understanding LED driven by LM317

yehezkel

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Oct 2, 2009
Messages
4
Hello all,

i have a 5W power LED
i want to use the very common LM317 at current limiting mode, with the known schematic:

F3YZ7FXFDYPTCX3.MEDIUM.jpg


(let's suppose that i always feed with a 12v stable voltage at 10A)
as i understand it - i have to set R according to the LED's current (i know the formula)
and the input voltage of the LM317 can be 12v, 15v, or anything up to 37v.

now,
let's say i have 2 types of 5w LEDs:
1400ma @ 3.5v
700ma @ 7v

all i have to change in the schematic is the resistor, one calculated for 700ma, or 1400ma.

my question is: how the LM317 knows the LED's voltage ?

if i take a 5W led (1400ma @ 3.5v) and a 10W led (1400ma @ 7v)
the resistor setting is the SAME (both leds are 1400ma),
but suddenly the LED need twice as much voltage !
same case if i add LEDs in series, current stays the same but the voltage doubles....

does the LM317 knows that it has to double the voltage ?

finally, i mean, is the VOLTAGE parameter of a power LED can be ignored (as long as i supply a higher voltage) ?

and also, how can i be sure that the LM317 will deliver the highest possible voltage to the LED (within the safe margin) ?
OK, it will deliver 1400ma that the LED needs, but how can i be sure that it will give the full led's Vmax (3.5v) and not 3.4v or a bit lower (hence causing the LED not to be the brightest possible) ?

Thanks a lot !
 
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