4.8 Article

Three-dimensional GaN dodecagonal ring structures for highly efficient phosphor-free warm white light-emitting diodes

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 4686-4695

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7nr08079d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF) grant - Korean government [NRF-2016R1A2A1A05005320]
  2. Climate Change Research Hub of KAIST [N11170054]

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Warm and natural white light (i.e., with a correlated colour temperature <5000 K) with good colour rendition (i.e., a colour rendering index >75) is in demand as an indoor lighting source of comfortable interior lighting and mood lighting. However, for warm white light, phosphor-converted white light-emitting diodes (WLEDs) require a red phosphor instead of a commercial yellow phosphor (YAG:Ce3+), and suffer from limitations such as unavoidable energy conversion losses, degraded phosphors and high manufacturing costs. Phosphor-free WLEDs based on three-dimensional (3D) indium gallium nitride (InGaN)/gallium nitride (GaN) structures are promising alternatives. Here, we propose a new concept for highly efficient phosphor-free warm WLEDs using 3D core-shell InGaN/GaN dodecagonal ring structures, fabricated by selective area growth and the KOH wet etching method. Electrically driven, phosphor-free warm WLEDs were successfully demonstrated with a low correlated colour temperature (4500 K) and high colour rendering index (R-a = 81). From our findings, we believe that WLEDs based on dodecagonal ring structures become a platform enabling a high-efficiency warm white light-emitting source without the use of phosphors.

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