I've been wondering about a feature on the Luxeon Rebel spec sheet:
http://www.philipslumileds.com/pdfs/DS56.pdf
On Red, Red-Orange, and Amber they all have the lumens output more than double for a double in current (350mA doubled to 700mA).
Not by much, the Red-40 for example goes from 40 to 85. So 6% more, but the other types (white, etc) have a LOWER lumens/mA ratio when we go above the nominal current.
In fact, the spec listed is for a constant THERMAL PAD temp of 25C. The thermal resistance from die-to-pad means the extra watt of power raises the die temp by about 12C. That factor alone should have causes the device to reduce its output by 5%-10% or more.
I'm curious why this is. Why did it increase, not decrease? Do these 3 colors actually get more efficient at higher currents?
http://www.philipslumileds.com/pdfs/DS56.pdf
On Red, Red-Orange, and Amber they all have the lumens output more than double for a double in current (350mA doubled to 700mA).
Not by much, the Red-40 for example goes from 40 to 85. So 6% more, but the other types (white, etc) have a LOWER lumens/mA ratio when we go above the nominal current.
In fact, the spec listed is for a constant THERMAL PAD temp of 25C. The thermal resistance from die-to-pad means the extra watt of power raises the die temp by about 12C. That factor alone should have causes the device to reduce its output by 5%-10% or more.
I'm curious why this is. Why did it increase, not decrease? Do these 3 colors actually get more efficient at higher currents?