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A new approach to making flexible white-light LEDs

Taiwanese researchers use readily available components to make bendy GaN LEDs

Researchers from National Chiao Tung University in Taiwan have used pre-existing technologies to create flexible, efficient white LEDs with potential use in wearable displays and non-flat surfaces.

"Compared to organic LEDs, this design of flexible LEDs can be very attractive, due to the low cost, prolonged lifetime and high efficiency. In addition, all of the technologies associated with this design are currently available," said Chien-Chung Lin, associate professor, College of Photonics, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan.

The paper by Lin,  Hao-Chung Kuo, and their research team appears in Optics Express, a journal published by The Optical Society (OSA). 

The researchers' off-the-shelf LED device gets its flexibility from polyimide and polydimethylsiloxane. To construct it, Lin and his colleagues first covered a polyimide substrate with copper foil shielding tape. The using flip-chip bonding, which reduces thermal resistance and results in higher heat dissipation than traditional wire bonding, they mounted 81 Blue LED chips, measuring 1.125 mm x 1.125 mm, to the foil in an upside down position.

To provide a warm white-yellow light, the researchers then added another layer consisting of a yellow phosphor film that had been mixed and spin-coated in polydimethylsiloxane, or PDMS, a widely used silicone-based organic polymer. It was chosen for its high degree of transparency, stability, and flexibility. The final film measured 5 x 5 cm, but there is no reasonable limitation to the size of the film.

The researchers ran the device for a standard 1,000 hours, to test its durability, finding that its emission decayed by only 5 percent. Its potential for use in wearables was demonstrated when subjected to bending tests. It held its power output when bent to a curvature with a 1.5cm radius. It also exhibited a light efficiency of 120 lumens per watt.

"Because the components are all available by current technology, the combined reliability can be very good," Lin said. "Most of the novel processes or materials require a lengthy procedure to verify their reliability, but our design uses only available parts to avoid this issue."

 "Large-area, uniform white light LED source on a flexible substrate,"  by C. Sher et al;  Optics Express 23, 1167-1178 (2015).

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