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Comparison between blue lasers and light‐emitting diodes for future solid‐state lighting
Authors:Jonathan J Wierer  Jeffrey Y Tsao  Dmitry S Sizov
Abstract:Solid‐state lighting (SSL) is now the most efficient source of high color quality white light ever created. Nevertheless, the blue InGaN light‐emitting diodes (LEDs) that are the light engine of SSL still have significant performance limitations. Foremost among these is the decrease in efficiency at high input current densities widely known as “efficiency droop.” Efficiency droop limits input power densities, contrary to the desire to produce more photons per unit LED chip area and to make SSL more affordable. Pending a solution to efficiency droop, an alternative device could be a blue laser diode (LD). LDs, operated in stimulated emission, can have high efficiencies at much higher input power densities than LEDs can. In this article, LEDs and LDs for future SSL are explored by comparing: their current state‐of‐the‐art input‐power‐density‐dependent power‐conversion efficiencies; potential improvements both in their peak power‐conversion efficiencies and in the input power densities at which those efficiencies peak; and their economics for practical SSL.
Keywords:Solid‐state lighting  LEDs  LDs  light‐emitting diodes  laser diodes  semiconductor laser  blue lasers  III‐nitride  InGaN  AlInGaN  power‐conversion efficiency  efficiency droop  quantum efficiency  phosphor‐converted LEDs  PC‐LEDs  gain  semipolar GaN  Auger recombination  cost of light  thermal management  heat management  heat sink  areal chip cost
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