| Literature DB >> 27671271 |
Gopinathan Anoop1,2, Janardhanan R Rani3, Juhwan Lim3, Myoung Soo Jang1, Dong Wook Suh1, Shinill Kang3, Seong Chan Jun3, Jae Soo Yoo1.
Abstract
The long-term instability of the presently available best commercial phosphor-converted light-emitting diodes (pcLEDs) is the most serious obstacle for the realization of low-cost and energy-saving lighting applications. Emission from pcLEDs starts to degrade after approximately 200 h of operation because of thermal degradation of the phosphors. We propose a new strategy to overcome this thermal degradation problem of phosphors by wrapping the phosphor particles with reduced graphene oxide (rGO). Through the rGO wrapping, we have succeeded in controlling the thermal degradation of phosphors and improving the stability of fabricated pcLEDs. We have fabricated pcLEDs with long-term stability that maintain nearly 98% of their initial luminescence emission intensity even after 800 h of continuous operation at 85 °C and 85% relative humidity. The pcLEDs fabricated using SrBaSi2O2N2:Eu2+ phosphor particles wrapped with reduced graphene oxide are thermally stable because of enhanced heat dissipation that prevents the ionization of Eu2+ to Eu3+. We believe that this technique can be applied to other rare-earth doped phosphors for the realization of highly efficient and stable white LEDs.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27671271 PMCID: PMC5037423 DOI: 10.1038/srep33993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic illustration showing experimental method of GO wrapping over phosphor. (b) Digital image of the fabricated pcLED using GO 1200 phosphor operated at 100 mA. (c–e) FESEM images of fresh phosphor and phosphor samples GO 1200, and GO 1350. (f) PL of the fresh, annealed, and GO-wrapped phosphors. Inset shows the variation in PL intensity with annealing and GO wrapping. (g) XRD patterns of fresh, annealed, and GO-wrapped phosphors.
Figure 2(a–f) TEM and HRTEM images of GO 1200, (g–l) TEM and HRTEM images of GO 1350. The wrapping of rGO over GO 1200 phopshors is clearly visibile, while in GO 1350, the self-wrapping of rGO sheets results in the formation of nanoscrolls.
Figure 3TEM and HRTEM images of GO 1350 from various regions.
The corresponding SAED patterns are also shown in the inset.
Figure 4(a) EL spectra of the pcLEDs fabricated using fresh, GO 1200 and GO 1350 phosphors. The inset shows the corresponding CIE coordinates. (b) Variation of EL intensities with time of pcLEDs fabricated using fresh and GO 1200 phosphors as well as commercial YAG:Ce3+ and silicate phosphor and operated at 85 °C and 85% rel. humidity. The long term reliability test under stress conditions shows superior thermal stability of rGO wrapped phosphors compared to fresh and commercial phosphors. (c) The Raman G peak shift as a function of the incident laser power. (d) Schematic illustration showing the heat dissipation mechanism in pcLEDs fabricated using unwrapped and rGO-wrapped phosphor. Because of the high thermal conductivity of rGO, thermal oxidation of Eu2+ activators to Eu3+ is considerably reduced, which gives rise to long term reliability of pcLEDs fabricated using rGO-wrapped phosphors.
Optical properties of fabricated white LEDs using unwrapped and wrapped phosphors.
| Phosphor | CIE x | CIE y | CCT | Efficacy (lm/W) | CRI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh | 0.3404 | 0.3779 | 5263 | 117 | 59.5 |
| UW 1200 | 0.3201 | 0.3372 | 6077 | 108 | 63.4 |
| UW 1350 | 0.3302 | 0.3546 | 5594 | 94 | 65.6 |
| GO 1200 | 0.3186 | 0.3472 | 6109 | 98 | 70 |
| GO 1350 | 0.3246 | 0.3543 | 5827 | 89 | 62 |
| Silicate (commercial) | 0.3143 | 0.3375 | 6370 | 165 | 59.1 |
$CCT-coordinated color temperature. CCT values provide a general indication of the apparent “warmth” or “coolness” of the light emitted by the source.
#CRI-color rendering index.