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IQE

27 July 2023

ams OSRAM’s OSIRE E3731i RGB LED alllows dynamic color and motion effects across hundreds of LEDs

ams OSRAM GmbH of Premstätten, Austria and Munich, Germany has introduced new technology that is said to greatly simplify the implementation of dynamic, color- and intensity-changing arrays of hundreds of RGB LEDs in car interior lighting.

The new OSIRE E3731i RGB LED features a digital core that enables low-latency communication over a standard serial bus interface with any microcontroller. ams OSRAM has also developed a new Open System Protocol (OSP) running on the OSIRE E3731i. Using OSP, any microcontroller can transmit instructions to modulate brightness and color individually to each LED. OSP is available for use license- and royalty-free by any car, LED, lighting system or microcontroller manufacturer.

By using the OSIRE E3731i LED and OSP, automotive manufacturers can realize novel dynamic lighting effects in the car interior. Up to 1000 LEDs can be connected in a daisy chain, controlled via one microcontroller.

“Dynamic lighting promises to add value to cars by combining changes in color and brightness with pulsing, breathing or moving light effects, for decorative or functional purposes,” says senior product manager Hermann Senninger. “The OSIRE E3731i and OSP enable dynamic interior lighting to be implemented with a simpler architecture, fewer components, less wiring and at lower system cost. These benefits are attracting customers already, and we expect to see the product deployed in production vehicles soon.”

Intelligence built in to every LED

ams OSRAM says that development of the new intelligent LED draws on its capabilities in optical technology and IC design and fabrication. The OSIRE E3731i is a high-performance RGB LED co-packaged with an IC that features three LED drivers, a serial bus interface supporting the OSP, a temperature sensor and on-chip memory.

Each intelligent RGB LED is characterized at the factory, and its optical performance data are stored in the LED’s on-chip memory. This is said to make it easier for automotive manufacturers to perform end-of-line calibration of interior lighting systems, and to achieve very high optical uniformity and consistency across arrays of hundreds of OSIRE E3731i LEDs.

The OSIRE E3731i is now qualified to the latest AEC-Q102 Annex 3 standard.

See related items:

TactoTek and ams OSRAM optimize RGB LED for in-mold structural electronics in car interior illumination

Tags: Osram Automotive LED lighting

Visit: www.ams-osram.com

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