Abstract

White light-emitting diodes (w-LEDs) have captured much attention due to their superior properties of high luminous efficiency, low energy consumption and long lifetime. However, current white lighting devices suffer from several drawbacks such as the deficiency of red component and the poor thermal stability of silicone. In this work, a chromaticity-tunable phosphor-in-glass (PiG) inorganic color converter has been successfully fabricated for high-power warm w-LEDs. At first, a series of La2(1−x)Eu2xTi2O7 (x=0.05–0.5) red phosphors with excellent thermal stability and high quantum efficiency have been synthesized. Importantly, the as-synthesized La2Ti2O7:Eu3+ and commercial YAG:Ce3+ phosphors were incorporated into a specially low-melting precursor glass to form PiG composite. Finally, the high-power warm w-LEDs were constructed by coupling a PiG plate on an InGaN blue chip, and the w-LED showed an optimal luminous efficacy of 105lm/W, a CCT of 4809K and a CRI of 83.5.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call