Micro-Raman Spectroscopy: Self-Heating Effects In Deep UV Light Emitting Diodes

A. Sarua,M. Kuball, M. J. Uren,A. Chitnis, J. P. Zhang, V. Adivarahan,M. Shatalov,M. Asif Khan

MATERIALS RESEARCH SOCIETY SYMPOSIUM PROCEEDINGS(2011)

引用 3|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Ultraviolet light emitting diodes (LED) based on GaN and its ternary alloy AlGaN are key devices for applications such as solid state white lighting and chemical sensing. Ultraviolet LEDs are prone to self-heating effects, i.e., temperature rises during operation, contributing significantly to the commonly observed saturation of light output power at relatively low input currents. Rather little, however, is known about the actual device temperature of an operating ultraviolet LED. Using micro-Raman spectroscopy temperature measurements were performed as a function of input current on 325nm-Al 0.18 Ga 0.82 N/Al 0.12 Ga 0.88 N multiple quantum wells LEDs grown on sapphire substrates, flip-chip mounted on SiC for heat-sinking. Temperature maps were recorded over the active device area. Temperature rises of about 65 °C were measured at input currents as low as 50mA (at 8V) for 200 μm x 200 μm size LEDs despite flipchip mounting the devices. Temperature rises at the device edges were found to be higher than in the device center, due to combined heat sinking and current crowding effects. Finite difference heat dissipation simulations were performed and compared to the experimental results.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要