I don't think its been mentioned specifically but as I understand it, the AI HD lights are wired to overdrive some diodes if others are under driven. As in if everything is turned up to 100% the drivers are operating at full capacity, but if you turn any individual color down, you can apply that power to another diode to overdrive it. I am far from an expert at electronics but that is how I understand them to work.
Also to echo what everyone else has already said, the OP's original information isn't just backward it's just generally incorrect. You're right that terrestrial plants and algaes use red wavelengths more than corals do. That part IS accurate. But to say photosynthesis requires red, green, blue, AND white light just doesn't compute. White light isn't a color. It's a combination of colors. Your mind just perceives it as white. Chloroplasts don't see white light. They see available wavelengths that they've evolved to use to produce sugars and breathe.
Furthermore, enough anecdotal evidence (yes, anecdotal, but strong evidence none the less) has shown from countless hobbyists and some big time aquaculture facilities that using strictly blue and violet wavelengths and very very little to no red and green has actually produced some of the BEST growth and color results. If you run your AI, Radion, Reef Breeders, or any controllable led fixture using only the blue and violet channels, your tank will do just fine. Fish will look odd, and it'll constantly have a dark, dim, sort of unnatural appearance, but it will grow corals fantastic. Same goes if you went with a combination of only blue+ and actinic t5ho bulbs. Would grow corals fanatastic, but probably get tiresome to see such a dark tank