The present invention was made under support from the University of California, Santa Barbara Solid State Lighting and Display Center member companies, including Stanley Electric Co., Ltd., Mitsubishi Chemical Corp., Rohm Co., Ltd., Cree, Inc., Matsushita Electric Works, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., and Seoul Semiconductor Co., Ltd.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention is related to light emitting diodes (LEDs), and more particularly, to a single or multi-color LED by growth over a patterned substrate.
2. Description of the Related Art
A light emitting diode (LED) is a semiconductor device that emits light in a stimulated manner when electrically biased in the forward direction. This effect is a form of electroluminescence.
An LED is comprised of a chip of semiconducting material impregnated, or doped, with impurities to create a structure called a pn junction. When biased forwardly, electrons are injected into the junction from the n-region and holes are injected from the p-region. The electrons and holes release energy in the form of photons as they recombine. The wavelength of the light, and therefore its color, depends on the bandgap energy of the materials forming the pn junction.
As semiconductor materials have improved, the efficiency of semiconductor devices has also improved and new wavelength ranges have been used. Gallium nitride (GaN) based light emitters are probably the most promising for a variety of applications. GaN provides efficient illumination in the ultraviolet (UV) to amber spectrum, when alloyed with varying concentrates of indium (In), for example.
Unfortunately, most of the light emitted within a semiconductor LED material is lost due to total internal reflection at the semiconductor-air interface. Typical semiconductor materials have a high index of refraction, and thus, according to Snell's law, most of the light will remain trapped in the materials, thereby degrading efficiency. By choosing a suitable geometry for the LED, a higher extraction efficiency can be achieved.
One method for reducing the effects of the total internal reflection is to create light scattering or redistribution through random texturing of the surface of the device, which leads to multiple variable-angle incidence at the semiconductor-air interface of the device. This approach has been shown to improve emission efficiency by 9-30%, as a result of the very high internal efficiency and low internal losses, which allows many passes for light before it escapes from the device.
Another method to reduce the percentage of light trapped is to use a Resonant-Cavity LED (RCLED) or Micro-Cavity LED (MCLED). MCLEDs offer opportunities to create solid-state lighting systems with greater efficiencies than existing systems using “traditional” LEDs. As a result of incorporating a gain medium within a resonant cavity, MCLEDs emit a highly compact and directional light beam. The higher extraction efficiency and greater brightness of these devices are the main advantages of these technologies over conventional LEDs.
Extraction efficiency refers to the ability of the photons generated by a particular system to actually exit the system as “useful” radiation. This higher extraction efficiency is, however, limited to values in the 40% range as the micro-cavity structure also leads to very efficient emission into guided modes and leaky modes. Thus, it would be useful if these guided modes could be extracted.
As noted above, guided modes are modes that are guided in the device plane due to the index difference between the structure layers. Leaky modes are radiated through the layers, towards the air or substrate. Leaky modes are usually lost as they undergo multiple total internal reflection at interfaces, travelling back and forth within the device, until their energy is dissipated by various loss mechanisms (e.g., metal mirror loss, free carrier absorption, re-absorption by the active layer, etc.).
To obtain high efficiency LEDs, it is necessary to optimize light emission 36 outside the structure, minimize the leaky modes 38 and guided modes 40 emission, and possibly re-emit the guided modes emission 40, as well as part of the leaky modes 38 emission. The present invention aims at fulfilling this goal, in structures amenable to easy fabrication.
In
In
Extraction efficiency from these structures is, respectively, in
Difficulties are encountered in most materials systems when attempting to obtain large micro-cavity extraction improvements of LEDs.
(i) The index contrast for materials epitaxially grown is quite limited, in particular for the very important nitride materials. This is why emission into many leaky modes is seen in the DBR mirror 56 structure of
(ii) The displayed efficiencies are only possible because very thin structures were considered, leading to low-order cavities (as described in reference 10 below). It is difficult to obtain such thin active layers. For example, it is usually necessary to grow a thick (several microns) buffer layer of nitride on a substrate before growing good quality material for the active layer. While lifting off the nitride materials (buffer layer and active layer) from the substrate is already a delicate operation, there is, in addition, extreme difficulty in obtaining the thinner layers (i.e., further removing part or all of the buffer layer) bounded by good metal mirrors, which would lead to the excellent performance of the thin metal mirror structure shown in
Thus, there is a need in the art for improved LED structures that provide increased light extraction efficiency. In addition, there is a need in the art for improved LED structures relying on optimized direct or radiative mode emission outside the structure, minimize leaky mode emission, and re-emitted guided mode emission. Moreover, there is a need to provide such improved LEDs while retaining a planar fabrication process, in order to render such structures amenable to easy fabrication. The present invention satisfies these needs.
The present invention discloses a single or multi-color light emitting diode (LED) with high extraction efficiency comprised of a substrate, a buffer layer grown on the substrate, a patterned layer deposited on top of the buffer layer and an active layer formed on the patterned layer, for example by Lateral Epitaxial Overgrowth (LEO), and including one or more light emitting species. The patterned layer comprises a patterned, perforated or pierced mask (made of insulating, semiconducting or metallic material) and materials filling holes in the mask. The patterned layer, due to a large index difference with the active layer and/or variations of the refractive index between the mask and materials filling holes in the mask, both acts as an optical confinement layer and as a buried diffraction grating, thus controlling emissions of the active layer into radiative and guided modes, which are then extracted.
Referring now to the drawings in which like reference numbers represent corresponding parts throughout:
In the following description of the preferred embodiment, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration a specific embodiment in which the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
The present invention describes new LED structures that provide increased light extraction efficiency while retaining a planar structure. The planar structure makes the new LED structures easily manufacturable at low cost.
Preferably, the structure comprises a substrate, a buffer layer grown on the substrate, a patterned layer deposited on the buffer layer, and an active layer including one or more emitting species (some of which are current-injected) formed on the patterned layer, for example by Lateral Epitaxial Overgrowth (LEO). The patterned layer comprises a patterned mask (made of insulating, semiconducting or metallic material) and materials filling holes in the mask. On top of the structure is either a single interface, or a geometrical structure (such as epoxy dome), or a DBR mirror, or a metallic mirror.
Due to the large index difference between the active layer and the patterned layer, the emission pattern of the species in the active layer can be modified, e.g. to increase or decrease the relative amount of light emitted in guided, radiative or leaky modes. Due to variation of the refractive index between the mask and the materials filling the holes in the mask, the patterned layer can act as a diffraction grating, thus enabling guided light to be emitted outside of the LED.
An immediate advantage of such a structure is that, in the case where the active layer is grown by LEO, using the patterned layer as a growth mask, the grown material should be of excellent opto-electronic quality, as is well known from previous studies of LEO growth.
Also shown in
Regions can be found (i.e., layer thickness 270 nm, QW position at 70% of that value) where most of the light is emitted directly or in guided modes (leaky modes are below 15%), with a direct extraction efficiency in the 30% range and 55% of light emission in guided modes.
Various geometries can be used as for the patterns, perforations or piercings in the mask 74 of the patterned layer 72. The simplest geometries are square or rectangular arrays, e.g., so-called periodic photonic crystals, illustrated as 82 and 84, respectively, in
There are many possible implementation of the concept of overgrowth on a patterned layer 72 in a thin film micro-cavity geometry. For example, two patterned layers 72, and two masks 74, and a double LEO growth can be used to improve the materials quality of the active layer 70, as shown in
Metallic or dielectric mirrors can be placed above or below the patterned layer 72, e.g., on the top of the structure, below the patterned layer 72 or below the substrate 78, to enhance or decrease emissions in a desired direction, and to extract some of the light emitted into the leaky modes towards the substrate 78.
The mask 74 of the patterned layer 72 may be formed of insulating, semiconducting or metallic material. What is required is that the index of refraction for the mask 74 of the patterned layer 72 is different enough from that of the active layer 70 and/or that of the materials filling the holes in the mask 74.
Moreover, additional active optically-pumped regions can be used to recycle the guided modes, thus re-emitting a portion of the guided light at another frequency. For example, such a structure may be used to generate white light, if a first quantum well 80 layer emits in the blue wavelength and a second quantum well 80 layer emits in the yellow wavelength. The additional active regions can either be quantum wells of any kind, including InGaN (Zn:Si), multiple quantum dots, multiple phosphors, dyes, polymers, or molecules. Some or all of the light-emitting species may be current-injected.
Another architecture provides and LED that has separate emission and extraction zones, at the periphery of the LED structure.
Variants of the present invention can include a metal mirror on top, retaining a substrate through which emission occurs, or without substrate when using a substrate lift-off technique.
The present invention can also act as a very directional light source, wherein emission occurs mainly in certain directions by suitable tailoring of the guided modes structure, in order to produce a directional LED. If the design of the structure is correct, only a few guided modes (ideally one) are excited and then extracted by the diffraction grating. In that case, light emission occurs in a narrow range of directions, as each guided mode is diffracted at a well-defined angle which can be chosen by tuning of the diffraction grating parameters.
While having been described with the example of nitride LEDs, this high efficiency LED scheme can be applied to any material that is amenable to such a fabrication technique it can be semiconductors, but also polymer or organic molecules. In these latter cases, provided that a broad emitting species is used, one can foresee high efficiency white light emission, using specialized areas with adequate grating periods to emit light with a given color (one also suppresses direct emission at other colors by making the cavity anti-resonant for these colors). Alternately, by having mono-color emitting gratings associated with local addressing, one could have full color display with a single polymer blend.
Finally,
Block 136 represents the step of growing a buffer layer on a substrate, wherein the buffer layer is a GaN-based material.
Block 138 represents the step of depositing one or more patterned layers on top of the buffer layer using LEO, wherein each patterned layer comprises a mask and materials filling holes in the mask. Preferably, the mask is comprised of an insulating, semiconducting or metallic material, and the materials filling the holes in the mask comprise GaN-based materials that are grown by LEO. The patterned layer acts as an optical confining layer due to a contrast of a refractive index with the active layer, or as a buried diffraction grating due to variations of a refractive index between the mask and the materials filling holes in the mask. Different patterns in the patterned layer are used to extract different wavelengths by diffraction or to vary a direction of the diffraction.
Block 140 represents the step of forming one or more active layers on or between the patterned layers, wherein the active layers are a GaN-based material and include one or more light-emitting species. Preferably, the active layer is grown by LEO.
The end result of these steps is an LED, wherein the patterned layer acts as an optical confining layer due to a contrast of refractive index with the active layer and/or as a buried diffraction grating due to variation of the refractive index between the mask and the material filling holes in the mask.
The following references are incorporated by reference herein:
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This concludes the description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The foregoing description of one or more embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not by this detailed description, but rather by the claims appended hereto.
This application is a continuation of the following co-pending and commonly-assigned application: U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 11/067,910, filed Feb. 28, 2005, by Claude C. A. Weisbuch, Aurelien J. F. David, James S. Speck, and Steven P. DenBaars, entitled “SINGLE OR MULTI-COLOR HIGH EFFICIENCY LIGHT EMITTING DIODE (LED) BY GROWTH OVER A PATTERNED SUBSTRATE,” attorneys' docket number 30794.122-US-01 (2005-145-1), which application is incorporated by reference herein. This application is related to the following co-pending and commonly-assigned applications: U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 10/938,704, filed Sep. 10, 2004, by Carole Schwach, Claude C. A. Weisbuch, Steven P. DenBaars, Henri Benisty, and Shuji Nakamura, entitled “WHITE, SINGLE OR MULTI-COLOR LIGHT EMITTING DIODES BY RECYCLING GUIDED MODES,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,223,998, issued May 29, 2007, attorneys' docket number 30794.115-US-01 (2004-064-1), U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 11/067,957, filed on Feb. 28, 2005, by Claude C. A. Weisbuch, Aurelien J. F. David, James S. Speck and Steven P. DenBaars, entitled “Horizontal emitting, vertical emitting, beam shaped, Distributed Feedback (DFB) lasers by growth over A patterned substrate,” attorneys' docket number 30794.121-US-01 (2005-144-1), and U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 11/067,956, filed on Feb. 28, 2005, by Aurelien J. F. David, Claude C. A. Weisbuch and Steven P. DenBaars, entitled “HIGH EFFICIENCY LIGHT EMITTING DIODE (LED) WITH OPTIMIZED PHOTONIC CRYSTAL EXTRACTOR,” attorneys' docket number 30794.126-US-01 (2005-198-1), which applications are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11067910 | Feb 2005 | US |
Child | 11923414 | Oct 2007 | US |