Thermal characterization of a printed circuit board with thermal vias for the application of high brightness light-emitting diodes

Author(s):  
Mian Tao ◽  
Zicheng Feng ◽  
John Swanson ◽  
John Ganjei ◽  
Jeffery C. C. Lo ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (1) ◽  
pp. 000887-000892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudi Hechfellner ◽  
Michiel Kruger ◽  
Tewe Heemstra ◽  
Greg Caswell ◽  
Nathan Blattau ◽  
...  

Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) are quickly evolving as the dominant lighting solution for a wide variety of applications. With the elimination of incandescent light bulbs and the toxic limitations of fluorescent bulbs, there has been a dramatic increase in the interest in high-brightness light emitting diodes (HB-LEDs). Getting the light out of the die, with reliable color, while maintaining appropriate thermal control over a long service life is a challenge. These issues must be understood and achieved to meet the needs of unique applications, such as solidstate-lighting, automotive, signage, and medical applications. These applications have requirements for 15–25 years of operation making their reliability of critical importance. The LUXEON Rebel has been accepted as an industry leading LED product, widely used in Mean-Time-Between-Failure (MTBF) sensitive applications. Customers use various mounting platforms, such as FR4 Printed Circuit Board (PCB), FR4 PCB with thermal via's, Aluminum & Copper Metal Core printed Circuit Boards (MCPCB), Super MCPCB, etc. As in other LEDs, when mounting to a platform where a large Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) exists between the LED & the PCB, Solder fatigue could become an issue that may affect system level lifetime. In this paper we have examined extreme cases and how a solder joint can impact system level reliability. We have modeled the conditions and formed a means to predict system level reliability. We have compared the prediction modeling with empirical tests for validation of the models. It is vital to understand system level reliability factors to build lighting solutions that match the application and customer expectations. It is impractical to test LEDs and other components for 50k hours ~5 years since the device evolution is much faster than that – on average one LED generation every 12–18 month. Hence we need models and prediction methods …..


2007 ◽  
Vol 364-366 ◽  
pp. 132-137
Author(s):  
Paul C.P. Chao ◽  
Lun De Liao ◽  
Chi Wei Chiu ◽  
Chien Yu Shen

A novel dual-cone-shaped side-emitting lens cap for High Brightness Light Emitting Diodes (HB-LEDs) is proposed for improving brightness and high uniformity of the direct LED backlight Units (BLUs) for large-sized LCD-TVs. Combining the designed lens cap with red, green and blue (RGB) chips on a Metal Core Printed Circuit Board (MCPCB), the LED module with the proposed cap is able to provide a compact white light source with unique features such as instant color variability and lower power usage, etc. The dual-cone-shaped of the proposed lens cap is designed to emit most of the light rays to the sides, only a small portion of light upward along the optical axis of the lens, providing a uniform luminance distribution and the high brightness on the backlight. In addition, a small reflective surface in semi-circular shape is designed and placed upon the proposed LED module about 10mm, the surfaces of which are attached with reflective films to increase the level of light mixing in the larger, global reflector optical box. With the structure of the LED module well designed, the LED backlight Module would be designed for the large-sized LCDTV using the fewer number of LEDs to lead to lower power consumption. The results indeed identify the attributes of the BLU, which make it possible to achieve excellent backlight performance using a direct illumination approach from the light source of “Dual-Cone-Shaped Side- Emitting Lens Cap of LEDs.”


Author(s):  
Jun-Xian Fu ◽  
Shukri Souri ◽  
James S. Harris

Abstract Temperature and humidity dependent reliability analysis was performed based on a case study involving an indicator printed-circuit board with surface-mounted multiple-die red, green and blue light-emitting diode chips. Reported intermittent failures were investigated and the root cause was attributed to a non-optimized reflow process that resulted in micro-cracks and delaminations within the molding resin of the chips.


2019 ◽  
Vol 209 ◽  
pp. 20-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reda Abdelbaset ◽  
Marwan Abouelalla ◽  
Yehya H. Ghallab ◽  
Hamdy Abdelhamid ◽  
Yehea Ismail

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