Abstract

AbstractThis paper investigates a wide‐band emitting red phosphor, an advancement that solves shortcomings including the re‐absorption of the yellow phosphor in the blue light area and a lack of red spectrum components which result in low color rendering and an uneven white light tone. An examination through femtosecond, Raman, and low‐temperature spectroscopy demonstrates why this phosphor has large Stokes shift (SS = 7.5×103 cm−1) and wide half‐peak width with a full‐width at half maximum (FWHM) of more than 170 nm. In these samples, it is importantly observed that larger lattice causes smaller electron–phonon coupling of Eu2+ activator, and meanwhile leads to less temperature dependency of emission peak width. The obtained sample, after cation replacement in (Ca1‐xSrx)7(SiO3)6Cl2: Eu2+ (CSSC: Eu2+), exhibits an emission spectrum covers the range from 450 to 800 nm while its excitation range is below 450 nm, in which not reabsorb the blue light. This matches well with blue phosphors that can also be excited by near‐ultraviolet chips. The fabricated white light‐emitting diode (w‐LED) device has an ideal color rendering index and correlated color temperature (Ra = 90.5, CCT = 3894 K), making it an excellent candidate material for white LED illumination.

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