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In last Guangzhou Lighting Fair, many guys using very low quality aluminum material,
and plastic to produce low price LED lighting products. But, price after that, do you
know it the radiator enough to cool the LEDs heat?
Today, let’s share some knowledge about how to calculate your LED lights heat sink.
Introduction
In this document, we will give you a simple, straight forward approach how you can
determine the correct LED heat sink for your new LED lighting design. This is a
simplified approach of the integral model and verification test has of course to be done,
but it will give you enough insights to make sure both the functional integrity as well as
the operational reliability of your design will meet the market expectations.
Some examples:
As example, we take a LED COB module from the Citizen CitiLED CLL020 series:
Model CLL020-1203A1-303M1A2
Forward current If 360mA – forward voltage Vf 40.9Vdc – power 14.7W
Citizen guarantees for this module a 50.000hr life time (conditional, 70% of remaining
flux)
Most LED COB module manufacturers just provide lifetime expectations under ideal
conditions, like 25°C ambient temperature.
We calculate with 90% reliability on these for the maximum junction temperature we
want in our design – example below:
If a B10, L70 curve is available, we suggest you determine your required lifetime and
read out the maximum junction temperature Tj related.
In this case, we want to keep our junction temperature below 90% of the Tj max => Tj
required < 150°C x 90% < 135°C
3. Calculate the required LED heat sink
The basics to do that is to understand the scheme at the right Each part of the design
adds up some heat due to individual thermal resistances of each material – the adding up
can be calculated as T = Pd x Rth.
In this case, we have the thermal resistance of the Citizen LED COB module (Rj-c), the
thermal resistance of a gap filler (thermal pad or grease) we want to place between the
COB module and the heat sink (Rb), and the thermal resistance from our heat sink (Rh)
which has to make that the total design stays below the maximum required junction
temperature Tj
Suppose we will use a phase change gap filler thickness 0.18mm (thermal pad which
becomes fluid on first heating cycle) with a thermal resistance of 0.4°C/W.
Only thing missing now is the needed thermal resistance of the heat sink Rh
Choose a heat sink with an Rth value of < 4.65°C OR (see notes below)
Choose a heat sink which guarantees less than (99.7°C – 45°C) = 54.7°C
After applying the thermal pad and the heat sink, verify the design Some LED COB
module manufacturers foresee a thermal measurement point at the case.
Remember for this Citizen COB module Tc measurement max was 100°C, since we
designed with some safety margins you should measure a temperature around 87-92°C
5. Important remarks
-Some manufacturers give a single thermal resistance value Rth for the heat sink,
independent on ambient temperature and power to dissipate, Please be aware the Rth of
the same heat sink will not be equal under all conditions
-The approach made in this documents don’t take in effect that the heat spreading will
become more and more difficult with the COB modules becoming smaller and smaller.
A COB LED module of 20x20mm for 20W or a COB LED module of 40x40mm for
20W can have a total different heat conduction towards the heat sink, So, that is why,
some SMD LED down light keep 180mm size, only do 18W to keep the heat output
good enough to long lifespan.
But some COB led down light 30W with 160mm size must keep heavy enough LED
aluminum material to cool the LED chip heat output.
But we don't think plastic is a good choice. Anyway, Philips is not using plastic to
produce LED down light, they are using plastic with aluminum inside material model to
keep safety and heat output.
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