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Martin Brown[_2_] Martin Brown[_2_] is offline
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Default Why do LEDs generate heat?

On 03/10/2019 15:16, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 15:08:43 +0100, Martin Brown
wrote:

On 03/10/2019 14:45, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Thu, 03 Oct 2019 14:37:34 +0100, whisky-dave
wrote:

On Thursday, 3 October 2019 14:29:30 UTC+1, Commander Kinsey* wrote:
Why do LEDs generate heat? I want a technical answer not "because
they're inefficient".

That is the technical answer just lioke why does a wire get hot when
curremnt passes through it.

No, the technical answer would explain what part of it has resistance
and if it can be overcome by using different materials.* And are you


It is resistance in the sense that there is some frictional losses to
the movement of current in the crystal lattice. Early LEDs you could
bump up the quantum efficiency by stiffening it - immersing in LN2
worked a few times before thermal cycling killed it stone dead.

sure it's even resistance?* It could be some photons are reabsorbed
before they escape the LED, generating heat.


White LEDs rely on a yellow phosphor absorbing and re-emitting blue
photons to make a perceived white light. Coloured LEDs typically have a
forward voltage related to the energy of photon that they emit.

There is a hit for doing that that limits ultimate efficiency to
something like 40% of power consumed out as useful light.


I didn't realise that, I thought white LEDs were designed to directly
emit a handful of different visible light wavelengths to make white.* Is
there a reason this can't be done?* An LED can make anything in the
visible light spectrum, so surely a mixture of them would be more
efficient than using phosphors?* There could even be seperate LEDs
within the housing, like growlamps which have visible, IR, and UV LEDs.


Tricolour can also be done but at the moment super efficient blue photon
production and then down convert to yellow to get white is best.

You can get tricolour high power LEDs that can be mixed to generate any
colour in consumer grade and theatre grade lighting systems too.

Magenta Growlights that only have blue and red LEDs are also now fairly
common. No point in having any green since chlorophyll reflects it.


--
Regards,
Martin Brown