All you need to know before buying COB led strip

09 Dec.,2024

 

All you need to know before buying COB led strip

LED strips have been a trendy DIY lighting solution for many applications for many years. That's why we are so interested in the latest LED strip technology, COB flexible led strip lighting.

Click here to get more.

What is COB?

COB stands for Chip on Board in the LED field, which basically means that the LED chip is packaged directly on the circuit board (PCB). Chip on Board' LEDs for flexible strip lights are sometimes referred to as flip-chips.

Flip chip LEDs are basically a bare-bones approach to LED construction. Take a look at an ordinary SMD (Surface Mount Device) LED. It has a Lamp bead holder that package the LED chip and then covers it with a phosphor coating. The 'flip chip' that makes up the COB LED strip removes everything from its design, except for the LED chip, yellow phosphor cover layer, and connection pads.


How is COB LED flexible strip manufactured?

  1. Expanding Chips
  2. Die bonding
  3. Resistors onto FPCB
  4. Reflow-High temperature over 65 degrees for finished PCB with chips and resistors
  5. Fluorescent Powder glue mixing
  6. Drop the mixing glue on the surface of chips and resistors by auto glue machine
  7. Put glued cob led strip into the oven
  8. QC-testing the cob led strip after cooling
  9. Soldering the PCB into 5 meters per reel or the length as customer request
  10. Aging test, QC test, packing, then shipping


Advantages and Disadvantages of COB LED Flex Strips

Now that you have a basic understanding of how this new COB led strip is produced, it's time to see its advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages:

No LED lighting dot, even without aluminum profiles.

One of the biggest complaints about traditional LED strips is the lighting dot throughout the strip. A lighting dot is a bright area through the strip where you can see where the light is coming from. Light is more soft and attractive when it looks like a smooth light source rather than a lighting dot mess.

With SMD flex strips, the larger diodes are squeezed close enough so that the light is spread out and consistent across the illuminated surface at a distance. But if the light is too close to the surface or the strip itself is visible, the hot spot is an obstacle that the human eye cannot ignore.

With a 480 chip/M COB strip, it is pretty challenging to pick out any hot spots on the COB flex strip. This strip shines a soft, uniform light from end to end. Even light with no lighting dot is more attractive to the human eye and gives off a steady light even in the narrow places. The only natural way to see the lighting dot is to look at the back of the strip, where it is easier to see the individually placed flip-chip LEDs. You can only see the individual led if you dim strip down to about 5% brightness. This makes COB flex strips ideal for applications where

  1. The led strip itself cannot be hidden from view.
  2. The surface being illuminated is within 2 feet of the light bar.
  3. Reflective surfaces like granite/glass are all around.
  4. Those applications where you want an excellent neon effect.


More flexibility

These strips are much more flexible than other flexible strips because of the small size of the diodes and the uniform weight distribution. These diodes are so small and closely spaced that no point of the strip is the same. This uniformity makes it easy to set up the strips without planning around a SMD LED sticking out where you don't need it. This extra flexibility will make it easier for them to fit into tight areas and turn corners in your application.


More stable, fewer problems

  1. COB strip is the chip directly attached to the FPCB, does not come with gold wire. Traditional SMD LED strip, very many problems are caused by the gold wire inside the LED beads. Because the gold wire is too small, it is straightforward to be broken, leading to the chip not being illuminated.
  2. The circuit design of the COB strip uses three chips, first in parallel, as a group, then each group, and then in series to form one step. Even if a group of two chips inside the bad, this one-step strip can continue to light. And COB a meter of chips how big 480, even if 1-2 chips do not light, will not produce dark areas, will not affect the use. While the traditional SMD strip, a CUT, as long as there are lousy lamp beads, this one cut will not light, so there will be obvious to see a section of the dark area.


Wide emitting angle

The traditional SMD light strip luminous angle is 120 degrees, while the COB light strip luminous angle is 180 degrees.


Disadvantage:

  1. The most significant disadvantage of COB led strips is that it is difficult to maintain the consistency of color. Because there is no COB led strips binning machines on the market. At present, all COB led strips manufacturers are only sampling to ensure color consistency. So, COB led strips are difficult to ensure that 100% are within the 3-step color tolerance.
  2. COB led strip light efficiency, currently only about 120LM/W. If you need higher light efficiency, COB led strip is not suitable.
  3.  The maximum power of COB led strip, only recommended doing 15W / m. Because the number of chips per meter is too much, if the power exceeds 15W / m, the chip's heat is brutal to dissipate. COB led strip life will be shortened.


For more information, please visit HumenChem.

SMD encapsulation procedure ' Binning

Conclusion

If you need a light effect without light spots, you can try COB led strips. If you need strict color consistency, such as 3-step Macadam color tolerance or 2-step Macadam color tolerance, or if you need high lumens, high luminous efficacy, then you can only consider the traditional SMD led strip.

Characteristics of COB Flex Strips

If you've been listening, the advantages and disadvantages of COB flexible light strips should be obvious, so now let's get into some specific details about this sort of strip. If you're acquainted with LED strips, then lots of this may sound familiar, but there are some differences during this form of strip, so it's best to test out the guidelines below before using COB strips.

Cut and Connect

COB led strip can cut this strip just like our other strip lights. Please only cut along the cut marks marked on the strip every 50mm (24) / 25mm (12V). This allows you to cut the strip to a custom size or add gaps to your application. The cut strips can be used again and are best connected by soldering, but if this is often not an option, our COB strip connectors also are available as an option.


Dimmable

COB led strips are dimmable as well as regular SMD led strips.

You can use DALI, triac, PWM, 0-10V dimming power supply to use with COB led strips to achieve dimming.

Color Options

White light: K, K, K, K, and other custom color temperatures are available

Colorful light: Red, green, blue, yellow, pink, etc., are available.

Tunable white, RGB, RGBW are all available.



Tunable White COB led strip


RGBW COB led strip

IP grades

IP20 none waterproof, IP52 silicone drip, IP65 silicone sleeve, IP67 silicone sleeve, and other various waterproof ways are available.

COB led strip light applications

  1. Architectural
  2. Furniture & wine cabinet
  3. Holtel renovation
  4. KTV & KTV bar
  5. Parking
  6. shopping mall

How to install the COB led strip light? (step by step)

  1. Clean the surface where you wish to put in the COB led strip light.
  2. Cut the scale of the COB led strip light you would like to put in.
  3. Tear the 3M backside of the COB led strip light.
  4. Paste the COB strip light where you would like to put in.
  5. Connect the ability supply with COB led strip light.
  6. If you wish to attach the COB led strip light, you'll be able to solder or use the connector.

After you read this article, I believe you already have a basic understanding of COB led strips. If you want to know more, please visit https://www.ledyilighting.com/all-you-need-to-know-before-buying-cob-led-strip/

Top COB LED Manufacturers | Who Produce the Best Chip ...



What Is a COB LED'

A chip-on-board (COB) LED is a multi-die LED package in which an array of diodes are directly mounted and electrically interconnected onto a metal-core printed circuit board (MCPCB) or a ceramic substrate. The die matrix is then coated with an organic polymer containing a yellow phosphor.

Architecture'

The COB LED is essentially a package that mounts a dense array of

Die Fabrication'

The semiconductor dies that form the die matrix of the COB array are indium gallium nitride (InGaN) LEDs. The InGaN direct bandgap semiconductor is doped with acceptor impurities and donor impurities to a positively charged (P-type) layer and negatively charged (N-type) layer, respectively. These InGaN layers are grown on a sapphire, silicon carbide (SiC), or silicon wafer. The wafer material has a significant impact on the efficiency and thermal performance of the LED. Sapphire is the dominantly used die substrate material but its density of threading dislocations to epitaxial layers is much higher than SiC. This translates to relatively low internal quantum efficiency. And SiC's high thermal conductivity of 110 - 155 W/mK allows GaN-on-SiC LEDs outperform GaN-on-Sapphire LEDs in terms of thermal conduction capacity (Sapphire has a typical thermal conductivity of 46.0 W/mK). The epitaxial layers are typically stacked with a standard chip structure found in SMD devices. Lately there has been a trend to use the flip-chip structure to make a chip-scale package (CSP) for COB applications.

Depending on the light output of the COB LED package, InGaN diodes of various power ratings are used. The use of low power LED dies will inevitably increase wire bonding density and subsequently the cost and process complexity, and the use of expensive

COB LED Packaging'

In COB packages, the diodes are die-bonded to the substrate using an adhesive with high electrical conductivity, high thermal conductivity and high thermal stability, which is typically a silver-based epoxy. Other die bonding materials including silver-glass pastes and liquid solder are also used. The electrical path to the diodes are made with thermosonic ball bonding using gold wires which are known for their high throughput, high strength, and resistance to surface corrosion. However, intermetallic compound formation between the gold wire and the substrate occurs at a higher temperature (>120°C). This may cause bonding failures such as the Kirkendall effect due to atomic interdiffusion between the gold wire and the aluminum bond pad. Aluminum wedge bonding allows room temperature processing and fine pitch assembly with the substrate, making it a contending option for applications where high temperature bonding is a concern.

Before dispensing yellow phosphor filled silicone, a dam is drawn around the phosphor area with a viscous silicone fluid. Different phosphor packaging concepts are used in COB LEDs. Cavity encapsulation is the most commonly used phosphor packaging method which dispenses the mixture of phosphor and a silicone binder directly onto the LED chips. The challenge of using this method is to ensure uniform mixing and dispersion of the binder and phosphor so that

The COB substrate is designed to facilitate assembly and handling of the LED package and also to ensure an efficient thermal path between the LED package and the

LED Efficiency'

The luminous efficiency of COB LEDs is inherently lower than that of

The package-level efficiency loss of LEDs occurs at the phosphor layer. Wide emission linewidths of the red and green phosphor bands cause the conversion of a part of the shorter wavelengths to longer wavelengths to take place at a poor spectral efficiency. Typically, about 15'25% of the blue light absorbed by the wide band phosphor is converted to Stokes heat. The solution is to formulate phosphors with a narrow FWHM (full width half maximum) for the red and green bands or to use quantum dots (QDs) as narrow band down-converters. Light scattering and total internal reflection (TIR) are two other major contributors to package inefficiency in the powder-in-polymer approach. Maintaining a close refractive index match between the polymer matrix and phosphor particles will reduce the scattering and TIR related light loss. An anti-reflection coating (ARC) may be applied to the encapsulant to further mitigate the total internal reflection. The remote phosphor concept is developed to produce significant gains in package efficiencies while providing a spectrally optimized output from a uniform, pixilation-free LES.



Lumen Maintenance'

The removal of the intermediate substrate in COB packages allows heat generated at the LED junction to be transferred to a heat sink via the shortest possible thermal path. The absence of lead frames and plastic housings means COB LEDs do not have to struggle with lumen depreciation factors such as discoloration and yellowing. Lumen maintenance failures in COB LEDs occur typically due to inefficient or inadequate system-level thermal management. The high die density COB LEDs produce a substantial amount of heat which, if allowed to accumulate, will accelerate the phosphor degradation process and result in a permanent reduction in light output. This degradation can be exacerbated by the presence of moisture and contaminants as the gas/humidity permeability of silicone polymers increases at higher temperature. Entrapped moisture and volatile organic compound (VOC) in the encapsulation significantly decreases the conversion efficiency of silicone/YAG phosphor composites.

As with the lumen depreciation factors, the color maintenance failures of COB LEDs are primarily caused by high thermal stress, and diffusion or reaction of moisture and contaminants at the phosphor layer. The color shift behaviors of COB LEDs usually fall between the blue and green directions. A drop in phosphor quantum efficiency due to thermal degradation or chemical reaction will develop a chromaticity shift in the blue direction. Overdriving of the LEDs will cause the phosphor to operate above the saturation flux level, and the chromaticity shift can move toward the blue direction. The presence of moisture may lead to a decrease in peak wavelength in red phosphors, which causes a blue shift in the initial stage. Blue shift will also occur when there's settling and precipitation of the phosphor as a result of improper mixing and dispersion of the binder and phosphor. Photo-oxidation of the phosphor matrix will introduce a shift in the green direction. Additionally, the degradation in reflective white coating on the MCPCB can be a contributor to a spectral shift of the LED emission and a decrease in efficacy.

Color Consistency'

COB LEDs are binned according to color coordinates (chromaticity), lumen output, and forward voltage to minimize differences in color and output that might be visible from fixture to fixture. Compared with discrete mid-power LEDs, the flux binning of COB LEDs is more important because COB lighting systems often incorporate single-

A MacAdam ellipse is an elliptical zone established around a chromaticity coordinate in the CIE (x,y) color space. The smaller the ellipse, the less color variation. The ANSI color binning system uses parallelograms to quantify the perceptual difference between LEDs. The parallelograms used by ANSI to define the color bins in the C78.377- standard encloses a 7-step MacAdam ellipse and are centered on the black body line. To this day, many lighting professionals use "MacAdam ellipses" to define the level of color consistency. High end

Color Reproduction'

COB LEDs are a popular type of light source for architectural-grade downlights and spotlights, despite the fact that these large-LES light sources require a very large optical assembly (such as a TIR lens and reflector combo) to achieve a directional light output and a controlled beam angle. In lighting design for retail and hospitality environments, or museums and galleries, high fidelity color rendering is a must-have feature. At present, color quality is measured by a metric called color rendering index (CRI). However, the CRI value Ra does not take into consideration the ability of the light source to faithfully reproduce highly saturated colors. Thus R9, the index for a saturated red, is sometimes listed individually as a supplement to the CRI general index. A minimum Ra of 90 and R9 of 60 is generally required to reveal the true character and quality of merchandise, to create a visually appealing environment, or to accentuate the texture, color and shape of exhibits in aforementioned environments.

In order for a

COB Connectors'

COB LEDs can be either mounted directly to a heat sink and discrete wires are used to deliver power to the LED, or attached a heat sink via a COB connector (holder) which offers solderless electrical connection to LED and poke-in wire termination. In direct attachment designs, a thermal interface material (TIM) must be applied between the COB substrate and heat sink. The TIM ensures the thermal impedance between the LED and heat sink is reduced to a minimum by completely filling interfacial air gaps and voids. The use of a COB connector simplifies assembly and can facilitate aligning the secondary optic with the LES. The Zhaga Consortium has standardized a family of COB form factors to enable the interchange of COB modules and COB holders made by different manufacturers.

A chip-on-board (COB) LED is a multi-die LED package in which an array of diodes are directly mounted and electrically interconnected onto a metal-core printed circuit board (MCPCB) or a ceramic substrate. The die matrix is then coated with an organic polymer containing a yellow phosphor. COB LEDs are high power packages that combine high die density, high drive current, and high temperature capability to enable breakthrough changes in form factor and emission pattern of LEDs. A large light emitting surface (LES) with high lumen density and optical uniformity delivers homogenous, powerful illumination for high lumen applications (e.g. high bay lighting street lighting ). With the ability to pump out thousands of lumens from a concentrated emitting surface, COB LEDs also fits best into spot and down lighting applications which require a high center beam punch with minimal spill outside the main beam.The COB LED is essentially a package that mounts a dense array of LED dies on a large, low thermal resistance substrate. It eliminates the intermediate substrate of a surface mounted device (SMD). Shortened thermal path enables effective thermal management and a significant reduction in package profile. COB LEDs have a single circuit and a single pair of anode (positive electrode) and cathode (negative electrode) for the entire package regardless of the number of diodes mounted on the substrate. To drive the high density array of semiconductor diodes, COB LEDs require a high forward voltage (of up to 72V). The electrical connection between the diodes is often a combination of series and parallel connections such that the circuit is protected against single LED open or short failures. The smaller the pitch (center-to-center spacing between LEDs), the more uniform and luminous the emission surface is. However, very small pitches can handicap horizontal heat extraction for diodes neighbored by other diodes in every horizontal direction. The COB LED packaging process requires both wire bonding and die bonding to provide electrical connection and thermal conduction for the LED dies. After the bonding process the die matrix is covered with a phosphor silicone mixture to produce white light and to shield the chip array from the environment.The semiconductor dies that form the die matrix of the COB array are indium gallium nitride (InGaN) LEDs. The InGaN direct bandgap semiconductor is doped with acceptor impurities and donor impurities to a positively charged (P-type) layer and negatively charged (N-type) layer, respectively. These InGaN layers are grown on a sapphire, silicon carbide (SiC), or silicon wafer. The wafer material has a significant impact on the efficiency and thermal performance of the LED. Sapphire is the dominantly used die substrate material but its density of threading dislocations to epitaxial layers is much higher than SiC. This translates to relatively low internal quantum efficiency. And SiC's high thermal conductivity of 110 - 155 W/mK allows GaN-on-SiC LEDs outperform GaN-on-Sapphire LEDs in terms of thermal conduction capacity (Sapphire has a typical thermal conductivity of 46.0 W/mK). The epitaxial layers are typically stacked with a standard chip structure found in SMD devices. Lately there has been a trend to use the flip-chip structure to make a chip-scale package (CSP) for COB applications.Depending on the light output of the COB LED package, InGaN diodes of various power ratings are used. The use of low power LED dies will inevitably increase wire bonding density and subsequently the cost and process complexity, and the use of expensive high power LED dies will compromise luminous efficacy and cause heat flux concentration. Therefore most InGaN LED dies incorporated in COB packages are usually mid-power chips in the 0.2W - 0.5W range.In COB packages, the diodes are die-bonded to the substrate using an adhesive with high electrical conductivity, high thermal conductivity and high thermal stability, which is typically a silver-based epoxy. Other die bonding materials including silver-glass pastes and liquid solder are also used. The electrical path to the diodes are made with thermosonic ball bonding using gold wires which are known for their high throughput, high strength, and resistance to surface corrosion. However, intermetallic compound formation between the gold wire and the substrate occurs at a higher temperature (>120°C). This may cause bonding failures such as the Kirkendall effect due to atomic interdiffusion between the gold wire and the aluminum bond pad. Aluminum wedge bonding allows room temperature processing and fine pitch assembly with the substrate, making it a contending option for applications where high temperature bonding is a concern.Before dispensing yellow phosphor filled silicone, a dam is drawn around the phosphor area with a viscous silicone fluid. Different phosphor packaging concepts are used in COB LEDs. Cavity encapsulation is the most commonly used phosphor packaging method which dispenses the mixture of phosphor and a silicone binder directly onto the LED chips. The challenge of using this method is to ensure uniform mixing and dispersion of the binder and phosphor so that color quality is not adversely affected. Conformal phosphor coating refers to spraying phosphor with minimal binder on die surface for a very consistent coating thicknesses around the entire die. CSP-based COB LEDs typically use this method to deposit phosphors to all five facets of the die except for the one with contact pads. A more delicate COB packaging method is to apply the phosphor mix to an optical cup inside which the LED die resides. The optical cup acts as a reflector to extract more light from the die while reducing the use of phosphor material as well as improving heat dissipation. Remote phosphor solutions, which place the phosphor layer at a distanced from the die, are also an option to provide a uniform phosphor conversion layer and lower the probability of light to be scattered back on the substrate surface.The COB substrate is designed to facilitate assembly and handling of the LED package and also to ensure an efficient thermal path between the LED package and the heat sink . COB LED arrays are typically fabricated on metal core printed circuit board (MCPCB) or ceramic substrate. Ceramic substrates are noted for their high chemical and thermal stability. They are preferred in environmentally demanding applications. However, the thermal conductivity of common ceramics is low (20-30 W/mK for alumina). The aluminum nitride (AlN) ceramic has exceptional thermal conductivity, but is expensive. Compared with ceramic substrates, MCPCBs, which are designed to provide high through-board thermal conductivity, have advantages of lower costs and better mechanical strength. The most common MCPCB construction consists of a base plate made of aluminum or copper, a dielectric layer, and a top copper layer. Thermal resistance of an MCPCB depends on the chemistry of the organic dielectric layer which is sandwiched between two metal layers.The luminous efficiency of COB LEDs is inherently lower than that of mid-power LEDs which have highly reflective cavities to facilitate efficient light extraction. The internal quantum efficiency (IQE) of InGaN LEDs largely depends on the wafer material. The large mismatch (13%) between the crystal lattice structure of sapphire and that of InGaN creates a high density of threading dislocations. Recombination of electronic carriers (electrons and holes) that occurs at such sites are primarily nonradiative. SiC substrates have a substantially low mismatch to GaN (3.4%). As such, the probability of photon generation in GaN-on-SiC LEDs is intrinsically higher than that in GaN-on-Sapphire LEDs. Nevertheless, growing GaN or InGaN on foreign substrates inevitably yields epitaxial defects and dislocations which are all compromising the IQE. LEDs fabricated on homoepitaxially grown GaN substrates are a superior approach to improving internal quantum efficiency. GaN-on-GaN LEDs have no lattice mismatch and CTE mismatch between the substrate and the n-type GaN layer, and therefore induce no non-radiative recombinations due to threading dislocations.The package-level efficiency loss of LEDs occurs at the phosphor layer. Wide emission linewidths of the red and green phosphor bands cause the conversion of a part of the shorter wavelengths to longer wavelengths to take place at a poor spectral efficiency. Typically, about 15'25% of the blue light absorbed by the wide band phosphor is converted to Stokes heat. The solution is to formulate phosphors with a narrow FWHM (full width half maximum) for the red and green bands or to use quantum dots (QDs) as narrow band down-converters. Light scattering and total internal reflection (TIR) are two other major contributors to package inefficiency in the powder-in-polymer approach. Maintaining a close refractive index match between the polymer matrix and phosphor particles will reduce the scattering and TIR related light loss. An anti-reflection coating (ARC) may be applied to the encapsulant to further mitigate the total internal reflection. The remote phosphor concept is developed to produce significant gains in package efficiencies while providing a spectrally optimized output from a uniform, pixilation-free LES.The removal of the intermediate substrate in COB packages allows heat generated at the LED junction to be transferred to a heat sink via the shortest possible thermal path. The absence of lead frames and plastic housings means COB LEDs do not have to struggle with lumen depreciation factors such as discoloration and yellowing. Lumen maintenance failures in COB LEDs occur typically due to inefficient or inadequate system-level thermal management. The high die density COB LEDs produce a substantial amount of heat which, if allowed to accumulate, will accelerate the phosphor degradation process and result in a permanent reduction in light output. This degradation can be exacerbated by the presence of moisture and contaminants as the gas/humidity permeability of silicone polymers increases at higher temperature. Entrapped moisture and volatile organic compound (VOC) in the encapsulation significantly decreases the conversion efficiency of silicone/YAG phosphor composites.As with the lumen depreciation factors, the color maintenance failures of COB LEDs are primarily caused by high thermal stress, and diffusion or reaction of moisture and contaminants at the phosphor layer. The color shift behaviors of COB LEDs usually fall between the blue and green directions. A drop in phosphor quantum efficiency due to thermal degradation or chemical reaction will develop a chromaticity shift in the blue direction. Overdriving of the LEDs will cause the phosphor to operate above the saturation flux level, and the chromaticity shift can move toward the blue direction. The presence of moisture may lead to a decrease in peak wavelength in red phosphors, which causes a blue shift in the initial stage. Blue shift will also occur when there's settling and precipitation of the phosphor as a result of improper mixing and dispersion of the binder and phosphor. Photo-oxidation of the phosphor matrix will introduce a shift in the green direction. Additionally, the degradation in reflective white coating on the MCPCB can be a contributor to a spectral shift of the LED emission and a decrease in efficacy.COB LEDs are binned according to color coordinates (chromaticity), lumen output, and forward voltage to minimize differences in color and output that might be visible from fixture to fixture. Compared with discrete mid-power LEDs, the flux binning of COB LEDs is more important because COB lighting systems often incorporate single- LED modules . As always, keeping chromaticity coordinates under tight control is a critical detail in architectural lighting . To counter chromaticity variability that is inherent in the manufacturing process, COB LEDs are sorted into bins based on the Standard Deviation Color Matching (SDCM) MacAdam ellipses or the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) parallelograms.A MacAdam ellipse is an elliptical zone established around a chromaticity coordinate in the CIE (x,y) color space. The smaller the ellipse, the less color variation. The ANSI color binning system uses parallelograms to quantify the perceptual difference between LEDs. The parallelograms used by ANSI to define the color bins in the C78.377- standard encloses a 7-step MacAdam ellipse and are centered on the black body line. To this day, many lighting professionals use "MacAdam ellipses" to define the level of color consistency. High end architectural lighting typically uses COB LEDs with 2- or 3-step MacAdam ellipse color tolerance. Chromaticity deviations at a 3-step MacAdam ellipse are considered barely perceptible. In general lighting applications a 5-step ellipse is still sufficient, and a 7-step ellipse can be tolerated for entry-level applications.COB LEDs are a popular type of light source for architectural-grade downlights and spotlights, despite the fact that these large-LES light sources require a very large optical assembly (such as a TIR lens and reflector combo) to achieve a directional light output and a controlled beam angle. In lighting design for retail and hospitality environments, or museums and galleries, high fidelity color rendering is a must-have feature. At present, color quality is measured by a metric called color rendering index (CRI). However, the CRI value Ra does not take into consideration the ability of the light source to faithfully reproduce highly saturated colors. Thus R9, the index for a saturated red, is sometimes listed individually as a supplement to the CRI general index. A minimum Ra of 90 and R9 of 60 is generally required to reveal the true character and quality of merchandise, to create a visually appealing environment, or to accentuate the texture, color and shape of exhibits in aforementioned environments.In order for a phosphor-converted LED to render colors accurately, the phosphor emission has to cover as broad a wavelength range as possible. However, in current phosphor-conversion systems there's an intrinsic trade-off between the CRI of an LED and its luminous efficacy. This is because wavelength conversion at the wide FWHM red and green phosphor bands causes a significant amount of Stokes energy loss. Two strategies are being researched to overcome this limitation: using a narrow-band red phosphor and down-converting the blue light using quantum dots. The use of quantum dots to generate spectrally narrow primaries has emerged as the preferred choice.COB LEDs can be either mounted directly to a heat sink and discrete wires are used to deliver power to the LED, or attached a heat sink via a COB connector (holder) which offers solderless electrical connection to LED and poke-in wire termination. In direct attachment designs, a thermal interface material (TIM) must be applied between the COB substrate and heat sink. The TIM ensures the thermal impedance between the LED and heat sink is reduced to a minimum by completely filling interfacial air gaps and voids. The use of a COB connector simplifies assembly and can facilitate aligning the secondary optic with the LES. The Zhaga Consortium has standardized a family of COB form factors to enable the interchange of COB modules and COB holders made by different manufacturers.

Contact us to discuss your requirements of Low Refractive Index Silicone For Cob Led Encapsulation. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.