Embodiments relate to a light-emitting element, and more particularly, to a light-emitting element for emitting light in a specific direction.
Group 3 to 5 compound semiconductors such as GaN or AlGaN have been widely used for optoelectronics and electronic devices due to many advantages thereof such as wide and easily adjustable band gap energy.
In particular, a light-emitting element such as a light emitting diode or a laser diode using groups 3 to 5 or 2 to 6 compound semiconductor materials of a semiconductor is capable of realizing various colors such as red, green, blue, and ultraviolet by virtue of thin film growth technologies and device materials, is also capable of realizing white light with high efficiency using a fluorescent material or via color combination, and advantageously has low power consumption, semi-permanent lifetime, rapid response speed, safety, and environmental friendliness compared with an existing light source such as a fluorescent lamp and an incandescent lamp.
Accordingly, the light-emitting element has been expansively applied to a transmission module of an optical communication device, a light-emitting diode backlight replacing a cold cathode fluorescent lamp (CCFL) included in a backlight of a liquid crystal display (LCD) display device, a light-emitting diode illumination device replacing a fluorescent lamp or an incandescent lamp, a vehicle headlight, and a traffic light.
A conventional light-emitting element 100 may be configured in such a way that a light-emitting structure 120 including a first conductive-type semiconductor layer 122, an active layer 124, and a second conductive-type semiconductor layer 126 is disposed on a substrate 110 and a first electrode 162 and a second electrode 166 are disposed on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 122 and the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 126, respectively.
The light-emitting element 100 emits light with energy determined by a unique energy band of a material included in the active layer 124 via recombination between electronics injected through the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 122 and holes injected through the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 126. In this case, light emitted from the active layer 124 may also be emitted from an upper portion, a lower portion, or a lateral surface of the light-emitting element 100.
A light-emitting package 200 of
The light-emitting package 200 of
However, there is a limit in adjusting a path of light emitted from a light-emitting element only by the aforementioned structure of the cavity and, in particular, there is a need to reduce a volume of a light source of a light-emitting element used as a light source of a mobile device.
Embodiments provide a light-emitting element for transmitting light emitted therefrom in a specific direction and reducing the volume of a light source.
In one embodiment, a light-emitting element includes a light-emitting structure including a first conductive-type semiconductor layer, an active layer, and a second conductive-type semiconductor layer, a first ohmic layer disposed on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer and including an open region formed in a first region, a first electrode disposed in a second region on the first ohmic layer, and a second electrode disposed on the second conductive-type semiconductor layer.
The light-emitting element may further include a reflective layer disposed between the second conductive-type semiconductor layer and the second electrode.
The light-emitting element may further include a second ohmic layer disposed between the second conductive-type semiconductor layer and the reflective layer.
The light-emitting element may further include a transmissive insulating layer disposed between the second conductive-type semiconductor layer and the reflective layer, wherein the second ohmic layer is patterned and arranged.
The second ohmic layer may be arranged in a third region corresponding to the open region and a fourth region at an edge of the light-emitting structure.
The transmissive insulating layer may be disposed in an entire region between the third region and the fourth region between the second conductive-type semiconductor layer and the reflective layer.
The sum of cross sections of the second ohmic layers in a horizontal direction may be 3% to 4% of a cross section of the active layer in a horizontal direction.
The second ohmic layer may include a plurality of cells and each cell may have a size of 5 to 15 micrometers in a horizontal direction.
The first conductive-type semiconductor layer may be doped with an n-type dopant and includes AlxGa(1-x)As where 0.2≤x≤0.5.
The second conductive-type semiconductor layer may be doped with a p-type dopant and may include AlxGa(1-x)As where 0.2≤x≤0.5.
The first conductive-type semiconductor layer may include AlGa doped with an n-type dopant and may include a first layer and a second layer, and a composition ratio of Al of the second layer may be greater than that of Al of the first layer.
A thickness of the first layer may be 8 to 9 times a thickness of the second layer.
The second conductive-type semiconductor layer may include AlGa doped with a p-type dopant and may include a first layer and a second layer, and a composition ratio of Al of the second layer may be less than that of Al of the first layer.
A thickness of the second layer may be about four times a thickness of the first layer.
In another embodiment, a light-emitting element includes a light-emitting structure including a first conductive-type semiconductor layer, an active layer, and a second conductive-type semiconductor layer, a first ohmic layer disposed on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer and including an open region formed in a first region, and a second ohmic layer and a transmissive insulating layer that are selectively arranged on the second conductive-type semiconductor layer.
The light-emitting element may further include a first electrode disposed in a second region on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer, wherein the second ohmic layer and the transmissive insulating layer may be selectively arranged in a third region facing the first region and only the transmissive insulating layer may be disposed in a fourth region facing the second region.
The light-emitting element may further include a first electrode disposed in a second region on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer, wherein only the transmissive insulating layer may be disposed in a third region facing the first region and a fourth region facing the second region and the second ohmic layer and the transmissive insulating layer may be selectively arranged between the third region and the fourth region.
A width of the second ohmic layer and the transmissive insulating layer may be largest in a third region facing the first region.
The second ohmic layer may include a plurality of cells and each cell has a size of 5 to 15 micrometers.
In another embodiment, a light-emitting element package includes a body, a first electrode layer and a second electrode layer that are arranged on the body, a light-emitting element including a light-emitting structure disposed on the first electrode layer and including a first conductive-type semiconductor layer, an active layer, and a second conductive-type semiconductor layer, a first ohmic layer disposed on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer and including an open region formed in a first region, a first electrode disposed in a second region on the first ohmic layer, and a second electrode disposed on the second conductive-type semiconductor layer, and a protective layer disposed to surround a partial region of the light-emitting element, wherein the protective layer is open in a region corresponding to the first electrode and the first electrode and the second conductive layer are connected to each other through a wire.
A light-emitting element according to embodiments may emit light only to a predetermined region and/or in a predetermined direction through an open region on a first ohmic layer and may adjust a proceeding angle of the emitted direction without a cavity disposed on a body of a package.
Hereinafter, embodiments will be described in detail with reference to the attached drawings.
In the description of the embodiments, it will be understood that, when an element is referred to as being “on” or “under” another element, the term “on” or “under” means that the element is “directly” on or under another element or is “indirectly” formed such that an intervening element may also be present. In addition, it will also be understood that the criteria of “on” or “under” is on the basis of the drawings.
A light-emitting element 300 according to an embodiment may include a light-emitting structure 220 including a first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322, an active layer 324, and a second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326, a first ohmic layer 332 disposed on the light-emitting structure 320, a first electrode 362 disposed on the first ohmic layer 332, a second ohmic layer 336 and a transmissive insulating layer 340 that are disposed below the light-emitting structure 320, a reflective layer 350 disposed below the second ohmic layer 336 and the transmissive insulating layer 340, and a substrate 360 disposed below the reflective layer 350.
The first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 may be formed of a compound semiconductor of group III to V, II to VI, or the like and may be doped with a first conductive-type dopant. The first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 may be formed of any one or more of semiconductor materials represented by an empirical formula of AlxInyGa(1-x-y)N (0≤x≤1, 0≤y≤1, 0≤x+y≤1), i.e., AlGaN, GaN, InAlGaN, AlGaAs, GaP, GaAs, GaAsP, and AlGaInP.
For example, the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 may be AlxGa(1-x)As doped with an n-type dopant and, in this case, 0.2≤x≤0.5 and, in detail, may be formed by alternately disposing two layers formed of AlxGa(1-x)As doped with an n-type dopant. In this case, a first layer included in the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 may be formed of Al0.2Ga doped with an n-type dopant and a second layer included in the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 may be formed of Al0.3Ga doped with an n-type dopant. In addition, a thickness of the second layer may be about 400 nanometers and a thickness of the first layer may be 8 to 9 times the thickness of the second layer.
When the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 is an n-type semiconductor layer, the first conductive-type dopant may include an n-type dopant such as Si, Ge, Sn, Se, and Te. A dopant may be included at a density of 1017 atoms per cm3 in the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322.
The active layer 324 may include any one of a single well structure, a multi-well structure, a single quantum well structure, a multi-quantum well (MQW) structure, a quantum point structure, or a quantum line structure and may emit light in a red or infrared ray wavelength region and light in a blue wavelength region.
The active layer 324 may be formed with any one or more of a pair structure of a well layer and a barrier layer using a compound semiconductor material of group III to V element, for example, AlGaN/AlGaN, InGaN/GaN, InGaN/InGaN, AlGaN/GaN, InAlGaN/GaN, GaAs(InGaAs)/AlGaAs, and GaP(InGaP)/AlGaP.
The well layer may be formed of a material with a lower energy band gap than an energy band gap of the barrier layer.
The second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be formed of a semiconductor compound. The second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be formed of a compound semiconductor of group III to V, II to VI, or the like and may be doped with a second conductive-type dopant. The second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be formed of any one or more of semiconductor materials represented by an empirical formula of InxAlyGa1-x-yN (0≤x≤1, 0≤y≤1, 0≤x+y≤1), for example, AlGaN, GaN AlInN, AlGaAs, GaP, GaAs, GaAsP, and AlGaInP.
For example, the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be AlxGa(1-x)As doped with a p-type dopant and, in this case, 0.2≤x≤0.5 and, in detail, may be formed by alternately disposing two layers formed of AlxGa(1-x)As doped with a p-type dopant. In this case, a first layer included in the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be formed of Al0.33Ga doped with a p-type dopant and a second layer included in the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 may be formed of Al0.2Ga doped with a p-type dopant. In addition, a thickness of the first layer may be about 400 nanometers and a thickness of the second layer may be about four times the thickness of the first layer.
When the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 is a p-type semiconductor, the second conductive-type dopant may be a p-type dopant such as Mg, Zn, Ca, Sr, and Ba. A dopant may be included in a density of 1018 atoms per cm3 in the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326.
As shown in
The first ohmic layer 332 may include gold (Au), germanium (Ge), and so on and the second ohmic layer 336 may include silver (Au), zinc (Zn), beryllium (Be), or the like.
The first electrode 362 may be disposed on the first ohmic layer 332 disposed in a second region B on the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322.
The reflective layer 350 may be disposed below the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326. The reflective layer 350 may be formed of a material with excellent reflectivity and, for example, may be formed of a conductive material and, in detail, may include a metal layer including tungsten (W), titanium (Ti), molybdenum (Mo), aluminium (Al), silver (Ag), nickel (N), platinum (Pt), or rhodium (Rh), or alloy including Al, Ag, Pt, or Rh. Aluminium, silver, or the like may effectively reflect light directed toward a lower portion of the active layer 324 in
The second ohmic layer 336 and the transmissive insulating layer 340 may be disposed between the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 and the reflective layer 350 and may be selectively patterned and arranged as shown in the drawings.
The second ohmic layer 336 may electrically connect the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 326 to the substrate 360 therebelow and the transmissive insulating layer 340 may pass light reflected by the reflective layer 350 in an upward direction of
The transmissive insulating layer 340 may be formed of an insulating material and the insulating material may include a non-conductive oxide or nitride, for example, a silicon oxide (SiO2) layer, an oxynitride layer, and an oxide aluminium layer.
The substrate 360 may be disposed below the reflective layer 350 and the substrate 360 may be fixed to the reflective layer 350 through a conductive-type adhesive layer 355 and may function as a second electrode.
The adhesive layer 355 may be formed of a material selected from the group consisting of, for example, gold (Au), tin (Sn), indium (In), aluminium (Al), silicon (Si), silver (Ag), nickel (Ni), and copper (Cu) or an alloy thereof.
The substrate 360 may be formed of a conductive material, for example, metal or a semiconductor material. The substrate 360 may be formed of metal with excellent electrical conductivity or thermal conductivity and is capable of sufficiently dissipating heat generated during an operation of a light-emitting element and, thus, may be formed of a material with high thermal conductivity. For example, the substrate 360 may be formed of a material selected from the group consisting of silicon (Si), molybdenum (Mo), silicon (Si), tungsten (W), copper (Cu), and aluminium (Al) or an alloy thereof and may selectively include gold (Au), Cu alloy, nickel (N), copper-tungsten (Cu—W), a carrier wave (e.g., GaN, Si, Ge, GaAs, ZnO, SiGe, SiC, SiGe, or Ga2O3), or the like.
The substrate 360 may have mechanical strength for appropriately separating the light-emitting structure 320 as separate chips through a scribing process and a breaking process without bending of an entire portion of the light-emitting structure 320.
The light-emitting element 100 according to the aforementioned embodiment may allow light emitted from the active layer 324 to proceed only through an open region of the first ohmic layer 332 and to be emitted only to a predetermined region.
In
A size of the substrate 360 is larger than a size of a light-emitting structure and, thus, the substrate 360 may protrude out of an edge of the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 322 in
Light-emitting elements 400a to 400d shown in
In the light-emitting element 400a of
In
In
In
The fourth embodiment of the light-emitting elements shown in
The fifth embodiment of the light-emitting element shown in
In a light-emitting element according to embodiments, the second ohmic layer 436 may include a plurality of cells and each cell may have a size of 5 to 15 micrometers. Here, the ‘size’ refers to a diameter or a side of each cell.
When a size of each of the aforementioned cells is less than 5 micrometers, amplitude of supplied current may be reduced in a direction toward the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 426 from a second electrode to increase a driving voltage of a light-emitting element. When a size of each of the aforementioned cells is greater than 15 micrometers, an amount of light shielded in cells included in the second ohmic layer 436 from light reflected by the reflective layer 450 may be increased to cause light loss in the light-emitting element.
The sum of cross sections of the second ohmic layers 436 in a horizontal direction may be 3% to 4% of a cross section of an active layer 424 in a horizontal direction. When the aforementioned sum of the cross sections of the second ohmic layers 436 is less than 3%, current may not be smoothly supplied to the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 436 and, when the sum of the cross sections of the second ohmic layers 436 is greater than 4%, an amount of light re-reflected by the second ohmic layer 436 from light reflected by the reflective layer 450 may be increased.
To uniformly supply current to an entire region of the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 426, cells included in the second ohmic layer 436 may have a dot shape, which is more advantageous than a line shape or a circular arc shape.
Table 1 below shows a driving voltage and output in the aforementioned second to fifth embodiments of the aforementioned light-emitting element and shows a driving voltage and output when current of 50 mA is supplied to the light-emitting element.
As seen from Table 1 above, a driving voltage is lowest and output is highest in the second embodiment of the light-emitting element.
As illustrated in the drawings, it may be seen that, when a concentration of aluminium in the first conductive-type semiconductor layer 422 or the second conductive-type semiconductor layer 426 represented by AlxGa(1-x)As is less than 0.2, optical efficiency of a light-emitting element may be degraded. In addition, when a concentration of aluminium is greater than 0.5, resistance in a semiconductor layer may be increased and a driving voltage of a light-emitting element may be increased.
The aforementioned light-emitting element may emit light in various wavelength regions depending on composition of an active layer and, for example, may emit light in an infrared or red wavelength region.
A light-emitting package 500 may be configured in such a way that a first electrode layer 522 and a second electrode layer 526 are disposed in a body 510, and the aforementioned light-emitting element 300 is electrically connected to the first electrode layer 522 through a conductive adhesive layer 540 and is electrically connected to the second electrode layer 526 through a wire 532.
In detail, a protective layer 550 may be arranged to surround a partial region of the light-emitting element 300 and may be open in a region corresponding to the first electrode, and the first electrode and the second conductive layer 522 may be connected to each other through the wire 532.
The protective layer 550 may be arranged at a circumference of the light-emitting element 300 and may be a passivation layer or a molding portion. The protective layer 550 may include a fluorescent substance and, in this case, the fluorescent substance may be excited by light in a first wavelength region, emitted from the light-emitting element 300, to emit light in a second wavelength region.
The aforementioned light-emitting package 500 may emit light only to a predetermined region and/or in a predetermined region through an open region in the light-emitting element 300 and, thus, may adjust a proceeding angle of the emitted light without a cavity disposed in the body 510, unlike in the prior art.
The aforementioned light-emitting element and light-emitting element package may be used as a light source of an illumination system and, for example, may be used as a backlight unit of an image display device and a light source of a lamp device or a vehicular illumination device.
When used as a vehicular illumination device, the light-emitting element and the light-emitting element package may be used as headlights or taillights or as a light source of an indicator.
Since the aforementioned light-emitting element and light-emitting package may not include a cavity in a body, the light-emitting element and the light-emitting package may adjust a proceeding angle of light while reducing a volume of the element and package and, thus, may be used as a light source of a miniaturized device, in particular, a mobile terminal.
A display 620 may be disposed in a housing 610 of a mobile terminal 600 and a cover portion 650 for protecting a sound output unit (not shown) may be disposed in an upper central portion of the housing 610.
A camera module 630 and a light source 640 may be arranged adjacent to the cover portion 650, the light source 640 may be the aforementioned light-emitting element or light-emitting element package, and the light source 640 may be arranged on a front surface of the housing 610, as shown in
Although embodiments have been described with reference to a number of illustrative embodiments thereof, it should be understood that numerous other modifications and applications may be devised by those skilled in the art that will fall within the intrinsic aspects of the embodiments. More particularly, various variations and modifications are possible in concrete constituent elements of the embodiments. In addition, it is to be understood that differences relevant to the variations and modifications fall within the spirit and scope of the present disclosure defined in the appended claims.
A light-emitting element according to embodiments may be used as a light source and, in particular, when the light-emitting element is used as a light source of a mobile device, a proceeding angle of light may be adjusted while reducing a volume of the light source.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2015-0184755 | Dec 2015 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/KR2016/014559 | 12/13/2016 | WO | 00 |