I don't think I missed anything on the schematic... Someone mentioned to me it could be a 50v led? I have another one I have taken apart and tried to power the led with no success using AA batteries.
Sent from my SM-G900F
All white LED chips operate on about 3.2 V and use from 10 mA for small ones up to a few hundred mA for big ones. Note that the big ones must be attached to a heat sink or they will be quickly be damaged.
Sometimes many LED chips are placed in series (and parallel) in a single package and this makes them require a higher operating voltage, but they are still multiples of 3.2 V internally.
The LED in your picture looks like it has four dies, so it may be a 2x2 arrangement and then it would need 6.4 V to drive it. You could try it with a 9 V battery and a 47 ohm series resistor and see if it lights up. If it does light up, measure the voltage across it with a meter. This would give you an idea of its normal operating voltage.
Since the package claims 2 W and all such labels are optimistic, consider it to be a 1 W LED. If you measure the operating voltage and divide that into 1 W it will give you a typical operating current.