Also, having the blue peak at around 440 insted 450 (thats the standard, right?)
I was thinking the epoxy had an organic dye rather than phosphor.
The temperature curve was more like an AlGaInP than a nitride.
Usually the forward voltage is the give away. Not this one. Just more confusing
Then I looked at the Duris Amber because they typically have a horrible temperature curve. The amber curve was the same as the red.
If this discussion i going the way of high cri, heavy red phosphor leds...
Looks like a 2700k with a red peak around 660nm. Also note that the bluepeak is closer to 440nm than 450.
Good catch, I'm impressed.
Now I think this is a PRS-LED (Photon Recycling Semiconductor).
There was one paragraph in the Duris amber datasheet that was not in the red datasheet which goes along with your high CRI.
Wide spectrum of phosphor converted colors with excellent color rendering and supreme efficacy in cost effective industry standard LED
@tomate I apologize for doubting it was a phosphor pumped LED. It is now looking to be a contender to mix with the LM561C. The LM561 90 CRI would be the easy solution because there are many PC Boards with the Samsung footprint.
The PRS would explain both the high forward voltage, temperature curve, and why the amber curve was the same as red.
The recycling semiconductor is AlGaInP, while the phosphor is pumped with a GaInN.
And the 440nm is the most efficient wavelength for a PRS. This is a very high efficacy red LED.
Source: Light Emitting Diodes 2nd edition, Schubert
Also from Schubert:
The above is a 470nm but it was also said:
The maximum luminous efficiency occurs if the primary source emits at the wavelength 440 nm. A theoretical luminous efficiency of 336 lm/W is obtained for this wavelength.