I have grown Pharagmipediums for about 15 years, the last 13 under LED lights. I have decreased my Phrags over the years as I increased Cattleyas. I currently have only two plants of a tetraploid Jason Fischer, two plants of a triploid Fritz Schomburg, a seedling of a diploid Robert-Jan Quene, two plants of a triploid Yoko W. Fischer, one plant of schlimii/fischeri, and a kovachii seedling. My experience is heavily concentrated on hybrids of the species besseae and kovachii.
Besseae and kovachii are native at a latitude about 6 degrees south of the equator. This location has a 12.4-hour mid-summer day length and an 11.7-hour mid-winter day length. I do not have a separate growing area for Phragmipediums, so they receive the 11.5 to 13.0-hour yearly day length variation that all my plants receive.
The natural change in the sun's angle from mid-summer to mid-winter in the besseae/kovachii latitude results in a modest 10% change in light intensity.
However, I do not vary the light intensity for my Phragmipediums to compensate for the modest excessive day length variation and keep a steadier daily light integral (DLI).
In the August 2021 AOS journal, Kelly McCracken reported results using LED lighting in her commercial grow houses in Arizona. She used the Apogee 500 light meter (which I also use) to measure light intensity as peak photon flux density (PPFD) in the photosynthetically active range (PAR). She noted that a constant PPFD of 150 micromoles/meter squared/second (probably at the mid-leaf zone) and a steady 12-hour day length throughout the year was successful with Phragmipediums. This would be a daily light integral (DLI) of 6.5.
My Phragmipediums receive a steady 125 PPFD throughout my varying day length year, resulting in a yearly average DLI of 5.75. My plants grow and bloom well. My two Jason Fischer and my schlimii/fischeri plants are now blooming. A Fritz Schomburg and Yoko W. Fischer are in spike and the other two plants of these hybrids recently finished flowering. My kovachii and Robert-Jan Quene still need to reach blooming size.
My plants might grow better if I modestly increased the DLI by lowering my lights several inches. However, I avoid this because, with my current LED fixture, headroom for spikes would be modestly compromised.
A steady 12-hour day and 100-150 PPFD should accommodate excellent Phragmipedium growth and flowering, at least with besseae, kovachii, and hybrids.