Electronic – Cool White LED bulbs: Are they “full-spectrum”

diodesledlightspectrum

I don't have much knowledge on LED lights and find the technology quite fascinating (yes, I know, it is not that new!)

I have read that in order to create "white" light, LEDs actually need to emit light from all spectrums.

My question(s):

  • How do LED light bulbs (cool white or warm) generate white light?
  • What would be the light spectrum for cool white LED light bulbs?
  • What would be the light spectrum for warm white LED light bulbs?

Thanks!

P.S. This is my first question here. If it should be forwarded to another SE site, please let me know!

P.P.S. I have done my research BEFORE asking but could not find a technically accurate answer.

Best Answer

gbulmer puts you on the right track. For the most part, "White" LEDs are nothing more than a single color LED with a phosphor on them. The phosphor takes roughly half of the light from the LED and converts it to a second frequency of light. The two frequencies of light combine in our eyes and look to be some variation of white.

A power LED I have emits yellow and purple to attain a "cool white". Warm white has more red in it. In short though, the color spectrum of White LEDs is generally horrible unless you get a really expensive one designed for full spectrum use. In general, white LEDs consist of two-ish spikes of color in the spectrum with everything else very low in comparison. The result of poor color spectrum is that some colors won't even be present even though it appears to us as white. You need 3 separate bands of color to be capable of producing all of the variations in between. With only two bands of color, you could be shining the light at something green and it'll come back looking dark grey.

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