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#21
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 02:43:31 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: There is a letter on this very subject in the Pease Porridge column of the latest issue of "Electronic Design." Now, that got my attention. I haven't kept up well with LED technology, but I haven't heard of any LEDs that have a built-in regulator, switching or otherwise. Out of curiosity, I tested the LED lights I have with an AM radio, and found the following: 1. A three-LED headlamp with no obvious electronics, fixed intensity, runs from 3 AAA cells: Quiet, no RFI. 2. Two different LED headlamps, one with 3 and the other 4 LEDs, with several intensity settings, run from 3 AAA cells: Loud audio whine. 3. Two small UV LED lights, run from 3 button cells: Quiet, no RFI. 4. Newly purchased one-LED flashlight, runs from a single AA cell: Generates an RF hiss. This is about what I expected. The #2 headlamps switch the lights on and off with varying duty cycle to get the different intensities. This can be seen by rapidly moving the light while on. The switching isn't visible at the maximum brightness setting but apparently the switcher is still on. It might be doubling as a regulator. High intensity LEDs seem to require about 4.5 volts for full brightness, and one cell is nowhere near enough to light one up without a DC-DC converter. So the #4 light has to have one. That explains its RFI. Built-in converters seem to be getting more common; without one, batteries last an incredible length of time, but at the expense of light intensity that falls dramatically as the battery discharges, especially during the first part of the discharge period. So unless there's some sort of LED defect that can cause RF noise, my money's still on your having some kind of converter or switch hidden in your flashlight somewhere. All the lights I have which don't have either are quiet. Roy Lewallen, W7EL John Smith wrote: Well, you might be right at that (and contrary to how you took my posts--I DO recognize you as an authority which has been around the block many more times than I), however, I have had that flashlight apart a half-dozen times, at least, it cannot be found! But, it is quite possible the current limiter is right on the chip with the LEDS and potted with it in the LED lenses... all five LEDS run in parallel.... Warmest regards, John |
#22
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 02:43:31 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: I haven't kept up well with LED technology, but I haven't heard of any LEDs that have a built-in regulator, switching or otherwise. Hi Roy, Constant current LEDs have been around since the late 70s. They were marginally common then, but I rarely see them now. As for the spectrum of LEDs, the all require different battery voltages to bring them to full output. Light power is always expressed as a function of current, not voltage however. The voltage is somewhat likened to the forward conduction knee. IR LEDs have the lowest knee voltage, roughly at the same potential as common diodes: 0.6V. Blue LEDs have the highest knee voltage, roughly 3V to 3.5V. The colors Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Aquamarine, Blue, UV exhibit the order of ascending voltage (and in the conventional order of wavelength for a rainbow). The White LED is simply a Blue or UV LED coated with phosphor (a solid state fluorescent light). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#23
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 00:37:12 -0700, "John Smith"
wrote: I wonder if a LED is not "strobed", either occuring as a natural property of the LED itself, or circuitry incorporated on the LED chip, itself, which "strobes" it? Hi Brett, The voltage supplied to the LED elevates the electron out of one orbital to the conduction band. When it falls back, a photon is emitted. The wavelength of the emitted photon is the path length the electron follows spiraling from one orbital to the other (DeBroglie wave). There are no lasers that are pumped in a cyclic sense except those that emit a pulse like the old CO2 UV lasers. I had a buddy who built one that used plate glass and aluminum foil to build the high voltage charge used to excite the gas to lasing (you still need an optically resonant chamber to build the intensity). This design, from the pages of Scientific American's Amateur Scientist column exhibited a very high peak power because of the extremely short pulse duration. His knowing this instilled the caution to aim it out the window into free space for its inaugural firing. When he pulsed it he cracked the window. Window glass is not perfectly transmissive, and the high peak power and short interval conspired to create a very hot dislocality - the glass couldn't shed the heat fast enough and it cracked. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#24
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Phosphor? Wow, that fact had missed me totally...
The lifetime rating on those white LEDs are incredible!!! From seeing crt tubes degrade over time, I'd expect there to be some sort of problem with the phosphor over such a long lifetime? A crt fails/dims due to air entering the tube, possibly? regards, john |
#25
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![]() Richard Clark wrote: The wavelength of the emitted photon is the path length the electron follows spiraling from one orbital to the other (DeBroglie wave). Actually, I think it's more of a quantum thing - a function of the band gap energy E, which is equal to hv (read h nu) where h is Planck's constant. Wavelenth is of course related to v by a constant, c (speed of light). Lambda = c/v. So wavelength = hc/E. If it was a DeBroglie thing, wavelength would depend on the momentum of the particle as h/p. The band gap energy is not determined by the energy carried by the particle, (or by the length of its path), but by the atomic nature of the material comprising the LED, and the difference in energy between the conduction band and the valence band of that material. ac6xg |
#26
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Probably... and those of us who have taken calculus and spent years of our
life closely working with mathematicians (or, those truck drivers who had an uncanny interest in math and have studied it in great detail--just for self-satisfaction) grasp the general concept--however, a wise-intelligent individual tries to express the complex in terms where the greatest numbers can make use of the knowledge, especially, when debates/arguments and proofs are offered in such a public forum as usenet--here, your explaination fails... I would venture that to most--this looks like nothing more than you stroking your ego... Regards, John |
#27
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 09:05:27 -0700, "John Smith"
wrote: A crt fails/dims due to air entering the tube, possibly? Hi Brett, I've seen air enter the tube - perhaps, but there are more conventional explanations. Those episodes of "seeing" it enter were slightly less than catastrophic (accidentally broke the final seal, which, as it happens, is the right way to de-activate them). Principally it is the oxidation of the cathode (one reason why tubes have scavengers) from what air had remained from the production cycle. Back when I did TV repair as a teen, and then later in the Navy as part of a Christmas charity project, we used what was called a "rejuvenator." This piece of gear would apply several hundred to a thousand volts between the cathode and the first grid (usually a cylindrical shield capped with a plate with a pinhole in it) and hold the voltage there for a couple of seconds (manufacturer's recommended time). This would produce a current that would rip the surface of the cathode open revealing a new emitting area and the tube would come to life for another 6 months. Well, during the extended project in the Navy, we found any number of tubes that refused this Lazarus treatment. We simply held the button down for 30-60 seconds as they sizzled. Who cared? It often convinced the tube that there was more to life than consignment to the dumpster (the guys loved to give them the heave-ho to thundering explosion). The only downside to this aggressive treatment was that in ripping open the surface, part of the current was a debris stream towards the grid that would occlude the pin hole. Sort of self defeating when you think about it (and good reason for the recommended couple of seconds instead of our heavy thumb). All rather remote possibilities for the White LED. LEDs suffer other problems in commercial service. Usually with aging where the half-life is quicker than expected. Another problem is with what is called sun bleaching (usually the problem of LED traffic lights). I would suspect either, or both, to be issues with vendors and poor QA or selection. There are a world of "ultra-bright" specifications that wander the map. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#28
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 12:47:18 -0700, Jim Kelley
wrote: Richard Clark wrote: The wavelength of the emitted photon is the path length the electron follows spiraling from one orbital to the other (DeBroglie wave). Actually, I think it's more of a quantum thing Hi Jim, The De Broglie [my spelling error] wave is a quantum thing. In fact Louis de Brolie presented in 1924 that MATTER was composed of discrete wavelengths (quanta). His was the identical treatment of Einstein's proposition with light. Both he and Einstein had revealed the duality of nature, and De Broglie's assertions were proven in 1927. The effect of his work left Schrodinger with the starting point for his development of quantum mechanics. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#29
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Damn...
That is all silly... But, hey, does that light bulb in the refrig really go out when I close the door? Or, is it too subject to the quantum laws, and it only depends on an observer? grin Regards, John |
#30
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On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 14:30:01 -0700, "John Smith"
wrote: But, hey, does that light bulb in the refrig really go out when I close the door? Or, is it too subject to the quantum laws Only if Schrodinger's cat was inside to watch. |
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