So it seems to me… with 630nm diodes not being very efficient alongside wide band phosphorus white diodes, adding a narrow band will give a spike that’s beneficial for plant growth in a similar way to a mono led. Although I’m the same way a mono needs to be mixed with whites, these will still need to be blended in with whites. I think someone will correct me if I’m wrong as this is just what I’ve worked out myself. I suspect this is why many boards don’t contain 2700k cri90? The ones that you find like the original highlights and my trusted highlight uv boards actually seem quite poor in efficiency compared with many new boards like the highlight 420’s. Although they’re still a better performer than HPS in my opinion.
I pretty much gave up chasing 630nm, I love to have a broad spectrum but 660nm is so efficient and the plants don’t seem to be bothered. Every now and then I look at my spare 4000k cri80 Samsung strips and consider how to make them into a great full spectrum grow light so that’s the only reason I came across the Bridgelux diodes. The strips only became redundant when I saw the gen1 highlights and they took away all the calculations and wiring it would have took.
The original High Light boards were 2.5 umol/j which was surprisingly high for their time and also considering they were CRI94-95. The Optisolis and Seoul Semiconductor UV Sunlike LEDs were not that efficient (around 2.1-2.2 umol/j), but the 2700K CRI90 Nichias are still up there (2.75 umol/j) which dragged the efficiency up – which is why I used them.
We managed to get 20% better efficiency from the High Light Light 420 boards, but that was only after doing a lot of individual LED testing with LED Teknik and mainly because we had access to some 3.94 umol/j 660 monos. We now have access to a new batch of 660s that are testing 4.1-4.2 umol/j, so the Gen 3 (or whatever it is we come up with next) will be even more efficient.
Overall, however, it is really hard to get that kind of efficiency from ANY LED that contains UV and Far Red. The 405nm Nichias we use now are 71-72% efficient but still only around 2.3 umol/j because they have a very low QER of 3.36 (the theoretical maximum umol/j for a spectrum if the diode is 100% efficient).
720nm Far Red diodes, on the other hand, are still only around 55% efficient – even, though they have a high QER of 5.99