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How to measure on/off LED timing ?

B

Boki

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi ,

I need to provide the LED measurement result for compare
specification.

What I should do is to use a oscilloscope and check the current ?

Thanks!

Best regards,
Boki.
 
H

Homer J Simpson

Jan 1, 1970
0
I need to provide the LED measurement result for compare
specification.

Compare what? Brightness?
What I should do is to use a oscilloscope and check the current ?

How will that help?
 
D

D from BC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi ,

I need to provide the LED measurement result for compare
specification.

What I should do is to use a oscilloscope and check the current ?

Thanks!

Best regards,
Boki.

wha wtf???
I'm going to try to translate the questions..
1) How do I test a LED to compare to the data sheet?
2) Do I use an oscilloscope to check the current?

Sorry..need more info .

I cringe at how nonenglish the details will be. :(
D from BC
 
Hi ,

I need to provide the LED measurement result for compare
specification.

What I should do is to use a oscilloscope and check the current ?

Thanks!

Best regards,
Boki.

Did we fail to read the subject before we pounced on this poor fella?

If you want to measure the on/off time of an LED you might try using a
moderately high-speed photodiode; at least 2X faster than the LED
datasheet specification (some Nyquist thingy or something ?). Make
sure that the spectral response of your photodiode is appropriate for
the LED you are testing (i.e. the photon energy of your LED is greater
than the band gap of your photodetector). Silicon photodiodes will
work out to about 1.1 microns, InGaAs will work between 900 nm and 1.7
microns. Attach the output of your photodiode to the input of an
oscilloscope (again, the analog bandwidth of your o-scope must be at
least 2X the frequency you are trying to measure) and measure the
voltage drop across 50 ohm input impedance. You might need to use a
lens to focus the LED emission onto the photodiode in order to get
enough signal to make this measurement across 50 ohms. If you have a
high speed scope probe with small capacitance (~10 pf for a passive
probe these days) you can also make this measurement across a 1MegOhm
input impedance for a larger signal.

I know nothing about the subject matter at hand, but I hope this
helps :)
 
S

Spehro Pefhany

Jan 1, 1970
0
wha wtf???
I'm going to try to translate the questions..
1) How do I test a LED to compare to the data sheet?
2) Do I use an oscilloscope to check the current?

Sorry..need more info .

I cringe at how nonenglish the details will be. :(
D from BC

It's in Bokish.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
 
Did we fail to read the subject before we pounced on this poor fella?

If you want to measure the on/off time of an LED you might try using a
moderately high-speed photodiode; at least 2X faster than the LED
datasheet specification (some Nyquist thingy or something ?). Make
sure that the spectral response of your photodiode is appropriate for
the LED you are testing (i.e. the photon energy of your LED is greater
than the band gap of your photodetector). Silicon photodiodes will
work out to about 1.1 microns, InGaAs will work between 900 nm and 1.7
microns. Attach the output of your photodiode to the input of an
oscilloscope (again, the analog bandwidth of your o-scope must be at
least 2X the frequency you are trying to measure) and measure the
voltage drop across 50 ohm input impedance. You might need to use a
lens to focus the LED emission onto the photodiode in order to get
enough signal to make this measurement across 50 ohms. If you have a
high speed scope probe with small capacitance (~10 pf for a passive
probe these days) you can also make this measurement across a 1MegOhm
input impedance for a larger signal.

I know nothing about the subject matter at hand, but I hope this
helps :)

There is the old equation

bandwidth=0.35/(rise time)
 
D

D from BC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Did we fail to read the subject before we pounced on this poor fella?

If you want to measure the on/off time of an LED you might try using a
moderately high-speed photodiode; at least 2X faster than the LED
datasheet specification (some Nyquist thingy or something ?). Make
sure that the spectral response of your photodiode is appropriate for
the LED you are testing (i.e. the photon energy of your LED is greater
than the band gap of your photodetector). Silicon photodiodes will
work out to about 1.1 microns, InGaAs will work between 900 nm and 1.7
microns. Attach the output of your photodiode to the input of an
oscilloscope (again, the analog bandwidth of your o-scope must be at
least 2X the frequency you are trying to measure) and measure the
voltage drop across 50 ohm input impedance. You might need to use a
lens to focus the LED emission onto the photodiode in order to get
enough signal to make this measurement across 50 ohms. If you have a
high speed scope probe with small capacitance (~10 pf for a passive
probe these days) you can also make this measurement across a 1MegOhm
input impedance for a larger signal.

I know nothing about the subject matter at hand, but I hope this
helps :)

Maybe he just needed to check Vd at 20mADC...
D from BC
 
J

jasen

Jan 1, 1970
0
I need to provide the LED measurement result for compare
specification.

usually it's a good idea to put the entire question in the message
Subject: Re: How to measure on/off LED timing ?
What I should do is to use a oscilloscope and check the current ?

That'd work, hook it to a scope and once you select the correct scales and
trigger settings etc the answer should be fairly obvious.

Bye.
Jasen
 
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