The present disclosure relates to a light-emitting device, more particularly, to a light-emitting device with uniform current spreading and improved brightness.
The light-emitting diodes (LEDs) of the solid-state lighting elements have the characteristics of low power consumption, low heat generation, long operation life, crash proof, small volume, quick response and good opto-electrical property like light emission with a stable wavelength, so the LEDs have been widely used in household appliances, indicator light of instruments, and opto-electrical products, etc. As the opto-electrical technology develops, the solid-state lighting elements have great progress in the light efficiency, operation life and the brightness, and LEDs are expected to become the main stream of the lighting devices in the near future.
A conventional LED basically includes a substrate, an n-type semiconductor layer, an active layer and a p-type semiconductor layer formed on the substrate, and p, n-electrodes respectively formed on the p-type/n-type semiconductor layers. When imposing a certain level of forward voltage to the LED via the electrodes, holes from the p-type semiconductor layer and electrons from the n-type semiconductor layer are combined in the active layer to generate light. However, the electrodes shelter light emitted from the active layer, and current may be crowded in semiconductor layers near the electrodes. Thus, optimized electrode and current blocking structures are needed for improving brightness, optical field uniformity and lowering an operating voltage of the LED.
A light-emitting device, includes a semiconductor stack, including a first semiconductor layer, a second semiconductor layer and an active layer formed therebetween; a first electrode formed on the first semiconductor layer, comprising a first pad electrode; a second electrode formed on the second semiconductor layer, comprising a second pad electrode and a second finger electrode extending from the second pad electrode; a second current blocking region formed under the second electrode, comprising a second core region under the second pad electrode and an extending region under the second finger electrode; and a transparent conductive layer, formed on the second semiconductor layer and covering the second core region; wherein in a top view, a contour of the second pad electrode has a circular shape and a contour of the second core region has a shape which is different from the circular shape and selected from square, rectangle, rounded rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid and polygon.
To better and concisely explain the disclosure, the same name or the same reference number given or appeared in different paragraphs or figures along the specification should has the same or equivalent meanings while it is once defined anywhere of the disclosure.
As shown in
In this embodiment, the second electrode 30 includes three second finger electrodes 302 extending from the second pad electrode 301. The first electrode 20 includes two first finger electrodes 202 extending from the first pad electrode 201. The first pad electrode 201 and the second pad electrode 301 are respectively disposed near two opposite edges of the light-emitting device 1. One of the second finger electrodes 302 extends in a direction parallel with an edge between the two opposite edges of the light-emitting device 1 and is disposed between the two first finger electrodes 202. The two first finger electrodes 202 are disposed between the second finger electrodes 302 respectively.
In another embodiment, the first electrode 20 and the second electrode 30 include less or more finger electrodes.
In another embodiment, one of the first electrode 20 and the second electrode 30 includes the pad electrode without finger electrode extending therefrom.
The substrate 10 can be a growth substrate, for example, gallium arsenide (GaAs) wafer for growing aluminum gallium indium phosphide (AlGaInP), sapphire (Al2O3) wafer, gallium nitride (GaN) wafer or silicon carbide (SiC) wafer for growing indium gallium nitride (InGaN). The substrate 10 can be a patterned substrate with a patterned structure; i.e. the upper surface of the substrate 10 on which the semiconductor stack 12 is epitaxial grown can be patterned. Lights emitted from the semiconductor stack 12 can be refracted by the patterned structure of the substrate 10 so that the brightness of the LED is improved. Furthermore, the patterned structure retards or restrains the dislocation due to lattice mismatch between the substrate 10 and the semiconductor stack 12, so that the epitaxy quality of the semiconductor stack 12 is improved.
In an embodiment of the present application, the semiconductor stack 12 can be formed on the substrate 10 by organic metal chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), hydride vapor deposition (HVPE), or ion plating, such as sputtering or evaporation.
The semiconductor stack 12 includes a first semiconductor layer 121, an active layer 123 and a second semiconductor layer 122 sequentially formed on the substrate 10. In an embodiment of the present application, the first semiconductor layer 121 and the second semiconductor layer 122, such as a cladding layer or a confinement layer, have different conductivity types, electrical properties, polarities, or doping elements for providing electrons or holes. For example, the first semiconductor layer 121 is an n-type semiconductor, and the second semiconductor layer 122 is a p-type semiconductor. The active layer 123 is formed between the first semiconductor layer 121 and the second semiconductor layer 122. The electrons and holes combine in the active layer 123 under a current driving to convert electric energy into light energy to emit a light. The wavelength of the light emitted from the light-emitting device 1 or the semiconductor stack 12 is adjusted by changing the physical and chemical composition of one or more layers in the semiconductor stack 12.
The material of the semiconductor stack 12 includes a group III-V semiconductor material, such as AlxInyGa(1-x-y)N or AlxInyGa(1-x-y)P, wherein 0≤x, y≤1; (x+y)≤1. According to the material of the active layer, when the material of the semiconductor stack 12 is AlInGaP series material, red light having a wavelength between 610 nm and 650 nm or yellow light having a wavelength between 550 nm and 570 nm can be emitted. When the material of the semiconductor stack 12 is InGaN series material, blue or deep blue light having a wavelength between 400 nm and 490 nm or green light having a wavelength between 490 nm and 550 nm can be emitted. When the material of the semiconductor stack 12 is AlGaN series material, UV light having a wavelength between 400 nm and 250 nm can be emitted. The active layer 123 can be a single heterostructure (SH), a double heterostructure (DH), a double-side double heterostructure (DDH), or a multi-quantum well structure (MQW). The material of the active layer 123 can be i-type, p-type, or n-type semiconductor.
Besides, a buffer layer (not shown) is formed between the upper surface of the substrate 10 and the first semiconductor layer 121. The buffer layer also reduces the lattice mismatch described above and restrains the dislocation so as to improve the epitaxy quality. The material of the buffer layer includes GaN, AlGaN or AlN. In one embodiment, the buffer layer includes a plurality of sub-layers (not shown). The sub-layers include the same material or different material. In one embodiment, the buffer layer includes two sub-layers. The sub-layers include same material AlN. The growth method of the first sub-layer of the two sub-layers is sputtering, and the growth method of the second sub-layers of the two sub-layers is MOCVD. In one embodiment the buffer layer further includes a third sub-layer. The growth method of the third sub-layers is MOCVD, and the growth temperature of the second sub-layer is higher than or lower than that of the third sub-layer.
An exposed region 28 is formed by etching and removing parts of the second semiconductor layer 122 and the active layer 123 downward to an upper surface of the first semiconductor layer 121. The side surfaces of the second semiconductor layer 122 and the active layer 123 and the upper surface of the first semiconductor layer 121 are exposed. The first electrode 20 is disposed on the exposed upper surface of the first semiconductor layer 121 to form an electrical connection with the first semiconductor layer 121. The second electrode 30 is disposed on the second semiconductor layer 122 to form an electrical connection with the second semiconductor layer 122.
The first current blocking region 40 are formed between the first electrode 20 (the first pad electrode 201 and/or the first finger electrodes 202) and the first semiconductor layer 121, and the second current blocking region 50 is formed between the second electrode 30 (the second pad electrode 301 and/or the second finger electrodes 302) and the second semiconductor layer 122. Current is injected into the light-emitting device 1 via the first pad electrode 201 and the second pad electrode 301 and flows into the second finger electrodes 302, and then spreads in the transparent conductive layer 18 and the second semiconductor layer 122. The first current blocking region 40 and the second current blocking region 50 prevent most parts of the current from directly flowing into the active layer 123 under the electrodes. That is, the injected current is prevented from directly flowing downward at the electrode regions.
In the embodiment, as shown in
The material of the first and the second current blocking regions 40 and 50 includes transparent insulated material, such as silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, titanium oxide or aluminum oxide, etc. The structure of the current blocking region can be a single layer or alternately multiple layers, such as DBR (distributed Bragg reflector). The thickness of the first current blocking region 40 and the second current blocking region 50 ranges from 700-5000 Å. In one embodiment, the thickness of the first current blocking region 40 and the second current blocking region 50 ranges from 700-1000 Å. In another embodiment, the thickness of the first current blocking region 40 and the second current blocking region 50 ranges from 1000-5000 Å.
The transparent conductive layer 18 is formed on the second current blocking region 50 and the top surface of the second semiconductor layer 122, so that the current injected into the second electrode 30 can be spread uniformly by the transparent conductive layer 18 and then flow into the second semiconductor layer 122. Because the transparent conductive layer 18 is disposed on the light extraction side of the light-emitting device 1, an electrically-conducting material that has transparent property is preferable to be selected. More specifically, the transparent conductive layer 18 may include thin metal film. The material of the thin metal film can be Ni or Au. The material of the transparent conductive layer 18 includes oxide containing at least one element selected from zinc, indium, or tin, such as ZnO (zinc oxide), InO (indium oxide), SnO (tin oxide), ITO (indium tin oxide), IZO (indium zinc oxide), or GZO (gallium-doped zinc oxide).
As shown in
The transparent conductive layer 18 includes an opening 180 exposing the second core region 501 of the second current blocking region 50. In this embodiment, the width of the opening 180 of the transparent conductive layer 18 is smaller than the width of the second core region 501 and larger than the width of the second pad electrode 301. The transparent conductive layer 18 covers the top surface of the second semiconductor layer 122, the extending regions 502 of the second current blocking region 50 and partial top surface of the second core region 501. Because the width of the opening 180 of the transparent conductive layer 18 is larger than the width of the second pad electrode 301, the transparent conductive layer 18 does not contact the second pad electrode 301. In one embodiment, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The first portion 2021 of the first finger electrode 202 and the first portion 3021 of the second finger electrode 302 including wider widths and larger areas can allow higher current pass through to avoid electrostatic discharge (ESD) or Electrical Over Stress (EOS) damage.
As shown in
In one embodiment, the distance D2 between each two adjacent islands 402 is substantially equal. In another embodiment, the distance between each two adjacent islands 402 increases as along the island 402 is disposed far away from the first pad electrode 201. That is, while the island 402 is disposed more far away from the first pad electrode 201, the distance between two adjacent islands 402 is greater.
In another embodiment, the total length of all the islands 402 under one first finger electrode 202 is Lisland and the length of the one first finger electrode 202 is Lfinger; the ratio Lisland/Lfinger ranges from 20%-80%.
In another embodiment, an end of the first finger electrode 202 contacts the first semiconductor layer 121 without the islands 402 formed therebetween.
In another embodiment, the first finger electrode 202 and the second finger electrode 302 have different widths form a top view. For example, the first finger electrode 202 is wider than the second finger electrode 302.
In another embodiment, the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 and the island 402 of the first current blocking region 40 have different widths from a top view. For example, the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 is wider than the island 402 of the first current blocking region 40.
In the embodiments shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, the second electrode 30 includes two second finger electrodes 302 extending from the second pad electrode 301. The first electrode 20 includes one first finger electrode 202 extending from the first pad electrode 201. The first pad electrode 201 and the second pad electrode 301 are disposed near two opposite edges of the light-emitting device 3. The first finger electrode 202 extends in a direction parallel with an edge connecting the two opposite edges of the light-emitting device 3 and is disposed between the two second finger electrodes 302.
The first current blocking region 40 includes a first core region 401 under the first pad electrode 201 and a plurality of separated islands 402 under the first finger electrode 202. The second current blocking region 50 includes a second core region 501 under the second pad electrode 301 and a plurality of extending regions 502 extending from the second core region 501 and under the second finger electrodes 302.
As shown in
The first core region 401 of the first current blocking region 40 below the first pad electrode 201 prevents the current from being directly injected into the semiconductor layer under the pad electrode, so that the current is forced to spread laterally. Another advantage that a light emitting device with a current blocking region is that light emitted from the active layer can be extract by the current blocking region and then brightness of the light emitting device can be improved. However, a larger blocking region means a less contact area between electrodes and the semiconductor stack, and then the electric characteristics might be affected, such as forward voltage (Vf) of the light emitting device. The area, position or layout of the current blocking region is a tradeoff according to brightness and electric characteristics of the light emitting device. As shown in the first embodiment, the light-emitting device has the semiconductor stack 12 with a larger area, and then a plurality of first finger electrodes 202 are chosen to satisfy the current spreading purpose in the semiconductor stack 12 with the larger area, and the first core region 401 which has a larger area than that of the first pad electrode 201 benefits brightness. As shown in the third embodiment, the light-emitting device 3 has the semiconductor stack 12 with smaller area and less first finger electrodes, for example, a single first finger electrode 202, setting the first core region 401 to have an area smaller than that of the first pad electrode 201 increases the contact area between the first semiconductor layer 121 and the first electrode 20, so that the forward voltage (Vf) can be decreased.
In one embodiment, the first core region 401 and the first pad electrode 201 have different shapes as shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, as shown in
In another embodiment, the second extending region 502 and the second finger electrode 302 have different shapes in top view.
In one embodiment, the second core region 501 of the second current blocking region 50 includes an opening (not shown) exposing the second semiconductor layer 122, as described in the second embodiment. In one embodiment, the opening of the second core region 501 has a shape the same as the shape of the second core region 501. For example, a shape of the second core region 501 is a circle as shown in
The light-emitting device 4 includes a substrate 10 and a plurality of light-emitting units 22 (22a-22f) formed on the substrate 10 and arranged in a two-dimensional array. Each light-emitting unit 22 includes a semiconductor stack 12. The plurality of light-emitting units 22 electrically connects in series via connecting electrodes 60, first finger electrodes 202 and second finger electrodes 302 formed thereon.
The manufacturing method of the light-emitting device 4 is described as below. The semiconductor stack 12 is formed on a substrate 10 by epitaxy process. Then, as shown in
In another embodiment, in order to increase light-extraction efficiency or heat dispersion efficiency of the light-emitting device, the semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting unit 22 can be disposed on the substrate 10 by wafer transferring and wafer bonding. The wafer bonding method includes direct bonding or indirect bonding. Direct bonding can be fusion bonding or anodic bonding, etc. In indirect bonding, the semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting unit 22 is epitaxial grown on an epitaxial substrate (not shown), and then is bonded with the substrate 10 by adhering, heating or pressuring. The semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting unit 22 can be adhered to the substrate 10 by an inter-medium (not shown). The inter-medium can be a transparent adhesion layer, and it also can be replaced by a metal material. The transparent adhesion layer can be organic polymer transparent glue, such as polyimide, BCB (Benzocyclobutene), PFCB (Perfluorocyclobutyl), Epoxy, Acrylic resin, PET (Polyethylene terephthalate), PC (Polycarbonate) or combination thereof; or a transparent conductive oxide metal such as ITO, InO, SnO2, ZnO, FTO (fluorine-doped tin oxide), ATO (antimony tin oxide), CTO (cadmium tin oxide), AZO (aluminum-doped zinc-oxide), GZO (gallium-doped zinc oxide) or combination thereof; or an inorganic insulator, such as SOG (spin-on-glass), Al2O3, SiNx, SiO2, AlN, TiO2, Ta2O5 or combination thereof. The metal material includes but is not limited to Au, Sn, In, Ge, Zn, Be, Pd, Cr, or alloy thereof such as PbSn, AuGe, AuBe, AuSn, PdIn, etc.
In fact, the method of forming the semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting unit 22 on the substrate 10 is not limited to these approaches. People having ordinary skill in the art can understand that the semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting unit 22 can be directly epitaxial grown on the substrate 10 according to different characteristics of the structures, such as optical and electrical properties, or productivity.
Next, an insulator 23 is disposed on the trenches 36 and continuously covers side surfaces and top surfaces of the semiconductor stack 12 of the light-emitting units 22. The insulator 23 includes a middle structure 23a covering a portion or all of the trench 36 between two adjacent light-emitting units 22. Parts of the insulator 23 which covers the top surface of the second semiconductor layer 122 is patterned to form a second core region 501 and extending regions 502 of the second current blocking region 50 as described in the above embodiments. The extending regions 502 connect to the middle structure 23a. Parts of the insulator 23 on the first semiconductor layer 121 is further patterned to form a first core region 401 and a plurality of separated islands 402 of the first current blocking region 40 as described in the above embodiments. The islands 402 are separated from the middle structure 23a. The functions of the plurality of separated islands 402 of the first current blocking region 40 and the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 are the same as described in the above embodiments. The middle structure 23a of the insulator 23 formed in the trenches 36 and on the side surfaces of the light-emitting units 22 protects the semiconductor stacks 12 and electrically insulates the adjacent light-emitting units 22. The material of the insulator 23 includes transparent insulated material, such as silicon oxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, titanium oxide or aluminum oxide.
In one embodiment, the structures of the insulator 23 (the middle structure 23a, the second current blocking region 50 or the first current blocking region 40) can be a single layer or alternately multiple layers, such as DBR (distributed Bragg reflector).
In another embodiment, the plurality of separated islands 402 of the first current blocking region 40 is omitted.
In another embodiment, the first core region 401 of the first current blocking region 40 is omitted.
Then, the transparent conductive layer 18 is disposed on the second semiconductor layer 122 and covers the extending regions 502 of the second current blocking region 50. The transparent conductive layer 18 includes an opening 180 on the light-emitting unit 22a exposing the second core region 502. The material of the transparent conductive layer 18 includes a metal oxide material such as indium tin oxide (ITO), cadmium tin oxide (CTO), antimony tin oxide (ATO), indium zinc oxide (IZO), aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO), or zinc tin oxide (ZTO). A metal layer with a thickness that light can pass through also can be the transparent conductive layer 18.
Next, an electrode layer is formed on the light-emitting units 22 and the trenches 36. The electrode layer includes the first pad electrode 201 on the light-emitting units 22f, the second pad electrode 301 on the light-emitting units 22a, first finger electrodes 202 and second finger electrodes 302 formed on the light-emitting units 22a-22f, and connecting electrodes 60 formed between two adjacent light-emitting units 22 (22a and 22b, 22b and 22c, 22c and 22d, 22d and 22e, 22e and 22f). Each of the connecting electrodes 60 is formed on the trench 36 and connects the first finger electrode 202 on one light-emitting unit and the second finger electrodes 302 on the adjacent light-emitting units 22. Each connecting electrode 60 connecting the first finger electrode 202 and the second finger electrodes 302 electrically connects two adjacent light-emitting units 22 so that the light-emitting units 22 form a series light-emitting diode array. In the present embodiment, a width of each connecting electrode 60 is larger than that of the first finger electrodes 202 and the second finger electrodes 302 in top view.
As shown in
The structures of the first electrode 20, the first current blocking region 40, the second electrode 30, the transparent conductive layer 18 and the second current blocking region 50 described in the above embodiments can be applied in the light-emitting device 4. More specifically, the structures of the first pad electrode 201, the first core region 401 of the first current blocking region 40, the second pad electrode 301, the transparent conductive layer 18 and the second core region 501 of the second current blocking region 50 described in the above embodiments can be applied in the light-emitting device 4. For example, as shown in
Referring to
As shown in
The middle part 23a of the insulator 23 under the connecting electrode 60 has a width W larger than that of the connecting electrode 60. In one embodiment, W is larger than twice of the maximum width of the connecting electrode 60.
In one embodiment, a width of the middle structure 23a that exceeds the connecting electrode 60 is larger than a width of the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 that exceeds the second finger electrode 302.
In another embodiment, one end of the middle part 23a of the insulator 23 connects to the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 of one light-emitting unit 22, and the other end of the middle part 23a does not cover the side surface of the first semiconductor layer 121 of the adjacent light-emitting unit 22. The side surface of the first semiconductor layer 121 is exposed, and the connecting electrode 60 contacts the side surface of the first semiconductor layer 121 via the exposed side surface of the first semiconductor layer 121.
In another embodiment, the thickness of the middle part 23a of the insulator 23 on the side surface of each light-emitting unit 22 is smaller than that of the island 402 of the first current blocking region 40 and/or that of the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50.
In another embodiment, the first finger electrode 202 and the second finger electrode 302 have different widths from a top view. For example, the first finger electrode 202 is wider than the second finger electrode 302.
In another embodiment, the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 and the island 402 of the first current blocking region 40 have different widths from a top view. For example, the extending region 502 of the second current blocking region 50 is wider than the island 402 of the first current blocking region 40.
The material of the first pad electrode 201, the first finger electrodes 202, the second pad electrode 301, the second finger electrodes 302 and the connecting electrodes 60 are preferably metal, such as Au, Ag, Cu, Cr, Al, Pt, Ni, Ti, Sn, Rh, alloy or stacked composition of the materials described above.
The light-emitting unit 22a can be the start unit of the electrical series and the light-emitting unit 22f can be the end unit of the electrical series. The light-emitting device 4 electrically connects to an external power or other circuits by wiring or soldering the first pad electrode 201 and the second pad electrode 301.
It will be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the devices in accordance with the present application without departing from the scope or spirit of the disclosure. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the present disclosure covers modifications and variations of this disclosure provided they fall within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/220,444, filed Dec. 14, 2018, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/607,689, filed Dec. 19, 2017, each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62607689 | Dec 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16220444 | Dec 2018 | US |
Child | 18223898 | US |