This invention relates to a light-emitting semiconductor device having enhanced brightness, particularly to a high power light emitting diode using a metal mesh directly onto the upper cladding layer of the active layer instead of on a transparent oxide layer.
The principles lying behind luminance of light emitting diodes relate to injecting an electric current sequentially through P-N junctions of a semiconductor to generate light, wherein AlGaInP is implemented in high brightness red, orange, yellow and yellowish green LEDs, AlGaInN is in blue and green LEDs. The process of metal organic vapor phase epitaxy (MOVPE) is commonly adopted in the mass production of the LEDs, while the light-emitting components are of the structures, including: homo-junction (HOMO), single-heterostructure (SH), double-heterostructure (DH), single-quantum well (SQW) and multiple-quantum well (MQW) or other appropriate structures.
The structure of a conventional light emitting diode is illustrated in
To enhance the current distribution, improvements have been made to the structures and materials, such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,008,718 by Fletcher et al., where a capping layer 15 (or window layer), made of GaP, GaAsP and AlGaAs having a low resistance value and being pervious to light, is added between the front contact and active layer, as shown in
Another embodiment is to change the design of the electrode. The structure metal electrode is a mesh. Please refer to
The material of the substrate 100 is dependent on the material of the active layer 120. When the active layer 120 is made of AlGaInP, GaAs is chosen as the substrate. When the active layer 120 is made of AlGaInN. Any of sapphire, may be selected as the substrate. The active layer is preferred to be in the range from 0.3 to 3 μm in thick. The thickness of the transparent layer 140 is preferred to be in the range from 10 to 50 μm. Both the active layer 120 and the transparent layer 140 are formed by MOVPE or molecular beam epitaxy (MBE).
The metallic mesh layer 210 suggested are dimensioned to 0.5 to 5 micrometers and evenly distributed above the substrate. If the meshes are dimensioned to 2 μm with a capping layer having a thickness of 15 μm, the light-emitting angle θ is calculated by, tan s2θc=2/15→2θc≈7.6°→θc≈3.8°.
It is a primary objective of this invention to provide a light-emitting diode to save the cost.
It is another object of the present invention is to improve the injecting current distribution and less light be shadowed by the metal mesh line.
The present invention discloses a light-emitting diode having a metal mesh pattern formed directly on an active layer without a transparent oxide conductive layer formed in between to save the manufacture cost. The mesh pattern is formed by using ion bombardment a metal layer so that myriad pits formed into the exposed portion of the active layer served as light emitting centers.
These and other modifications and advantages will become even more apparent from the following detained description of preferred embodiments of the invention and from the drawings in which:
According to a preferred embodiment, the light emitting diode has a metal meshes directly formed on the active layer without a transparent layer there between and in the openings of the meshes has myriad pits formed therein to service as emitting centers.
Referring to
In accordance with a preferred embodiment, a metal layer is directly formed on the active layer 120 without a transparent layer 140 in between. The metal layer has a thickness between about 10˜100 nm. A photoresist pattern having round holes or mesh pattern is formed on the metal layer as an etching mask. The coverage of the photoresist layer is about 20% to 30%. Thereafter, a dry etching such as an ion bombardment technique is carried out to etch the metal layer so as to generate a mesh pattern 210 having round holes 200A or lattice holes, as shown in
In another preferred embodiment, an ion beam etching technique is performed to pattern the metal layer by using a reticle having rounded holes or a mesh pattern as the etching mask. The rounded holes in the mesh have a diameter between about 1 μm to hundreds μm. In case of lattice holes in the mesh layer 210, the width of the mesh line is between 100 nm to 5000 nm so that the remnant metal with an area-coverage is between about 20-26%.
The material of the metal mesh layer 210 is selected from copper or silver. The conductivity of the Cu and Ag are, respectively, of about 6.3×107 s/m (or 1.728×10−8 Ωm in resistivity) and 5.85×107 s/m in SI unit in compare with the 104 s/m for ITO. For a case of metal area-coverage 25%, the transparency would be 75%. The transparency of the ITO is of about 80% for blue light or red light. Thus the total light emitting out from the metal mash layer is anticipated better than out from the ITO layer since the conductivity of metal mesh pattern is significantly surpass than that of the ITO.
The benefits of the present invention are:
1. The metal mesh pattern is directly formed on the active layer. No widow layer such as an ITO, GaP, GaAsP or AlGaAs layer is demanded. It is thus save the cost and time.
2. The metal mash layer is patterned by ion bombardment, myriad pits and become current centers are resulted and formed on the active layer where the centers are at the openings of the mesh pattern.
3. The current injection is directly through the metal mesh lines. It is thus the current distribution is uniform.
This invention is related to a novel creation that makes a breakthrough in the art. Aforementioned explanations, however, are directed to the description of preferred embodiments according to this invention. Since this invention is not limited to the specific details described in connection with the preferred embodiments, changes and implementations to certain features of the preferred embodiments without altering the overall basic function of the invention are contemplated within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99100976 A | Jan 2010 | TW | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3936322 | Blum et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
8288786 | Hwang et al. | Oct 2012 | B2 |
20090242929 | Lin | Oct 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110169044 A1 | Jul 2011 | US |