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1.
Opt Express ; 23(6): 8150-61, 2015 Mar 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25837152

RESUMEN

The modulation bandwidths of the light-emitting diodes (LEDs) of different mesa sizes with and without surface plasmon (SP) coupling effect are compared. Due to the significant increase of carrier decay rate, within the size range of LED square-mesa from 60 through 300 micron and the injected current-density range from 139 through 1667 A/cm², the SP coupling can lead to the enhancement of modulation bandwidth by 44-48%, independent of the variations of LED mesa size or injected current level. The enhancement ratios of modulation bandwidth of the samples with SP coupling with respect to those of the samples without SP coupling are lower than the corresponding ratios of the square-root of photoluminescence decay rate due to the increases of their RC time constants (the product of device resistance and capacitance). The increases of the RC time constants in the samples with SP coupling are attributed to the increases of their device resistance levels when the Ag nanoparticles and GaZnO dielectric interlayer are added to the LED surface for effectively inducing SP coupling.

2.
Opt Express ; 23(12): 15491-503, 2015 Jun 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26193529

RESUMEN

The emission behaviors of four light-emitting diodes (LEDs) of different substrate structures, including a lateral LED grown on sapphire, a vertical LED wafer-bonded onto Si (111), a bendable LED Ag-epoxied onto a flat metal, and another bendable LED Ag-epoxied onto a metal of a curved surface, under different duty cycles of current injection are compared. Their different variation trends of emission behavior with injection duty cycle are attributed to the different thermally-induced strain conditions in the epitaxial layers, which are controlled by their substrate structures, in increasing injection duty cycle or current level. The results of Raman scattering measurements during LED operation show that a stronger tensile strain is generated under heating for reducing the quantum-confined Stark effect and hence increasing emission efficiency when the epitaxial layer is not tightly bonded onto a hard substrate. Such a behavior is particularly stronger when the epitaxial layer is bent.

3.
Opt Express ; 23(25): 32274-88, 2015 Dec 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26699018

RESUMEN

The combined effects of a few mechanisms for emission efficiency enhancement produced in the overgrowth of the transparent conductor layer of Ga-doped ZnO (GaZnO) on a surface Ag-nanoparticle (NP) coated light-emitting diode (LED), including surface plasmon (SP) coupling, current spreading, light extraction, and contact resistivity reduction, are demonstrated. With a relatively higher GaZnO growth temperature (350 °C), melted Ag NPs can be used as catalyst for forming GaZnO nanoneedles (NNs) through the vapor-liquid-solid growth mode such that light extraction efficiency can be increased. Meanwhile, residual Ag NPs are buried in a simultaneously grown GaZnO layer for inducing SP coupling. With a relatively lower GaZnO growth temperature (250 °C), all the Ag NPs are preserved for generating a stronger SP coupling effect. By using a thin annealed GaZnO interlayer on p-GaN before Ag NP fabrication, the contact resistivity at the GaZnO/p-GaN interface and hence the overall device resistance can be reduced. Although the use of this interlayer blue-shifts the localized surface plasmon resonance peak of the fabricated Ag NPs from the quantum well emission wavelength of the current study (535 nm) such that the SP coupling effect becomes weaker, it is useful for enhancing the SP coupling effect in an LED with a shorter emission wavelength.

4.
Opt Express ; 22 Suppl 7: A1799-809, 2014 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25607494

RESUMEN

The growth and process of a regularly patterned nanorod (NR)- light-emitting diode (LED) array with its emission from sidewall non-polar quantum wells (QWs) are demonstrated. A pyramidal un-doped GaN structure is intentionally formed at the NR top for minimizing the current flow through this portion of the NR such that the injection current can be effectively guided to the sidewall m-plane InGaN/GaN QWs for emission excitation by a conformal transparent conductor (GaZnO). The injected current density at a given applied voltage of the NR LED device is similar to that of a planar c-plane or m-plane LED. The blue-shift trend of NR LED output spectrum with increasing injection current is caused by the non-uniform distributions of QW width and indium content along the height on a sidewall. The photoluminescence spectral shift under reversed bias confirms that the emission of the fabricated NR LED comes from non-polar QWs.

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