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2008-06-10
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Editorial: LEDs at Light Fair - Everybody selling, but who's buying?
 
... Mission assignment: Sort through the zillion or so exhibits in the Las Vegas Convention Center to find the companies that claim they are serious about selling solid state lighting fixtures or enabling technologies/modules that bring LED-lighting to everyone's life. In 2007, that narrowed the field to about 1/2 the...
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Features:


Seoul Semiconductor Korean Design Patents Declared Invalid in Nichia Dispute
LIGHTimes Staff

June 10, 2008...Nichia has won the latest IP dispute round with Seoul Semiconductor. Nichia announced that on May 22, 2008, the Korean Intellectual Property Tribunal (IPT) ruled that Seoul Semiconductor’s design registration (No. 364186) is invalid. The tribunal found that the registration was similar to the prior art design registration of Nichia Corporation (Design Publication; Similar Design Registration No. 294490-2). The IPT reportedly rendered the decision against Seoul Semiconductor in relation to the patent invalidation suit filed by Nichia on July 24, 2007. The two companies have butted heads over intellectual property rights around the world for several years. The ruling of the Korean Intellectual Property Tribunal ends only one chapter of the ongoing dispute. Nichia News Release

DOE Releases L Prize Requirements
SSLDesign News Staff

June 10, 2008...At Lightfair International 2008 in Las Vegas, the Department of Energy officially released the requirements for the Bright for Tomorrow Lighting Competition, also known as the L Prize. An award is given to the developer of the best solid state lighting replacement for the 60-Watt A-19, Edison base bulb, the most common bulb used. Another prize will be given to the best solid state lighting replacement for PAR 38 halogen incandescent lamps. The maker of the solid state lighting-based 60-watt incandescent replacement will receive $10 million. The maker of the solid state lighting-based PAR 38 halogen incandescent replacement will receive $5 million. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Saga University Researchers Tout Green LED Manufacturing Cost Improvement
LIGHTimes Staff

June 10, 2008...A research team at Saga University in Saga, Japan, has created a new green LED that the researchers contend is only a fraction of the cost, but can be as energy efficient, according to an article in Nikkei Net. Instead of using the more expensive molecular beam epitaxy, the researchers used what the article called thermal diffusion. Also, instead of using gallium phosphide, one of the frequently used but pricy compounds for green LEDs, the researchers used zinc telluride. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

We're giving away a Sony Video MP3 player... Sign up for, or renew, a LIGHTimes SecondPage membership here in January and you will be automatically entered!

How cool is that? If you've been sitting on the fence about whether to join or renew (or if you've been meaning to, but just haven't gotten around to it), now is the best time to get it done. If your current membership hasn't expired yet, take advantage of an early renewal and we'll add a year to your current term, and we'll throw in an extra month to thank you for your loyalty in support of the industry mission to bring better light to the world! Visit the secure sign-up and renewal page now for the details and to take advantange of our Dec-2008/Jan-2009 giveaway. (Renewals can also just email us at renewals2009@lightimes.com with the subject "Renew me". We will check our records and either process your renewal with the information on file, or contact you if anything needs updating.)

The LED Supply
Chain Conference
Epi, Chips and Devices...
June 8-9 Hsinchu, Taiwan

When markets are uncertain, winning companies in growth markets push forward while the incumbent technologies pull back. Now is the time to press the advantage, and knowledge and updated connections are what you need to do it. To help you use your time most efficiently, this 7th Annual international event has been moved to early June as a lead-in for the 2009 Taiwan Photonics Festival later that same week. Senior executives from the key industry players will gather as we examine the complete vertical market, from leading manufacturers and developers of advanced materials and processes, to packaging and packaged devices. Before you meet the crowds, get focused on the key market and technical developments you need to know. Visit www.BlueTaiwan.com for all the details.

HP Introduces LED-based Color-critical Display
LIGHTimes Staff

June 10, 2008...Hewlett-Packard (HP) has introduced its new color-critical computer professional display. The company boasts that the display is available for less than a quarter of the cost of displays with competitive performance. The HP DreamColor Display features a new liquid crystal display (LCD). While LED backlit LCD displays have been around for a while, color reproducibility has been a concern for graphics professionals, digital movie makers, and animators.

Instead of the 24-bit graphics offered by most LED- based LCD computer display screens, the new HP display provides a range of more than 1 billion colors in a 30-bit, LED-backlit display. 30 bits of color has 64 times the number of colors on conventional LCD displays with 24 bits of color. The display is now shipping worldwide for a U.S. list price of $3,499. HP points out that the display is the result of a technology collaboration with DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Osram Launches Ostar Projection SMT LED for Pico Projection Applications
LIGHTimes Staff

June 10, 2008...Osram Opto Semiconductors has introduced the Ostar Projection SMT LED, which the company says is designed to be integrated into pico projection applications. Osram says that the packaged surface mountable LED measures just 5.8 x 4.7 x 1.5 mm. Its small size makes it ideal for ultra miniature pico projection applications such as those that might be integrated into cell phones and other mobile devices in the future. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Strategies in Light is an executive-level conference on high-brightness LEDs produced by Strategies Unlimited and PennWell Corporation.

Now in its tenth year and the longest-running conference in the LED industry, this event is considered to be the premier annual forum for presenting current commercial developments in high-brightness LEDs and providing unparalleled networking opportunities for component and equipment suppliers, manufacturers, and end-users of HB LED devices. Strategies in Light is the US-based event to learn about the latest innovation in HB LED markets, applications, products, and regional activities. This is the kickoff event of the year, which supplies the critical market forecast you need to keep the industry working for you. Register online now, or contact lubah@pennwell.com for more information.

Nichia Withdraws Patent Lawsuit Against AOT
LIGHTimes Staff

June 5, 2008...Taiwan-based LED maker Advanced Optoelectronic Technology (AOT) disclosed that Nichia of Japan has dropped a patent lawsuit against it, according to a news article in Digitimes. In the article, AOT said it had several rounds of talks in which Nichia realized that AOT had no "malicious intentions" in infringing its patent and agreed to withdraw the lawsuit.

Nichia filed a provisional injunction with a Taiwan district court in November 2008 against AOT for allegedly infringing its surface mounted (SMD) LED design patent. Nichia indicated that the LED related to this design patent was mainly used in the backlights for handset-use LCD displays. Specifically Nichia alleged that AOT’s LED products, AOT-4008S-W312-Z and AOT-SHWU-Z-H, infringed the Nichia’s design patent. There was no word in the article on any agreement or licensing that may have ended the dispute.

UCSB Professor Shuji Nakamura to Receive Prince of Asturias Award
LIGHTimes Staff

June 5, 2008...Professor Shuji Nakamura, Director UC Santa Barbara’s Solid-State Lighting and Energy Center, has again received accolades for his innovations related to the gallium nitride growth for blue LEDs and laser diodes while working at Nichia. Nakamura has been named a recipient of the 2008 Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research. Each award recipient is reportedly presented with a medal and a Joan Miro sculpture commissioned specifically for the awards. The recipients in each category also share a €50,000 (US$77,000) stipend.

The prize from the Prince of Asturias Foundation in the Technical and Scientific Research category is given annually to “the individual, work group or institution whose discoveries or research represent a significant contribution to the progress of humanity in the fields of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Medicine, Earth and Space Sciences, as well as their related technical aspects and technologies”. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Bridgelux Using Low cost Architectures to Achieve High Performance With the NLX-5 Chip
LIGHTimes Staff

June 5, 2008...Bridgelux, Inc., a supplier of LED technology based in Sunnyvale, California USA, made its new NLX-5 high-power gallium nitride (GaN) LED chip available. Bridgelux says that the unpackaged NLX-5 provides a typical light output of 85-90 lumens operating at 350mA when embedded in a customer’s standard, cool white LED package. Bridgelux claims that as a result, the NLX-5 delivers the industry’s leading cost-per-lumen performance for warm white, cool white and RGB applications today. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Leadis Technology Announces Family of Inductorless 200 mA, LED Flash/Lamp Drivers
LIGHTimes Staff

June 3, 2008...Leadis Technology, Inc., a developer of color display drivers, power management ICs, and white/RGB LED drivers, announced today the sample availability of the LDS8620 and the LDS8621, a new family of inductorless 200 mA, dual-output LED flash/lamp drivers. They come in low-profile (0.8mm), space-saving 3x3mm TQFN packages. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Philips' Ihor Lys Named 2008 USA National Inventor of the Year for SSL Breakthrough
LIGHTimes Staff

June 3, 2008...Philips Solid-State Lighting Solutions of Burlington, Massachusetts USA, announced that its chief scientist, and Color Kinetics co-founder, Dr. Ihor Lys has been named 2008 National Inventor of the Year. The Intellectual Property Owners (IPO) Education Foundation selected Dr. Lys for the award for his invention of Powercore technology that integrates power management and data management within a fixture. The company says that the patented Powercore technology increases electrical efficiency and lowers production costs.

The company points out that Powercore eliminates the need for external low-voltage power supplies and special cabling that were historically required to operate solid-state lighting systems. For this reason, the company contends that Powercore reduces installation cost and complexity while making these fixtures far easier to use in existing lighting environments. According to the company, the realm of solid state lighting requires that LEDs must be integrated into precisely integrated systems that can be adapted to existing infrastructure. Power management is a critical component of a well designed LED-based lighting system, the company indicated.

Dr. Lys co-founded Color Kinetics in 1997, which was later acquired by Philips. During his ten-years with Color Kinetics, prior to its acquisition, Dr. Lys led the development of the company's breakthrough Chromacore and Chromasic technologies. Chromacore and Chromasic technologies control color mixing with LED light systems to produce any color of light and color temperature of light. Philips Solid State Lighting Solutions says these technologies continue to support and differentiate Philips' solid-state lighting systems today. The company notes that Dr. Lys has been a prolific inventor, having contributed to more than 50 issued patents and numerous patent filings.

The National Inventor of the Year Award, one of the top honors bestowed to U.S. inventors, will be presented in a ceremony on June 10, 2008 in Washington , D.C. LIGHTimes SecondPage members login for more. Guests can view membership details.

Our news features are reported by the LIGHTimes staff writers.
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Commentary & Perspective...

LEDs at Light Fair - Everybody selling, but who's buying?
Tom Griffiths - Publisher

May 30, 2008...Mission assignment: Sort through the zillion or so exhibits in the Las Vegas Convention Center to find the companies that claim they are serious about selling solid state lighting fixtures or enabling technologies/modules that bring LED-lighting to everyone's life. In 2007, that narrowed the field to about 1/2 the exhibitors. Here in 2008, it almost appeared as though the only ones not offering some kind of LED-lighting products were the security people (but I suspect they were merely in stealth mode and likely have products in late-stage R&D). If a visitor from another planet happened to land in Las Vegas this week, (and I'm talking a real alien, not just the "interesting folks" that are wall-to-wall on the strip after 11pm), they would be pretty sure that LED-based lighting was the most common technology among the millions of light fixtures streaming out of manufacturers' and distributors' doors every month. Heck, according to the voice on the monorail train, 6000 people per month move to Las Vegas. As a minimum, if we put them in apartments with 10 LED downlights, 4 under-cabinet strips, and at least 1 fixture in the refrigerator, that's 90,000 LED fixtures per month or a bit over 1 million fixtures annually in this one town, just for new residential construction. What a great market!

Of course, we're not there yet. Solid state lighting is just reaching a point where it can cost effectively fill some key niches in the general lighting environment, almost exclusively in near 24x7 applications such as hotel lobbies and elevators, and outside where the higher efficacy cool white devices can really "shine". So what are all those products doing in all those booths? Well, frightening the heck out of the customers is one possibility. Lighting specifiers, and other sane mortals, have to find themselves asking, "With all these LED products out here, am I crazy for not using them? And do any of them really work because it's obvious there's plenty of junk as part of the show and tell?" Common enough questions, and just in case you didn't find the answers, no, you're not crazy and yes, some of them are really work. So far, the specifiers aren't being widely fooled by the pretend products, which is a good thing. In addition, the first key SSL specifications have arrived on the scene and customers can now start asking for the spec data to help them separate the wheat from the chaff (more on that next time). With nice rational fears in play, we're also seeing a few irrational ones as well.

In a pre-exhibition session, one lighting designer shared the technology lessons he had gained from his experiences, which included outfitting at least one skyscraper in the Middle East with a color changing exterior LED lighting scheme. He had implemented a number of creative solutions in response to the hot desert environment, and experienced a lot of frustration with installation issues, such as stretched interconnects that led to shorts and failures, but it had led him on a bit of quest to understand the full variety of challenges that were lurking in the LED technology. His investigations led him all the way down to the epitaxial process at the pre-LED wafer level, and to what he perceived as the "Achilles' heel" of the technology. You grow crystals on a substrate and, he asked, "How many of us have had those crystal kits or grown sugar crystals on a string? We all know how random that is. That's the same basic thing that happens here, so you will never get very predictable results... that's why they do something called color binning." The audience understood him to then extend that premise to a firm belief that once an LED chip is characterized at the chip level (during a blink-of-an-eye duration test, in which it never heats up beyond a comfortable room temperature), that once it is installed into some type of package and allowed to heat up to a more normal electronic chip kind of temperature, that the color could shift in a random direction, and to a random extent. Hence, he concluded, it's unlikely we would ever get predictable side-by-side color samples, especially from white LEDs.

Could this be true? New mission: Find the people that have the answers to the inconsistency concern. At the Osram Sylvania booth, my host had procured the right person to discuss color shifting and staunchly refused to give him up, even during an attempt to get him over to the DOE group that was on tour. (Sorry Jim, I got him first... which is lucky as we needed a column. We'll cover the Round 5 CALiPER results next time). The answer to the question was what I suspected. Yes, they do shift substantially under temperature. While their binning has been narrowed down to 3 MacAdam ellipses (basically undetectable to the eye), the color shift at temperature can be as much as 7 MacAdam ellipses, BUT it does it predictably and they have the curves to back it up. Discussions elsewhere confirmed the same type of thing, and with the addition of a great point from Philips Lumileds. That paraphrase is that when customers ask about "the heat problem" or "the binning problem", they're only problems if you aren't engineering your product. We don't call it a "problem" that you need to put a heat sink and fan on a Pentium processor chip. We don't spend much time concerned about Intel's inconsistent manufacturing processes, which are all built on variable crystal structures. They call their binning fancy names like "2.8 GHz Pentium Duo" and "3.0 GHz Pentium Duo", and sell the faster bin for a higher price and the slower bin for less (how sneaky is that!). It's kind of how things are handled with semiconductors, and why there is still some confusion. We're seeing the tremors that naturally come when technology areas gently collide -- semiconductors meet lighting and a new knowledge base is required to bridge the gap.

So we come back to the question of who is buying? The knowledgeable specifiers who are willing to ask a supplier to defend why their product is a good one, and to require them to back it up with real data and real results. They ask for guarantees, and they aren't afraid to ask for help to put the pieces together. I would also submit that they are the ones who aren't shy about suggesting that a product might need some improvement when it's obvious that it does. Knowledge will be king for specifiers, reps, distributors and lighting manufacturers. There's still a lot to learn together. (Beam me up, Scotty).

If you have questions about the solid state lighting and compound semiconductor industries or have
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