12/29/2011

SIL 2012 Preview--LED Manufacturing track to address critical issues for LED production


The LED industry faces a series of key challenges as it moves to high-volume production, and many of these will be discussed in the new LED Manufacturing track at Strategies in Light, explains BOB STEELE.

As the LED industry has embarked on an unprecedented scale-up in manufacturing capacity worldwide, it is clear that manufacturing techniques that were suitable for low-volume production are no longer adequate. Application of new tools and techniques for high-volume production must be implemented, including the use of larger-diameter substrates, automation, device metrology and feedback, yield management techniques, and the use of improved packaging materials and methods.
All of these subjects will be addressed in the LED Manufacturing track, introduced for the first time at Strategies in Light (SIL) in 2012 (February 7-9, Santa Clara, California). The topic of LED manufacturing was offered as a half-day workshop at Strategies in Light 2011. Due to the sold-out attendance and the overwhelmingly positive response to the workshop, it was decided to devote a full-day conference track to LED manufacturing in 2012. SEMI, the industry trade association, was a key sponsor of the 2011 workshop, and will again be sponsor of the 2012 conference track.
Plenary session
Opening the plenary session will be the featured keynote speaker, Iain Black, VP of Worldwide Manufacturing, Engineering and Innovation at Philips Lumileds Lighting. He will discuss the topic of how the evolving LED market represents a range of challenges for the LED manufacturer. Such challenges include the maturity of processes and equipment, the evolution of product and performance standards, and an immature value chain. See LEDs Magazine’s recent interview with Iain Black for a more detailed review of his presentation.
The second keynote speaker will be Karen Savala, President, Americas with SEMI. Her presentation, entitled “LED Manufacturing Today: Consolidating Expansion and Planning for the Long Haul”, will review LED fab capacity by region and provide estimates of capital spending in the 2012-2013 period. It will also provide an update on global efforts toward industry-wide manufacturing standards.
Another featured speaker in the plenary session will be Jacob Tarn, President of TSMC’s Solid-State Lighting Unit. As the representative of a major silicon-semiconductor manufacturer that is moving into the solid-state lighting space, Tarn will discuss approaches by which such a company can help to accelerate the LED cost-reduction curve and enable LEDs to penetrate the general-purpose lighting market.
Addressing similar issues from the perspective of government-industry collaboration, James Brodrick, SSL Program Manager at the US Department of Energy, will provide a detailed look at the latest edition of DOE’s SSL Manufacturing Roadmap, which examines key cost elements and where future cost reductions will occur.
Wafer-level manufacturing issues
The move to larger substrate sizes - 4-inch and 6-inch - is one approach to help scale up LED production volumes and bring down costs. Raja Parvez, CEO of sapphire producer Rubicon Technology, will give a presentation detailing the manufacturing efficiencies and cost reductions associated with moving to larger-diameter substrates.
There are a number of other ways to improve throughput and productivity during wafer manufacturing. Abdul Lateef, CEO of Plasma-Therm, will discuss the productivity improvements that are possible by adapting front-end plasma processes that have been successfully used for silicon to LEDs. Thomas Uhrmann, Business Development Manager, Compound Semiconductors, for EV Group, will review how high-throughput lithography and metal-wafer bonding can increase LED production efficiency and reduce costs.
Metrology and yield management
In this session, speakers will address the application of metrology to tracking defects during production and using the information obtained as feedback to improving yield. Mike Plisinski, VP and GM of Rudolph Technologies Data Analysis Business, will show how data collected across the entire manufacturing process can be used by process engineers to reduce costs and increase yields.
Dan Scharpf, General Manager of the Systems Business Unit at Labsphere, will discuss how yields can be increased, binning can be more efficient, and the cost of manufacturing can be reduced by moving optical testing further upstream in the manufacturing process.
Packaging
As the final step in the LED manufacturing process, and a key contributor to cost, packaging is receiving increased attention, and advanced techniques and materials are being applied to lower cost and increase performance. Ilkan Cokgor, VP of Global Marketing for Everlight Electronics, will discuss the packaging trends across the LED application space that are helping to drive down the cost per lumen.
Ravi Bhatkal, VP of Energy Technologies at Cookson Electronics, will outline the issues typically encountered in the package-on-board assembly process, and make recommendations for material selection and manufacturing processes that will enable high-reliability luminaire fabrication.
Bringing the packaging session to a close will be Geoff Gardner, Marketing Manager, Lighting, for Dow Corning. His presentation will cover the emerging widespread use of silicones in LED packaging, ranging from direct application on the die to final assembly in a lamp, and the technology challenges facing integration of these materials into LED products.

WE ALWAYS CONCENTRATE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF LED INDUSTRY. MORE DETAILS YOU CAN CHECK http://www.bgocled.com/

12/27/2011

LEDs Predicted to Replace Streetlights in India by 2020


Recently, insiders in India showed their opinions about the tendency of LED development.

According to Amrit Manwani, an alumnus of IIT-Kanpur, LEDs will take the place of conventional streetlights by 2020. He thought that the LEDs consume one-third of the power consumed by the conventional streetlights and also illuminate a larger area. Due to less power consumption, the LED bulbs and tubelights would become a part of every household.

Manwani, a co-ordinator of 1972 batch, said LED tubelights and bulbs consume only 1/10 of the power consumed by tubelights and bulbs. In his opinion, by 2020 only tubelight made of LEDs would be used in the country. The government is also promoting the LED lamps and lights. "The tubelights and the bulbs having LED as content would have a life of 15 years and cost around Rs 800. It would be very economical apart from providing better lighting."

WE BGOCLED,INC ALWAYS INSIST IN ENVIROMENTAL PROTECTION AND ENERGY SAVING, IF YOU ARE THE SAME ,YOU CAN CHECK http://www.bgocled.com/ FOR MORE DETAILS.
 

The Controversy on New Light Bulbs Rules


As new year is dawning near, the new law on phasing out the 100-watt bulbs is to take effect, however, some Southwest Floridians prefer the incandescent bulbs.

A law passed in 2007 says manufacturers must phase out the 100-watt bulbs in 2012, or make them much more energy-efficient.  The government would like people to use the compact flourescent lights, CFL's, or LEDs

Different people have different opinions. According to Jack Lurie of Tropical Hardware in Fort Myers, "They see light bulbs as an investment. They just want to screw in a bulb and they want light."  He said people are stock-piling the old incandescents, for fear of not being able to buy them in the future.

"I don't like it one bit. If they have a new product, then put it out there and let us decide whether to buy it. But don't tell us, you have to do this. That is government intrusion," said Patty Eppler of Fort Myers. "I prefer the incandescents and I will stay with them as long as I can."
Donna Croddy of Lee Lighting told WINK News: it is time for a change to a better technology than incandescents.  "That is a 135-year-old technology. It's time. God bless Thomas Edison, but it's time."

We BgocLED,inc always insist in environmental protection and energy saving, if you are the same ,you can check http://www.bgocled.com/ for more details.




Party Tips for New Year

Dance
Dance Party 

Parties without music tend to be a somewhat dull affair, moreso a New Year party. Never FORGET to arrange for a good sound system, all the better if it has a sing-along facility. Choose good music numbers prior to the party. Remember that the selection depends not on your choice but the general taste and age of your guests. It is great if you can be the DJ yourself or get a friend to do it for you, but you can always hire a professional if you are ready to spend the extra bucks to make it a grand affair. Have some slow-paced hits play in the background all evening to set the mood for the occassion. As midnight draws to a close, let play some groovy dance tracks to heat things up. Turn your party-zone into a big dance floor. Set it on fire with the latest chartbusters, a must have for such an occasion. You can also organize dance themes. There can be a couple dance or a mat dance. Dance competitions can also be organized among the kids and prizes distributed to the top three performers. 

Dinner
Dinner for New year party 

This is the most crucial part of the New Year party. Say whatever you may, but nothing matters so much to your guests on the New Year Eve as the items on your party dinner menu. Arrange for simple snacks like popcorn and chips if you are having an evening party on Dec 31st. Get a stack of alcoholic beverages in store if you plan to throw a bash only for adults. If your guest list includes kids, stay away from booze and restrict it all to non-alcoholic cold drinks that suit the kids. On New Year, people usually gorge on non-vegetarian food and cocktails. However, you are adviced to keep provisions for non-vegetarian as well as vegetarian dishes so that you are spared the embarrasment of having to see any of your guests leaving on an empty stomach. It is better to know their preferences beforehand, if that is possible for you. Whatever your other dishes be, it is necessary to prepare some of the traditional New Year foods (specially the ones that are thought to bring luck). Black-eyed peas, ham hocks, cabbage, rice, dried red peas, bacon, salted pork and lentil soup are some indespensable cuisines to gorge on in the run up to the big hour. If possible, a buffet should be laid out and menu should be planned according to the tastes and preferences of the guests and children. The New Year special cake should always be served at the end of the dinner. 
 

Costumes
party ideas 
The costumes for your New Year Party depends totally on the theme, if you have any. For a "Rock 'n Roll" theme, go for the typical glitter belt-white boot-white jacket Elvis look. Or you can try the cardboard-nose Pinocchio look if you are planning a "Dress as a cartoon character" theme, something kids will love very much. But if you prefer not to have a theme, you can fix the evergreen suits and gowns dress code or ask your guests to come as they like.


Party Games
party games 
Games have the wonderful ability to add more fun to a party. Make sure that you involve all your guests in the party games you play. Some exciting and amusing games can keep boredom at bay, make the party atmosphere more lively and fill your guests with the energy and hilarity so needed to make your New Year Bash an affair to remember. Click here for New Year Party Game Ideas.

LEDs light up Leica microscopes


The LED illumination series LED5000 and LED3000 have been designed for high-end stereo microscopes and routine stereo microscope systems, respectively. Both series have spotlight, ringlight, and multicontrast illumination modules available. Lifetimes up to 50,000 hours nearly eliminate downtime. The LEDs save up to 90% of the power required by a 150-W halogen lamp. The LED5000 series can communicate with Leica Application Suite (LAS) software to save illumination settings with captured images and performing recall when needed.

12/26/2011

LED News--Taiwan Ranks No.1 in LED Industry Scale of 2011

Recently, Taiwan's Photonics Industry and Technology Development Association (PIDA), has released a report on Led industry scale in 2011. Taiwan remains world's biggest in LED industry scale in 2011, despite lower-than-expected market growth.
 
As the eurozone's debt problems dragged down demand, the output value of the global LED market grew by only 2.6 percent to US$16.6 billion (NT$502.48 billion) this year from US$16.1 billion in 2010.

In terms of regional performance, Taiwan still topped the market with a total output value of US$4.54 billion in 2011 -- including those of the upstream epitaxial wafers -- although the figure declined 0.4 percent from last year's US$4.56 billion.

South Korea ranked third behind Taiwan and Japan with output values of US$3.35 billion this year, representing an increase of nearly 5 percent from last year.
Some South Korean companies have launched low-priced products to tap into the Lighting market but they still need to purchase LED components from Taiwan to save costs because of their limited scale of production.

For Europe, LED output value plunged 7.3 percent from US$1.74 billion in 2010 to US$1.61 in 2011 due to the impact of the European debt crisis and fierce competition.

While, China is considered as the highest growth among all regions with its LED output value surged 26 percent year-on-year from 2010, thanks to local government support.

We always persevere in bring you the latest news and the best service.  http://www.bgocled.com/

12/25/2011

How "Merry Christmas" is said ...around the world

Afrikaans:                                     Gese雗de Kersfees
Afrikander:                                   Een Plesierige Kerfees
African/ Eritrean/ Tigrinja:        Rehus-Beal-Ledeats
Albanian:                                     Gezur Krislinjden
Arabic:                                          Milad Majid
Argentine:                                   Feliz Navidad
Armenian:                                   Shenoraavor Nor Dari yev Pari Gaghand
Azeri:                                            Tezze Iliniz Yahsi Olsun
Bahasa Malaysia:                     Selamat Hari Natal
Basque:                                       Zorionak eta Urte Berri On!
Bengali:                                       Shuvo Naba Barsha
Bohemian:                                 Vesele Vanoce
Bosnian:                                    (BOSANSKI) Cestit Bozic i Sretna Nova godina
Brazilian:                                    Feliz Natal
Breton:                                       Nedeleg laouen na bloavezh mat
Bulgarian:                                  Tchestita Koleda; Tchestito Rojdestvo Hristovo
Catalan:                                     Bon Nadal i un Bon Any Nou!
Chile:                                         Feliz Navidad
Chinese:                                   (Cantonese) Gun Tso Sun Tan'Gung Haw Sun
Chinese:                                   (Mandarin) Sheng Dan Kuai Le
Choctaw:                                  Yukpa, Nitak Hollo Chito
Columbia:                                 Feliz Navidad y Pr髎pero A駉 Nuevo
Cornish:                                    Nadelik looan na looan blethen noweth
Corsian:                                    Pace e salute
Crazanian:                                Rot Yikji Dol La Roo
Cree:                                          Mitho Makosi Kesikansi
Croatian:                                   Sretan Bozic
Czech:                                        Prejeme Vam Vesele Vanoce a stastny Novy Rok
Danish:                                      Glædelig Jul
Duri:                                            Christmas-e- Shoma Mobarak
Dutch:                                         Vrolijk Kerstfeest en een Gelukkig Nieuwjaar! or Zalig Kerstfeast
English:                                      Merry Christmas
Eskimo:                                      (inupik) Jutdlime pivdluarit ukiortame pivdluaritlo!
Esperanto:                                Gajan Kristnaskon
Estonian:                                   R貂msaid J鮱lup黨i
Ethiopian:                                  (Amharic) Melkin Yelidet Beaal
Faeroese:                                   Gledhilig jol og eydnurikt nyggjar!
Farsi:                                           Cristmas-e-shoma mobarak bashad
Finnish:                                      Hyvaa joulua
Flemish:                                     Zalig Kerstfeest en Gelukkig nieuw jaar
French:                                      Joyeux Noel
Frisian:                                      Noflike Krystdagen en in protte Lok en Seine yn it Nije Jier!
Galician:                                    Bo Nada
Gaelic:                                       Nollaig chridheil agus Bliadhna mhath 鵵!
German:                                    Fr鰄liche Weihnachten
Greek:                                       Kala Christouyenna!
Haiti:                                          (Creole) Jwaye Nowel or to Jesus Edo Bri'cho o Rish D'Shato Brichto
Hausa:                                      Barka da Kirsimatikuma Barka da Sabuwar Shekara!
Hawaiian:                                 Mele Kalikimaka
Hebrew:                                    Mo'adim Lesimkha. Chena tova
Hindi:                                        Shub Naya Baras (good New Year not Merry Christmas)
Hungarian:                             Kellemes Karacsonyi unnepeket
Icelandic:
                                Gledileg Jol
Indonesian:                            Selamat Hari Natal
Iraqi:                                         Idah Saidan Wa Sanah Jadidah
Irish:                                         Nollaig Shona Dhuit, or Nodlaig mhaith chugnat
Iroquois:                                  Ojenyunyat Sungwiyadeson honungradon nagwutut. Ojenyunyat osrasay.
Italian:                                      Buone Feste Natalizie
Japanese:                               Shinnen omedeto. Kurisumasu Omedeto
Jiberish:                                  Mithag Crithagsigathmithags
Korean:                                   Sung Tan Chuk Ha
Lao:                                          souksan van Christmas
Latin:                                       Natale hilare et Annum Faustum!
Latvian:                                  Prieci'gus Ziemsve'tkus un Laimi'gu Jauno Gadu!
Lausitzian:                            Wjesole hody a strowe nowe leto
Lettish:                                   Priecigus Ziemassvetkus
Lithuanian:                            Linksmu Kaledu
Low Saxon:                          Heughliche Winachten un 'n moi Nijaar
Luxembourgish:                  Sch鑙ne Chreschtdaag an e gudde Rutsch
Macedonian:                         Sreken Bozhik
Maltese:                                 IL-Milied It-tajjeb
Manx:                                     Nollick ghennal as blein vie noa
Maori:                                     Meri Kirihimete
Marathi:                                 Shub Naya Varsh (good New Year not Merry Christmas)
Navajo:                                 Merry Keshmish
Norwegian:                          God Jul, or Gledelig Jul
Occitan:                                 Pulit nadal e bona annado
Papiamento:                        Bon Pasco 
Papua New Guinea:           Bikpela hamamas blong dispela Krismas na Nupela yia i go long yu
Pennsylvania German:     En frehlicher Grischtdaag un en hallich Nei Yaahr!
Peru:                                      Feliz Navidad y un Venturoso A駉 Nuevo
Philippines:                          Maligayang Pasko!
Polish:                                   Wesolych Swiat Bozego Narodzenia or Boze Narodzenie
Portuguese:                         Feliz Natal
Pushto:                                 Christmas Aao Ne-way Kaal Mo Mobarak Sha
Rapa-Nui (Easter Island): Mata-Ki-Te-Rangi. Te-Pito-O-Te-Henua
Rhetian:                                 Bellas festas da nadal e bun onn
Romanche:                            (sursilvan dialect): Legreivlas fiastas da Nadal e bien niev onn!
Rumanian:                            Sarbatori vesele or Craciun fericit
Russian:                                Pozdrevlyayu s prazdnikom Rozhdestva is Novim Godom
Sami:                                      Buorrit Juovllat
Samoan:                               La Maunia Le Kilisimasi Ma Le Tausaga Fou
Sardinian:                             Bonu nadale e prosperu annu nou
Scots Gaelic:                        Nollaig chridheil huibh
Serbian:                                Hristos se rodi.
Singhalese:                          Subha nath thalak Vewa. Subha Aluth Awrudhak Vewa
Slovak:                                  Vesele Vianoce. A stastlivy Novy Rok
Slovene:                                Vesele Bozicne Praznike Srecno Novo Leto or Vesel Bozic in srecno Novo leto
Spanish:                               Feliz Navidad
Swedish:                             God Jul and (Och) Ett Gott Nytt År
Tagalog:                              Maligayamg Pasko. Masaganang Bagong Taon
Tamil:                                   (Tamizh) Nathar Puthu Varuda Valthukkal (good New Year not Merry Christmas)
Trukeese:                           (Micronesian) Neekiriisimas annim oo iyer seefe feyiyeech!
Thai:                                    Sawadee Pee Mai or souksan wan Christmas
Turkish:                              Noeliniz Ve Yeni Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
Ukrainian:                           Srozhdestvom Kristovym or Z RIZDVOM HRYSTOVYM
Urdu:                                    Naya Saal Mubarak Ho (good New Year not Merry Christmas)
Vietnamese:                       Chuc Mung Giang Sinh
Welsh:                                 Nadolig Llawen
Yoruba:                               E ku odun, e ku iye'dun!

Say merry Christmas and happy new year to all of the world ,tell them how happy you are .

GE Lighting settles LED patent dispute with Dongbu Lightec


GE Lighting Solutions has settled its LED patent-infringement lawsuit with, and granted a license to, Dongbu Lightec.
GE Lighting Solutions, LLC, has settled a patent-infringement lawsuit filed in May 2010 against Dongbu Lightec, formerly Fawoo Technology. GE Lighting Solutions is part of the GE - Appliances & Lighting business unit of General Electric Company.
The settlement terminates a pending action before the court regarding allegations of Dongbu Lightec's infringements of US patents 6,799,864 and 6,787,999 that cover, among other things, LED lamp heat-sink designs, and systems and methods for efficiently replacing existing lamps with such designs.
The specific terms of the settlement will remain confidential, but as part of the agreement, Dongbu Lightec has agreed to a license from GE Lighting Solutions under the aforementioned patents.
"We are pleased with this settlement, which demonstrates our commitment to defending GE Lighting Solution's intellectual property across the globe," said Jaime Irick, President and CEO of GE Lighting Solutions. "The '864 and '999 patents cover technology important to the long -life operation of LED-based lamps. GE Lighting Solutions is offering non-exclusive licenses to the '864 and '999 patents to interested parties. 

May LED have a bright future. we always believe http://www.bgocled.com/

Christmas house with 32,000 LEDs


I've seen people go over the top decorating their houses with Christmas lights and ornaments, but having 32,000 LED lights synchronized to dubstep is just too much. Santa and Rudolph would have a seizure from a mile away figuring out how to land on this tricked out roof. Compared to the playable Angry Birds light show we saw yesterday, this house uses 12,000 more LED lights and 54 more Light-O-Rama 16 channel controllers. I think we have our champion!

We also decorate our Christmas house ,http://www.bgocled.com/  what about u?

12/22/2011

2011 Google Christmas Eve LOGO--didn't pay attention to environmental protection

When i see the 2011 Google Christmas Eve LOGO,made up with LED strip light.

It appeal us protect our earth ?As LED light, environmental protection,energy saving,healthy and so on .and it is what our company's purpose,environmental protection,energy saving and give our customer our best service and a healthy life.

But in the LOGO of GOOGLE,it use candle? it may produce a lot of flu gas that make us unhealth.It is not a good idea.

It is not a good idea so we also appeal all of you ,we can use LED candle light to replace the candle,you can check www.bgocled.com to find which one you'd like ,and also you can find it anywhere ,we just appeal all of you to protect our world .

Compared with Google 2011 and 2010 Christmas Eve personality Logo-what will happend in 2012,doomsday or a new start

Today early in the morning to open Google we discovered the individuality Logo.It is made up with LED strip light.


2010 Christmas Eve personality Logo,Or can't just call it Logo.It is composed with many doodles

The doodle of Christmas may be one of the most important one among Google's doodle.That year's Christmas doodle had spent five artists about 250 hours of time to finish with . It has consistently show in Google home page for two and a half days.

The one of 2011 may the same,hope LED has a bright future.

I was thought about it is like the eggs and bring the surprises too us ,and it is .2011 is a year of surprise .Though it just a logo,from the energy cost by Google we can see,This is not a simple Logo.

Remember the Logo Google took before was focus on a few letters ,and this abandoned the previous tradition.No any words of the Google,when the mouse slip your images pictures will be large.Feel so good.

What about this year's,idea made up from  LED strip light,means it is a new start of LED ?and LED light will light all the Earth ,so we are alive.

More details you can share with us in http://www.bgocled.com/

2012/(2011) Google's New Creative LOGO about Christmas--use LED Strip light


 
Have your saw that picture,it is the blessing of Christmas send out by Google.What This new creative made up from? LED Light Strip or Something else? It means the bright future of LED ?
Google is never a company with lack of creative ideas,obvious with its Logo used every festival.From it founded in 1998,there are more than 200 LOGOs.It appears in every important festival.we can see what it indecate.
We will have a survey about its LOGO used over the years.
It means the bright future of LED?
 
 More content you can pay attention to Http://www/bgocled.com/

Winter Fun Guide-Winter Solstice


The mid December solstice marks the beginning of winter in the Northern Hemisphere and summer in the Southern Hemisphere.

In the Northern Hemisphere, the next Winter Solstice occurs on Thursday, December 22, 2011 at 12:30 A.M. EST or 5:30 AM UTC (Universal Time).

In the Southern Hemisphere, the next Winter Solstice takes place on June 20, 2012 at 23:09 UTC (Universal Time).

While the beginning of summer marks the longest day of the year, the winter solstice brings the shortest day - and the longest night! - of the year.

The reason for the different seasons in the two hemispheres is that while the earth rotates around the sun, it also spins on its axis, which is tilted some 23.5 degrees. Because of this tilt, the Northern Hemisphere receives less direct sunlight and the Southern Hemisphere receives more (and vice versa) depending on the season.

In the Northern Hemisphere, the gloomy winter solstice has been responsible for many symbols, ancient myths and religious beliefsover millennia.
In ancient Rome, the winter solstice was celebrated at the feast of Saturnalia, while in pre-christian Britain, the end of December centered around the pagan Yule log in a fiery display to melt the heart of a cold and dreary winter.

Today, a similar response to winter doldrums is the celebration of Christmas by many cultures around the world complete with twinkling lights, holiday feasts & lively festivals.

To many pre-Christian cultures, however, December was thought of as the most dreaded time of year, when the lack of heat and light and a limited supply of food spelled danger.
The cold was stark and the darkness seemed perpetual.

Even today, modern science points to a mental disorder that is now officially recognized as SAD, or seasonal affective disorder that results in moodiness or depression during the winter months due to the lack of sunlight.
The cure? Turn up the wattage! — indeed, the use of artificial light is the only known treatment for SAD.

Yet as the old wise man once said, it truly is darkest before the dawn. After the Winter Solstice, the light slowly begins its inevitable return, and the days begin to grow blessedly longer, flipping the switch to ON for the inevitable countdown to spring ...

Today is our Winter Soltice,we make dumplings in our office,we will upload the videos later,what  do you this day,hope you can share with us too.  http://www.bgocled.com/


Top 20 LEDs Magazine news stories of 2011: Readers gravitate to A-lamp stories


Based on 2011 web readership statistics, A-lamp SSL topics proved most popular with our readers followed by stories with a financial or industry-forecast angle and then outdoor-area- and street-lighting topics.
Winding down to the end of 2011, we took the time to look back at the LEDs Magazinenews stories that attracted the most interest from you - our readers. We present our Top-20 news stories measured by page traffic on our website. Review the list below and it's clear that LED retrofit lamps are the hottest solid-state-lighting (SSL) topic. Other notable areas of interest include industry forecast and financial stories, outdoor lighting, linear-fluorescent alternatives, and a variety of specialty topics.
The A-lamp, and in general the retrofit lamp, topic appeared early and often on our list. The greatest number of the stories centered of the US Department of Energy's L Prize that was awarded to early-entrant Philips Lighting just after GE Lighting andLighting Science Group (LSG) announced plans to enter the DOE contest. But coverage of A-Lamp news at Lightfair International and the entry of startup Switch into the segment also caught your interest.
Technology- and financial-forecast articles scored three times in the top ten, and that's no surprise given the growth path that LED lighting is on. The general-illumination SSL segment is clearly the next big market driver, but questions remain as to the exact chronology and as to which market segments that LEDs have the largest impact.
The street- and outdoor-lighting is certainly a segment where SSL deployment is moving rapidly. We've covered the trend throughout the year in our Outdoor Lighting story series and in numerous other case studies. In our list, we have case studies of Philips Lighting deployments in Europe and a major Kingsun project in China. We also had new items on new outdoor luminaires fromAmbergreat and Zhihai.
The remainder of the list is quite fragmented, but several stories are worth mention. Cree topped the list with a fixture that is an alternative to linear fluorescent lighting. Although LED-based replacements for T8 fluorescent lamps are still struggling in the market, purpose-built linear fixtures perform quite well.
Google made news with its Android@Home initiative and a light bulb due from LSG next year that can be wirelessly-controlled by smartphones. California was out in front of the energy-efficiency light-bulb movement, although the US may have taken a step back at year end with legislation that eliminates enforcement of new efficiency regulations.
All in all 2011 brought good and diverse news to the SSL segment. LEDs are succeeding in myriad applications, and the baseline component technology is still improving in terms of light output and efficacy on a steep ramp. The year 2012 should be even more exciting.
Top 20 LEDs Magazine news stories of 2011:
Cree’s CR SSL luminaire designs deliver 90 to 110 lm/W efficacy utilizing LEDs that radiate upwards into a mixing chamber and reflector that distributes light through a diffuser.
Based on a worldwide survey of lighting professionals and consumers, as well as other input factors, McKinsey has developed a lighting market model that estimates the size of the global lighting market through to 2020, differentiated by application, geography, and light-source technology.
Lighting Science Group and Light Prescriptions Innovators have developed an LED lamp which they plan to submit to the DOE for L Prize evaluation.
The global market for packaged high-brightness LEDs is expected to reach $18.9 billion by 2015, according to Strategies Unlimited.
Falling LED prices and a reduced demand for LED-backlit TVs will result in a slower growth rate for LED revenues this year compared with 2010, according to Strategies Unlimited.
Replacement lamp design relies on inert liquid for cooling allowing Switch Lighting to drive the LEDs at higher current achieving greater brightness with fewer components.
The new Amberstar street-light features Cree LEDs, a high-efficiency driver from Philips/Advance and a modular design.
Philips has supplied 293 LED luminaires for a busy stretch of highway near Amsterdam. Meanwhile, Philips Lighting UK argues that switching-off street lights is a false economy, and modern technology such as LEDs and control systems offer a better option.
GE Lighting and Cree have collaborated to develop a 60W-equivalent lamp with conventional looks that will be submitted to the DOE L Prize competition.
Zhihai Power Technology co., Ltd. has released its new generation LED light, the Genius series.


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