July 21, 2004
LED omni-directional reflector developed by
Rensselaer researchers could brighten LEDs enough to replace
the conventional light bulb
Troy, N.Y. — A research team at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute has created a new type of reflector that has
dramatically improved LED (light-emitting diodes) luminance.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) recently awarded the
research team a three-year, $210,000 grant to move the patented
omni-directional reflector to market.
“We have developed an omni-directional reflector (ODR) for
LEDs that will accelerate the replacement of conventional
lighting used for a multitude of applications, such as lighting
in homes, businesses, museums, airports, and on streets,” said
Fred Schubert, Wellfleet Senior Constellation Professor of the
Future Chips Constellation at Rensselaer who is heading the
research effort. “The advance has implications ranging from
major energy savings to contributing to a better environment
and improving health.”
New LED Technology
LEDs are made from semiconductor “chips,” the size of sand
grains, covered with arrays of pencil-eraser size plastic
bulbs. Increasingly being used in traffic signals, automotive
lighting, and exit signs, LEDs have the potential to use far
less electricity and last much longer than conventional
fluorescent and incandescent bulbs. But current LEDs are not
bright enough to replace most everyday uses of the standard
light bulb.
“Only when the light generated is efficiently reflected inside
the semiconductor can the brightness exceed that of standard
lighting sources,” Schubert says. “With the ODR, which reflects
light at nearly 100 percent — up to twice as much as previous
reflectors — we now have an LED that could revolutionize
today’s standard lighting.”
The ODR is a thin triple-layer coating that consists of a
semiconductor, a dielectric material, and a silver layer.
Reports of the new reflector were published in the May 31,
2004, issue of the journal of Applied Physics Letters
and last October in the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers) journal of Electron Devices
Letters. In addition to NSF funding, the researchers also
have received $250,000 in the last two years from the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop the new
reflector.
Next-Generation LEDs: Cutting Energy Costs and
Potential Medical Applications
Next-generation LEDs are expected to become the widespread
“green technology” of choice for lighting, Schubert says.
“With near ideal LEDs, our nation could cut electricity
consumption for lighting in half,” Schubert says. “Lighting is
the most common use of electrical energy, taking up about 25
percent of electrical energy consumption in the United
States.”
Schubert also notes that LEDs are mercury-free, unlike even
the newest energy-saving fluorescent bulbs. Mercury exposure
can cause significant health problems in children and adults,
according to National Institutes of Health.
In addition, an LED that emits higher-quality light has
potential medical applications, such as alleviating sleep
disorders, Schubert says. The circadian cycle, the 24-hour
sleep-wake cycle in healthy humans, is controlled by the
spectrum and intensity of light sources. Using the right light
for the right time of day can enhance or hinder sleep.
For example, “tunable” light sources, such as LEDs, which emit
longer wavelength light (red) that mimics the setting Sun could
help those with insomnia sleep better. Individuals are not
affected visually by the difference in “colored” light, but the
body’s internal clock can sense the difference, Schubert says.
Conventional illumination sources cannot provide the same
benefit because of the lack of “tunability,” meaning their
optical spectrum cannot be adjusted to emphasize various
wavelengths.
Schubert, who won the 2000 Discover Magazine Award
for his photon-recycling semiconductor LED invention, has
helped to transform traffic signals and airport runway lighting
through his numerous LED-based inventions. He holds
appointments in the Department of Electrical, Computer, and
Systems Engineering and in the Department of Physics, Applied
Physics, and Astronomy at Rensselaer. The recently-completed
Future Chips Constellation, in which he is a senior professor,
focuses on innovations in materials and devices, in solid state
and smart lighting, and extends to applications such as
sensing, communications, and biotechnology.
Contact: Jodi Ackerman
Phone: (518) 276-6531
E-mail: N/A