Roughly 20 percent of the electricity consumed worldwide is used to light homes, businesses, and other private and public spaces. Though this consumption represents a large drain on resources, it also presents a tremendous opportunity for savings. Improving the efficiency of commercially available light bulbs — even a little — could translate into dramatically lower energy usage if implemented widely. In the latest issue of Journal of Applied Physics, published by the American Institute of Physics (AIP), a group of scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences is reporting an important step towards that goal with their development of a new type of light emitting diode (LED) made from inexpensive, plastic like organic materials. Designed with a simplified ‘tandem’ structure, it can produce twice as much light as a normal LED — including the white light desired for home and office lighting. ‘This work is important because it is the realization of rather high efficiency white emission by a tandem structure,’ says Dongge Ma , who led the research with his colleagues at the Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Found in everything from brake lights to computer displays, LEDs are more […]
Sunday, April 12th, 2009
Cheap and Efficient White Light LEDs
Author:
Source: American Institute of Physics
Publication Date: Tue 07-Apr-2009, 12:00 ET
Link: Cheap and Efficient White Light LEDs
Source: American Institute of Physics
Publication Date: Tue 07-Apr-2009, 12:00 ET
Link: Cheap and Efficient White Light LEDs
Stephan: We must prepare ourselves to accept a world in which we are not the only innovators. Amongst some it is going to induce feelings or fear with the usual protectionist isolationist response. This needs to be resisted.
The article 'A high-performance tandem white organic LED combining highly effective white units and their interconnection layer' by Qi Wang et al. was published online on April 6, 2009 [J. Appl. Phys. 105, 076101 (2009)]. The article is available at http://link.aip.org/link/?JAPIAU/105/076101/1. Journalists can obtain a free copy of the article by emailing jbardi@aip.org.