This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2012-0002467, filed on Jan. 9, 2012, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
1. Field
The present disclosure relates to tappets and nozzles of phosphor dispensers for coating a phosphor liquid on a light-emitting device package.
2. Description of the Related Art
Light-emitting device chips, for example, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), are semiconductor devices that realize various light colors by configuring a light source having a PN junction of compound semiconductors. LEDs have a long lifetime, may be miniaturized and manufactured light, and may be driven at a low voltage due to a high directionality. Also, LEDs are strong against impact and vibration, do not require a preheating time and a complicated driving, and may be packaged in various types. Accordingly, LEDs may be applied for various purposes.
In order to realize a light-emitting device that emits white light, generally, a phosphor layer in which a yellow phosphor or a mixture of a green phosphor and a red phosphor is formed on a blue light-emitting diode. The phosphor layer is formed on a light-emitting device chip by coating a phosphor liquid, in which a phosphor is mixed with an epoxy resin or a silicon resin, using a phosphor dispenser. Through a drying process of the phosphor layer, a light-emitting device package is manufactured.
A phosphor dispenser includes a nozzle through which a phosphor liquid is ejected and a tappet that pushes the phosphor liquid towards the nozzle while the tappet is moving towards the nozzle.
A conventional tappet and nozzle are formed of materials having a high abrasion resistance, for example, tungsten carbide, or wear-resistant ceramics, for example, silicon nitride, silicon carbide, or zirconia.
However, the tappet and nozzle are worn out by the phosphor due to repeated and high-speed reciprocal movement of the tappet, and accordingly, it is difficult to eject a uniform quantity of a phosphor liquid and the life expectancy of the tappet and nozzle is shortened.
Provided are phosphor dispensers that can improve wearing characteristics of a tappet and nozzle that are worn out by a phosphor of a phosphor liquid in an ejecting process.
Additional aspects will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practice of the presented embodiments.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a phosphor dispenser that ejects a phosphor liquid, the phosphor dispenser including: a nozzle having a space for accommodating the phosphor liquid, wherein an opening for ejecting the phosphor liquid is connected to the space; and a tappet reciprocally movable with respect to the nozzle to eject the phosphor liquid in the space through the nozzle, wherein the tappet includes a cylindrical unit having a cylindrical shape and a convex unit having a hemispherical shape that is convex towards the nozzle from the cylindrical unit, and the convex unit includes polycrystalline diamond (POD).
The convex unit may include a plurality of diamond particles and a binder.
The plurality of diamond particles may have an average diameter approximately in a range from about 1 μm to about 1.7 μm.
An amount of the binder may approximately be in a range from about 8 wt. % to about 16 wt. % of the total weight including the plurality of diamond particles.
The phosphor dispenser may further include a binding layer between the convex unit and the cylindrical unit for bonding the convex unit and the cylindrical unit.
The cylindrical unit may include tungsten carbide or a wear-resistant ceramic.
At least a concave unit of the nozzle that corresponds to the convex unit and contacts the space may include PCD.
The convex unit and the cylindrical unit may be formed as one body, and only a surface of the convex unit may be coated with PCD.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a phosphor dispenser that ejects a phosphor liquid. The phosphor dispenser includes a nozzle having a space for accommodating the phosphor liquid, wherein an opening for ejecting the phosphor liquid is connected to the space; and a tappet reciprocally movable with respect to the nozzle to eject the phosphor liquid in the space of the nozzle through the nozzle, wherein the tappet includes a cylindrical unit having a cylindrical shape and a groove in a length direction thereof, and a convex unit having a hemispherical shape and including an extension unit extending to correspond to the groove in the cylindrical unit and to face the hemispherical shape, and the convex unit includes polycrystalline diamond (PCD).
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a phosphor dispenser that includes a nozzle having a space for accommodating a phosphor liquid and an opening for ejecting the phosphor liquid; and a tappet reciprocally movable with respect to the nozzle to eject the phosphor liquid from the space through the opening, wherein said tappet includes polycrystalline diamond (PCD).
At least a portion of the tappet adjacent to the nozzle includes the polycrystalline diamond (PCD).
At least a portion of the nozzle adjacent to the tappet includes polycrystalline diamond (PCD).
The tappet may include a cylindrical unit having a cylindrical shape and a convex unit having a hemispherical shape that is convex towards the nozzle from the cylindrical unit, the at least a portion of the tappet may include the convex unit.
The cylindrical unit may include tungsten carbide or a wear-resistant ceramic.
The tappet may include a coating layer formed on a surface thereof, the at least a portion of the tappet may include the coating layer.
According to the present disclosure, the lifetimes of the tappet and the nozzle of the phosphor dispenser may be increased.
Also, it is possible to eject an accurate quantity of a phosphor liquid, and thus, a color distribution of a light-emitting device package may be improved. In particular, because the wear-resistance of the tappet and nozzle can be improved, phosphor particles having a relatively large diameter may be effectively ground, and thus, the color distribution of the light-emitting device package may further be improved.
These and/or other aspects will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout and the thicknesses or sizes of each constituent element are exaggerated for clarity. It will be understood that when an element or layer is referred to as being “on” another element or layer, the element or layer may be directly on another element or layer, or intervening elements or layers may also be present.
Referring to
A tappet 140 includes a convex unit 142 that corresponds to a concave unit 114 (refer to
A first force to move the tappet 140 in a direction indicated by an arrow B (an upwards direction as viewed in
Referring to
When a voltage is not applied to the piezoactuator 170, the tappet 140 receives a force in the direction indicated by the arrow B from the compressive spring 160. Accordingly, the convex unit 142 is separated from the nozzle 110. At this point, the opening 112 of the nozzle 110 is filled with a phosphor liquid supplied from a first region A1.
Next, when a voltage is applied to the piezoactuator 170, the tappet 140 moves in the direction indicated by the arrow C by a force of the piezoactuator 170, and thus, the convex unit 142 presses the phosphor liquid in the nozzle 110. Accordingly, the phosphor liquid is ejected through the opening 112.
In
Referring to
A portion of the tappet 140 where wearing occurs, due to a phosphor in the phosphor liquid when the tappet 140 reciprocally moves, is a surface of the convex unit 142. Also, a portion of the nozzle 110 where wearing mainly occurs due to friction with the phosphor liquid is the concave unit 114. The degree of wearing of the convex unit 142 may be seen from the reduction of a length of a radius of the convex unit 142, in particular, a radius “r” of a portion of the convex unit 142 that perpendicularly contacts the surface of the concave unit 114.
The tappet 140 according to the current exemplary embodiment includes the cylindrical unit 144 having a cylindrical shape and the convex unit 142 that convexly protrudes towards the nozzle 110 from the cylindrical unit 144. The convex unit 142 may have a hemispherical shape.
The cylindrical unit 144 may be formed of tungsten carbide.
The convex unit 142 may be formed of polycrystalline diamond (PCD). The PCD is manufactured by sintering a mold after forming the mold by combining diamond particles with a binder. The diamond particles may have an average diameter approximately in a range from about 1 μm to about 1.7 μm, and may have a size in a range from about 0.7 μm to about 2 μm.
In order to mold diamond particles, a binder is used. The binder bonds the diamond particles together by being interposed therebetween. The binder may be one selected from the group consisting of cobalt, chrome, nickel, manganese, tantalum, iron, and titanium carbide, or a mixture of these materials.
If the diamond particles have an average diameter greater than 2 μm, then the binder having a relatively low hardness may be worn by phosphor particles having a diameter approximately in a range from about 2 μm to about 16 μm. When this wearing due to the diamond particles having an average diameter greater than 2 μm occurs, the bonding between the diamond particles can be broken, and thus, a portion of the convex unit 142 of the tappet 140 may be broken.
The amount of the binder may vary according to the diameter of the diamond particles. The amount of the binder may approximately be in a range from about 8 wt. % to about 16 wt. % of the total weight including the diamond particles.
In order to bond the convex unit 142 formed of PCD to the cylindrical unit 144, a binder 146 is applied between the convex unit 142 and the cylindrical unit 144. The binder 146 may be referred to as a binding layer. Afterwards, the convex unit 142 and the cylindrical unit 144 are bonded by melting the binder 146 at a temperature of 1,400° C. through electrical welding under a high pressure of, for example, 80,000 bar. The binder 146 may be cobalt or the binder materials described above.
The wear-resistance of the tappet 140 is improved since the convex unit 142 of the tappet 140 includes PCD. However, when the nozzle 110 is made of a conventional hard metal or a wear-resistant ceramic, the wear-resistance of the nozzle 110 may not be relatively improved. Accordingly, the ejection of a uniform quantity of a phosphor liquid becomes difficult and the lifetime of the nozzle 110 may be reduced. In order to enable preventing these problems, like the convex unit 142 of the tappet 140, the nozzle 110 may also be formed of PCD. At this point, when the nozzle 110 includes PCD, the particle size of the diamonds and the amount and kind of binder are substantially the same as those of the convex unit 142, and thus, detailed descriptions thereof are omitted.
The convex unit 142 and the nozzle 110 may be formed of a single diamond.
Referring to
In
Referring to
In the current embodiment, the convex unit 142 and the nozzle 110 are formed of PCD. However, the present disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, the convex unit 142 may be formed such that a basic material of the convex unit 142 includes a hard material such as tungsten carbide, or a wear-resistant material such as zirconia, silicon carbide, or silicon nitride; and a PCD coating may be formed on a surface of the convex unit 142. The PCD coating can be a mixture of a binder and diamond particles.
When a PCD coating is formed on the surface of the convex unit 142, main bodies of the cylindrical unit 144 and the convex unit 142 may be formed as one body.
Like the convex unit 142, the nozzle 110 may also be formed such that a basic material of the nozzle 110 is a hard material such as tungsten carbide or a wear-resistant material such as zirconia, silicon carbide, or silicon nitride; and a PCD coating may be formed on a surface of the concave unit 114 of the nozzle 110.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The cylindrical unit 444 may be formed of tungsten carbide. The convex unit 442 may be formed of PCD. PCD is formed by sintering at a high temperature under a high pressure after forming a mold by mixing a binder and diamond particles. The diamond particles may have an average diameter approximately in a range from about 1 μm to about 1.7 μm, and may have a size in a range from about 0.7 μm to about 2 μm.
When the convex unit 442 is formed using PCD, after forming a mold by mixing diamond particles and a binder, the mold is sintered. The binder bonds the diamond particles together by being interposed therebetween. The binder may be cobalt or a binder material described above.
In order to bond the cylindrical unit 444 to the convex unit 442, a binder 446 is introduced between the cylindrical unit 444 and the convex unit 442. Afterwards, the convex unit 442 and the cylindrical unit 444 may be bonded by melting the binder 446 at a temperature of 1,400° C. through electrical welding under a high pressure of, for example, 80,000 bar. In
In
While this disclosure has been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2012-0002467 | Jan 2012 | KR | national |