Light Emitting Diode - Design Principles: EBB 424E
Light Emitting Diode - Design Principles: EBB 424E
3 Lectures on LED
OBJECTIVES:
To learn the basic design principles of LED To relate properties of semiconductor material to the principle of LED To be able select appropriate materials for different types of LED To be able to apply knowledge of band gap engineering to design appropriate materials for a particular LED To acknowledge other materials that can and have been used in LED
4 Main Issues
1. 2. 3. 4. The device configuration Materials requirements Materials selection Material issues
What is LED?
s tor ducy n i co u al i t Sem g q n bri ight! to l
LED are semiconductor p-n junctions that under forward bias conditions can emit radiation by electroluminescence in the UV, visible or infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The qaunta of light energy released is
Applications of LEDs
LED chip is the part that we shall deal with in this course
Excitation
E Electron (excited by the biased forward voltage) is in the conduction band
Normally the recombination takes place between transition of electrons between the bottom of the conduction band and the top of the valance band (band exterma). The emission of light is therefore; hc/ = Ec-Ev = Eg(only direct band gap
P-n junction
Electrical Contacts
A typical LED needs a p-n junction There are a lot of electrons and holes at the junction due to excitations Electrons from n need to be injected to p to promote recombination Junction is biased to produce even more e-h and to inject electrons from n to p for
Recombinatio n produces
Electrons in CB Holes in VB
Ideal LED will have all injection electrons to take part in the recombination process In real device not all electron will recombine with holes to radiate light Sometimes recombination occurs but no light is being emitted (non-radiative)
Emission wavelength,
The number of radiative recombination is proportional to the carrier injection rate Carrier injection rate is related to the current flowing in the junction If the transition take place between states (conduction and valance bands) the emission wavelength, g = hc/(EC-EV) EC-EV = Eg
g
= hc/Eg
Calculate
If GaAs has Eg = 1.43ev What is the wavelength, g it emits? What colour corresponds to the wavelength?
p n
Electrica l contacts
Substrate
LED Construction
Efficient light emitter is also an efficient absorbers of radiation therefore, a shallow p-n junction required. Active materials (n and p) will be grown on a lattice matched substrate. The p-n junction will be forward biased with contacts made by metallisation to the upper and lower surfaces. Ought to leave the upper part clear so photon can escape. The silica provides passivation/device isolation and carrier confinement
Efficient LED
Need a p-n junction (preferably the same semiconductor material only different dopants) Recombination must occur Radiative transmission to give out the right coloured LED Right coloured LED hc/ = Ec-Ev = Eg so choose material with the right Eg Direct band gap semiconductors to allow efficient recombination All photons created must be able to leave the semiconductor Little or no reabsorption of photons
Materials Requirements
Efficient radiative pathways must exist Material can be made p and ntype
UV-ED ~0.5-400nm Eg > 3.25eV LED - ~450-650nm Eg = 3.1eV to 1.6eV IR-ED- ~750nm- 1nm Eg = 1.65eV
Candidate Materials
Materials with refractive index that could allow light to get out Readily doped n or ptypes
Visible LED
Definition: LED which could emit visible light, the band gap of the materials that we use must be in the region of visible wavelength = 390- 770nm. This coincides with the energy value of 3.18eV- 1.61eV which corresponds to colours as stated below:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The band gap, ~ 3.17eV that the Eg 2.73eV semiconductor 2.52eV must posses to 2.15eV emit each light 2.08eV 1.62eV
Electromagnetic Spectrum
The appearance of the visible light will be the results of the overlap integral between the eye response curve and the spectral power of the device the peak of the luminous curve will not in general be the same as the peak of the spectral power curve
Visible lights
Question 1
Indicate the binary compounds that can be selected for red, yellow, green and blue LED.
iii iv ii
Al Ga In
v
N P As
Binary compounds
Questions to ask when choosing the right material: 1. Can it be doped or not? 2. What wavelength it can emit? 3. Would the material able to allow radiative recombiation? 4. Direct or indirect semiconductor?
Announcement
Evening classes