Abstract

An LED chip containing monolithically integrated red, green, and blue channels was fabricated and characterized. Using local strain engineering in gallium nitride p-i-n nanopillar structures, each color channel emits a distinct color with emission wavelength determined entirely by the diameter of the nanopillar. The crosstalk between color channels is negligible. As a result, individually addressable color channels can be integrated on the same substrate which will be suitable for color-tunable lighting applications. Optical and electrical properties were measured and discussed. Fabrication challenges which degraded power efficiency of the shorter-wavelength channel were analyzed. Potential strategies for improvements were proposed.

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