New Fabrication Technique Yields Nanoscale UV LEDs
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Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), in collaboration with scientists from the University of Maryland and Howard University, have developed a technique to create tiny, highly efficient light-emitting diodes (LEDs) from nanowires. As described in a recent paper,* the fabricated LEDs emit ultraviolet light — a key wavelength range required for many light-based nanotechnologies, including data storage — and the assembly technique is well-suited for scaling to commercial production.
Light-based nanoscale devices, such as LEDs, could be important building blocks for a new generation of ultracompact, inexpensive technologies, including sensors and optical communications devices. Ultraviolet LEDs are particularly important for data-storage and biological sensing devices, such as detectors for airborne pathogens. Nanowires made of a particular class of semiconductors that includes aluminum nitride, gallium nitride and indium nitride are the most promising candidates for nanoscale LEDs. But, says NIST researcher Abhishek Motayed, “The current nanowire LEDs are created using tedious nanowire manipulation methods and one-by-one fabrication techniques, which makes them unsuitable for commercial realization.”
The NIST team used batch fabrication techniques, such as photolithography (printing a pattern into a material using light, similar to photography), wet etching and metal deposition. They aligned the nanowires using an electric field, eliminating the delicate and time-consuming task of placing each nanowire separately.
A key feature of the new nanowire LEDs is that they are made from a single compound, gallium nitride (GaN). Each LED consists of an “n-type” GaN nanowire placed on the surface of a “p-type” GaN thin film. “N-type” and “p-type” refer to semiconductors with, respectively, an abundance of electrons and an abundance of positively charged electron vacancies called holes. P-n junctions made from the same basic compound yield more efficient LEDs than those made with different compounds, and so can operate at lower power.
When the proper voltage is applied to the junction, it emits light with a peak wavelength of 365 nanometers, which falls squarely in the ultraviolet range. The group produced and tested more than 40 of these LEDs; all showed very similar emission properties. They also displayed excellent thermal stability — withstanding temperatures up to 750 degrees Celsius — and operational stability, showing no signs of deterioration even after two continuous hours of operation at room temperature. These properties indicate that this LED production method yields reliable, stable devices. The researchers say their method could be used to fabricate other nanowire structures as well as applications requiring a large area of nanoscale light sources.
[tags]LED, light emitting diode[/tags]

One Comment
Nano-sized UV Leds « LED Development Blog
August 29th, 2007
at 7:46am
[...] Nano-sized UV Leds New Fabrication Technique Yields Nanoscale UV LEDsIt’s really neat when the rest of the world is all a buzz about super high-brightness LEDs and LED modules that are big and bright enough to burn you facial silhouette into concrete that the boys at NIST, University of Maryland, and Howard University have cooked up nano-sized LEDs. Nanotechnology is still one of those voodoo technologies that has only realized limited commercial success in a very limited selection of applications but, perhaps, with the advent of nano-sized solid-state lighting that may change. Interesting that UV was the chosen wavelength. Since 365 nm is a typical UVA phototherapy wavelength, maybe medical applications should be included on the list of viable uses for these things. I envision doctors releasing into the bloodstream an army of nano-robots equipped with nano-scale UV LEDs capable of treating persistent skin conditions with micro-bursts of locally concentrated UV, internally! How cool is that? Well, I’m guessing we’re a long ways away from anything like that but it’s fun to think about. [...]