Table of Contents
- 1. Product Overview
- 1.1 Core Advantages and Target Market
- 2. Technical Parameters: In-Depth Objective Interpretation
- 2.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
- 2.2 Electrical and Optical Characteristics
- 3. Performance Curve Analysis
- 3.1 Spectral Distribution
- 3.2 Forward Current vs. Forward Voltage (I-V Curve)
- 3.3 Temperature Dependence
- 3.4 Radiation Pattern
- 4. Mechanical and Package Information
- 4.1 Outline Dimensions
- 4.2 Suggested Soldering Pad Dimensions
- 5. Welding and Assembly Guide
- 5.1 Soldering Conditions
- 5.2 Storage and Handling
- 5.3 Cleaning
- 5.4 Drive Method
- 6. Packaging and Ordering Information
- 6.1 Tape and Reel Package Dimensions
- 6.2 Packaging Specifications
- 7. Application Suggestions and Design Considerations
- 7.1 Typical Application Scenarios
- 7.2 Design Considerations
- 8. Technical Comparison and Differentiation
- 9. Frequently Asked Questions (Based on Technical Parameters)
- 9.1 Can I drive this LED directly with a 5V microcontroller pin?
- 9.2 Why is the output lower at high temperature?
- 9.3 What is the difference between Radiant Intensity and Total Radiant Flux?
- 9.4 How critical is the 1-week floor life after opening the bag?
- 10. Practical Design and Usage Case
- 11. Principle of Operation Introduction
- 12. Technology Trends (Objective Perspective)
- LED Specification Terminology
- Photoelectric Performance
- Electrical Parameters
- Thermal Management & Reliability
- Packaging & Materials
- Quality Control & Binning
- Testing & Certification
1. Product Overview
This document provides the complete technical specifications for a discrete infrared emitter component. The device is designed for applications requiring a high-power, reliable infrared light source. It utilizes a Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) chip to emit light at a peak wavelength of 940 nanometers, which is in the near-infrared spectrum and invisible to the human eye. The primary function of this component is to serve as a controlled infrared emitter in various electronic systems.
1.1 Core Advantages and Target Market
The component offers several key advantages for infrared applications. It features a high radiant intensity, enabling strong signal transmission. It is designed for a high driving current, which contributes to its output power. The device is also characterized by its long operational life and high performance reliability. It is compliant with environmental regulations such as RoHS, classifying it as a green product. The target applications for this infrared emitter are diverse, primarily focusing on areas like infrared emitters for remote control systems and PCB-mounted infrared sensors for proximity detection, object sensing, or data transmission.
2. Technical Parameters: In-Depth Objective Interpretation
The following sections provide a detailed, objective analysis of the device's key technical parameters as defined in its specification limits.
2.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
These ratings define the stress limits beyond which permanent damage to the device may occur. Operation under or at these limits is not guaranteed and should be avoided in reliable design.
- Power Dissipation (Pd): 1.8 Watts. This is the maximum amount of power the device can dissipate as heat at an ambient temperature (TA) of 25°C. Exceeding this will cause the junction temperature to rise excessively.
- Peak Forward Current (IFP): 5 Amperes. This is the maximum allowable current under pulsed conditions (300 pulses per second, 10-microsecond pulse width). It is significantly higher than the DC rating, leveraging the device's thermal inertia.
- DC Forward Current (IF): 1 Ampere. This is the maximum continuous forward current the device can handle.
- Reverse Voltage (VR): 5 Volts. Applying a reverse voltage higher than this can break down the semiconductor junction.
- Thermal Resistance (RθJ): 10 K/W. This parameter indicates how effectively heat travels from the semiconductor junction to the ambient. A lower value means better heat dissipation.
- Operating Temperature Range: -40°C to +85°C. The device is guaranteed to function within this ambient temperature range.
- Storage Temperature Range: -55°C to +100°C.
2.2 Electrical and Optical Characteristics
These are the typical and guaranteed performance parameters measured under specified test conditions (TA=25°C, unless noted).
- Radiant Intensity (IE): 160 mW/sr (Min). This measures the optical power emitted per unit solid angle (steradian) along the axis. It defines the beam's strength in a specific direction.
- Total Radiant Flux (Φe): 590 mW (Typ). This is the total optical power emitted by the device into all directions (4π steradians).
- Peak Emission Wavelength (λP): 940 nm (Typ). The wavelength at which the emitted optical power is maximum.
- Spectral Line Half-Width (Δλ): 50 nm (Typ). This is the spectral bandwidth where the radiant intensity is at least half of its peak value. It describes the purity of the emitted color (wavelength).
- Forward Voltage (VF): 1.8V (Typ), 2.3V (Max) at IF=1A. The voltage drop across the device when conducting the specified forward current.
- Reverse Current (IR): 10 μA (Max) at VR=5V. The small leakage current that flows when the device is reverse-biased.
- Rise/Fall Time (tr/tf): 30 ns (Typ). The time required for the optical output to rise from 10% to 90% (or fall from 90% to 10%) of its final value in response to a step current. This determines the maximum modulation speed.
- Viewing Angle (2θ1/2): 90 degrees (Typ). The full angle at which the radiant intensity is half the value at the center (0°). A 90° angle indicates a wide beam pattern.
3. Performance Curve Analysis
The datasheet includes several graphs illustrating the device's behavior under varying conditions. These curves are essential for understanding non-linearities and temperature dependencies.
3.1 Spectral Distribution
A graph (Fig.1) shows the relative radiant intensity versus wavelength. The curve is centered around 940 nm with a typical half-width of 50 nm. This confirms the device emits in the near-infrared region, which is optimal for many sensors and remote controls that filter out visible light.
3.2 Forward Current vs. Forward Voltage (I-V Curve)
The I-V curve (Fig.3) demonstrates the exponential relationship typical of a diode. At the rated current of 1A, the forward voltage is typically 1.8V. Designers must ensure the drive circuit can provide this voltage at the required current.
3.3 Temperature Dependence
Key graphs illustrate the impact of temperature:
- Forward Current vs. Ambient Temperature (Fig.2): Shows how the maximum allowable forward current derates as ambient temperature increases, due to the fixed power dissipation limit.
- Relative Radiant Intensity vs. Ambient Temperature (Fig.4): Indicates that the optical output power decreases as the junction temperature rises. This is a critical factor for maintaining consistent performance.
- Relative Radiant Intensity vs. Forward Current (Fig.5): Shows the sub-linear relationship between drive current and light output, especially at higher currents where efficiency may drop and heating increases.
3.4 Radiation Pattern
The radiation diagram (Fig.6) is a polar plot showing the angular distribution of emitted light. The 90° viewing angle is visually confirmed, showing intensity dropping to half at ±45° from the center axis. This pattern is important for aligning the emitter with a detector or ensuring adequate coverage in a sensing application.
4. Mechanical and Package Information
4.1 Outline Dimensions
The device has a standard through-hole package form factor. The dimensional drawing specifies the body size, lead spacing, and lead diameter. All dimensions are provided in millimeters with a typical tolerance of ±0.1 mm unless otherwise stated. The cathode is identified on the package, which is crucial for correct orientation during PCB assembly.
4.2 Suggested Soldering Pad Dimensions
A diagram provides recommended land pattern (footprint) dimensions for PCB design. Following these recommendations helps ensure a reliable solder joint and proper mechanical stability after wave or reflow soldering.
5. Welding and Assembly Guide
5.1 Soldering Conditions
The datasheet provides clear guidelines for two soldering methods:
- Reflow Soldering: Recommended for surface-mount assembly. The profile must have a pre-heat stage (150-200°C), a peak temperature not exceeding 260°C, and a time above 260°C limited to a maximum of 10 seconds. The device can withstand this profile a maximum of two times.
- Hand Soldering (Iron): The soldering iron tip temperature should not exceed 300°C, and contact time should be limited to 3 seconds per lead. This should be performed only once.
A reference to a JEDEC-compliant reflow temperature profile is provided as a generic target, emphasizing the need to adhere to both JEDEC limits and solder paste manufacturer specifications.
5.2 Storage and Handling
- Storage (Sealed Bag): Devices should be stored at ≤30°C and ≤90% Relative Humidity (RH). The shelf life in the moisture-proof bag with desiccant is one year.
- Storage (Opened Bag): After opening, the ambient should not exceed 30°C / 60% RH. Components should be used within one week. For longer storage outside the original bag, they must be kept in a sealed container with desiccant or in a nitrogen desiccator.
- Baking: If devices are exposed to ambient air for more than one week, a bake at 60°C for at least 20 hours is recommended before soldering to remove absorbed moisture and prevent "popcorning" during reflow.
5.3 Cleaning
If cleaning is necessary after soldering, only alcohol-based solvents like isopropyl alcohol should be used to avoid damaging the package or lens material.
5.4 Drive Method
A critical design note emphasizes that an LED is a current-operated device. To ensure uniform brightness when driving multiple LEDs in parallel, a individual current-limiting resistor must be placed in series with each LED. This compensates for minor variations in the forward voltage (VF) of individual devices, preventing current hogging and uneven illumination or output power.
6. Packaging and Ordering Information
6.1 Tape and Reel Package Dimensions
Detailed mechanical drawings specify the dimensions of the carrier tape, the pocket that holds the component, and the overall reel (7-inch diameter is mentioned). The tape is sealed with a cover tape to protect components during shipping and automated assembly.
6.2 Packaging Specifications
Key packaging details include:
- Reel size: 7 inches.
- Quantity: 600 pieces per reel.
- Quality: The maximum number of consecutive missing components in the tape is two.
- Standard: Packaging conforms to ANSI/EIA 481-1-A-1994 specifications.
7. Application Suggestions and Design Considerations
7.1 Typical Application Scenarios
Based on its specifications, this infrared emitter is well-suited for:
- Infrared Remote Controls: For TVs, audio systems, and other consumer electronics. The 940nm wavelength is standard for most IR receivers.
- Proximity and Object Sensing: Paired with a photodiode or phototransistor to detect the presence, absence, or distance of an object by reflecting its IR light.
- Optical Switches and Encoders: Interrupting the beam between the emitter and detector to create a non-contact switch or measure rotation/position.
- Short-Range Data Transmission: For IrDA-like applications or simple wireless data links, modulated by its fast rise/fall time.
7.2 Design Considerations
- Heat Management: With a power dissipation of 1.8W and thermal resistance of 10 K/W, driving the device at its maximum DC current will generate significant heat. Adequate PCB copper area (thermal relief) or a heatsink may be necessary for continuous operation, especially in high ambient temperatures.
- Current Drive Circuitry: Use a constant current driver or a voltage source with a series resistor to set the current. Avoid driving directly from a logic pin or unregulated voltage source.
- Optical Design: Consider the 90° viewing angle. For long-range or directed beams, a lens may be required to collimate the light. For wide-area illumination, the native angle may be sufficient.
- Pairing with Detector: Ensure the selected photodetector (PIN photodiode, phototransistor) is sensitive in the 940nm region. Using a detector with a daylight blocking filter will improve the signal-to-noise ratio in ambient light conditions.
8. Technical Comparison and Differentiation
While a direct comparison requires specific competitor data, this device's key differentiating features based on its own datasheet are:
- High Power Capability: A 1A DC forward current and 5A pulsed current rating indicate a robust chip and package design capable of high output.
- Wide Viewing Angle: The 90° angle provides broad coverage, useful for sensing applications where alignment is not critical or area illumination is needed.
- Fast Switching Speed: A typical 30ns rise/fall time allows for high-frequency modulation, enabling faster data transmission rates in communication applications compared to slower devices.
- Established Reliability: References to JEDEC standards and detailed soldering/moisture sensitivity guidelines suggest a component designed for robust manufacturing processes.
9. Frequently Asked Questions (Based on Technical Parameters)
9.1 Can I drive this LED directly with a 5V microcontroller pin?
No, this is not recommended and likely to damage either the LED or the microcontroller. The LED typically drops 1.8V at 1A. A microcontroller pin cannot source 1A, and connecting it directly to 5V without a current limit would attempt to draw a destructively high current. You must use a driver circuit (transistor/MOSFET) with a series resistor to limit the current to the desired value.
9.2 Why is the output lower at high temperature?
The efficiency of the semiconductor material in converting electrical current to light (internal quantum efficiency) decreases as the junction temperature increases. This is a fundamental physical property. The graph in Fig.4 quantifies this derating, which must be accounted for in designs operating over a wide temperature range to ensure consistent optical performance.
9.3 What is the difference between Radiant Intensity and Total Radiant Flux?
Radiant Intensity (mW/sr) is a directional measure: the power emitted into a specific solid angle (usually along the central axis). It's key for applications where a detector is placed in a specific location. Total Radiant Flux (mW) is the total integrated power emitted into all directions (the entire sphere). It represents the overall "brightness" of the emitter regardless of direction. A device can have high total flux but low axial intensity if the light is spread very wide.
9.4 How critical is the 1-week floor life after opening the bag?
It is very important for reliable soldering. Plastic packages absorb moisture from the air. During the high-temperature reflow soldering process, this trapped moisture can vaporize rapidly, causing internal delamination, cracks, or "popcorning" that destroys the component. The 1-week limit and baking requirement are based on the package's Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL) to prevent these failures.
10. Practical Design and Usage Case
Case: Designing a Multi-Emitter Object Detection Barrier
A system requires an infrared light curtain to detect objects passing through a 50cm wide gate. Five emitter-detector pairs will be used.
- Drive Circuit: Each emitter will be driven by a dedicated N-channel MOSFET, controlled by a shared microcontroller PWM signal to modulate the IR light (e.g., at 38kHz). A single current-limiting resistor will be calculated for each LED branch: R = (Vsupply - VF_LED) / IF. Assuming a 5V supply, VF=1.8V, and IF=500mA (derated for reliability), R = (5 - 1.8) / 0.5 = 6.4Ω (use 6.2Ω standard value). The resistor power rating must be at least I2R = (0.5)2*6.2 ≈ 1.55W, so a 2W or 3W resistor is needed.
- Thermal Management: Each LED dissipates P = VF * IF = 1.8V * 0.5A = 0.9W. The PCB should have large copper pours connected to the LED's cathode and anode pads to act as a heatsink, keeping the junction temperature within safe limits.
- Optical Alignment: The 90° viewing angle simplifies alignment with the corresponding detector across the gap. Small tubular shrouds can be placed around the emitter and detector to limit ambient light interference without overly restricting the beam.
- Modulation: Driving the emitters with a 38kHz square wave allows the detectors to be tuned to the same frequency, effectively filtering out constant ambient IR light (like from sunlight or lamps) and greatly improving detection reliability.
11. Principle of Operation Introduction
This device is a Light Emitting Diode (LED) that operates in the infrared spectrum. Its core is a semiconductor chip made of Gallium Arsenide (GaAs). When a forward voltage is applied across the chip's P-N junction, electrons from the N-type material recombine with holes from the P-type material. This recombination process releases energy. In a standard silicon diode, this energy is primarily released as heat. In materials like GaAs, a significant portion of this energy is released as photons (light particles). The specific energy bandgap of the GaAs material determines the wavelength of these photons, which in this case is centered around 940 nm, placing it in the near-infrared region. The intensity of the emitted light is directly proportional to the rate of recombination, which is controlled by the forward current flowing through the diode.
12. Technology Trends (Objective Perspective)
The field of infrared emitters continues to evolve alongside broader optoelectronics trends. There is a consistent drive towards higher power density and efficiency, allowing for brighter output from smaller packages or with lower power consumption. This enables more compact sensor designs and longer battery life in portable devices. Integration is another key trend, with components combining the emitter, driver circuitry, and sometimes even a basic detector or monitoring photodiode into a single module or IC package, simplifying system design. Furthermore, advancements in materials, such as the development of more efficient epitaxial structures or the use of new semiconductor compounds, aim to improve performance parameters like wall-plug efficiency (light output per electrical input) and temperature stability. The demand for devices supporting higher modulation speeds also persists, driven by applications in faster data communication and LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) systems. These trends focus on enhancing performance, reliability, and ease of use for the system designer.
LED Specification Terminology
Complete explanation of LED technical terms
Photoelectric Performance
| Term | Unit/Representation | Simple Explanation | Why Important |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luminous Efficacy | lm/W (lumens per watt) | Light output per watt of electricity, higher means more energy efficient. | Directly determines energy efficiency grade and electricity cost. |
| Luminous Flux | lm (lumens) | Total light emitted by source, commonly called "brightness". | Determines if the light is bright enough. |
| Viewing Angle | ° (degrees), e.g., 120° | Angle where light intensity drops to half, determines beam width. | Affects illumination range and uniformity. |
| CCT (Color Temperature) | K (Kelvin), e.g., 2700K/6500K | Warmth/coolness of light, lower values yellowish/warm, higher whitish/cool. | Determines lighting atmosphere and suitable scenarios. |
| CRI / Ra | Unitless, 0–100 | Ability to render object colors accurately, Ra≥80 is good. | Affects color authenticity, used in high-demand places like malls, museums. |
| SDCM | MacAdam ellipse steps, e.g., "5-step" | Color consistency metric, smaller steps mean more consistent color. | Ensures uniform color across same batch of LEDs. |
| Dominant Wavelength | nm (nanometers), e.g., 620nm (red) | Wavelength corresponding to color of colored LEDs. | Determines hue of red, yellow, green monochrome LEDs. |
| Spectral Distribution | Wavelength vs intensity curve | Shows intensity distribution across wavelengths. | Affects color rendering and quality. |
Electrical Parameters
| Term | Symbol | Simple Explanation | Design Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward Voltage | Vf | Minimum voltage to turn on LED, like "starting threshold". | Driver voltage must be ≥Vf, voltages add up for series LEDs. |
| Forward Current | If | Current value for normal LED operation. | Usually constant current drive, current determines brightness & lifespan. |
| Max Pulse Current | Ifp | Peak current tolerable for short periods, used for dimming or flashing. | Pulse width & duty cycle must be strictly controlled to avoid damage. |
| Reverse Voltage | Vr | Max reverse voltage LED can withstand, beyond may cause breakdown. | Circuit must prevent reverse connection or voltage spikes. |
| Thermal Resistance | Rth (°C/W) | Resistance to heat transfer from chip to solder, lower is better. | High thermal resistance requires stronger heat dissipation. |
| ESD Immunity | V (HBM), e.g., 1000V | Ability to withstand electrostatic discharge, higher means less vulnerable. | Anti-static measures needed in production, especially for sensitive LEDs. |
Thermal Management & Reliability
| Term | Key Metric | Simple Explanation | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junction Temperature | Tj (°C) | Actual operating temperature inside LED chip. | Every 10°C reduction may double lifespan; too high causes light decay, color shift. |
| Lumen Depreciation | L70 / L80 (hours) | Time for brightness to drop to 70% or 80% of initial. | Directly defines LED "service life". |
| Lumen Maintenance | % (e.g., 70%) | Percentage of brightness retained after time. | Indicates brightness retention over long-term use. |
| Color Shift | Δu′v′ or MacAdam ellipse | Degree of color change during use. | Affects color consistency in lighting scenes. |
| Thermal Aging | Material degradation | Deterioration due to long-term high temperature. | May cause brightness drop, color change, or open-circuit failure. |
Packaging & Materials
| Term | Common Types | Simple Explanation | Features & Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Package Type | EMC, PPA, Ceramic | Housing material protecting chip, providing optical/thermal interface. | EMC: good heat resistance, low cost; Ceramic: better heat dissipation, longer life. |
| Chip Structure | Front, Flip Chip | Chip electrode arrangement. | Flip chip: better heat dissipation, higher efficacy, for high-power. |
| Phosphor Coating | YAG, Silicate, Nitride | Covers blue chip, converts some to yellow/red, mixes to white. | Different phosphors affect efficacy, CCT, and CRI. |
| Lens/Optics | Flat, Microlens, TIR | Optical structure on surface controlling light distribution. | Determines viewing angle and light distribution curve. |
Quality Control & Binning
| Term | Binning Content | Simple Explanation | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luminous Flux Bin | Code e.g., 2G, 2H | Grouped by brightness, each group has min/max lumen values. | Ensures uniform brightness in same batch. |
| Voltage Bin | Code e.g., 6W, 6X | Grouped by forward voltage range. | Facilitates driver matching, improves system efficiency. |
| Color Bin | 5-step MacAdam ellipse | Grouped by color coordinates, ensuring tight range. | Guarantees color consistency, avoids uneven color within fixture. |
| CCT Bin | 2700K, 3000K etc. | Grouped by CCT, each has corresponding coordinate range. | Meets different scene CCT requirements. |
Testing & Certification
| Term | Standard/Test | Simple Explanation | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| LM-80 | Lumen maintenance test | Long-term lighting at constant temperature, recording brightness decay. | Used to estimate LED life (with TM-21). |
| TM-21 | Life estimation standard | Estimates life under actual conditions based on LM-80 data. | Provides scientific life prediction. |
| IESNA | Illuminating Engineering Society | Covers optical, electrical, thermal test methods. | Industry-recognized test basis. |
| RoHS / REACH | Environmental certification | Ensures no harmful substances (lead, mercury). | Market access requirement internationally. |
| ENERGY STAR / DLC | Energy efficiency certification | Energy efficiency and performance certification for lighting. | Used in government procurement, subsidy programs, enhances competitiveness. |