New Technology Creates Single-Chip White LEDs

April 1, 1999

A new technology has been developed for producing LEDs that emit white light without the use of separate red, green and blue LED chips. By combining blue emitting diodes with luminescent dyes, single-chip LEDs are created that emit bright light at altered wavelengths, with the resulting mixture of colors visible to the eye as white light. In addition, the simple circuit design eliminates the need to control three different colors while assuring a stable color tone. Available in a TOPLED surface-mount design, first generation devices derived from this revolutionary white LED technology deliver luminescence intensities of 20 mcd, with next-generation parts, which will be available latter this year, to boost intensities to 60 to 80 mcd. The LW T676 TOPLED white LEDs dissipate 90 mW and are well-suited for use for dashboards, backlighting, reading lamps, displays, image scanning and photocopying, and more.

Sponsored Recommendations

The Importance of PCB Design in Consumer Products

April 25, 2024
Explore the importance of PCB design and how Fusion 360 can help your team react to evolving consumer demands.

PCB Design Mastery for Assembly & Fabrication

April 25, 2024
This guide explores PCB circuit board design, focusing on both Design For Assembly (DFA) and Design For Fabrication (DFab) perspectives.

Unlocking the Power of IoT Integration for Elevated PCB Designs

April 25, 2024
What does it take to add IoT into your product? What advantages does IoT have in PCB related projects? Read to find answers to your IoT design questions.

Near- and Far-Field Measurements

April 16, 2024
In this comprehensive application note, we delve into the methods of measuring the transmission (or reception) pattern, a key determinant of antenna gain, using a vector network...

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!