Bridging the “green gap” of LEDs: giant light output enhancement and directional control of LEDs via embedded nano-void photonic crystals
Author(s) -
Yu-Lin Tsai,
Che-Yu Liu,
Chirenjeevi Krishnan,
Da-Wei Lin,
You-Chen Chu,
Tzu-Pei Chen,
TienLin Shen,
Tsung-Sheng Kao,
Martin D. B. Charlton,
Peichen Yu,
ChienChung Lin,
HaoChung Kuo,
JrHau He
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nanoscale
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.038
H-Index - 224
eISSN - 2040-3372
pISSN - 2040-3364
DOI - 10.1039/c5nr05555e
Subject(s) - light emitting diode , materials science , optoelectronics , voltage droop , photonics , optics , quantum efficiency , nano , voltage , physics , composite material , quantum mechanics , voltage divider
Green LEDs do not show the same level of performance as their blue and red cousins, greatly hindering the solid-state lighting development, which is the so-called "green gap". In this work, nano-void photonic crystals (NVPCs) were fabricated to embed within the GaN/InGaN green LEDs by using epitaxial lateral overgrowth (ELO) and nano-sphere lithography techniques. The NVPCs act as an efficient scattering back-reflector to outcouple the guided and downward photons, which not only boost the light extraction efficiency of LEDs with an enhancement of 78% but also collimate the view angle of LEDs from 131.5° to 114.0°. This could be because of the highly scattering nature of NVPCs which reduce the interference giving rise to Fabry-Perot resonance. Moreover, due to the threading dislocation suppression and strain relief by the NVPCs, the internal quantum efficiency was increased by 25% and droop behavior was reduced from 37.4% to 25.9%. The enhancement of light output power can be achieved as high as 151% at a driving current of 350 mA. Giant light output enhancement and directional control via NVPCs point the way towards a promising avenue of solid-state lighting.
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