Issue 12, 2024

Structure tailoring and defect engineering of a highly thermally stable red emitting phosphor

Abstract

Phosphor-converted white light-emitting diodes (pc-WLEDs) are highly efficient light sources for lighting displays and electronic devices. To facilitate the development of next-generation high-power WLEDs, it is crucial to investigate more efficient red-emitting phosphors. One of the biggest challenges facing pc-LEDs is thermal quenching, in which phosphors suffer emission losses as the temperature rises during high-power LED operation. Here, we report a red phosphor Gd3−yCay−0.02GaO6:0.02Eu2+ (y = 0.2) with an emission center located at 650 nm and a half-peak width of 68 nm. At 423 K, the emission intensity can still maintain more than 95% of that at room temperature, which is owing to the defect level of the phosphor compensating for the emission loss. A white LED device was fabricated by combining a 460 nm blue LED chip and commercial yellow phosphor Y3Al5O12:Ce3+ and Gd3−yCay−0.02GaO6:0.02Eu2+ (y = 0.2). The white LED has excellent properties with the correlated color temperature CCT = 3999 K and color rendering index Ra = 95, which demonstrates that the red phosphor Gd3−yCay−0.02GaO6:0.02Eu2+ (y = 0.2) has good application prospects in the field of white LEDs.

Graphical abstract: Structure tailoring and defect engineering of a highly thermally stable red emitting phosphor

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Jan 2024
Accepted
13 Feb 2024
First published
16 Feb 2024

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2024,12, 4287-4295

Structure tailoring and defect engineering of a highly thermally stable red emitting phosphor

X. Huo, Z. Wang, X. Meng, J. Zhang, Y. Wang and P. Li, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2024, 12, 4287 DOI: 10.1039/D4TC00144C

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