Non-Rare-Earth Na3AlF6:Cr3+Phosphors for Far-Red Light-Emitting Diodes

120Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Emerging phototherapy in a clinic and plant photomorphogenesis call for efficient red/far-red light resources to target and/or actuate the interaction of light and living organisms. Rare-earth-doped phosphors are generally promising candidates for efficient light-emitting diodes but still bear lower quantum yield for the far-red components, potential supply risks, and high-cost issues. Thus, the design and preparation of efficient non-rare-earth activated phosphors becomes extremely important and arouses great interest. Fabrication of Cr3+-doped Na3AlF6 phosphors significantly promotes the potential applications by efficiently converting blue excitation light of a commercial InGaN chip to far-red broadband emission in the 640-850 nm region. The action response of phototherapy (μ667-683 nm; μ750-772 nm) and that of photomorphogenesis (μ700-760 nm) are well overlapped. Based on the temperature-dependent steady luminescence and time-resolved spectroscopies, energy transfer models are rationally established by means of the configurational coordinate diagram of Cr3+ ions. An optimal sample of Na3AlF6:60% Cr3+ phosphor generates a notable QY of 75 ± 5%. Additionally, an InGaN LED device encapsulated by using Na3AlF6:60% Cr3+ phosphor was fabricated. The current exploration will pave a promising way to engineer non-rare-earth activated optoelectronic devices for all kinds of photobiological applications.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Yu, D., Zhou, Y., Ma, C., Melman, J. H., Baroudi, K. M., Lacapra, M., & Riman, R. E. (2019). Non-Rare-Earth Na3AlF6:Cr3+Phosphors for Far-Red Light-Emitting Diodes. ACS Applied Electronic Materials, 1(11), 2325–2333. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaelm.9b00527

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free