Category Archives: LED Packaging and Testing

June 13, 2012 – BUSINESS WIRE — Light-emitting diode (LED) company Cree Inc. (Nasdaq:CREE) is opening new technology centers in Shenzhen and Shanghai, China, expanding Cree TEMPO (Thermal, Electrical, Mechanical, Photometric, Optical) Services for LED lighting manufacturers evaluating LED luminaires.

The new technology centers will offer a range of TEMPO Services to meet the unique needs of lighting manufacturers in China, including the popular Cree TEMPO 21 and TEMPO Thermal Simulation Services. Cree’s experience indicates that many of the common quality issues and failure modes seen in Solid State Lighting products are not detected by currently available standardized tests. TEMPO 21 examines critical aspects of quality that commonly go unchecked such as chemical compatibility, driver spikes, dimmer compatibility and electrolytic capacitor analysis.

Also read: Cree LED test suite TEMPO 24 incorporates IES LM-79

Tang Guoqing, senior advisor, Cree Hong Kong Limited, said “TEMPO Services can give manufacturers competitive advantages by helping them avoid costly design mistakes and by providing access to a broad range of test environments that are, in many cases, cost-prohibitive for them to build and operate.”

Effective LED luminaire thermal design is essential to ensure reliability and optimum performance. TEMPO Thermal Simulation predicts the thermal behavior of LED-based fixtures, including junction temperature, heatsink temperature, temperature profile and airflow profile. TEMPO SPOT gives customers access to complex, costly equipment to measure the photometric performance of luminaires and replacement lamps. Every TEMPO Service delivers an accurate, easy-to-understand TEMPO report that includes all testing results and relevant performance data.

In addition to the new China centers, Cree currently provides TEMPO Services out of its U.S. Cree Technology Centers located in Durham, NC and Santa Barbara, CA. For more information on Cree Services, please visit www.cree.com/tempo.

Cree makes lighting-class LEDs, LED lighting, and semiconductor products for power and radio frequency (RF) applications. For additional product and company information, please refer to www.cree.com.

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June 12, 2012 — High Tech Lights is participating in a nationwide “Reshoring Initiative” (http://www.reshorenow.org) by bringing job positions from China to the US for light emitting diode (LED) and laser diode (LD) scientists, manufacturing and assembly workers, and R&D staff.

High Tech Lights is offering 80 positions in a Las Vegas manufacturing and assembly facility, hiring over the next six months. The company worked with the Nevada Commission on Economic Development and the Nevada Development Authority to develop a state-of-the-art manufacturing facility within the next three years.

“We’re motivating recruits to enter the skilled manufacturing workforce,” said Tony Jones, president, adding that the Made in America brand is important to the company. High Tech Lights sees manufacturing costs in China rising, and also notes more direct control of product by moving manufacturing to the US.

Learn more about "reshoring" or "insourcing" here: President Obama speaks on "insourcing" at Albany Nano-Tech complex

High Tech Lights designs, develops, manufactures and markets general illumination (lighting) products that exclusively use light-emitting diodes (LEDs) as their light source. Website: http://www.hightechlights.com.

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June 4, 2012 — Displaybank published a 2009-2014 analysis of light-emitting diode (LED) packages, the finished LED components used in various applications. While LED package units will grow steadily through the forecast period, revenues will remain mostly flat from 2010 to 2013.

Figure. LED package sector growth by units shipped and by revenue through 2014. SOURCE: LED Industry Outlook – Package (2009~2014), Displaybank.

LEDs are achieving near 100% penetration in mobile device displays, emerging as a major segment of lighting, and replacing CCFLs in television backlights. Market penetration is increasing for internal and external automotive lights, as well as signage applications.

LED light sources can offer higher performance and lower power consumption than traditional technologies. The technology is also considered more environmentally friendly, and can reduce costs for some applications.

The report,

June 1, 2012 — OSRAM AG will build a new light emitting diode (LED) assembly plant in Wuxi, Jiangsu, China. LED chips fabbed at its Regensburg, Germany and Penang, Malaysia wafer processing facilities will be packaged at the new back-end facility in Wuxi starting in late 2013. The plant will accommodate up to 1600 employees.

An OSRAM LED package diagram showing the chip and package.
An actual OSRAM LED package.

This will free up the Regensburg and Penang wafer fabs to exclusive manufacture LED chips. Wuxi will also augment the Penang plant by manufacturing general, automotive and industrial lighting products for key segments of the Chinese market. The new facility gives Osram more access to China, which it calls “the lighting industry’s largest single market worldwide.” Wuxi is near Shanghai.

In fiscal 2011, about one-fifth of Osram’s revenue came from the Asia-Pacific region. Osram employs about 16,000 people there, its largest regional workforce. Roughly half of these workers are in China. Osram has marketed products in the region for about 80 years.

OSRAM Opto Semiconductors manufactures optoelectronic semiconductors for the lighting, sensor and visualization sectors. Learn more at http://www.osram-os.com/osram_os/EN/

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May 30, 2012 — Phosphors used in light-emitting diode (LED) lighting applications will see a market increase from about $525 million in 2012 to more than $730 million by 2015, continuing to over $1.6 billion by 2019, said NanoMarkets in its new report, “Market Opportunities for LED Phosphors in Lighting Applications 2012.” This means a 17% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over the 8-year forecast period.

As LED lighting is adopted globally, starting in 2012 and with the support of many national and municipal governments, LED phosphor suppliers will sell to an expanding market, especially in the general illumination sectors. To read more about how LEDs are changing the lighting industry, see Egret Consulting’s report from LightFair 2012: LEDs outshine legacy lighting business structure at LightFair 2012

Phosphors can improve luminous efficacy to make LEDs comparable with fluorescent lighting. LED phosphors increase internal quantum efficiency or reduce down-conversion loss.

For general illumination LEDs and display backlights, phosphors will be used to improve color rendering, bringing LEDs into competition with incandescent lighting.

LED lighting component makers will also use phosphors and phosphor blends to tailor color temperatures to applications.

During the forecast period, the market value for LED phosphors in display backlighting will decline. Underlying display markets will not keep up demand, as advances are enabling fewer LEDs per device.

Market Opportunities for LED Phosphors in Lighting Applications 2012 from NanoMarkets provides analysis and forecast of the LED phosphor market in the next 8 years as it relates to the fabrication of white LEDs for lighting applications, covering market strategies, products, and technical developments in the area of LED phosphors. The report also includes NanoMarkets’ assessments of the strategies of several of the leading firms active in the LED phosphors space, and granular 8-year forecasts of the inorganic LED phosphors shipments in both volume and value terms, with breakouts by type of phosphor and by phosphor deposition technology.

Key players mentioned in the report: Seoul Semiconductor, Intematix, Mitsubishi, Nichia, Toyoda Gosei, Dow, Osram, GE, Philips, and others.

NanoMarkets tracks and analyzes emerging market opportunities in solid-state lighting, energy, electronics and other markets created by developments in advanced materials. Visit www.nanomarkets.net for a full listing of NanoMarkets’ reports and other services.

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May 23, 2012 — Microelectronics standards developer JEDEC Solid State Technology Association created a series of standards, JESD51-5x, for component-level testing of high-brightness/power light-emitting diodes (LEDs). JESD51-5x targets thermal characterization of power LED components and is in compliance with the International Commission on Illumination (CIE)’s existing LED measurement recommendations.

The standards were developed with LED industry leaders in JEDEC’s JC-15 Committee. LED manufacturers and assembly/packaging/test providers will use the new standards.

Efficiency of power LEDs is in the range of 20-40%, and these devices are increasingly used as a lighting source. The design process requires accurate thermal data for LED components. LED lifetime expectancy and light output are dependent on proven thermal design. The JESD51-5x series of standards were developed to give credence to expected lifetime and light output information on LEDs.

Also read: Cree LED test suite TEMPO 24 incorporates IES LM-79

JESD51-5x offers clear recommendations for which data to include on LED data sheets, as well as test environments and procedures defined specifically for power LEDs, removing ambiguity about how thermal performance of an LED package or a metal core printed circuit board (MCPCB) assembled LED device is identified.

The new standards will be featured in a presentation at CORM’s (Council for Optical Radiation Measurements) May 31 event in Ottawa, Canada. Dr. Andras Poppe of Mentor Graphics and Budapest University of Technology and Economics, and a key author of the new standards within JC-15, will present “New JEDEC thermal testing standards for high power LEDs.” For more information visit: http://cormusa.org/CORM_2012_Program.html.

JEDEC is a leading developer of standards for the microelectronics industry. JESD51-50, 51, 52 and 53 are all available for free download via the JEDEC website: http://www.jedec.org/standards-documents/results/jesd51-5.

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May 22, 2012 — Indium Corporation acquired a manufacturing facility in Rome, NY, to expand its production capacities of indium-, gallium-, germanium-, and tin-based materials, as well as other compounds.

Growing sales to solar photovoltaic, flat panel display (FPD), semiconductor and packaging, optical fiber, and light-emitting diode (LED) manufacturers necessitated the expansion.

The new facility enables Indium

May 16, 2012 — Dow Electronic Materials, a business unit of The Dow Chemical Company (NYSE:DOW) made a bolt-on acquisition of Lightscape Materials Inc., a spin-off of research company SRI International.

Lightscape Materials offers intellectual property (IP) in specialty phosphor technology, which Dow will add to its light-emitting diode (LED) technologies portfolio. Lightscape co-founders Gerard Frederickson and Yongchi Tian will join Dow’s LED Technologies team.

Major Lightscape Materials’ investors included Wisepower and SRI International. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed. 

Phosphors are applied to or around LED chips for improved efficiency and color quality. They are implemented in display backlights and illumination LED fixtures. Also read: Phosphor trends for LED manufacturing

"The novel phosphor compositions developed by Lightscape Materials enable improved quality, reliability and output color of LED light-based systems," said Leo Linehan, global general manager for Dow Electronic Materials’ Growth Technologies business. The phosphors will enable LEDs to create a wide spectrum of white light, with the color tuned for the desired application.

Dow formed its LED Technologies business segment in October 2011. Its portfolio includes metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) precursors for LED manufacturing, photoresists and related ancillaries for lithographic processing, metallization processes for electroplating, and pads and slurries for chemical mechanical polishing/planarization (CMP). In March, Dow opened an R&D center in Seoul, South Korea, with a focus on organic LEDs (OLEDs).

Dow (NYSE: DOW) is a wide-ranging science and technology company offering specialty chemicals, advanced materials, agrosciences and plastics for electronics, water, energy, coatings and agriculture. Dow Electronic Materials is a global supplier of materials and technologies to the electronics industry, serving the semiconductor, interconnect, finishing, photovoltaic, display, LED and optics markets. Dow Electronic Materials has manufacturing and research facilities in the US, Europe, China, Taiwan, Japan and Korea. 

More information about Dow can be found at http://www.dow.com.
Wisepower (KOSDAQ: 040670) is a diversified business in batteries, wireless charging solution and LED lighting. More information about Wisepower can be found at http://www.wisepower.co.kr.

SRI International, a nonprofit research and development organization, performs sponsored R&D for governments, businesses, and foundations.

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May 14, 2012 — Barclays Capital analysts attended Lightfair International, a large, US-based general lighting tradeshow, and gleaned several trends in light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and organic LEDs (OLEDs) for lighting. Data presented at the show points to strong and steady LED lighting demand growth in 2012, though the LED lighting “inflection year” is still in the future.

While utilization rates are still relatively low in LED fabs, many chipmakers are reluctant to convert all of their backlighting-specific (BLU LEDs for display applications) LED tools to lighting-specific production, because they value yields honed for a specific design. Chipmakers told Barclays that they do not want to reconfigure metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) tools unless they are confident that this backlighting-specific production will no longer be needed. This suggests that anticipated LED lighting demand in H2 2012 and beyond will require more MOCVD tool orders, even without higher capacity utilization rates in LED fabs. Gradually improved MOCVD capex, in Q3 2012 and beyond, will be supported by a steady stabilization in LED supply/demand as 2013 approaches.

Barclays observed that LED chips still compete based on price, even among the Tier 1 LED makers, and further cost reductions are needed if margins are to survive. LED component price declines did moderate to an extent relative to last year’s price cuts, but the aggressive pricing trend continues, driven in part by end customers leveraging Tier 3 quality price points in China against Tier 1 and 2 LED makers. Until LED makers reach 80%+ effective yields in the fabs, the distribution of LEDs per run is fairly wide. Chips that do not meet their application’s specs are dumped on the market at a much lower price. Indeed, even in lighting-grade LEDs, there is “no rationality for price points,” according to 1 Tier-1 supplier. The good news for LED revenues is that unit volume growth is offsetting the price cuts.

The quality barrier between Tier 1 and Tier 2/3 LED suppliers continues to hold, with only ~10 LED makers that can reach 100lm/W efficacy levels in mass production, and meet Energy Star, UL, etc., specifications. In step with the luminous efficacy improvements at the chip level, system-level efficacy also continues to increase, with various troffers and luminaries already approaching 100lm/W. Korean LED makers are considering leveraging BLU LEDs for some lighting applications, like linear lighting and troffers, because specifications are similar. As a result, Samsung is becoming a major threat to Tier-1 LED suppliers, longer term, as it focuses on quality.

Also read: As LED patents run out, supply chain value will shift downstream

With LED lifetimes approaching 50K hours, LEDs are no longer the predictors of the lifetime of the full system, and the lifetime of the other components is becoming more prominent. Despite various certifications available, data on the lifetime and reliability at the total system level is still fairly limited.

While still in the early stages of development, OLED lighting was also being exhibited by several suppliers, with Philips and OSRAM appearing to be at the lead from an efficacy and product quality standpoint. Philips’ OLED lighting panels reached 25lm/W this year, with the company aiming for 60lm/W next year, driven by new developments in OLED materials (Philips using RGB stack with combination of phosphorescent and fluorescent materials); new developments in the glass substrate (adding reflective element to the glass composition); and advances in the deposition and processing technology. However, while reaching 60lm/W efficacy would be a big breakthrough, the key from there would be lumen maintenance, which is still very low for the OLED lighting panels currently available on the market. And while some companies suggested that OLED lighting is now moving from a designer/architectural application to a high-end lighting application, based on the product specs and the pricing, Barclays puts OLED lighting ~5-7 years behind LED lighting.

This year’s Lightfair was “almost entirely focused on LEDs,” said Barclays analysts. While LED dominance in new products at the booths is not yet indicative of end market penetration, it highlights the inevitability of LED lighting adoption in the coming years. Most lighting manufacturers and suppliers and LED makers alike see 2012 as a year of steady, strong LED lighting demand growth, though not yet an inflection. The biggest ramp in demand remains in segments where lighting is on for longer than 8 hours per day (streetlights, gas station canopies, retail, hospitality, warehouses). This is aided by the Federal Recovery Act spending on retrofitting public fixtures. Membership in the Solid State Street Lighting Consortium — a Department of Energy (DOE)-sponsored consortium of cities and municipalities looking to upgrade their lighting systems to energy-efficient solutions — has expanded to ~350 members from less than 100 last year. Payback periods for LED installs are compressing — for outdoor lights, LED systems have gone from 50-60% more expensive than non-LED lights last year to ~30-50% more. The payback for replacing non-LED luminaires in many applications is currently 2-5 years, sufficient to ensure funding for many commercial and industrial users. Utility rebates and government subsidies offered in various regions enhance paybacks further.

Many companies at Lightfair indicated that advances in LED chips and components, especially with regard to high efficacy, have lowered the cost of other components in a lighting system, driving down costs.

Learn more about Lightfair at http://www.lightfair.com.

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