Power

Power project working on LED replacements for UV light sources

6th December 2017
Alice Matthews
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A total of five research institutes and companies have been working on 'UV Power' since February 2017. This is a collaborative project funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The partners have made it their goal to provide high-power UV LEDs to cover a wide variety of applications. These LEDs will eventually replace conventional UV light sources, which often contain toxic mercury, in areas such as production, disinfection, the environment, life sciences and medicine. UV LEDs are also likely to open up new areas of application.

As part of 'Advanced UV for Life', a consortium of research institutes and companies which is being funded under the federal 'Zwanzig20' programme, Osram Opto Semiconductors is working with four partners on high-power UV LEDs for the mass market: the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut, Leibniz-Institut für Höchstfrequenztechnik (FBH), the Technical University of Berlin, LayTec AG and UVphototonics NT GmbH. Prototype LEDs and the technology for producing high-power LEDs for the UVB and UVC spectrums on the basis of the aluminum gallium nitride (AlGaN) material system are scheduled to be presented by 2020.

The partners are therefore pooling their scientific know-how and making their highly specialised technical facilities and analysis methods available. Development of the highpower LEDs is taking place along the entire technology chain for LED production. “The various tasks have been distributed among the partners on the basis of their strengths – everything from the production of structured sapphire substrates, epitaxy and chip processing to packaging and analytics,” said Dr. Hans-Jürgen Lugauer, Head of UV Development at Osram Opto Semiconductors. “With our presence on the international market and our expertise in industrial manufacturing we are boosting the impact of the consortium considerably,” he added.

To speed up development and make efficient use of resources, the partners are splitting their work into different wavelength ranges. In addition to coordinating the entire project, Osram Opto Semiconductors is taking on the wavelength range of 270-290nm. In epitaxy, the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut is covering the adjacent wavelengths in the UVB range between 290-310nm and processing the epitaxial wafers into UV chips. The Technical University of Berlin is focusing on the wavelength range of 250-270nm, applying its expertise in material analysis for AIGaN materials and AIGaN LEDs. TU Berlin also has extensive specialised equipment for UV analysis. LayTec AG is developing tailor-made techniques for controlling the epitaxy and plasma etching systems.

FBH spin-off UVphotonics NT is the interface to users. It is responsible for optimising the chip design, for achieving high currents and for efficient cooling. The company is also handling the statistical collection and analysis of process data from the entire production chain and making this data available to the project partners for optimising the production process. The important subjects of assembly technology and the effects of ageing will be investigated by FBH, TUB and UVphotonics in further projects as part of the consortium.

The optical outputs of the new LEDs are expected to be greater than 120mW at 300±10nm, 140mW at 280±10nm and 80mW at 260±10nm. The research group is also working on making significant improvements to the ageing behaviour of the LEDs so they can be operated longer and more economically.

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