1. Introduction
A fundamental transformation of lighting technology was triggered in the early 1990s with the emerging InGaN-based light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Nowadays LEDs are widely used in the fields of indoor and outdoor lighting [1,2,3], full-color displays [4,5,6], and applications beyond lighting [7,8,9,10] because of the inherent advantages of nitride LEDs, including high efficiency, robustness, low heat output, nontoxicity, and long life span [11,12,13]. Assuming that solid-state lighting sources could replace conventional light sources worldwide, energy consumption would be remarkably reduced. This is equivalent to approximately 230 typical 500-MW coal plants or 200 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions [12]. White LEDs (WLEDs) are usually realized by two strategies: one is phosphor-converted LEDs (PC-LEDs), which are achieved by mixing emission from blue LEDs (BLEDs) with the excited light from yellow phosphor [14,15]. Another one is multicolor LEDs, where several monochromatic LEDs are mixed to produce white light [16]. However, due to the lack of high-efficiency InGaN-based long-wavelength LEDs, this strategy remains difficult to implement. At present, PC-LEDs are the most mainstream technology for various applications.
As predicted, the theoretical luminous efficacy (ηL) limit of PC-WLEDs is ~350 lm/W [17]. Additionally, its practical limit is forecasted to be 255 lm/W [18]. In this regard, Cree Inc. first reported that the ηL of WLEDs on SiC (probably) exceeded 300 lm/W, details of which were not revealed [19]. For many decades, many efforts have been taken to improve the internal quantum efficiency (ηint), light extraction efficiency (ηext), and conversion efficiency of phosphor (ηphos), which improves the overall ηL of PC-LEDs. For ηint and ηext, the typical techniques focus on (a) improving the crystalline quality of epilayers by using low-temperature (LT) buffer layers [20], epitaxial lateral overgrowth [21,22], and patterned sapphire substrate (PSS) [23,24]; (b) optimization of the device structures including multiple quantum wells (MQWs) with stronger radiative recombination [25,26], electron blocking layer (EBL) suppressing current leakage [27,28], and p-type layer with high hole concentration [29]; and (c) high ηext design, involving PSS [23,24], microstructured air cavities [30], and mirror reflectors [31,32]. In terms of ηphos, multiple types of phosphors have been introduced to improve color rendering index while manifesting high efficiency [33,34]. Nevertheless, there is still great room for efficiency improvement that can yield additional substantial energy savings.
In this work, we fabricated high-efficiency WLEDs by employing physical vapor deposition (PVD) AlN prebuffer and transitional-refraction-index patterned sapphire substrate (TPSS) technologies. Mass production device results demonstrated an increase of productivity by ~8%, with an enhancement in the light output power (φe) of BLEDs from 158 to 162 mW at an injected current of 120 mA. Simulation results showed that the BLEDs grown on TPSS enabled a top ηext improvement of 5.65%. Simultaneously, φe is experimentally enhanced by 10% at an injected current density (Jin) of 40 A/cm2. Consequently, the PC-WLEDs exhibited a peak ηL of 295.2 lm/W at a Jin of 0.9 A/cm2, which provided effective strategies for achieving super high-efficiency solid-state lighting.
2. Materials and Methods
The GaN-based epitaxial layers were grown on two types of substrates: (a) 4-inch PSS and (b) 4-inch TPSS. Both pattern arrays were achieved by standard photo-lithography and dry etching. All epilayers of the BLED structure were synthesized by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD, Veeco, k700). During the MOCVD process, Trimethylgallium (TMGa) or triethygallium (TEGa), trimethylaluminum (TMAl), trimethylindium (TMIn), NH3, silane (SiH4), and magnesocene (Cp2Mg) were adopted as Ga, Al, In, N precursors, n-doped and p-doped sources, respectively. The buffer layer growth process will be discussed in detail in subsequent sections. As shown in Figure 1a, the MOCVD process consists of a 3.5 μm undoped GaN (u-GaN) layer, a 1.5 μm n-doped GaN (n-GaN) layer with Si-doped concentration of ~2.5 × 1019 cm−3, two types of InGaN/GaN pre-superlattices (pre-SLs) defined as pre-SLs-I and pre-SLs-II, MQWs, a p-doped AlGaN electronic barrier layer (EBL), a p-doped GaN (p-GaN) layer with Mg-doped concentration of ~3.6 × 1019 cm−3, and a p-GaN contact layer (CL). The detailed growth conditions of the above processes are summarized in Table 1. Finally, the p-GaN layer and p-GaN CL were annealed in-situ at 720 °C to form good ohmic contacts. The design of pre-SL layers aims to both relax the stress in MQWs and improve the horizontal distribution of injected electrons, and then enhances the ηL [35]. Al-composition-graded p-AlGaN EBL contributes to blocking electrons escaping from the active region [36].
A layer of indium tin oxide film was deposited on p-GaN CL with a thickness of 50 nm as the current spreading layer, and then annealed at 550 °C for 30 min in N2 atmosphere. The mesa was achieved by standard photolithography and the inductively coupled plasma etching process. Cr/Al/Ti/Au (50/1700/40/200 nm) layers were deposited through electron beam evaporation to act as p- and n- contact electrodes, and then annealed at 250 °C for 15 min. The devices were passivated by a layer of SiO2 (225 nm) through plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition. Afterwards, 40 pairs of Ti2O5/SiO2 (46.4/76.8 nm) distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) were coated on the backside of the wafer after grinding and polishing processes. The BLED chips were separated by wafer laser dicing. The devices were mounted on the alumina substrates and wire-bonded followed by covering yellow phosphors. Figure 1a illustrates a cross-sectional schematic diagram of an LED chip. An optical photo of a chip (22 × 40 mil2) is presented in Figure 1b. The optical and electronic performance of these two types of BLEDs were tested by the integrating sphere (Everfine).
To precisely evaluate the influence of PVD AlN prebuffer on the device performance, a mass production test was run over twenty different MOCVD chambers for half a month. Ten wafers were grown in each MOCVD on a daily basis, using conventional LT GaN buffer layer (defined as W/O AlN, 540 °C LT buffer layer for five wafers) and PVD AlN prebuffer (800 °C HT buffer layer for five wafers). The lateral LEDs were processed for all the wafers to fabricate BLED chips with dimensions of 9 × 28 mil2. The φe at a current of 120 mA was obtained through chip on tape (COT) measurement.
A simulation using the Monte Carlo ray-tracing method was performed to evaluate the optical characteristics of BLEDs on flat sapphire substrate technology (BLED-FSS), PSS (BLED-PSS), and TPSS (BLED-TPSS) [37]. The size of the chip was set to 60 µm2. A Lambertian light emission from the active area with a wavelength of 450 nm and φe of 1 W (Ptotal = 1 W) was adopted. The ray incidence on the upper hemisphere surface is collected. A perfect absorber with a radius of 1 mm was designed to count the output φe for the three models (see Figure S1a–c). The top ηext is defined as the ratio of φe that escapes into the hemisphere surface (Pout) to the source power (Ptotal).
The morphology of the substrate and epilayers was characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM, Hitachi, Tokyo, Japan; operated at 4.4 kV). Dislocations were analyzed through high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM, JEM-F200), and X-ray diffraction spectroscopy (XRD, Bede D1, Durham, UK; operated at 40 kV, 35 mA). The reflectance of the epilayers was measured through a spectrophotometer (Hitachi, UH4150, Tokyo, Japan), with the incident light wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet to near-infrared.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. PVD AlN Prebuffer Layer
In this part, PVD AlN prebuffer layer, in contrast to W/O AlN for BLED epitaxial structure, was demonstrated in terms of the growth time, material quality, and φe in the mass production. Because of the large lattice mismatch (~16%) and thermal mismatch between GaN film and (0001) sapphire substrate [38], improving the material quality is crucial for fabrication of high efficiency nitride-based devices. Disruptive breakthroughs of high-quality GaN films originated from the development of LT GaN or AlN buffer layers [20,39]. The LED epitaxial structure was grown on 4-inch PSS, yielding periodically arrayed cone-shaped sapphire substrates. The height and base diameter of the cone were 1.8 µm and 2.77 µm (H = 1.8 µm, D = 2.77 µm), respectively, and the period was 3 µm (p = 3 µm) (see Figure 2a,b). The cone-shaped array exhibited a smooth sidewall and good periodicity. This is beneficial to the uniform gas flow field distribution of the reaction chamber, and then ensures the uniformity of electrical and luminescence properties of LED devices. Epitaxy processes of LED samples using W/O AlN and PVD AlN prebuffer during the MOCVD process were compared. For W/O AlN, Figure 2c,d show schematic diagrams of the epitaxial structure and curves of temperature transients during the MOCVD process. In detail, PSS first underwent a heating and high-temperature (HT) cleaning process at 1050 °C. Then, the LT-GaN layer was grown at 540 °C for 4 min through a cooling procedure maintained for approximately 13 min. Subsequently, after a 9 min heating ramp, three-dimensional (3D) island growth and two-dimensional (2D) lateral growth were implemented in order.
The AlN prebuffer layer with a thickness of ~20 nm was deposited on PSS by PVD (Endura 300, Applied Materials, Inc., Santa Clara, CA, USA). Afterward, the AlN/PSS templates were loaded into the MOCVD reactor for the growth of LED epilayers. The corresponding schematic diagram of the epitaxial structure and trace-record curve of temperature transients were depicted in Figure 2e,f. An HT buffer layer was directly deposited on the template followed by the 3D island and 2D lateral deposition process after a heating ramp. In this case, the complicated heating and cooling ramp lasting of the LT buffer were simplified. This shortened the growth time by more than 20 min and increased the productivity by ~8%. Considering the high operating cost of MOCVD, the introduction of PVD AlN prebuffer layer in nitride epitaxy provides a new thought for the high-efficiency and low-cost growth of nitrides, which is meaningful in industrialized mass production.
Consequently, a trial-produced BLED film on a 4-inch PSS comparing the W/O AlN and PVD AlN prebuffer was executed to investigate the material quality and LED characteristics. The mean full width at half maximum (FWHM) values of the (0002) and (10–12) rocking curves were measured as 259, 252 arcsec for W/O AlN, and 130, 180 arcsec for PVD AlN prebuffer, respectively (see Figure 3a). Therefore, the screw threading dislocation density (TDD) and edge TDD are derived as: (a) 1.34 × 108 and 3.16 × 108 cm−3 for W/O AlN, and (b) 3.4 × 107 and 2.65 × 108 cm−3 for PVD AlN prebuffer [40], which indicates that the screw TDD drops by approximately an order of magnitude and the edge TDD decreases slightly. Cross-sectional TEM images of LED epilayers are shown in Figure 3b,c, which verifies that the TDD is effectively reduced for BLEDs with the PVD AlN prebuffer. Improvement of crystalline quality could benefit the ηint of the LED structure via suppressing the Shockley–Read–Hall recombination process. [41]. As discussed, an HT buffer layer was implemented on PVD AlN prebuffer layer. Therefore, different growth temperatures for HT buffer layer were executed in MOCVD. From Figure 3d, it can be observed that as the temperature increases, the color of the wafer gradually fades from dark yellow to nearly transparent, suggesting the reduction of defect densities under HT conditions. Therefore, the LT GaN buffer layer absorbs more blue light emitted from MQWs because of the defect-related photoluminescence when the LED device is operated. This is bad for enhancing ηext [42].
The average φe data of each batch of wafers in different reactors were recorded daily (see Figure 3e). The average φe of all wafers over half a month duration test for W/O AlN and PVD AlN prebuffer are around 158 and 162 mW, respectively. This suggests that the φe of BLED has been increased by 2.53%, in which accidental factors are excluded based on the statistics of the quantity. In summary, the development of PVD AlN prebuffer not only improves the production efficiency, but also optimizes the working performance of LED devices.
3.2. TPSS Technology
In this section, a novel TPSS technology was introduced in the BLED structure compared with conventional PSS technology mainly for the promotion of ηext through pilot study. For TPSS, the cone material is replaced from sapphire to silica, with a size of H = 2.1 µm, D = 2.9 µm, and periodicity of p = 3.1 µm, which is the same as the features of PSS (see Figure 4a,b). These two technologies combined with PVD AlN prebuffer were adopted to grow LED epitaxial structures, and the MQW layer was located approximately 100 nm from the top.
To save computational memory, the BLED modeling was simplified as four layers, including an active region, GaN epilayer, substrates layer, and DBR layer with a reflectivity of 99% from top to bottom (see Figure 4c). The cross-sectional ray-tracing of BLED-FSS, BLED-PSS, BLED-TPSS, and corresponding radiation patterns on the hemisphere surface are sketched in Figure S1d–e and Figure 4d–g. It is observed that the BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS exhibit significantly enhanced light emissions in all directions compared with the BLED-FSS. It is worth mentioning that BLED-TPSS demonstrates a stronger upward and weaker downward light distribution than BLED-PSS. The intensity mapping of the φe density in Figure 4g for BLED-TPSS is higher than that in Figure 4e for BLED-PSS. This is consistent with the results of ray-tracing. Figure 4h presents the simulated far-field radiation patterns of BLEDs on different substrates. We assume that the pattern is an ideal symmetrical distribution and the result in the range of 0–90° is simulated. For the emission intensity, that of BLED-TPSS is the highest at almost all launch angles. In terms of the half-value (HV) angle, BLED-FSS, BLED-PSS, and BLED-TPSS are 122.6°, 123.4°, and 123.4°, respectively. This means that BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS have almost the same emission HV angle, which is slightly wider than BLED-FSS. The top ηext values of the three-type LEDs are 59.17%, 71.14%, and 75.16%, as shown in Figure 4i. Compared with BLED-PSS, the top ηext of BLED-TPSS is increased by 5.65%. Although a small value appears, it is a large breakthrough for industrial production. As the reflectivity of the epitaxial structure is an important factor for LED light extraction, the reflectivity of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS wafers was measured to investigate the collimated ηext effect (see Figure 5a,b). The reflectivity of BLED-TPSS is slightly higher than that of BLED-PSS in the range of incident light wavelengths from ultraviolet to near-infrared. In particular, a significant improvement of 4.06% at 450 nm is observed, explaining the stronger ηext intensity along the axial direction, which coincides with the simulated results. In addition, during the epitaxial process, AlN/TPSS could improve the interfacial growth front compared to AlN/PSS (see Figure S2), with detailed discussion in Supplementary Materials. The thickness of epitaxial LED structure on both AlN/PSS and AlN/TPSS is around 5.75 µm (see Figure S3).
3.3. High Light Output Power BLED
The BLED devices were fabricated with dimensions of 22 × 40 mil2, using PSS and TPSS combined with PVD-AlN prebuffer. φe of BLED-TPSS (φe-TPSS) and φe of BLED-PSS (φe-PSS) versus Jin are sketched in Figure 6a. The relative enhancement of φe (φe-relative) is described as the ratio of difference φe (φe-diff) to φe-DPSS, expressed as φe-diff/φe-PSS (see Figure 6b). It can be seen that φe-TPSS is slightly lower than φe-PSS when Jin is less than 0.16 A/cm2. However, φe-TPSS is higher in a large current density range greater than 0.16 A/cm2. As Jin increases, φe-relative shows logarithmic growth first when Jin is less than 6.8 A/cm2, and then exhibits a linear increase when Jin is greater than 6.8 A/cm2. The φe-relative has exceeded 10% at a Jin of 40 A/cm2.
The peak wavelength (λp) and FWHM of the electroluminescence (EL) spectra are presented in Figure 6c. The λp of both BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS is located at approximately 450 nm, corresponding to the radiation recombination of electron–hole pairs of blue emission. λp blueshifts from 452.2 to 449.4 nm for BLED-PSS, and 452.6 to 450.2 nm for BLED-TPSS as Jin increases from 0.07 to 39.5 A/cm2. In this case, a quantum-confined Stark effect (QCSE) is generated within the MQW region at no Jin caused by spontaneous and built-in piezoelectric fields, especially for the LED structure [43], which will reduce the overlap integral of electron/hole wave-functions. As a result, the charge screening and band filling effects would gradually weaken the QCSE as Jin increases, subsequently leading to a blueshift in the λp. The FWHM of both LEDs behaves faintly larger when Jin changes from 0.07 to 40 A/cm2. This is ascribed to the native fluctuation of In composition in MQWs, and more electron–hole pairs would be excited as Jin increases [44]. Far-field radiation patterns of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS in the range of 0–90° are experimentally measured (see Figure 6d). Compared to BLED-PSS, BLED-TPSS exhibits a higher relative intensity, which is consistent with the simulation results. However, the deviation is that the HVs of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS are larger than the simulated results, in which the experimental results are affected by many processes, such as dicing, gold wires, and package substrate. Additionally, BLED-TPSS has a more convergent emission pattern with an HV 11° lower than that of BLED-PSS.
3.4. High Luminous Efficacy WLED
We fabricated WBEDs by incorporating BLEDs and yellow phosphor through a PC-LED package strategy. The Jin dependence of ηL, wall-plug efficiency (WPE), operated voltage, and φe are shown in Figure 7. The peak ηL and peak WPE reach maxima of 295.2 lm/W and 63.2%, respectively, at a Jin of 0.9 A/cm2. It is worth noting that the ηL and WPE retained 282.4 lm/W and 60.4% at a Jin of 5.6 A/cm2, respectively. The ηL and WPE decrease as Jin (greater than 0.9 A/cm2) increases, which is the common droop effect for LED devices. It may originate from Auger recombination, carrier leakage, carrier localization, and other factors [45,46].
The J-V curve of the WLED demonstrates good rectification characteristics with two representative points of (0.9 A/cm2, 2.55 V), (5.6 A/cm2, 2.7 V). The φe shows a linear increase with increasing Jin and reaches 40.74 mW at a Jin of 5.6 A/cm2. The correlated color temperature (CCT) was measured as 4592 K, where neutral white light was obtained. This work has significantly enhanced the brightness of WLEDs, which is expected to promote the applications of superior solid-state lighting in general lighting, high-power lighting, and display fields in the future.
4. Conclusions
In summary, high-efficiency WLEDs have been demonstrated by adopting PVD AlN prebuffer and TPSS technology. The ηL reaches 295.2 lm/W and 282.4 lm/W at Jin of 0.9 A/cm2 and 5.6 A/cm2, respectively. The PVD AlN prebuffer enables the screw TDD to drop by approximately an order of magnitude from 1.34 × 108 to 3.4 × 107 cm−3. It then enhances the φe of BLEDs by 2.53% via batch data statistics, while increasing the productivity of ~8%. Monte Carlo ray-tracing simulations show that the top ηext has been increased from 71.14% for BLED-PSS to 75.16% for BLED-TPSS. The reflectivity of light peaking at 450 nm for BLED-TPSS is enhanced by 4.06%, and the φe is promoted by 10% at a Jin of 40 A/cm2. The goal of this work is to reduce energy waste with technological innovations in solid-state lighting to achieve higher quantum efficiency. Future work will focus on the mature mass production and commercialization of the strategies proposed in this work.
S.Z. and M.L. contributed equally to this work. Design and execution of experiments, S.Z. and M.L.; formal analysis, S.Z. and M.L.; supervision and discussion of results, Y.Y., J.H., Y.L., T.F., X.Z., Z.L. (Zhicong Li) and C.X.; validation, S.Z. and M.L.; writing—original draft preparation, S.Z. and M.L.; writing—review and editing, S.Z., M.L., J.W., J.L., Z.L. (Zhiqiang Liu) and X.Y.; project administration, J.W., J.L., Z.L. (Zhiqiang Liu) and X.Y.; funding acquisition, Z.L. (Zhiqiang Liu) and X.Y. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Not applicable.
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The data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Figure 1. (a) Schematic diagram of the LED structure from a cross-sectional view including epilayers and technical processes; (b) Optical photo of the as-fabricated lateral LED chip.
Figure 2. (a) Plane-view and (b) cross-sectional SEM images of PSS; (c) schematic diagram and (d) schematic curve of temperature transients of LED epitaxial structure with LT-GaN buffer layer; (e) schematic diagram and (f) schematic curve of temperature transients of LED epitaxial structure with PVD AlN prebuffer layer.
Figure 3. (a) The mean FWHM values of (0002) and (10–12) rocking curves of epitaxial wafers utilizing W/O AlN and PVD AlN prebuffer, Ds: screw TDD, De: edge TDD; TEM images of BLED epilayers using (b) W/O AlN, (c) PVD AlN prebuffer; (d) The optical photo of the wafers, in which the GaN buffer layer was grown at 550, 650, 730, and 800 °C using PVD AlN prebuffer. (e) φe data logging results of mass production wafers using W/O AlN and PVD AlN prebuffer for half a month.
Figure 4. (a) Plane-view and (b) cross-sectional SEM images of TPSS; (c) The simulated modeling of BLED-PSS or BLED-TPSS; (d) Cross-sectional ray-tracing and (e) radiation patterns on hemisphere surface of BLED-PSS; (f) Cross-sectional ray-tracing and (g) radiation patterns on hemisphere surface of BLED-TPSS; (h) Simulated far-field radiation patterns and (i) calculated top ηext of BLED-FSS, BLED-PSS, and BLED-TPSS.
Figure 5. (a) Reflection spectra of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS wafers with incident wavelengths from 300 nm to 800 nm; (b) Zoomed reflection spectra at incident wavelengths around 450 nm.
Figure 6. (a) φe and its difference, (b) the φe enhancement, (c) λp and FWHM of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS chips as functions of Jin, the inset of (a) is an expansion of φe-diff in the range of Jin less than 0.16 A/cm2; (d) Experimentally measured far-field radiation patterns of BLED-PSS and BLED-TPSS.
Figure 7. (a) ηL as a function of Jin for WLEDs; (b) WPE as functions of Jin for white LEDs; (c) Jin and (d) φe dependence of operating voltage for WLEDs.
The growth conditions of the epitaxial structure in the MOCVD process.
Step | Temperature |
Time |
NH3 |
TMGa |
TEGa |
TMAl |
TMIn |
SiH4 |
Cp2Mg |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
u-GaN | 1040 | 53 | 146 | 1490 | / | / | / | / | / |
n-GaN | 1070 | 23 | 112 | 740 | / | / | / | 50.6 | / |
InGaN/GaN |
860 | 2 | 90 | / | 490 | / | 1280 | / | / |
860 | 4 | 90 | / | 390 | / | / | / | / | |
InGaN/GaN |
800 | 2 | 90 | 315 | / | 1125 | / | / | |
885 | 4 | 90 | 1010 | / | / | / | / | ||
InGaN/GaN |
760 | 4 | 90 | / | 315 | / | 1125 | / | / |
885 | 8 | 90 | / | 1010 | / | / | / | / | |
p-AlGaN EBL | 950 | 5 | 22 | 150 | / | 0–140 | / | / | 360 |
p-GaN | 950 | 10 | 112 | 180 | / | / | / | / | 765 |
p-GaN CL | 680 | 1.5 | 90 | / | 315 | / | 790 | / | 394 |
Supplementary Materials
The following supporting information can be downloaded at:
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Abstract
Constant advance in improving the luminous efficacy (ηL) of nitride-based light-emitting diodes (LEDs) plays a critical role for saving measurable amounts of energy. Further development is motivated to approach the efficiency limit for this material system while reducing the costs. In this work, strategies of using thin AlN prebuffer and transitional-refraction-index patterned sapphire substrate (TPSS) were proposed, which pushed up the efficiency of white LEDs (WLEDs). The AlN prebuffer was obtained through physical vapor deposition (PVD) method and TPSS was fabricated by dry-etched periodic silica arrays covered on sapphire. Devices in mass production confirmed that PVD AlN prebuffer was able to improve the light output power (φe) of blue LEDs (BLEDs) by 2.53% while increasing the productivity by ~8% through shortening the growth time. Additionally, BLEDs on TPSS exhibited an enhanced top ηext of 5.65% in contrast to BLEDs on the conventional PSS through Monte Carlo ray-tracing simulation. Consequently, φe of BLEDs was experimentally enhanced by 10% at an injected current density (Jin) of 40 A/cm2. A peak ηL of 295.2 lm/W at a Jin of 0.9 A/cm2 and the representative ηL of 282.4 lm/W at a Jin of 5.6 A/cm2 for phosphor-converted WLEDs were achieved at a correlated color temperature of 4592 K.
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1 Research and Development Center for Solid State Lighting, Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100083, China;
2 Research and Development Center for Solid State Lighting, Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100083, China;
3 Xiamen San’an Optoelectronic Technology Co., Ltd., Xiamen 361009, China;
4 Research and Development Center for Solid State Lighting, Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100083, China;