Cause of LED efficiency droop finally revealed: Auger recombination responsible

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

(Phys.org)—Researchers at University of California, Santa Barbara, in collaboration with colleagues at the École 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 of LEDs has held the technology back as a viable replacement for 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 efficiencies. LEDs have enormous potential for providing long-lived high quality efficient sources of lighting for residential and . 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 .

"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."

Cause of LED efficiency droop finally revealed
These are UC Santa Barbara researchers Justin Iveland (left) and Professor James Speck. Credit: UCSB

"This was a very complex experiment—one that illustrates the benefits of teamwork through both an and a DOE Energy Frontier Research Center," commented Weisbuch, distinguished professor of Materials at UCSB. Weisbuch, who is also a faculty member at the École 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 École Polytechnique.

In 2011, UCSB professor Chris van de Walle and colleagues theorized that a complex non-radiative process known as 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 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.

More information: 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 at arxiv.org/abs/1304.5469

Journal information: Physical Review Letters

Citation: Cause of LED efficiency droop finally revealed: Auger recombination responsible (2013, April 23) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2013-04-efficiency-droop-revealed-auger-recombination.html
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