Yes it's the plant version I got especially for that tank .it didn't come with it .I'm not sure of the Kelvin rating . My water gh is 120ppm . The algae on them other plants has been building very slowly over nearly a year . If they were growing I think it wouldn't be there really ?
The link gave the Kelvin of the "Plant" LED as 8000K which is for me too much blue and insufficient red, something the 6500K "Sunny" rectifies. So that would be my suggestion for the light. The GH is OK, not an issue there.
Algae will appear in any healthy aquarium, we cannot prevent it. But, we want to keep it under control. And with plants this means the light and nutrients are in sync for the specific plants (they have differing needs depending upon species, and numbers) so algae is thwarted. As soon as the balance is out, be it too much light, not enough light, too much fertilizer/nutrients or not enough, etc,, the plants struggle and algae takes advantage because it is not anywhere as fussy over the light. If the intensity is OK, and the spectrum is OK, then the duration can be played with, still in balance with the available nutrients.
Sometimes it is just a matter of tweaking the light period until it achieves the goal. I reduced my tank light period to 7 hours before I got black brush algae in two tanks under control. Then I found it increased in the summer due to the additional light intensity/duration from daylight, so I covered the windows (in a fish room this is easy to do) and that solved that. For four years after, no more BBA.
EDIT. Saw your latest post...if you can replace the Plant with the Sunny, that may do it. Given the algae issue starting, I would not want to be adding more intensity especially when it is blue light which does encourage BBA, I had this in one tank with a 10,000K tube alongside a 6500K tube. Removed the 10000K and replaced it with a second 6500K, end of BBA in that tank.