4.6 Article

Non-Rare-Earth Na3AlF6:Cr3+ Phosphors for Far-Red Light-Emitting Diodes

Journal

ACS APPLIED ELECTRONIC MATERIALS
Volume 1, Issue 11, Pages 2325-2333

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaelm.9b00527

Keywords

fluorescence; non-rare-earth; Cr3+; far-red; LEDs

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Department of Energy through the Critical Materials Institute
  3. National Science Foundation [IIP-1059286]
  4. NIH NIBIB [EB018378-01]
  5. National Institutes of Health

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Emerging phototherapy in a clinic and plant photomorphogenesis call for efficient red/far-red light resources to target and/or actuate the interaction of light and living organisms. Rare-earth-doped phosphors are generally promising candidates for efficient light-emitting diodes but still bear lower quantum yield for the far-red components, potential supply risks, and high-cost issues. Thus, the design and preparation of efficient non-rare-earth activated phosphors becomes extremely important and arouses great interest. Fabrication of Cr3+-doped Na3AlF6 phosphors significantly promotes the potential applications by efficiently converting blue excitation light of a commercial InGaN chip to far-red broadband emission in the 640-850 nm region. The action response of phototherapy (similar to 667-683 nm; similar to 750-772 nm) and that of photomorphogenesis (similar to 700-760 nm) are well overlapped. Based on the temperature-dependent steady luminescence and time-resolved spectroscopies, energy transfer models are rationally established by means of the configurational coordinate diagram of Cr3+ ions. An optimal sample of Na3AlF6:60% Cr3+ phosphor generates a notable QY of 75 +/- 5%. Additionally, an InGaN LED device encapsulated by using Na3AlF6:60% Cr3+ phosphor was fabricated. The current exploration will pave a promising way to engineer non-rare-earth activated optoelectronic devices for all kinds of photobiological applications.

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