Document
CLD-DS56 REV 11D
Cree® XLamp® XP-E2 LEDs
PRODUCT FAMILY DATA SHEET
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The XLamp® XP-E2 LED builds on the unprecedented performance of the original XP-E by increasing lumen output up to 20% while providing a single die LED point source for precise optical control. The XP‑E2 LED shares the same footprint as the original XP‑E, providing a seamless upgrade path to more lumens and/or greater efficiency while shortening the design cycle for existing XP customers.
XLamp XP-E2 LEDs are the ideal choice for lighting applications where high light output and maximum efficacy are required, such as LED retrofit lamps, outdoor, portable, indoor directional, emergency vehicle or architectural.
FEATURES
• Available in white, outdoor white, 80-CRI, 85-CRI, 90-CRI white, royal blue, blue, green, PC amber, amber, red-orange, red, photo red & far red
• ANSI-compatible chromaticity bins • White binned at 85 °C • Maximum drive current: 1 A • Low thermal resistance: as low as 5 °C/W • Wide viewing angle: 110°-140° • Unlimited floor life at ≤ 30 °C/85% RH • Reflow solderable - JEDEC J‑STD‑020C compatible • Electrically neutral thermal path • RoHS and REACh compliant • UL® recognized component (E349212)
WWW.CREE.COM/XLAMP
Copyright © 2012-2019 Cree, Inc. All rights reserved. The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Cree®, the Cree logo and XLamp® are registered trademarks of Cree, Inc. UL® and the UR logo are registered trademarks of UL LLC.
Cree, Inc. 4600 Silicon Drive Durham, NC 27703 USA Tel: +1.919.313.5300
XLAMP® XP-E2 LED
TABLE OF CONTENTS Characteristics........................................................................................................................................................................................................ 3 Flux Characteristics - White.................................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Flux Characteristics - Color.................................................................................................................................................................................. 10 Relative Spectral Power Distribution................................................................................................................................................................... 16 Relative Flux vs. Junction Temperature............................................................................................................................................................... 17 Electrical Characteristics - White......................................................................................................................................................................... 18 Electrical Characteristics - Color.......................................................................................................................................................................... 18 Relative Flux vs. Current - White........................................................................................................................................................................... 19 Relative Flux vs. Current - Color........................................................................................................................................................................... 19 Relative Chromaticity vs. Current and Temperature........................................................................................................................................... 20 Typical Spatial Distribution................................................................................................................................................................................... 21 Thermal Design..................................................................................................................................................................................................... 22 Performance Groups - Luminous Flux................................................................................................................................................................. 24 Performance Groups - Radiant Flux..................................................................................................................................................................... 25 Performance Groups - Chromaticity.................................................................................................................................................................... 26 Performance Groups - Dominant Wavelength.................................................................................................................................................... 29 Performance Groups - Peak Wavelength...............