Soraa cites new research on LED colour quality
Soraa, known for its GaN on GaN LED technology, has announced new research proving that whiteness and colour rendering have a strong effect on the perception of energy-efficient LED lighting. The study was approved by an Institutional Review Board and led by Kevin Houser at Penn State University.
Above: A side-by-side comparison between two LED lamps
Compared with conventional blue-based LEDs, study participants overwhelmingly preferred the whiteness and colour rendering of Soraa's full visible spectrum lamps with Violet-Emission 3-Phosphor (VP3) technology. Like conventional electric light sources such as incandescent and halogen lamps, Soraa's lamps emit full visible spectrum light which renders warm, saturated colours-including important colours like reds and bright greens.
Furthermore, these lamps excite Optical Brightening Agents (OBAs) in white objects like clothing, paper and plastics, making them look intentionally whiter. However, in their race to create maximally efficient, cheap products, most LED manufacturers skipped parts of the spectrum. This has resulted in blue-LED based lighting products that cannot truly render whiteness or colours.
Soraa's full visible spectrum lamps with VP3 Natural White are engineered to emit all colours of the rainbow, including violet, which excites OBAs and perfectly renders whites.
The research study at Penn State showed that the vast majority of participants preferred objects rendered under Soraa's full visible spectrum light over standard LED light that lacked the short wavelength range of the spectrum. In fact, whether looking at a white dress shirt or their own smile, 90 percent of users preferred the whiteness rendering provided by Soraa's lamps.
As for colours, study participants commented that colours were more saturated, vibrant and attractive under Soraa's full visible spectrum LED lamps with VP3 Vivid Color (colour rendering index (CRI) of 95 and R9 of 95) versus the blue-based LED lamps with a standard CRI of 85 and R9 of 0. The research showed that the company's VP3 technology rendered colours with high fidelity and no change in saturation; and the colours accurately matched the reference halogen lamp. This was true not only for coloured objects, but also for participants' skin complexions.
"There are those who've asked: does colour and whiteness rendering really matter? Well, it does, and we now have the data to prove it," said Mike Krames, CTO of Soraa. "Because all of our lamps render the entire visible spectrum, white fabrics and paper goods pop, plastics are brilliant and people's smiles are whiter, and colours are more natural and beautiful. That's good news for consumers and retailers, who want and deserve the enormous economic and environmental benefits of LED lighting, but are unwilling to sacrifice the sales benefits of excellent light quality in return."