For immediate release
                     CAP-XX Updates Study Comparing Xenon Flash and 
			High-Power LED BriteFlash 
                        Supercapacitor-powered LEDs outshine xenon for a thin-form 
			camera-phone flash solution 
                        Sydney, Australia – September 21, 2009 – 
			CAP-XX Limited (LSE:CPX), developer of thin-form supercapacitors, 
			has published an updated study comparing flash solutions for camera phones - xenon, standard LEDs 
			powered by a battery, and high-current LEDs powered by a supercapacitor using the company's 
			BriteFlash power architecture. The study tested each solution's ability to deliver the light energy 
			needed to take digital-still-camera-quality pictures in low-light conditions, and also compared shutter 
			requirements, ease of design-in, safety and size. 
                      The 
			original report from October 2006 compared light power and energy using 1.3 to 3.2-megapixel 
			camera phones. The 
			new report includes data from 5-megapixel camera phones released in the last year, 
			and also considers advancements in camera sensors, xenon flash units, high-power white LEDs (WLEDS) 
			and LED flash drivers. 
                      Tests again showed that the LED BriteFlash approach delivers more light energy than most xenon 
			flashes in a thin form factor suitable for slim camera phones and digital cameras. 
                      Clear pictures in dim environments require sufficient light energy - the total amount of light received by 
			each pixel in the camera sensor - during image-capture time. "People often wrongly assume that light 
			power, which is the brightness or intensity of the flash, is the key because it's what draws our attention, 
			but it's really the light energy that counts," said Pierre Mars, CAP-XX vice president of applications 
			engineering. 
                       To calculate light energy, one would multiply light power (in lux) by the duration of the flash exposure 
			(in seconds): Light power (lux) x flash exposure time (sec) = light energy (lux.sec). Ten to fifteen lux.sec of 
			light energy is ideal for high-resolution pictures:
                                  
                                  - Xenon flash tubes driven by electrolytic storage capacitors deliver higher light power, but over a 
				very short flash exposure.
 
                                  - High-current LEDs driven by a supercapacitor deliver lower light power, but over a longer flash 
				exposure to generate more light energy.
 
                                 
                       Flash solutions tested:
                                  
                                  - Xenon: SonyEricsson K800, LG KU990, Nokia N82 and Samsung G800, all with 5-megapixel 
				cameras but with varying size electrolytic storage capacitors.
 
                                  - Standard battery-powered LEDs: Nokia N73 (3.2-megapixel) and N96 (5-megapixel)
 
                                  - Supercapacitor-powered LEDs: To demonstrate the BriteFlash approach, CAP-XX used a small, 
				thin (20mm x 18mm x 3.8mm thick), dual-cell supercapacitor to drive a two-LED array of Philips 
				LUXEON® PWM4s at 2A each or 4A total during the flash pulse.
 
                                 
                       "BriteFlash maximizes performance from our LUXEON Flash LEDs so that cell phone users get superior 
			image quality," said Michel Zwanenburg, product manager, LUXEON Flash, Philips Lumileds. 
                       A photo detector measured on-axis illumination, while a digital storage oscilloscope captured light power 
			over time at 1 and 2 meters from the source. The areas under the power curves were integrated to 
			measure the light energy at the detector as a function of time. 
                       Study results: 
                       The supercapacitor-powered BriteFlash example (two-LED array powered at 2A per LED), using a 
			15-frame-per-second rolling shutter over a 67-millisecond flash exposure, delivered more light energy 
			than the xenon flashes. 
                       From 1 meter, the BriteFlash LEDs delivered the best of all cases with 21.7 lux.sec, 37 percent 
			more than the best-performing xenon, which was the SonyEricsson K800 with 15.8 lux.sec. The standard 
			battery-powered LED flash unit in the Nokia N73 delivered only 1.71 lux.sec with 1 LED, and 3.45 lux.sec 
			in the Nokia N96 with 2 LEDs.  
                       From 2 meters, the BriteFlash LEDs delivered 7.0 lux.sec, approximately 60 percent more light 
			energy than the 4.45 lux.sec from the best-performing xenon, which was again the SonyEricsson 
			K800. The standard battery-powered LED flash unit in the N73 delivered only 0.43 lux.sec with 1 LED, 
			and 0.86 lux.sec in the N96 with 2 LEDs.  
                       The BriteFlash example over a 33-millisecond flash exposure from 1 meter, which is short enough 
			for crisp images without using anti-handshake image-processing software, delivered comparable light 
			energy to two of the xenon examples: 11.2 lux.sec compared to 11.5 lux.sec from the Samsung G800 and 
			10.2 lux.sec from the Nokia N82. Image-processing software is readily available for designers to use to 
			correct for hand movement that may blur images captured over a longer, 67-millisecond exposure. 
                       For complete light energy test results, see: http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm#FlashTable 
                       The study also compared ease of design-in, safety and size.  Supercapacitor-enabled LED flash units are 
			smaller and thinner than xenon solutions (2 - 4mm thick, occupying less than 2cc, compared to 3.8cc and 
			7mm thick for the K800 xenon flash unit), use a lower voltage (5V compared to a 330-V electrolytic storage 
			capacitor), recharge quicker between flashes (two seconds compared to eight in the K800), do not require a 
			mechanical shutter to achieve correct exposure, and can handle other peak-power needs in the phone, 
			including the RF power amplifier and audio amplifier. The result is longer talk time and better photos and 
			audio quality. For a more complete comparison, see: http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm#DesignTable 
                       Stuart Robinson, director of handset component technologies for Strategy Analytics, explained, 
			"Consumers want camera phones that rival digital still cameras. We estimate high-powered LED flash will 
			grow significantly, reaching 30% of all camera phones by 2012. Supercapacitors are an enabler for this 
			market and we have seen them power WLEDs to produce clear pictures in low-light conditions." 
                       About the BriteFlash power architecture:  
                       CAP-XX developed BriteFlash to give designers a thin-form LED flash solution that rivals bulkier 
			xenon. The power architecture combines a LED flash driver, supercapacitor, battery and WLEDs. The flash 
			driver's boost converter charges the supercapacitor to 5.5V, which then delivers high-peak current to drive 
			the LED flash. The battery only supplies average power, and recharges the supercapacitor 
			between flashes. 
                       Other BriteFlash developments include the recent release of several supercapacitor-optimized LED flash 
			drivers, including AnalogicTech's 
			
			AAT1282, and ON Semiconductor's 
			CAT3224
			and 
			NCP5680. These drivers integrate tools to manage the supercapacitor, including the boost converter, 
			supercapacitor balancing, I2C interface and LED current control, thus saving development time, board 
			space and cost. 
                       About CAP-XX: 
                       Sydney, Australia-based CAP-XX is a world leader in thin, flat supercapacitors for space-constrained 
			electronic devices. Supercapacitors resolve the performance limitations of batteries and other 
			current-limited power supplies, and provide backup power if the primary power source fails. 
                       CAP-XX supercapacitors, which are also licensed to manufacturing partner Murata, enable 
			manufacturers to make smaller, thinner, longer-running and more feature-rich devices such as camera 
			phones, solid state drives, handheld PCs and battery-free condition-monitoring systems using the 
			company's BritePower architectures. The company is listed on the Alternative Investment 
			Market (AIM) in London. For more information, visit http://www.cap-xx.com 
			or email sales@cap-xx.com. 
                        # # # 
                       Note: For photos and diagrams comparing LED and xenon flash:  
			http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm#Compare.
			 For a block diagram and photos of LED flash drivers and modules:  
			http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm#BriteFlash.
		  	 
                         
                         
  
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