- News (semiconductor diode)
Researchers from the Smart Lighting Engineering Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
have successfully integrated an LED and a power transistor on the same
gallium nitride (GaN) chip. This innovation could open the door to a
new generation of LED technology that is less expensive to manufacture,
significantly more efficient, and which enables new functionalities
and applications far beyond illumination.
At
the heart of today’s light-emitting diode (LED) lighting systems are
chips made from GaN, a semiconductor material. For the LED to function,
many external components--such as inductors, capacitors, silicon
interconnects, and wires--must be installed on or integrated into the
chip. The large size of the chip, with all of these necessary
components, complicates the design and performance of LED lighting
products. Additionally, the process of assembling these complex LED
lighting systems can be slow, manually intensive, and expensive.
In a new study led by T. Paul Chow, professor in the Department of Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering
(ECSE) at Rensselaer, the researchers sought to solve this challenge by
developing a chip with components all made from GaN. This type of
monolithically integrated chip simplifies LED device manufacturing, with
fewer assembly steps and less required automation. Additionally, LED
devices made with monolithically integrated chips will have fewer parts
to malfunction, higher energy efficiency and cost effectiveness, and
greater lighting design flexibility.
Chow
and the research team grew a GaN LED structure directly on top of a
GaN high-electron-mobility transistor (HEMT) structure. They used
several basic techniques to interconnect the two regions, creating what
they are calling the first monolithic integration of a HEMT and an LED
on the same GaN-based chip. The device, grown on a sapphire substrate,
demonstrated light output and light density comparable to standard GaN
LED devices. Chow said the study is an important step toward the
creation of a new class of optoelectronic device called a light
emitting integrated circuit (LEIC).
“Just
as the integration of many silicon devices in a single chip,
integrated circuits, has enabled powerful compact computers and a wide
range of smart device technology, the LEIC will play a pivotal role in
cost-effective monolithic integration of electronics and LED technology
for new smart lighting applications and more efficient LED lighting
systems,” Chow said.
“This
new study, and the device we have created, is just the tip of the
iceberg,” said Smart Lighting ERC Director Robert Karlicek, a co-author
of the study and ECSE professor at Rensselaer. “LEICs will result in
even higher energy efficiency of LED lighting systems. But what will be
even more exciting are the new devices, new applications, and new
breakthroughs enabled by LEICs--they will truly usher in the era of
smart lighting.”
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