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Haitz's law

Haitz's law is an observation and forecast about the steady improvement, over many years, of light-emitting diodes (LEDs).

History
Haitz's law is named after Roland Haitz (1935–2015), a scientist at Agilent Technologies among others. It was first presented to the larger public at Strategies in Light 2000, the first of a series of annual conferences organized by Strategies Unlimited. However, some "white" LEDs have achieved efficacies of over 300 lm/W. == Developments ==
Developments
In 2010, Cree Inc., developed and marketed the XM-L LED that claimed 1000 lumens at 100 lm/W efficacy and 160 lm/W at 350 mA and 150 lm/W at 700 mA. They also claimed to have broken the 200 lm/W barrier in R&D with a prototype producing 208 lm at 350 mA. In May 2011, Cree announced another prototype with 231 lm/W efficacy at 350 mA. In March 2014, Cree announced another prototype with a record-breaking 303 lm/W efficacy at 350 mA. using LED filament technology, three years before what Haitz's law predicted. ==References==
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