and will open the way for
penetration of LED headlights in main-
stream, rather than just high-end, vehicles. FIG. 3. LED headlights on the Audi S7 featured in a vampire-themed TV ad that aired
He predicted that the number of cars with during the 2012 Super Bowl, two days before SIL began (www.ledsmagazine.com/
LED headlights would grow from 1.5 million news/9/2/4).
________ The vampires didn’t enjoy the “daylight” created by the 5500K LEDs.
in 2013 to 5.0 million in 2015, and the value
of the LED components used in this applica- Backlighting (mobile PCs, desktop monitors and LCD TVs,
tion would grow from $130 million to $300 Paul Semenza of DisplaySearch, a market- with screen sizes of 9-in and above). Mobile
million. The market value will not continue research company, said that LCD-TV back- PCs are essentially saturated, but the other
to grow as rapidly as the number of vehicles lights will dominate LED demand through categories lag behind. “LED penetration in
adopting LED headlights, since the number 2013, but lighting will take over in 2014. LCD TVs has been slower than expected,
of LEDs per headlight unit will fall. While LED chip and package prices have but is continuing” said Semenza. While the
So why use LEDs in headlights? “LEDs use fallen dramatically, they still represent a number of LCDs with LED backlights will
less fuel,” said Vanderhaeghen, “but can also large proportion of the bill-of-materials cost increase through 2013, the average number
be used to express a strong brand identity.” for displays. However, the cost structure for of LEDs per backlight will peak in 2012 at
There are design advantages of using LED displays is less dependent on the LED cost 12 (Fig. 4), and will then fall due to efficacy
systems that typically have a depth of about than is the case for lighting. LEDs represent improvements and new designs such as low-
5 cm, compared with 10-15 cm for halogen about 25% of the cost of an LED-backlit unit cost direct backlights. In the LCD-TV seg-
projectors. And then there is the smart func- (BLU) – obviously this varies by TV size and ment, chip demand will also peak in 2012 at
tionality aspect of using an LED matrix to the backlight design – but less than 5% of the around 24 bn units (normalized for 500×500-
implement intelligent lighting that can illu- whole TV cost. For LED lamps, the LED cost μm chips) and then will start to fall.
minate around corners, for example. can easily exceed 50% of the total. The low-cost, direct backlight schemes
The target for LED lighting is to be able to DisplaySearch estimates that the total use fewer LEDs than conventional direct
match the performance of xenon lamps and global LED chip capacity, normalized for backlighting, but the LEDs are larger and
provide about 1000 lm on the road, which for 500×500-μm devices, will reach almost 95 have lenses to direct the light. Th is helps to
LEDs translates to about 2000 “hot source bn units in 2012, compared with around 82 eliminate certain optical fi lms within the
lumens” (i.e. an LED-module output of 2000 lm bn in 2011. Taiwan is now slightly ahead of backlight, but means that thin panels can-
with a case temperature of 85°C). But there is Korea in terms of unit volume, with these not be built. “Th is trend towards so-called
also the need to move towards cost-effective, two countries accounting for 74% of the chubby TVs is ironic given the association
single-LED sources to enable mass adoption. total. The top three LED-chip suppliers by in recent years of LEDs with thin TVs,” said
“Most systems today use fans for cooling,” said volume – Samsung LED, LG Innotek and Semenza. Also, he said, as LED unit pricing
Vanderhaeghen. “But this is not sustainable Epistar – are all very close to LCD back- decreases, the driving force gets weaker for
for OEMs to translate into mass-market vehi- light makers, said Semenza, and obviously reducing the number of LEDs per unit.
cles.” He pointed out that LEDs rated at a max- the fi rst two are vertically integrated with
imum case temperature of 130°C, rather than major TV makers. Driving SSL adoption
110°C, would allow the use of much smaller The share of LEDs in backlights is above Cree’s Mike Watson was refreshingly con-
heatsinks for the same output. 50% for all large-area LCD applications troversial for the first talk on Thursday
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Sharp has extended its LED portfolio to include three high-luminosity temperature of up to 90 °C. Such qualities mean they are not just
modules: the 15W, 25W and 50W MegaZENI LEDs. These LED arrays the intelligent alternative to individual LEDs but also first choice for
are compact, light and extremely bright with a shiningly high light indoor and outdoor lighting applications. MegaZENI LEDs are Energy
quality. Sharp’s MegaZENI LEDs give product developers and design- Star and ANSI-compliant, combine maximum energy efficiency with
ers the chance to achieve the best possible colour reproduction in minimum thermal dissipation, and come in various colour tempera-
surroundings where ultra-high luminance is essential, e.g. spotlights tures from warm to cool white.
or downlights. These new arrays stand out from the crowd with a Our Service Team will be glad to supply you with any enginee-
luminous flux of up to 6,700 lm, a luminous efficacy of up to 105 lm/W, ring samples and advice you need. E-Mail: info.sme@sharp.eu;
a CRI of up to 93 and a lifetime of up to 40,000 hours at an operating Phone: +49 (0)180 507 35 07; www.sharpleds.eu
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morning. He described Zhaga as “an SSL version of the old model,” Backlight LED shipments Number
i.e. the lamp-ballast-socket paradigm, and asked: “Why are we wast- (Billions, 500 × 500 μm size) of LEDs
ing time with A-lamps?” His discussion was entitled “Beyond the 60 18
LED” and looked at why the industry needs to focus on new busi- 16
50
ness models to deliver SSL value. 14
40 12
Drawing parallels with transitions to solid-state technology in
10
other industries, Watson said that such changes always improved 30
8
core function and value, and provided well-defined benefits. How- 20 6
ever, the transitions also involved hardware changes, and this was 4
10
feared by consumers. To overcome this roadblock, said Watson, “new 2
0 0
adoption models became as important as technology to drive mar- 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
ket acceptance.” Source: DisplaySearch Quarterly LED Supply/Demand Report
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n
ptio
Demand LED manufacturing capacity
Ado Jed Dorsheimer of Canaccord Genuity, an investment bank, dis-
cussed the economics of LED manufacturing. He said that the recent
“second cycle” of the LED market, driven by backlighting demand,
resulted in a 4× increase in global LED manufacturing capacity.
Create Enable Deliver However, this massive capacity is being used inefficiently.
Performance Scale Time Although LED unit demand will continue to increase, as light-
Optimized cost Acceptance ing becomes the dominant application, Dorsheimer does not expect
2012 to see a similar “third cycle” of manufacturing where the focus
FIG. 5. To “cross the chasm” in 2012 and enable widescale is on scale. Instead, he said that a change in the “yield vs. scale
SSL adoption, the industry needs to focus on various adoption debate” may be anticipated, as manufacturers devote more of their
factors: performance, optimization and cost, quality and capital expenditure into increasing the productivity and yield of
acceptance, and scale (source: Cree). their existing manufacturing equipment, in order to increase their
return on investment.
general, the single-large-die approach is best suited where there are In conclusion, Dorsheimer said that “LED will be the hidden gem
specific optical requirements, for example directional luminaires or of the cleantech/sustainability movement.” Because upstream invest-
outdoor lighting. But, said Doxsee, “the multi-small-chip approach ments have already been made, this should allow for costs to come
is usually better if optics allow.” Also, the different-sized chips have down “exponentially,” he said. “LEDs will begin as an energy-efficiency
the same manufacturing process, but small die have better yield. The story, but will become more about utility: users can do more.”
_________________
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YOUR
SOURCE FOR
LED & LED
LIGHTING
COMPONENTS
• A world of 10,000 LED lighting components and design solutions
• LEDs, Power and Thermal management, Interconnect and Optic
products available
• Global portfolio of industry leading manufacturers
farnell.com/lighting
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A
diverse set of speakers ranging from
lighting designers to research sci-
entists to executives from LED and
lighting manufacturers took the stage in
the “LEDs in Lighting” track at Strategies
in Light. The central theme was obstacles
to broader deployment of solid-state light-
ing (SSL) and potential solutions that can
drive such deployment. The track included
success stories as well, but the overriding
theme was unmistakably focused on how
LEDs can eventually dominate the general-
lighting market.
Conference co-chair and Strategies
Unlimited director of LED lighting research
Vrinda Bhandarkar started the track with a
market report on LED lighting (page 21). Ted
Ferreira, principal at CD+M Lighting Design
Group followed with a keynote presentation
that set the obstacle/solution tone.
Ferreira discussed some of the challenges FIG. 1. CD+M Lighting Design Group and Lighting Science Group used a range of LED
that still stand in the way of broader adop- lighting to create the “Garden Lights, Holiday Nights” display at the Atlanta Botanical
tion of LED lighting. He asked the audi- Garden. RGB LEDs lit color-changing objects in the 16-acre display.
ence to remember the number sequence
15, 3, 15. The fi rst two numbers represent a high-quality 60W-equivalent CFL lamp the consumer and professional markets:
the life expectancy, in years, of LED and costs a little more than $5 today, while the always innovate; tell the story; create an
CFL lamps respectively, based on 9 hours of Philips EnduraLED 60W-equivalent lamp audience; establish rules; and start early.
operation per day. The third number repre- costs around $32. Ferreira said that the Innovation was a widely-used word at
sents the average time, in years, that a per- return on investment (ROI) of the two lamps SIL and Ferreira, among others, suggested
son lives in the same home. Ferreira said, is similar but the ROI calculation for LEDs is rethinking lighting products. He stressed
“Most LED bulbs will outlast the average US based on their much longer life. “Most peo- that there is nothing sacred about the
homeowner.” ple don’t make a [buying] decision based on socket and used a table task lamp with an
a 15-year lifespan with the possible excep- integrated LED light engine and driver as
Residential obstacles tion of their home,” he said an example.
The point that Ferreira was making is that An energy-efficiency theme pervaded Fer- Telling the story is perhaps the most
buying an LED lamp remains an unlikely reira’s talk, but he clearly believes that the important of Ferreira’s steps. People must
choice for the typical consumer. He said that LED lighting industry must do more than be aware of what they are seeing for it to
cut energy use to fully succeed. He discussed impact future buying decisions. For exam-
MAURY WRIGHT is a Senior Technical Editor what he called the “five simple steps” that ple, CD+M partnered with Lighting Sci-
with LEDs Magazine. can accelerate the adoption of SSL in both ence Group on an LED-lighting display at
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FIG. 5. Type A Productions installed more than 5000 LED downlights in the Indianapolis
JW Marriott hotel, mostly in the guest rooms.
(CQS) as an accurate metric. Steen said “I the industry has mistakenly accepted that
hope the industry actually adopts it so that color consistency is assured by LEDs that fall
we can try to get down to one metric.” within a 3-step SDCM ellipse out of the box,
Still, Steen’s larger concern is the need for and in the worst case, those LEDs should
standards that defi ne color shift over time shift a maximum of 5 additional steps over
(and obviously LEDs that would meet such time. In general the industry is managing to
standards). He said, “It might not be lumen live with such performance, in part accord-
depreciation that defi nes lifetime of LEDs. ing to Steen because all of the LEDs in an
It may indeed be color that defines the life- installation typically shift in the same direc-
time of a source.” tion over time.
The LM-80 standard used to specify LED But Steen presented the scenario depicted
lifetime does not really address color, said in Fig. 4 that shows a huge potential prob-
Steen. It does require an LED maker to dis- lem. The point in the upper left corner of the
close color shift over 6000 hours, but doesn’t red box represents an LED at the 3-step line
set limits on acceptable shift. Steen said that out of the box. Over time, that LED shifts
Energy Star requires luminaires to maintain in color up and to the left out to the range
color within a range of 0.007 relative to the of an 8-step SDCM ellipse. Say one lamp or
CIE 1976 color space. But that delta, accord- LED module in a group of sources fails and
ing to Steen, is in the range of a 7-step SDCM has to be replaced. The replacement meets
ellipse. CELMA has even less rigorous guide- the 3-step limit for a new component but
lines in Europe. is actually at the low, right corner of the
ellipse in Fig. 4. The result is an 11-step dif-
_____________ Accepted quality levels ference in installed sources, and that could
______________ Steen understands the difficulty faced by be unsightly.
the standards bodies. He said “Statisticians As a solution, Steen proposed a color-
__________________________
do not know how to statistically extrapo- maintenance curve that is modeled after the
__________________________
late color movement over time.” Steen said commonly used lumen-maintenance curve
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RELY ON UL
When you rely on UL for your lighting product needs, your future is bright.
VISIT WWW.UL.COM/BRIGHT
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and specs such as hours to L70. He proposed Zhaga consortium (www.ledsmagazine. ductions, presented a case study of an LED
holding LED color maintenance to the 1-step com/features/8/11/11). The interfaces are lighting project at the JW Marriott hotel in
chromaticity and 2-step CCT limits that he mechanical, thermal and electrical, and ulti- Indianapolis, Indiana. The project included
discussed earlier. mately allow LED modules to be packaged in the installation of more than 5000 LED
custom forms. downlights, mostly in guest rooms. The
Modular products Guenebaut warned that the approach has result has been 25-30% energy savings over
Getting back to the subject of innovation, risk in that you can end up with too many what legacy sources would have required,
a number of SIL speakers lauded the fact modules if you are not careful. He also said and a similar reduction in the size of emer-
that LEDs will free product designers from that modules can in some cases lead to com- gency generators required.
accepted lighting form factors including promises in terms of performance relative The project faced numerous obstacles
linear troffers, downlights, and even bulbs. to a luminaire designed specifically for an including issues with contractors that were
Still, we haven’t yet witnessed a lot of inno- application. But there are positives as well. hesitant about SSL, and with lighting man-
vation in form factor. Ironically a company Guenebaut said that because its modules ufacturers' representatives that failed to
called Nualight, which is focused on retail are used across many different products, produce a suitable product. Ultimately the
lighting for food displays, was the lone com- the company can spend more time and team found a single downlight that met their
pany that addressed the need for custom- effort optimizing the performance in terms requirements including a relatively-tight
izable form in the LEDs in Lighting track. of parameters such as efficacy. mounting space.
Vincent Guenebaut, head of product When asked, McComas said that the cho-
innovation at Nualight, said “We are not Success stories sen downlight had a CCT of 3000K and a CRI
limited anymore by the size and shape of There were other SSL success stories were of 79. But McComas said, “CRI has nothing
fluorescent tubes.” Instead Nualight is tak- also discussed in the lighting track. Michael to do with LEDs. It’s not a valuable met-
ing a modular approach by offering config- Royer, lighting engineer at the DOE’s Pacific ric. It doesn’t even work for incandescent.”
urable SSL systems that can fit in refrig- Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), pre- Apparently the team couldn’t correlate CRI
erated display cases and above display sented results from the lab’s latest round of scores with light that looked good in the
counters that hold items such as produce. tests of LED-based retrofit lamps (www.leds-
_______ application.
Guenebaut said, “The luminaire becomes magazine.com/news/9/2/16). The results
__________________
the main attribute of a case.” were much improved over the prior round Museum lighting
While Nualight does offer modular especially in the case of A-lamps with most Naomi Miller, senior lighting engineer with
products, Guenebaut said the company’s delivering efficacy in the 60 lm/W range and PNNL, presented a number of examples of
approach to product design is to define CRI around 80. LED lighting in museums. One reason that
interfaces rather than modules. The descrip- Sarena McComas and Jennifer Rueth, LED lighting is attractive to museums is
tion sounds much like the approach of the partners at lighting design firm Type A Pro- that SSL does not emit energy in the IR or
___________________________________
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www.exleds.com
____________
XLEDs-NEW PRODUCTS
MR-16
MX60L 5.7W
480 lm / 770 lx
40° / 60°
MR-16
GA1608S 8W
SL-H3 90/120/135/150W 540lm / 980lx
8550 / 11500 / 12500 / 13750 lm 40° / 60°
IP 66
PAR-30
PX-310S 11W
860lm / 1800lx
40° / 55°
PAR-38
PX-38 16W
980lm / 1850lx
Q-400 10W 40° / 60°
CW,NW,WW Changing function
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UV bands – and both are known as harm- keting officer Sam Klepper covered
ful. But Miller said that is a misconception the familiar ground of sav-
that only UV and IR damage art. She said ing energy via dimming
that paintings can fade due to exposure to lights and turning lights
visible light as well, and that some energy off based on occupancy
bands are especially damaging. There is the sensors. And he described
potential with LEDs to precisely control the other benefits of having
spectral power distribution. occupancy sensors through-
Miller cited one example of successful SSL out an office. He said Redwood
deployment in the Brooker Gallery at The customers are using the lighting sys-
Field Museum in Chicago, Illinois. She said tem to detect the availably of conference
the LED lighting cut energy use by 63% due rooms dynamically and even to enhance
both to more-efficient lighting and a reduc- security by detecting the presence of peo-
tion in HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air ple in areas that should be unoccupied.
conditioning) energy use. Miller said that The lone speaker from an LED manufac- FIG. 6. Third-generation, lighting class
relative to halogen lights, the payback for turer was Mark McClear, global director of LEDs, such as the XLamp XT-E, will reach
LED lighting is 2.4 years when the HVAC applications engineering at Cree. McClear the 200 lm/W efficacy level, according
expense is included in the analysis. insisted that the best is yet to come in to Cree’s Mark McClear.
Several speakers in the track discussed LEDs. He described Cree’s newest prod-
controls including Redwood Systems – a ucts, the XLamp XT-E family (Fig. 6), as terms of efficacy gains, but that the third-
company that specializes in networked a “third-generation” LED (www.ledsmag-
_________ generation designs will get the industry to
lighting for office spaces (www.ledsmaga-
__________ azine.com/news/9/2/7).
_______________ He said second- 200 lm/W. He expects Cree and other mak-
zine.com/news/7/3/7).
_____________ Redwood chief mar- generation LEDs are “running out of gas” in ers of lighting-class LEDs such as Nichia,
Philips Lumileds, and Osram Opto Semi-
conductors to all deliver third-generation
families soon and said Cree was already in
high volume already with its newest LEDs.
McClear clearly sees LEDs as the primary
source for general lighting going forward. He
addressed OLED lighting and the fact that
some projections have OLEDs achieving
fluorescent-T8 efficacy and brightness lev-
els by 2017. But he said that in 2017, OLED
will be competing with LEDs as the incum-
bent technology rather than with T8s. He
said, “Can OLED enter that market and com-
pete? I think no.”
LED droop – the unexplained drop in effi-
cacy at higher drive currents – was also a
target in McClear’s presentation, and has
been considered an obstacle to broader
SSL deployment. While droop hasn’t been
solved, McClear believes efficacy gains in
general have eliminated droop as a con-
cern. He said that at 50 lm/W droop was a
big concern, but with LED component effi-
cacy over 100 lm/W droop is a hurdle that
has been cleared.
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________________
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U
tility company San Diego Gas &
Electric (SDG&E) has partnered
with Hodad’s restaurant in down-
town San Diego, California, to install LED-
based ambient lighting in a demonstration
of energy efficiency and high-quality light-
ing. The solid-state lighting installation uses
LED-based, T8-retrofit tubes in the kitchen,
LED A-lamps in the dining area, and LED
downlights in corridors. After the project,
SDG&E concluded that LED lighting can
deliver energy savings ranging from 31% to
91% in restaurant applications.
Hodad’s has long been a popular restau-
rant in the counter-culture, costal commu-
nity of Ocean Beach just northwest of down-
town San Diego. A visit from Food Network
star Guy Fieri of “Diners, Drive-ins and
Dives” extended the popularity of the res-
taurant to foodies visiting San Diego from
around the globe. Last year, Hodad’s opened
a second location in downtown San Diego on
the border of the Gaslamp Quarter. That new FIG. 1. Duracell LED A-lamps light Hodad’s signature burger and sides.
restaurant serves as the site for what SDG&E
called a “Restaurant ambient lighting dem- the new Hodad’s was already underway when prior plan was for 95W incandescent lamps.
onstration showcase.” SDG&E’s Emerging Technologies Program got Duracell is better known for batteries but
While the goal of the demonstration was involved in the project. The contractor had has launched a line of LED retrofit lamps
energy efficiency, quality of lighting was installed 4-lamp lensed fluorescent troffers (www.duracelllighting.com). DeJean says
also paramount in the restaurant applica- in the kitchen area spaced at 4-ft intervals that the LED lamps deliver 25-30 fc (foot-
tion. “We take lighting for granted but it’s in each dimension, totaling 52 lamps. In cor- candle) at table level.
so important in my business,” said Hodad’s ridors, the contractor had installed recessed In the corridors, the team used a generic
owner Mike Hardin. “I always tell my cus- lights and planned to use 13 compact fluo- LED retrofit kit purchased at Home Depot
tomers that 90 percent of their taste buds are rescent lamps (CFLs) in those cans. A total of in place of the CFL lamps. The 11W LED kits
in their eyeballs.” Specifically, the lighting 42 incandescent lamps were intended for the replaced what would have been 23W CFLs.
needs to render the colors in the food well; suspended fi xtures in the dining area. The LED T8 tubes used in the kitchen also
Fig. 1 shows one of the restaurant’s signature came from Duracell, although the company
hamburgers under an LED A-lamp mounted LED lighting selection has yet to formally announce the products.
in a suspended fi xture. SDG&E worked with lighting consultant The company’s website indicates that LED
A remodel of the space that would become Daryl DeJean of Emerging Technologies linear lamps are due this summer. While
Associates to plan a conversion to LED most LED T8s require that the fluorescent
MAURY WRIGHT is a Senior Technical Editor lighting. Ultimately the team chose a 9W ballast be removed from the power circuit
with LEDs Magazine. LED A-lamp made by Duracell, whereas the in the fi xture (www.ledsmagazine.com/fea-
tures/7/6/6),
________the Duracell lamps work with
any rapid-start ballast, according to DeJean.
Moreover, he added that the Duracell T8s are
on the order of 5% more efficient when used
with a ballast as opposed to being connected
directly to line power.
Fig. 2 shows a troffer fixture in the
kitchen with owner Hardin at the work
surface. The only lights in the restaurant
that aren’t LED based are the CFL lights
that are visible on the upper left side of the
photo over the cooking surfaces. The project
team felt that LED-based lights would not
be a good match for the heat rising from the
cooking equipment, given the need for heat
dissipation in LED lighting.
The troffers that were installed were not of
the so-called Super T8 variety that use both
more-efficient lamps and ballasts to reduce
energy. The fluorescent lamps would have
dissipated 32W, but were replaced with 22W
Duracell tubes.
FIG. 2 LED-based T8 tubes light work surfaces in the kitchen, although CFLs (at upper
Payback analysis left) are used over hot cooking surfaces.
Table 1 summarizes the simple payback
analysis of the project and is based on the case of the LED T8s used in the kitchen. Gen- to the application.
following assumptions. The lights are on erally, the lighting industry has not judged Indeed, after the LED lighting had been
5792 hours annually based on 16-hour days LED-based T8s as suitable replacements installed for several weeks, Hodad’s workers
and the 362 days/year that the restaurant for fluorescent tubes. For example, the US reported that the lights in the kitchen were
is open. The table presents a retrofit case Department of Energy (DOE) has docu- essentially too bright. SDG&E and DeJean
meaning that payback factors-in the total mented LED T8 performance in a number experimented and ultimately removed two
cost of the LED lamps and fi xtures used to of evaluations (www.ledsmagazine.com/ of the LED T8s from each troffer.
replace the incumbent sources. In a new news/8/5/22).
________ And while the LED tubes use According to DeJean, the fi xtures with
construction scenario where only the incre- less energy than fluorescent lamps, they also four fluorescent tubes installed generated
mental cost of the LED lighting is consid- produce less light and aren’t a good match 40-50 fc at the task plane. With four LED
ered, the payback drops considerably for for troffer fi xtures designed to reflect the tubes installed, the fi xtures delivered 60
both the downlights and T8 tubes to 1.44 omnidirectional output of fluorescent tubes. fc. With two LED tubes in each fi xture the
and 3.88 years respectively. In the case of Hodad’s, however, the direc- lighting at task level is in the 25-30-fc range
But the story gets more compelling in the tional nature of the LEDs was a good match and that’s appropriate for the application,
Lamp Cost/lamp Number of Total product Energy (kWh) Energy cost/ Annual Annual Simple Payback
($) lamps cost ($) kWh ($) energy cost energy cost (years)
($) savings ($)
Incandescent * 2 42 84 23,110 0.20 4,622 - -
LED direct 25 42 1,050 2,189 0.20 438 4,184 0.23
replacement
CFL * 7 13 91 1,732 0.20 346 - -
LED retrofit kit 50 13 650 828 0.20 166 180 3.11
Fluorescent * 7 52 364 9,638 0.20 1,928 - -
Linear LED 60 52 3,120 6,626 0.20 1,325 603 4.57
TABLE 1. Based on a retrofit scenario, with 5792 hours of annual usage, the different types of LED lighting have paybacks ranging
from about 12 weeks to 4.57 years. (*Base case for each fi xture type)
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SP
OV AC BO
ER EA E O OK
3, R R
00 LY RE EXH
0 B G I
AT IRD IST BIT
TE E
_________________
ND RAT R FO
EE ES R
SI
N
20
11
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the DOE’s testing is without question accurate, it’s also clear that
LED T8s are improving. For example, we also recently reported on a
successful LED T8 case study in an Air New Zealand facility (www.
___
ledsmagazine.com/news/9/1/2).
___________________
____________
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_____________
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Register today to benefit from early bird savings! Visit www.sil-ledchina.com for more information
on the program and to register online.
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A
t the inaugural Ecosystems in
Solid State Lighting Conference in
Washington, DC, last December,
Dan Ruscheinski, vice president of sales
and marketing at Carmanah, described
an almost utopian lighting system of the
future: one that is free of the grid, LED-
based, adaptive and intelligent, more cost
effective than today’s lighting systems. They
are also secure and stable, environmentally
friendly, and available to a greater propor-
tion of the world’s population.
To accomplish such goals, and with the
drive toward zero-net-energy buildings, the
robust solid-state lighting (SSL) industry
will need a solid infrastructure (or ecosys-
tem), and several developments to build that
infrastructure are underway.
Indeed Makarand “Chips” Chipalkatti,
senior director of SSL & emerging market ini- FIG. 1. Concept of a reconfigurable lighting system with adjustable, track-mounted
tiatives for Osram Sylvania Inc., and one of the luminaire heads that are powered by rechargeable batteries.
conference organizers, said the fulfillment of
LED technology goes beyond the use of LED frustrated with the inflexible lighting sys- enable the luminaires to be turned off auto-
light source itself, and extends to the entire tems of today. Often, lighting is not available matically when work areas are empty. The
SSL ecosystem – the light source, power sup- when and where it is needed, and even sim- luminaires could be adjusted vertically or
ply, controls, fixture, and any intelligence ple lighting changes require rewiring above rotated to provide personalized, task-level
built into or used with the system, which the ceiling level and the hiring of electri- lighting and prevent area over-lighting.
makes SSL affordable and practical. cians. Also, users often end up paying high “With this kind of an approach, we could
electricity rates when they use it the most – see energy savings of around 40%,” said
Intelligent office lighting during the day. Brodrick. The rechargeable batteries could
At the conference, Jim Brodrick, lighting Brodrick proposed a flexible lighting also eliminate the wiring along tracks and
program manager at the US Department approach that is designed to use less energy in the ceiling as well as typical power distri-
of Energy (DOE), attempted to answer the than existing office lighting systems. Th is bution issues. Brodrick concluded by asking
question of “what might future lighting sys- approach (Fig. 1) could involve mobile attendees “Can it be done?” – challenging
tems look like?” He chose the office environ- LED light heads on a track, which could be the lighting industry to think beyond the
ment to illustrate how the unique attributes reconfigured wirelessly as needed, via smart bulb in developing tomorrow’s LED light-
of LED lighting might be used to save energy phones or work stations. The system’s on- ing solutions.
and money while enhancing the user expe- board batteries could be recharged during Fritz Morgan, chief product officer of Dig-
rience. Brodrick explained that people are off-peak electricity hours. ital Lumens, also explored lighting control
The luminaires could incorporate day- methods but in a more static environment
LAURA PETERS is a Senior Technical Editor light sensors and adjust light-output lev- – the factory floor. He stated that factories
with LEDs Magazine. els accordingly. Occupancy sensors could are already taking advantage of facility-wide
_____
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New Market
Reviews and Forecasts
Available Now!
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E
Presented By:
SO XHI
20 L BIT
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& UT OO
20 IN R
1 1
2011 Highlights:
54% increase in registered attendees
Sold out exhibition floor
950+ attendees from 52 countries
300+ Keynote attendees
74% exhibition space rebooked at the event
Contact a member of our sales team today to book your exhibit space:
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FIG. 4. This office environment uses solar power, DC electricity and LED lighting fi xtures.
tive include higher lighting-system efficacy, lighting systems, both street lights and signal
a 10% improvement in driver efficiency and lights, which his company manufactures. He
improved driver reliability due to the elimi- said that the trend toward distributed energy
nation of high-voltage inductors. capacity supports the adoption of solar-pow-
The EMerge Alliance, which currently ered outdoor LED lighting.
LED Modules COB Shop has 80 members, is in the process of per- Ruscheinski presented information based
forming its fi rst microgrid beta-site dem- on a survey of North American municipal
𰃂 Long service lifetime: onstrations. Fig. 5 shows a reconfi gurable contractors and the reasons that non-users
50,000 h (L90/B10), office space that utilizes DC-based solar gave for not purchasing solar-powered street
due to ceramic PCB energy to drive LED lighting and controls at lights. The top reason was the uncertainty
𰃂 Highly efficient: 106 lm/W Optima Engineering’s facility in Charlotte, of battery life and the maintenance related
at tc = 65 °C NC. The installation uses free-floating acous- to solar-powered lights. The second concern
𰃂 Narrow colour tolerance tical ceiling clouds that distribute low-volt- was a lack of industry standards and regula-
age DC power to light fi xtures, sensors and tions. The third reason was related to cost and
other electronic devices. Lighting controls, return on investment.
including occupancy sensors and dimmers, Ruscheinski called for continued cost
were provided by Sensor Switch, an Acuity reduction of solar street lights, improved
Visit us: Brand, and Lithonia Lighting, also an Acu- industry education and standards work,
ity Brand, provided the recessed and track and lobbying of governments and utilities
lighting. The rooms can be easily reconfig- for increased funding of solar-powered
ured with minimal rewiring. lighting systems. He believes that solar
pril 2012,
15. – 20. A Ultimately, the EMerge Alliance would street lights offer a cost-effective alterna-
tand B50
like to combine renewable energy, DC tive to grid-based street lights, particu-
Hall 4.0, S energy storage and system intelligence to larly in developing countries where grids
enable net-zero-energy consumption for all are either inaccessible or unreliable. He
new commercial buildings by 2030 and net- discussed the reliability of solar-powered
zero-energy consumption for all existing systems, highlighting a case study where
www.vossloh-schwabe.com commercial buildings by 2050. an earthquake struck Santiago, Chile, just
three months following the installation of
Outdoor lighting solar-powered street lights in a park. The
Carmanah’s Ruscheinski focused his talk park remained illuminated while the entire
on the adoption of solar-powered outdoor city lost grid power.
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Second international
event involving Our newest event
both Chinese & foreign focused on lighting design.
companies at all levels July 31-Aug. 1, 2012 3,000 attendees and nearly
May 22-24, 2012
THE
LED
of supply chain. 90 exhibitors.
SHOW
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equipment suppliers, and end-users who come to evaluate products and services and get the
information they need to conduct business within the global LED and lighting industry.
Whether you are a supplier, an LED manufacturer trying to reach new customers,
a designer looking for new product information, or a buyer exploring the latest
technologies, our events can help achieve your objectives.
For more information on exhibiting or sponsoring at ANY of our events, please contact:
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+1 650 946 3163 +44 0 1992 656 663 +81 3 3219 3642 +86 755 259 88571 x1009
tcarli@strategies-u.com virginiaw@pennwell.com led@ics-inc.co.jp michaelT@actintl.com.hk
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last word
I
wrote a feature article in the last issue of The building-automation standard relies on Choong and Maley pointed out that you
LEDs Magazine on lighting controls (www.___ functions embedded in other ZigBee stan- can use manufacturer-defined commands for
ledsmagazine.com/features/9/2/6),
_____________________ and dards. And I knew other documents defined special features. Moreover, the standard will
lamented the lack of a full standard network the lower network layers, but I expected the be regularly updated as deployments uncover
stack for lighting systems. Networks and con- logical concept of zones in the application- deficiencies in the document relative to SSL
trols will be very important in the continued level automation standard. or any issue.
growth of LED-based solid-state lighting It was Daintree Networks that called my I was also mistaken about the intent of
(SSL). It turns out, however, that I was wrong statements about ZigBee into question, and I another ZigBee standard under development
about ZigBee lacking support for lighting. The discussed some specific lighting features with called ZigBee Light Link. That standard is
ZigBee Alliance has recently published build- them as well. For example, I couldn’t find any focused on SSL, but it’s not intended for instal-
ing- and home-automation standards that mention of the ability to monitor temperature lations with robust home- or building-auto-
include provisions for lighting control. There in fi xtures in the lighting portion of the auto- mation systems. Instead it’s targeted at sim-
are still a few missing pieces relative to SSL, mation standards. Such measurements may ple plug-and-play connections between say a
but there is no reason that lighting manufac- be a key to product longevity given the sensi- remote control and an LED lamp or luminaire.
tures should hesitate in adding ZigBee sup- tivity of LEDs to hot environments. My second look at the status of ZigBee has
port to their products. Jason Choong, Daintree chief solution me convinced that the technology is ready
The alliance completed version 1.0 of the architect and vice president of product man- for prime time. Daintreee says that in fact
ZigBee Building Automation standard back agement, pointed out that there is a com- its ControlScope product family is fully Zig-
in September. Moreover, the standard has mand cluster defined in the ZigBee Clus- Bee compliant.
been endorsed by the BACnet organization – ter Library Specification that defines how to Still as things stand now, there are miss-
the group working under ASHRAE (American implement temperature readings across all ing pieces. Today you still have to use a ded-
Society of Heating Refrigerating and Air-Con- product types. Likewise you won’t find the icated ZigBee controller mated with an
ditioning Engineers) that defined the BACnet cluster used to measure device power in the LED luminaire to realize a workable sys-
data-communication protocol for building building-automation standard. tem. What is missing is luminaires that
automation over wired networks. There are elements of the automation have native ZigBee support integrated into
My difficulty in assessing the state of Zig- spec that are more focused on legacy light- the product. Actually, the lighting makers
Bee is the complex structure of the many ing than SSL. For example, there is a specific are likely to support ZigBee with some type
different standards and specifications. For defi nition of how to measure time since a of modular controller that buyers can spec-
example, I had reviewed the building-auto- lamp was changed. There is not an explicit ify as an option, and that costs extra. But
mation standard and knew there were basic definition of how to deal with an integrated even that type of add-on is missing for now.
capabilities for lighting such as switching a luminaire without a replaceable lamp where I will be looking closely at Zigbee technol-
ZigBee-enabled light on or off, or setting a you might want to know how many hours ogy at Lightfair. I want to see if there evidence
dimming level. But I found no concepts for the luminaire has been powered on, or how of support. I don’t see an imminently available
grouping fi xtures in zones. much time has elapsed since a driver was alternative, so I would hope that the industry
I asked Ryan Maley, director of ZigBee replaced. The defi nition of dimming in the moves to adopt ZigBee and in doing so helps
Certified at the alliance, about the con- standard is also focused more on legacy proliferate SSL. Meanwhile we hope to present
cept of zones and groups. He immediately lighting that doesn’t dim linearly, but you a comprehensive contributed article on apply-
replied, “It is in the network layer standard.” can work around that issue. ing ZigBee to lighting soon.
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VIN DCM
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REVOLUTIONARY!
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