Spectrally pure far-UVC emission from AlGaN-based LEDs with dielectric band pass filters

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Abstract

AlGaN-based far ultraviolet-C (UVC) light emitting diodes (LEDs) with a peak emission wavelength below 240 nm typically show a long-wavelength tail at >240 nm that is detrimental to the use of the devices for skin-friendly antisepsis. We present the development of far-UVC LEDs with reduced long-wavelength emission using a HfO2/SiO2-based distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) filter. When the DBR filter is directly mounted on an LED package, the long-wavelength emission around 250 nm is reduced by two orders of magnitude while the transmitted output power is reduced down to 18%-27% of the initial value for DBR filters with cut-off wavelengths at 237-243 nm. As the transmission through the DBR filter depends strongly on the angle of incidence of the radiation, the transmitted output power of the spectrally pure far-UVC radiation can be doubled when an additional collimating lens is used on top of the LED package before passing through the filter.

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Guttmann, M., Lobo-Ploch, N., Gundlach, H., Mehnke, F., Sulmoni, L., Wernicke, T., … Kneissl, M. (2022). Spectrally pure far-UVC emission from AlGaN-based LEDs with dielectric band pass filters. Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 55(20). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6463/ac5145

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