Category Archives: LED Manufacturing

Cree today introduced the new CPW5 Z-Rec high-power silicon-carbide (SiC) Schottky diodes, the industry’s first commercially available family of 50 Amp SiC rectifiers. Designed to deliver the cost reduction, high efficiency, system simplicity and improved reliability of SiC technology to high power systems from 50kW to over 1MW, these new diodes can address demanding applications that include solar / PV inverters, industrial power supplies, induction heating, battery charging stations, wind turbine converters and traction inverters.

Developed to facilitate the direct matching of 50 Amp diodes to 50 Amp MOSFETs or IGBTs, Cree CPW5 Schottky diodes reduce system complexity and cost by enabling the replacement of multiple low-voltage, low-current SiC Schottky diodes, or silicon PiN diodes, with a single CPW5 rectifier. Additional cost savings can be achieved through reduced maximum voltage ratings and the elimination of snubber circuitry due to the diminished voltage overshoot during switching in silicon carbide.

“Cree’s CPW5 family of SiC Schottky diodes are a critical component in our high performance power modules and power electronic systems,” said Ty McNutt, director of business development, APEI, Inc. “The low forward voltage drop, fast switching speed and extended temperature capability allow us to push power density and efficiency across many applications, such as high power motor drives and solar inverters.”

Cree CPW5 diodes enable a new generation of high-current Si/SiC IGBT modules. Hybrid Si/SiC IGBT modules can deliver up to a 43 percent reduction in switching losses over conventional modules, while also reducing voltage- and current-overshoot, switching dead time and cooling requirements. As an added benefit, design engineers can use the same gate driver design and circuits used with conventional modules, allowing easy and immediate implementation. Cree CPW5 diodes also provide a peak forward surge resistance greater than 500 Amps repetitive and 2000 Amps non-repetitive, delivering increased reliability under the harshest electrical conditions.

“As the sole distributor of Cree SiC-based power products in wafer and die form, SemiDice is excited to offer the CPW5 family of Z-Rec Schottky diodes,” said Dan Cormack, CEO of SemiDice, Inc. “We are seeing increased customer demand for 50 Amp Schottky diodes and we know that as a global leader in the manufacture of advanced SiC diodes, Cree will deliver the quality and performance that our customers expect to help them minimize system cost and size.”

EV Group (EVG), a supplier of wafer bonding and lithography equipment for the MEMS, nanotechnology, solar and semiconductor markets, and Brisbane Materials Technology (BMT), a specialty materials company, today introduced a new anti-reflective (AR) coating solution based on BMT’s innovative XeroCoat materials, which is designed to substantially increase lumen output of light emitting diode (LED) devices.  The jointly developed manufacturing solution enables lumen output increases of up to eight percent.  The AR coating manufacturing solution can be seamlessly integrated with established production schemes, allowing the coating of LED components at room temperature and atmospheric pressure.

“Improving light efficiency is a constant goal for LED chip and luminaire manufacturers in order to drive down the total cost of LED lighting.  However, extracting further improvements in light output from the LED chip design and epitaxial layer growth process has become increasingly difficult and costly.  As a result, any incremental improvements in light output that can be gained from other areas with minimal cost or disruption to the LED manufacturing flow can have a significant impact on reducing overall system cost,” stated Dr. Antun Peic, business development manager at EV Group.  “Through our partnership with BMT, we’ve developed a turnkey manufacturing solution that has achieved a significant breakthrough in improving LED light efficiency, which can help accelerate new applications for solid-state lighting such as smart lighting and smart building.”

Under a strategic cooperation agreement, EVG has optimized its precision coating systems for BMT’s unique materials and processes, enabling high-yield fabrication of AR coatings with industry-leading performance and cost.  The innovative technology enables the creation of a nano-porous silicon dioxide (SiO2) coating from a liquid precursor at room temperature and atmospheric pressure on plastic and glass lenses and luminaires. The SiO2 film, which has undergone rigorous testing, including a 2.5-year accelerated aging test equivalent to more than 20 years of field application, is covalently bonded to the surface to give maximum durability and field reliability.

“Our collaboration with EV Group in the solar market over the past several years has proven the ability of our joint-AR coating solution to provide significant improvements in solar cover glass transmission,” commented BMT founder and CEO Dr. Gary Wiseman.  “We are very excited to begin providing our patented XeroCoat anti-reflective materials to LED lighting customers.  Our unique solution provides a simple and cost-effective way for customers to increase lumen output.  Working with our equipment partner, EVG, we provide the equipment, materials, and process as a turnkey solution to our customers.”

The large-area spray deposition method employed for this new process provides maximum processing flexibility as well as scalability.   According to Paul Lindner, executive director of technology at EVG, “The large-area spray coating technology used in this process has been in commercial production in the display technology space for well over 10 years.  This field-proven equipment solution, combined with BMT’s novel material, allows us to quickly and uniformly coat nano-scale films onto a large number of luminaires―a key requirement to meet the challenging volume and cost targets of our LED customers.  In addition, spray coating allows for coating over a large range of form factors―for instance, lenses with highly curvilinear features―which is another important requirement for the LED luminaire market.”

Soraa announced today the world’s most efficient LED, which it will integrate into the market’s first full-visible-spectrum, large form factor lamps. Soraa’s third generation (Gen3) GaN on GaN LED achieves world-record setting wall-plug-efficiency, outperforming the nearest competitor by 20% at normal operating conditions. In just one year, Soraa has achieved a remarkable 30% increase in white lumen per watt (lm/W) efficiency over its prior generation LED. Soraa’s Gen3 LED will be available in the second quarter of this year in a variety of product offerings: modules, large form factor PAR and AR lamps, and MR16 lamps.

Soraa’s full-visible-spectrum PAR30L lamp, powered by its Gen3 LED, will lead the market not only in light output, but also in color and whiteness rendering; at CRI-95 and R9-95 it will achieve center-beam intensity (CBCP) of 28,250cd at 8° beam angle, 10% higher than the CRI-85 offering of the nearest competitor. Soraa’s large form factor lamps will feature all the signature elements of light quality that its customers are accustomed to: natural and accurate rendering of colors and whiteness, perfectly uniform beams of exceptionally high intensity, and clear single shadows.

“We have achieved a 30% lm/W efficiency improvement over our previous generation white LEDs, and what’s amazing is that we expect to repeat these significant year-over-year performance gains in the future,” said Jeff Parker, CEO of Soraa.

Soraa will display its new full-visible-spectrum large lamp products at Strategies in Light in Santa Clara, California (February 25-27, booth #805) and Light + Building in Frankfurt, Germany (March 30-April 4, booth# 4.1 B55).

MCA Public Relations, a high-tech global public relations and marketing solutions agency serving the semiconductor, microelectronics, life science and flat-panel display industries, announced it has launched a new solid-state lighting (SSL) practice specifically designed to target companies from the multiple segments of the SSL ecosystem to create unique branding and communications campaigns for each.  Brian Fisher, a senior executive with substantial global branding, market positioning and strategic communications experience in this space, has been hired to lead the expansion into this industry as general manager.

Several lighting industry analysts are forecasting double-digit growth rates to 2020 for LED-based lighting within the current $100 billion global lighting market.

“I’ve known Brian for many years and am thrilled to have him join the MCA team,” said Marie Labrie, chief executive officer of MCA.  “Brian’s wealth of experience in the solid-state lighting space makes him an invaluable asset in driving our presence in this burgeoning market.  MCA is unique among technology PR agencies in both its depth and breadth of knowledge in every key aspect of the technology value chain — from design and R&D through manufacturing — across multiple microelectronics industries.  Bringing these capabilities to bear on the solid-state lighting market was a natural progression for us.”

“Brian and MCA have been hard at work for us for more than a year now and have yielded positive and measurable results,” said Derry Berrigan, chief innovation officer at Light Think Studios.  “MCA has helped us articulate our vision for the future of lighting and how SSL embodies not just a technology story, but how it enables innovation in lighting design to enrich people’s lives, to enhance the quality of our experience.”

“The adoption rate of LED-based lighting is clearly accelerating, which creates significant growth opportunities for companies throughout the SSL ecosystem,” said Brian Fisher.  “To capitalize on these opportunities, it is important for companies to start branding themselves, letting their key messages be heard, to expand upon the energy efficiency discussion and to move on to explaining the significance of the quality of light, low maintenance, and how smart lighting leads directly to smart buildings.  MCA, with its technical background, best practices in external communications and previous exposure to LED technology, is the right choice to help companies deliver these messages.”

Brian Fisher has over 20 years of experience in brand building across a spectrum of technologies including LED manufacturing, solid-state lighting, semiconductor capital equipment, enterprise software and IT, for companies ranging from start up through mature stages of growth.  He joins MCA from Bridgelux, where he helped the company develop into a globally recognized industry leader and pioneer of chip-on-board (COB) technology.  He has also worked for Aviza Technology, Porter Novelli and Photronics.

MCA is a sponsor of the Strategies in Light Exhibition and Conference, taking place at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Cara, Calif., February 25-27.

By SEMI contributors

The closing Executive Panel discussion at the SEMI Industry Strategy Symposium on January 15 provoked diverse views on the drivers and future of innovation in the microelectronics manufacturing supply chain.  While technology demand and manufacturing efficiency provide the motivation for continued innovation in the minds of some, others believe the supply chain is forfeiting its value proposition and places too much emphasis on cost reduction.

ISS-exec-panel-photo1In a wide-ranging discussion moderated by VLSI Research chairman Dan Hutcheson, the arguments and examples of these perspectives spanned the topics of new device architectures, lithography, and the 450mm wafer transition.

John Chen, Ph.D., vice president of technology and foundry operations at Nvidia Corporation, said that affordability is key due to price sensitivities in the consumer market place.  People want electronic gadgets with great features and a good interface between them; however, the vast majority of users are young individual users and price is very important.

Chen said that if the industry truly collaborates together early-on, it can have early engagement in concurrent engineering and eliminate waste and redundancy. This reduces total cost and increases profitability for all.

Chen said that he doesn’t believe in “squeezing the vendors”; however, there is still waste in the supply loop.  Chen prefers think in terms of a supply “loop,” in which the participants have to work together rather than a supply “chain,” which connotes a more one dimensional linear relationship.

Chen said, “It’s difficult to “out-smart” others in the supply loop because all the participants have great capabilities and the only solution is to increase the pie and share the rewards.”

He asserts that this kind of coordination is essential given greater complexity from challenging technology requirements and an increasing rate of change. As an example, he speculated that the industry faces three significant discontinuities as it adopts manufacturing technology for 20nm semiconductor devices.

First, is a good discontinuity — the introduction of 3D transistors or finfets. These new device structures reduce power requirements and greatly enable consumer products with longer battery life by providing better control of the gate and reducing leakage current. Chen said that without these kinds of design innovations and the accompanying manufacturing process technology, we cannot have a quantum jump in performance.

The second discontinuity accompanies the end of 193 lithography — the point at which multiple patterning is required. At 20nm, the number of masking steps has increased 15-20 percent. Chen characterizes multiple patterning, “as a brute dumb force.” It causes wafer costs to increase and yields to suffer. Both of these results contribute to a negative discontinuity in die cost.

Read more: Is the chip industry as important as we think? Depends on whom you ask

The third discontinuity is the wafer size. Chen argues that we are already in need of 450mm wafers.  He noted that every time the industry has migrated to a larger size wafer, additional innovation comes with the transition. Accordingly, he expects additional innovation to accompany 450mm technology development.

Mike Splinter, executive chairman of Applied Materials, offered an optimistic perspective on the semiconductor demand to be created by “the internet of things” and pervasive computing — labels for the massively interconnected sensing and computing capabilities, which he expects to help address complex business, healthcare and education issues that face society.

The sub-trends influencing pervasive computing are mobility and analysis of huge amounts of information from personal devices that will be available anywhere and anytime producing a gigantic amount of data.  Because of this rapid expansion, he believes that we are underestimating the need for bandwidth and memory. He contrasted the adoption rate of other products as a way to make the point that we face unprecedented demand acceleration.  He said that television took 40 years to acquire 50 million users; Facebook took a couple years; and now an app can have 50 million users in a few weeks.  Because of this data centers will grow at an increasing rate and we will need greater performance.  Outside the data center we need lower power and cost reductions.

The highest value technologies will increase performance, reduce power, and lower cost; and that is how he believes the industry should measure what we do and prioritize R&D resources.

Read more: New methods to reduce time and cost of R&D

Splinter was confident that the industry would continue to drive smaller dimensions down to 5nm. Splinter said the lithography is now essentially a “cost play.” Scaling is no longer the enabling play, it’s a cost play because there are alternatives such as precision material engineering.

Splinter said, “We haven’t seen this kind of demand for innovation since the 1970’s when the industry saw the emergence of non-volatile memory, DRAM and the shift away from aluminum and to silicon for logic gates.  That’s the environment we are in today.  There have been tremendous advancements in flash memory, but we need a new DRAM as well as 3D technology in logic devices.”

Equipment companies have become very efficient through productivity improvements, engineering, consolidation and offshoring.  He believes the industry is reaching the limits of how much more efficiency can be attained without significant R&D trade-offs. Investments in innovation should be evaluated on the criteria of power, performance and cost.

Regarding 450mm, Splinter said that the technology changes under consideration for the large wafer size can much more easily be achieved at 300mm if the industry concentrates its R&D dollars there.  Furthermore, he is concerned about the posture of memory makers because most of the wafers processed are for memory products and if memory makers don’t participate in 450mm we won’t see the volumes necessary to support the larger wafer area.

“Where there is a demand for innovation, innovation will happen.  I am excited about next 10-15 years. The only limitation we may have is assuring that we have the young people coming into the industry.”

In response to a question by panel moderator Dan Hutcheson, Mike Splinter rebutted an assertion earlier in the conference that consolidation and large mergers were creating mega-suppliers that are too big to fail, but also too big to innovate. Splinter expressed enormous optimism about the prospects of sparking innovation when the engineers from TEL and Applied Materials are allowed to get together and share diverse but complimentary capabilities.  He pointed to beneficial collaboration that occurred when Applied Materials acquired Varian and believes that, when combined with TEL, the new organization will be able to leverage real collaboration and focus more R&D dollars on innovative technology.

According to Kazuo Ushida, executive vice president and president of Precision Equipment Company for Nikon, lithography has long supported Moore’s Law in lowering the cost per transistor. However, it is reaching the limits of what can be achieved with wavelength reduction and numerical aperture enlargement.  EUVL has numerous and costly challenges, and therefore Nikon believes that it is necessary to migrate to a larger wafer size.  During the transition from 200-300mm, there was a quadrupling in in the optical lithographic performance improvement.

Ushida said that Nikon is willing to take a long view on the return on investment to support customers.  He compared the situation to Boeing’s investment in developing the 787 which will have approximately 20 year payback.

He said that throughput of 150 wafers per hour will be needed to be competitive with 300mm and that industry synchronization is essential to lower the time to recouping the cost of development.

Terry Brewer, Ph.D., president and founder of Brewer Science, bemoaned the persistent emphasis on cost reduction that is pervasive in industry dialog.  He fears the industry is drifting away from true innovation as a driver of technology. Picking up on an earlier topic about the industry’s need to recruit future talent, Brewer said that it will be hard for young technologists to be excited about manufacturing innovation because there is too much focus on cost.

Brewer cautioned that the manufacturing supply chain will decline in value if it positions costs reduction as the primary benefit of innovation. Brewer said, “At one time, Moore’s law was very valuable because chips were the main value proposition in electronics.  Sadly, it is not today.”  He suggested that semiconductor manufacturing is being supplanted as the “mainstream” value creator by companies like Apple and Google.

Brewer contrasted the industry mindset to that of Apple’s saying that, “Steve Jobs came out with an $800 phone when everyone else was trying to reduce cost.  Apple won because it had a better value proposition.”

Brewer suggested that the industry roadmap for the 450mm transition, EUV lithography will slow or be pushed out because of costs.  In contrast, the last two nodes were driven primarily out of chemical engineering and materials innovations.

The panel concluded with a consensus that innovation and collaboration are tightly related activities and that value-driven innovation is required to sustain the industry in a consolidating supply chain environment.

SEMI ISS-Europe is February 23-25. For information on all SEMI events, visit: www.semi.org/en/Events.

NIKKISO CO., LTD. has announced that it is establishing a new factory in Japan. The company will initiate production operations in mid 2014 and install an annual capacity in excess of 1 million units for its UVB and UVC LED illumination sources.

NIKKISO will introduce its new deep UV LED product line for the first time in North America at the SPIE Photonics West exhibition in San Francisco February 4 – 6, 2014, Booth 4918. The company will exhibit products featuring wavelengths from 255 to 350nm, including several power levels and package types to enable important applications in a wide variety of areas. Among those with immediate demand are surface curing of resins and inks, biomedical instrumentation, dermatology, air purification, and water and surface sterilization.

NIKKISO’s proprietary AlGaN semiconductor technology enables the world’s highest performance, power and efficiency, with industry-leading reliability in the UVB and UVC regions. NIKKISO UVB and UVC LEDs offer substantial advantages over UV lamps including mercury-free operation, compact and lightweight form factor, flexible emission wavelength, directional illumination, instantaneous analog power control via current modulation, and low-voltage operation. Power levels up to 40mW per package are available, with customized multichip assemblies capable of emitting more than 1W. The devices can be utilized in stand-alone light sources, or integrated seamlessly as OEM components into end customers’ final product solutions.

With production technology that enables mass manufacturing on a commercial basis, NIKKISO’s new factory is located in Japan’s Ishikawa Prefecture with a total floor area of 1500 m2. It includes new epitaxial equipment, wafer fabrication, and clean room facilities for volume manufacturing of deep UV LEDs. The production facility represents a $22 million investment in NIKKISO’s deep UV LED business, and will ensure the stable supply of top-quality deep UV LED products to Nikkiso’s partners, thereby accelerating the development of deep-UV LED applications.

Soraa, a provider of in GaN on GaN LED technology, launched today the first line of high color and white rendering, high light output LED GU10 230V dimmable lamps. Uniquely, the company has released a 10o spot version, not available in halogen or from other LED manufacturers, as well as a 25o version that has a peak intensity higher than halogen and all other LED GU10 products. Now customers can buy transformer-free, full visible spectrum Soraa LED GU10 lamps that spectacularly render colors and whites; without beam striations, artifacts or multiple shadows visible in other manufacturer’s LED products.

“The Soraa GU10 lamps provide unmatched light output, perfectly uniform beams, exceptional rendering of colors and whites, full dimmability, long lamp life, dramatically improved energy efficiency, and excellent compatibility.” said Jeff Parker, CEO of Soraa. “All these features are made possible through our proprietary GaN on GaN LED technology and innovative lamp design.”

The company’s continuous full visible spectrum Soraa Vivid 2 LED GU10 lamps, with a CRI of 95 and R9 greater than 90, render deep reds and cyans dramatically and accurately and have no artificial spectral “blue-peak.” And just like natural light, the violet component of the full visible spectrum makes whites in fabrics and fibers stand out in their intended brightness and tint.

Soraa’s GaN on GaN LEDs have exceptionally high light density, emitting ten times more light per unit area of LED material than LEDs built on lower quality foreign substrates. As a result, the company’s lamps have a single light source that casts a perfect beam and a single sharp shadow, bringing out textures and contrast to flawlessly illuminate any environment.

“With our new LED GU10 lamps, customers no longer need a transformer and we’ve made available beam and output options that were previously unattainable in the market, because of limitations with all other technologies. Additionally, our products are ideally suited for fully enclosed, non-ventilated fixtures—a place where other LED lamps struggle to perform,” added Parker.

Built with design flexibility in mind, Soraa’s new LED GU10 lamps are available in a wide range of light output, beam angles and color temperatures. Soraa’s Premium 2 LED GU10 10o lamp has a peak intensity of 7760Cd and 2420Cd for the 25o option—twice that of halogen. The LED GU10 lamps are available in 10o, 25o, 36o, and 60o beam angles and 2700K, 3000K, 4000K, and 5000K color temperatures. Plus, the company’s 10o lamp works with its award-winning magnetic accessory SNAP System.  With a simple magnetic accessory attachment, beam shapes can be altered and color temperature can be modified, allowing endless design and display possibilities.

Soraa’s new LED GU10 lamps are compatible with a very wide range of dimmers, having been tested and characterized extensively through its Works with Soraa program. And the company’s novel heatsink design and thermal management system makes its lamps suitable for use in fully enclosed, non-ventilated fixtures, damp locations and outdoor applications.

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the “Global LED Chip Market & Forecasts Report, 2016” report to their offering.

One of the major drivers in this market is the growing significance of LED chips. The LED-based device manufacturers are attaching increasing significance to LED chips. This is because the majority of the product differentiation in LED devices is dependent on the LED chips used as a base for the LED lighting devices. Thus, the importance of LED chips has been increasing in the LED Lighting industry.

Luminous efficacy refers to the amount of electrical power required to produce a certain intensity of light in lumens per watt. The vendors in the market are attaching more significance to improving luminous efficacy due to the presence of various opportunities to improve luminous efficacy along the value chain. Furthermore, at epitaxy level, one of the key drivers fueling the market is the higher level of sophistication in the MOCVD. Some of the options evaluated by the vendors include more efficient production handling and better choice of layer material, especially the substrate material on which the light-emitting layers are deposited. At a chip level, multiple activities to enhance luminous efficacy are currently being tested. All these activities in the industry will tend to enhance the growth prospects of the market.

Further, the report states that one of the key challenges in the market is the cyclical nature of the industry. The fluctuation in demand from the LED lighting device manufacturers is one of the major factors curtailing the growth in the market as it lowers the profitability of the market. The increasing fluctuations in demand could constrain the market growth during the forecast period.

Universal Lighting Technologies, Inc. is starting the year on a high note with the announcement of its new corporate headquarters at 51 Century Blvd., Suite 230 in Nashville, Tennessee. Not only does the new building better position the company for growth, but it also comes newly equipped with innovative and energy-efficient lighting incorporated throughout the office, including updated meeting room technology for greater capabilities to network with customers.

“Universal Lighting has seen significant growth over the past few years since we joined the Panasonic family,” said Chris Holstein, Vice President of Marketing. “We’re excited to start the next chapter in our company’s future as we make the move to a new home where the lighting technology reflects the very products that have led to our success.”

The new corporate office positions the company for greater growth and includes leading designs and technologies from all members of the Panasonic Lighting Americas group.

LED technologies in the facility include LED downlights that use EVERLINE LED Drivers and Chip on Board LED Modules with 0–10V dimming controls. Existing recessed troffer lighting fixtures were upgraded with LED retrofit kits and EVERLINE linear LED modules to provide high efficiency lighting with high quality color and an extremely long rated life while being dimmable. DCL control technology allows the LED drivers to receive communications over the power line, providing energy management load shedding capabilities.

Universal Lighting’s new headquarters incorporates leading fluorescent technologies, including DEMANDflex ballasts, as well as six-lamp T8 fixtures installed throughout the unique and innovative office space. The lighting system also utilizes VariPRO 0–10V dimming in the main entry. Both technologies are incorporated with a Dialog Control System and occupancy sensors from Panasonic’s Douglas Lighting Controls for local zone control, manual overrides and facility scheduling.

Xicato, a developer of superior light quality from LED modules, announced today that it has relocated its San Jose headquarters to accommodate a new manufacturing line for the company’s next generation of products. The new 24 thousand-square-foot space is more than double the size of Xicato’s previous San Jose facility. The privately held company has invested millions of dollars in equipment and resources to meet the increasing global demand for its LED modules.

“Investment in our U.S. operations enables Xicato to rapidly develop and introduce innovative technologies and products for the global lighting industry and starting next month we will transition to full manufacturing mode,” said Menko de Roos, CEO of Xicato. “Our move timeframe was very short, and it was critical that the build-out and permitting went smoothly and matched our equipment arrival schedule. The City of San Jose’s appointment-based permitting process worked well and allowed us to meet critical milestones and get our operations up and running.”

Xicato’s new space includes areas for manufacturing, research and development labs and testing facilities for its LED modules. Class 100K cleanroom space is dedicated to a new manufacturing line; expanded reliability testing labs ensure product longevity and quality.

Xicato’s focus continues to be the delivery of quality light. The new manufacturing facility allows Xicato’s next generation of products to offer significantly improved efficiency to reduce energy use and costs, lowers the cost of Xicato’s modules and ushers in a new era of intelligent lighting – Lighting 2.0.

Hundreds of luminaires and applications ranging from retail shops to bars and restaurants, to homes, offices and retail locations can be viewed in Xicato’s web galleries on the company’s website.

Lighting designers, interior designers and others achieve their desired emotional impact using three different light types created by the company.

Standard Series light provides a smooth spectrum of light that feels natural and superior to ceramic metal halide and fluorescent lamps.

Artist Series light is indistinguishable from halogen-based light and gives Artist Series light an even richer feel compared to other sources.

Vibrant Series light brings out vivid, saturated colors and the details of texture for compelling and eye-catching visuals that capture and hold consumers’ attention.

The company’s new address is 101 Daggett Drive, San Jose, CA 95134, USA.