posted in:

Hitachi Cable - www.yourelectricalequipmentnews.co

Hitachi Cable Develops High-Power 55-Lumen Red LED Chips

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2010

Hitachi Cable, Ltd. (TOKYO:5812) has announced the development of a high-power red LED chip(1) offering a maximum luminous flux of 55 lumens(2),(3). This luminous flux was enabled by increasing the size of the LED chip and use of a fine line electrode structure.

LEDs are semiconductor solid-state components that convert electricity directly into light. With their capacity to emit light of a specific color without color filters and at low operating voltages, LEDs are used as indicator lights in a wide range of equipment, appliances, and devices. Recent progress in luminous efficiency and the widespread commercial manufacture of blue and green LEDs has rapidly expanded the use of LEDs in full color display and illumination applications, including traffic lights, automobile rear signal lamps, and large outdoor display panels.

Hitachi Cable manufactures supplies aluminum gallium arsenide (AlGaAs) epitaxial wafers and aluminum gallium indium phosphorus (AlGaInP) epitaxial wafers, both of which are compound semiconductor wafers for red LEDs. In response to demand for LEDs of higher luminous efficiency, the company has also developed a high-brightness red LED chips (hereafter referred to as an “MR-LED chips”) that form a metal reflector (MR) under the light emitting layer. This product is currently being supplied to LED package manufacturers and other customers.

Through its LED business, Hitachi Cable has recognized the growing demand for higher output LED chips. The company has incorporated fine electrode structures and enlarged chip dimensions to develop high-power red LED chips offering outputs as high as 55 lumens.

One of the methods of improving per-chip light output is to increase the chip dimensions. However, larger chips increase the difficulty in distributing a uniform current across the entire light emitting layer. On the other hand, if large electrodes are positioned in the upper layer of the chip for a more uniform current dispersion, light from the light emitting layer will be blocked, reducing the light extraction efficiency.

To resolve these problems in developing a new LED chip, instead of using larger electrodes, Hitachi Cable has utilized two pad electrodes for receiving power, a backbone electrode connecting the two electrodes, and multiple fine line electrodes that extend from the backbone electrode on the upper chip layer.

By employing fine line electrodes, Hitachi Cable has succeeded in achieving uniform dispersion of current across the entire chip surface without blocking light from the light emitting layer, thus attaining a maximum luminous flux of 55 lumens in a large LED chip measuring 1 mm by 1 mm—equivalent to the combined output of 21 MR-LED chips (0.33 mm x 0.33 mm).(4) With its higher output, the new LED chip is expected to find applications not only in display applications, but also as a light source for devices such as projectors.

Hitachi Cable will continue to pursue active development of higher-power LED chips while expanding its lineup of high-power LED chips, including yellow and infrared LED chips.

 

Source: Business Wire

posted in:

Other Electrical Equipment News

Tyco International Reports First Quarter 2012 Earnings 01-02-2012
ABB to acquire Thomas & Betts for $3.9 billion to become major player in North American low-voltage products market 30-01-2012
Siemens' Annual Shareholders' Meeting 2012 attracts some 8.800 shareholders 25-01-2012
InnoVites to launch CableCircle.com at Seminar during Wire 2012 23-01-2012
Siemens Selected by Dow Corning as Strategic Process Automation Partner 20-01-2012
RS Components Launches Industry-first app for its Branch Network 17-01-2012
Nexans goes live on grid with world’s first fault current limiter based on second-generation superconductors 16-01-2012
Cooper Industries Announces Three Acquisitions 06-01-2012
ABB completes acquisition of Envitech Energy 22-12-2011
Mueller Electric Company Acquired by Desco Corporation 21-12-2011

Advertisers