4.6 Article

Challenges and Strategies to Design Phosphors for Future White Light Emitting Diodes

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 126, Issue 20, Pages 8553-8564

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.2c01679

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Science & Engineering Research Board [SB/SJF/2020-21/02]
  2. Department of Science and Technology [DST/SJF/CSA-01/2019-20]

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Phosphor-converted white-light-emitting diodes (pc-WLEDs) are a successful energy-efficient illumination product, but issues of thermal stability, luminescence saturation, and chip efficiency need to be addressed. Reducing blue light is also a research direction.
Phosphor-converted white-light-emitting diodes (pc-WLEDs) are a commercially successful product for energy-efficient illumination. A large number of reported phosphors exhibit high photoluminescence efficiency but struggle in pc-WLED applications. So what kind of phosphors are required to upgrade the existing pc-WLED? An answer to this question is provided here. The industry is moving toward high-power pc-WLED. For that, issues of thermal instability (at similar to 200 degrees C) and luminescence saturation of phosphors, along with the efficiency drop of the InGaN chip, need to be addressed. Another research direction is to reduce excessive blue light from the present commercial pc-WLED, by replacing the blue-emitting InGaN chip with an ultraviolet (UV)-violet chip. Designing phosphors for high-power pc-WLED with UV-violet chip still remains a challenge. This Perspective highlights the present challenges and provides insights to address them in the future.

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