What would be the maximum speed that a bog standard LED can switch on and off at regardless of the transistor used. Would the colour of the LED make a difference (I'm presuming it might).
Thanks.
Be sure to click 'more' and select 'suggest as answer'!
If you're the thread creator, be sure to click 'more' then 'Verify as Answer'!
What would be the maximum speed that a bog standard LED can switch on and off at regardless of the transistor used. Would the colour of the LED make a difference (I'm presuming it might).
Thanks.
Hi,
It's likely in the tens of MHz, since this Hamamatsu red LED provides operation at 70 MHz: https://www.hamamatsu.com/eu/en/product/light-and-radiation-sources/led/L10762.html
LEDs with phosphors (e.g. white LEDs) may have a slower response time. Size of LED and how it's driven (e.g. keeping it on the edge of switching on) may make a difference.
Most standard (visible) LEDs that are for indicator purposes probably won't have a specification for this however, since it's not their normal use-case, so it may need experimentation if you wish to find particularly fast ones for instance.
Hi,
It's likely in the tens of MHz, since this Hamamatsu red LED provides operation at 70 MHz: https://www.hamamatsu.com/eu/en/product/light-and-radiation-sources/led/L10762.html
LEDs with phosphors (e.g. white LEDs) may have a slower response time. Size of LED and how it's driven (e.g. keeping it on the edge of switching on) may make a difference.
Most standard (visible) LEDs that are for indicator purposes probably won't have a specification for this however, since it's not their normal use-case, so it may need experimentation if you wish to find particularly fast ones for instance.
Thanks very much for this. It's just general info for an idea...