The energy efficiency of LEDs suffers both at high power and at green wavelengths which is why improving the efficiency of green LEDs has become a major goal of current research in solid-state lighting technology.
The University of Michigan researchers, Dylan Bayerl and Emmanouil Kioupakis, also found that changing the nanowire width or cross-sectional shape could tailor optical emission to other visible wavelengths.
Many approaches to bridging the green gap in LED technology focus on materials like indium nitride (InN) and gallium nitride (GaN). The semiconductors have direct band gaps near opposite ends of the visible spectrum (0.6 eV in InN and 3.4 eV in GaN). Mixing them in different ratios tunes the band gap between those of the pure materials, in principle achieving light emission of any color in the visible range. However, in practice, fluctuations in the alloy composition, lattice mismatch with the substrate, and strain-induced polarization fields severely limit the efficiency of InGaN-based LEDs. The issues are especially prevalent in alloys with composition ratios corresponding to green light emission.
To circumvent the problems faced by InGaN alloys, the scientists explored the effects of extreme quantum confinement on nanowires of pure InN. Quantum confinement typically increases the optical emission energy of a semiconductor, and so we expected that the light emitted by InN could be boosted into the visible range in very small diameter nanowires. The researchers found that InN nanowires approximately 1 nm in diameter will emit green (2.3 eV) or cyan (2.5 eV) light, depending on the shape of the nanowire cross-section. Using a nanostructured pure-phase semiconductor instead of an alloy avoids many of the efficiency loss mechanisms occurring in InGaN alloys.
Visible-light emission from InN nanowires is possible because quantum confinement affects the optical emission energy in two ways. First, it increases the energy gap between valence and conduction bands from 0.6 eV in bulk InN to 3.7 or 3.9 eV in 1nm-diameter nanowires, depending on the nanowire cross-section shape. Like the particle-in-a-box model of basic quantum mechanics, the increase in the band gap depends inversely on the diameter of the nanowire and the effective masses of charge carriers. In our case, the nanowires are sufficiently small in diameter and InN has such a small electron effective mass (0.07 mo, where mo is the free electron rest mass), that the size of the nanowire band gap is surprisingly large.
The second way quantum confinement affects the optical emission energy is by increasing the exciton binding energy. Excitons are quasi-particles composed of an electron and a hole separated in energy by the band gap. Their mutual electrostatic attraction binds them together to form an exciton, and the energy needed to break their bond is the exciton binding energy. When the electron relaxes to the valence band and recombines with the hole, the extra energy is emitted as a photon with energy equal to the band gap minus the exciton binding energy. Increasing the exciton binding energy thereby decreases the energy of the emitted photons.
Inorganic semiconductors tend to have large dielectric constants, which screen the electrostatic attraction between electrons and holes. Strong screening allows the bound electron and hole wave functions to spread out over tens of nanometers in bulk semiconductors. As a result, inorganic semiconductors typically have small exciton binding energies (e.g., 20 meV in bulk InN). However, quantum confinement forces the electron and hole wave functions to occupy less space, concentrating their charge density (see Figure 2). This diminishes the effect of dielectric screening and increases the binding energy. The confinement in 1 nm diameter InN nanowires is so great that the exciton binding energy increases to 1.4 eV and the emitted photons have energies of 2.3 to 2.5 eV (depending on the cross-sectional shape), resulting in emission of green or cyan light.
An implication of the findings is that the light emitted from an InN nanowire can be tailored by changing the nanowire diameter or cross-sectional shape. Nanowires with smaller cross-sectional area will emit blue, indigo, or violet, while those with larger cross-sectional area will emit yellow, orange, or red. This could lead to highly efficient LED-based illumination and displays capable of producing a broad range of warm and natural-looking hues. While such small nanowires are difficult to synthesize, InN nanocrystals just a few nanometers in size have already been synthesized, and nanorods 1 nm in diameter have been synthesized from other semiconductors. The key aspects of the findings for nanowires can be generalized to nanorods and nanocrystals, in which quantum confinement plays an even larger role in modifying optical properties.
Related articles and links: