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Diamontex’s LED Lights Use Synthetic Diamond Technology

2012/03/08 | By Ken Liu

Taipei, Feb. 16, 2012 (CENS)--Diamontex Co., Ltd. has introduced a collection of LED lamps using its chemical vapor deposition-based (CVD-based) diamond technology, which delivers descent thermal-dissipation performance on the lamps.

A U.S.-trained materials science Ph.D. and a professor at the prestigious National Cheng Kung University in Taiwan, company general manger James Chen leads an R&D team of seven specialists to develop the material technology for the company’s LED lamps.

So far, the company has rolled out emergency lamps, high-power work lights, solar-powered streetlights, and intelligent dimmable lights. Also, the company has made available its micro LED projectors designed for smartphones. Its flash lights have been adopted by Japanese police.

Unlike traditional emergency lights, the company’s emergency lamps have micro power storage that can keep the bulb illuminated for up to 10 minutes, sufficient enough for people to exit a building in case of a blackout.

Chen pointed out that the company develops the lamps integrating thermal management, electrical scheme, mechanical refinement, and optical optimization (TEMO) designs.

The company’s LED lamps are outfitted with diamond conduction substrate (DSC), which is a combination of CVD diamond and heat sink substrate which boasts outstanding thermal dissipation.

The company has won 66 patents from Taiwan, the United States, mainland China and Japan for the lamps.

Diamontex has retained production at home in order to ensure product quality.