Anders Hoveland
Enlightened
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2012
- Messages
- 858
Hi to this forum.
I am trying to find a blue-green wavelength high-power (at least 1 watt) LED emitter. I am looking for anything between 480-490nm. I am having a very difficult time finding anything in this spectral region.
To make matters more difficult, there are countless LED emitters being sold that are "mislabeled". For example, most of the "ice blue" LED products that are labeled as "485nm" are actually more like 470nm with a green phosphor. So they are more like an "effective 485nm" color LED, but in reality there is a big dip in the spectral output right in that region. Mouser sells Cree blue emitters sold as 485nm, but these are actually 465-485nm, with the peak at about 473nm. I have been looking for 490nm blue LED also, but most of them labeled "490nm" are actually 490-495nm, with the peak much closer to 495nm, so they are much more of a minty-green color than blue or real turquoise.
In this particular region of the spectrum, a small difference in nanometer wavelength makes a very significant difference in color. 495nm is definitely green, while a true 490nm emission would be pretty blue. Of course, LED emitters in practice do not emit at a single discrete wavelength, and while their bandwidth tends to be rather narrow, in this region of the spectrum "narrow" starts to get more relative.
I also looked at the 490nm blue LED source at Thor Labs but it was rather expensive and I will need several of these things.
I am also open to the possibility of combining a blue and cyan LED to get the desired spectral peak. However, to do this the cyan LED would need to be very close to 490nm and the blue LED would need to be very close to 480nm for there to be significant overlap. I have tried a 470nm and 495nm LED and this did not work. There was only very minimal spectral overlap. Using a Cree XPE cool blue emitter instead of the 470nm worked better, but I could still tell there was a 30-40% dip in the spectral output at ~485nm.
I know there are many knowledgeable people in this forum. Is anyone aware of an LED emitter that would meet my needs? What is the "greenest" tinted blue LED emitter that they make?
I am trying to find a blue-green wavelength high-power (at least 1 watt) LED emitter. I am looking for anything between 480-490nm. I am having a very difficult time finding anything in this spectral region.
To make matters more difficult, there are countless LED emitters being sold that are "mislabeled". For example, most of the "ice blue" LED products that are labeled as "485nm" are actually more like 470nm with a green phosphor. So they are more like an "effective 485nm" color LED, but in reality there is a big dip in the spectral output right in that region. Mouser sells Cree blue emitters sold as 485nm, but these are actually 465-485nm, with the peak at about 473nm. I have been looking for 490nm blue LED also, but most of them labeled "490nm" are actually 490-495nm, with the peak much closer to 495nm, so they are much more of a minty-green color than blue or real turquoise.
In this particular region of the spectrum, a small difference in nanometer wavelength makes a very significant difference in color. 495nm is definitely green, while a true 490nm emission would be pretty blue. Of course, LED emitters in practice do not emit at a single discrete wavelength, and while their bandwidth tends to be rather narrow, in this region of the spectrum "narrow" starts to get more relative.
I also looked at the 490nm blue LED source at Thor Labs but it was rather expensive and I will need several of these things.
I am also open to the possibility of combining a blue and cyan LED to get the desired spectral peak. However, to do this the cyan LED would need to be very close to 490nm and the blue LED would need to be very close to 480nm for there to be significant overlap. I have tried a 470nm and 495nm LED and this did not work. There was only very minimal spectral overlap. Using a Cree XPE cool blue emitter instead of the 470nm worked better, but I could still tell there was a 30-40% dip in the spectral output at ~485nm.
I know there are many knowledgeable people in this forum. Is anyone aware of an LED emitter that would meet my needs? What is the "greenest" tinted blue LED emitter that they make?