Something I've been wondering:
In principle, for the purpose of making large quantities of white light, would RGB (or RGBY) arrays be cheaper and more efficient than "white" LEDs?
RGB arrays are usually wired so that each color group can be driven individually, since they are designed for variable colour.
If the goal were to make lots of white light, then addressability is not required.
Since "white" LEDs work depend on fluorescence, which has inherent inefficiencies, I am wondering if color mixing RGBY might produce white more efficiently.
In real life, "white" LEDs in production seem to have same or better efficacy than coloured ones, (of similar output / module), is this due to whites being in highest demand?
And what about CRI?
Of course, there's the problem of colored shadows, I expect them to be most pronounced in small arrays, but large ones with hundreds of interspersed RGB leds would not make the colored shadows.
In principle, for the purpose of making large quantities of white light, would RGB (or RGBY) arrays be cheaper and more efficient than "white" LEDs?
RGB arrays are usually wired so that each color group can be driven individually, since they are designed for variable colour.
If the goal were to make lots of white light, then addressability is not required.
Since "white" LEDs work depend on fluorescence, which has inherent inefficiencies, I am wondering if color mixing RGBY might produce white more efficiently.
In real life, "white" LEDs in production seem to have same or better efficacy than coloured ones, (of similar output / module), is this due to whites being in highest demand?
And what about CRI?
Of course, there's the problem of colored shadows, I expect them to be most pronounced in small arrays, but large ones with hundreds of interspersed RGB leds would not make the colored shadows.