annageek
Well-Known Member
The 5050 LEDs are an interesting device. They have 3 diodes in the package which collectively excite a phosphor to provide the white light. The LED diodes seem to emit a blue green. The diodes are each accesible on the back but are usually wired in series for 12v with a current limiting resistor added. The device is clearly made for providing lighting as opposed to Annageek sugesting some are made for SMD indication. Regarding getting too hot and insufficient heat dissipation well this may be so. Heat is a function of current so any additional series resistance to reduce the voltage/current will reduce the heat and light output. But improve reliability. However I suspect that some reliability will be lost in the corrosive environment on a boat.
Just as an excercise in time wasting fiddly things. I had one of those little candle lanterns used for Christmas decorations. I got 4 x5050 chips. Removed them from the base printed circuit and rewired them in parallel. The 4 face outwards in a square mounted on copper wire. With a suitable series resistor they run on 3 x1.5v cells and provide as much light or more as the candle. But no fire risk. Definitely fiddly. A winter project for the insane. olewill
Perhaps indication LEDs is the wrong term, but certainly, the 5050 type LEDs were never developed for normal illumination. I think they were originally used for things like backlighting in TFT screens. It just so happens that because LED backlit TFT screens are so numerous these days, they have driven the 5050 and similar diodes in to huge levels of mass production - reducing their cost below that of 'designed primarily for general illumination' type LEDs. As a result, they've been the cheapest option for the LED strip makers and cheap LED replacement conventional bulbs, and so they've found use for these applications too on teh grounds of low cost, rather than technical suitability.
I believe the 3 diodes (RGB) in the 5050's are the same design straight out of the PLCC2 package, which contains only a single diode, and these were certainly developed for indication over illumination. That said, I am sure the big players like Cree, Philips and Osram have been working hard cramming higher luminous flux and better heat managed dies into these same packages.
For completeness, its not a great idea running LEDs of any type in parallel (without a current regulating shunt resistor in series with each string). No two diodes are equal, and so the current running through each parallel diode will be different. Furthermore, diodes display (for a period) negative temperature coefficient, so as the diode that is taking the largest amount of current heats, its effective impedance increases, and so it takes more and more current, resulting in a sort of thermal runaway. In practice, this may not happen immediately, and providing your source impedance is such that even if you only had a single diode in circuit then it should still operate within it's safe operating area (SOA), then you should be fine. You will find though, that over time, there will be a very noticeable difference in brightness of each LED. Simple fix, though - 4 resistors of 0.25X ohms (one in series with each diode), rather than 1 resistor of X ohms.
