ams OSRAM, headquartered in Premstätten, Austria, is a global leader in optoelectronics and advanced sensor integration, providing technologies that enhance vision, sensing, and light-based data processing. Its portfolio includes miniaturized sensors, LED-based emitters, LiDAR components, and IR modules used in automotive systems, industrial automation, wearable devices, and medical diagnostics. ams OSRAM distinguishes itself through semiconductor innovation, high-reliability packaging, and light-based AI applications, operating across Europe, Asia, and the Americas.
ams OSRAM and DP Patterning demonstrate a technology using single-layer flexible PCBs and the LED driver to enable intelligent automotive lighting while achieving up to a 98% CO2 reduction in manufacturing.
The AS8580 from ams OSRAM uses robust capacitive sensing with IQ demodulation, improving resilience to environmental factors while maintaining high sensitivity for interior and exterior automotive applications.
ams OSRAM, Marelli, and NIO are integrating the EVIYOS HD25 multipixel LED into the premium electric sedan ET9 – a milestone in intelligent vehicle lighting.
SYNIOS LEDs deliver high performance, compact design, and full color options for enhanced automotive lighting, including signaling, interiors, and autonomous applications.
OSRAM’s TYREinflate range offers three models with analog or digital displays, auto-stop function, LED lights, and Easyset control wheel for quick, precise and user-friendly tyre inflation at home.
The stack technology places two P/N junctions in series within one chip to achieve an optical output power increase of almost 180% compared to a single stack chip.
The technology enables ams OSRAM to apply LEDs onto a thin, flexible and transparent substrate. This advancement paves the way for light to emerge from surfaces, offering a truly fascinating and interactive experience.
The development of a light source in the form of an array of extremely small LEDs has produced a new kind of illumination: not light as a block or beam, but rather a matrix of thousands or millions of tiny point sources (pixels).