Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Nuclear Energy News .




INTERNET SPACE
Cause of LED Efficiency Droop Finally Revealed
by Staff Writers
Santa Barbara, CA (SPX) Apr 29, 2013


LED emitting light under forward bias in an ultra high vacuum chamber allowing simultaneous electron emission energy. Credit: Ecole Polytechnique, Ph. Lavialle.

Researchers at University of California, Santa Barbara, in collaboration with colleagues at the Ecole Polytechnique in France, have conclusively identified Auger recombination as the mechanism that causes light emitting diodes (LEDs) to be less efficient at high drive currents.

Until now, scientists had only theorized the cause behind the phenomenon known as LED "droop"-a mysterious drop in the light produced when a higher current is applied. The cost per lumen of LEDs has held the technology back as a viable replacement for incandescent bulbs for all-purpose commercial and residential lighting.

This could all change now that the cause of LED efficiency droop has been explained, according to researchers James Speck and Claude Weisbuch of the Center for Energy Efficient Materials at UCSB, an Energy Frontier Research Center sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy.

Knowledge gained from this study is expected to result in new ways to design LEDs that will have significantly higher light emission efficiencies. LEDs have enormous potential for providing long-lived high quality efficient sources of lighting for residential and commercial applications. The U.S. Department of Energy recently estimated that the widespread replacement of incandescent and fluorescent lights by LEDs in the U.S. could save electricity equal to the total output of fifty 1GW power plants.

"Rising to this potential has been contingent upon solving the puzzle of LED efficiency droop," commented Speck, professor of Materials and the Seoul Optodevice Chair in Solid State Lighting at UCSB. "These findings will enable us to design LEDs that minimize the non-radiative recombination and produce higher light output."

"This was a very complex experiment-one that illustrates the benefits of teamwork through both an international collaboration and a DOE Energy Frontier Research Center," commented Weisbuch, distinguished professor of Materials at UCSB. Weisbuch, who is also a faculty member at the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris, enlisted the support of his colleagues Lucio Martinelli and Jacques Peretti. UCSB graduate student Justin Iveland was a key member of the team working both at UCSB and Ecole Polytechnique.

In 2011, UCSB professor Chris van de Walle and colleagues theorized that a complex non-radiative process known as Auger recombination was behind nitride semiconductor LED droop, whereby injected electrons lose energy to heat by collisions with other electrons rather than emitting light.

A definitive measurement of Auger recombination in LEDs has now been accomplished by Speck, Weisbuch, and their research team.

The experiment used an LED with a specially prepared surface that permitted the researchers to directly measure the energy spectrum of electrons emitted from the LED. The results unambiguously showed a signature of energetic electrons produced by the Auger process.

The results of their work are to be published in the journal Physical Review Letters. A similar version of the accepted manuscript can be found here. This work was funded by the UCSB Center for Energy Efficient Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center of the US Department of Energy, Office of Science. Additional support for the work at Ecole Polytechnique was provided by the French government.

.


Related Links
Center for Energy Efficient Materials at UCSB
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERNET SPACE
As Google Glass appears, does personal privacy vanish?
Washington DC (UPI) Apr 28, 2013
Every jump in technology brings with it adjustments society must make and rules it must develop if the new paradigm is to be considered acceptable, and Google Glass - a wearable computer that can record video surreptitiously - presents just such a paradigm shift. Even Google Chairman Eric Schmidt is being open about it, saying it will require a "new etiquette," admitting there are pla ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
Recipe for Low-Cost, Biomass-Derived Catalyst for Hydrogen Production

China conducts its first successful bio-fueled airline flight

Bugs produce diesel on demand

New input system for biogas systems

INTERNET SPACE
JinkoSolar Completes the Largest Rooftop PV System in a Desalination Plant

Standard Solar Installs Fourth Aggregate Net-Metered Solar System

Microgrid Solar First In US To Install Restaurant Roof Made Entirely Of Solar Panels

World's First Ski Area Fully Powered With On-Site Renewables

INTERNET SPACE
U.S. leads in wind installations

Providing Capital and Technology, GE is Farming the Wind in America's Heartland with Enel Green Power

Wind skeptic British minister replaced

Using fluctuating wind power

INTERNET SPACE
Ethiopia and China sign $1 billion power deal

New York approves power line from Canada

$674 billion annual spend on 'unburnable' fossil fuel assets signals failure to recognise huge financial risks

Germany energy transition faces cuts after European Parliament vote

INTERNET SPACE
New Battery Design Could Help Solar and Wind Energy Power the Grid

NASA to foot the bill for U.S. production of nuclear spacecraft fuel

China, India spar over Persian Gulf oil

Permit delays raise US-Canada pipeline costs: company

INTERNET SPACE
Astronomer studies far-off worlds through 'characterization by proxy'

Mysterious Hot Spots Observed In A Cool Red Supergiant

Orbital Selected By NASA for TESS Astrophysics Satellite

Star-and Planet-Forming Regions May Hold Key to Life's Chirality

INTERNET SPACE
Pakistan commissions last Zulfiquar frigate

Raytheon Anschuetz Integrated Bridge to advance Italy's Coast Guard patrol boat functionality

Raytheon delivers second Phalanx Block 1B for Australia's Air Warfare Destroyer

India's Scorpene subs facing more delays

INTERNET SPACE
Dutch reality show seeks one-way astronauts for Mars

Accurate pointing by Curiosity

NASA Mars Orbiter Images May Show 1971 Soviet Lander

Opportunity is in position for solar conjunction at 'Cape York' on the rim of Endeavour Crater




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement