Published October 18, 1993
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Journal Article
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30% external quantum efficiency from surface textured, thin-film light-emitting diodes
Chicago
Abstract
There is a significant gap between the internal efficiency of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and their external efficiency. The reason for this shortfall is the narrow escape cone for light in high refractive index semiconductors. We have found that by separating thin-film LEDs from their substrates (by epitaxial lift-off, for example), it is much easier for light to escape from the LED structure and thereby avoid absorption. Moreover, by nanotexturing the thin-film surface using "natural lithography," the light ray dynamics becomes chaotic, and the optical phase-space distribution becomes "ergodic," allowing even more of the light to find the escape cone. We have demonstrated 30% external efficiency in GaAs LEDs employing these principles.
Additional Information
Copyright © 1993 American Institute of Physics. Received 9 April 1993; accepted 9 August 1993. The authors thank H. W. Deckman, S. A. Schwarz of DARPA and ONR under Contract No. N0014-93-1-0311.Files
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