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LIGHT!
HOW AN LED WORKS
An LED dancing penguin in Locomotive Park,Lewiston Idaho.
Created by Dr. Jesse Huso & Dr. Leah BergmanDepartment of Physics, University of Idaho
Supported by:The National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR-1202532
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LIGHTING
Modern lighting is based on a device called a “Light Emitting Diode”.
We usually just call these LEDs (pronounced “el ee dees”).
LEDs are useful because they’re small, energy efficient and long lasting.
Image courtesy of energystar.gov
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COLOR (IN BRIEF)
LEDs come in many colors.
These colors are determined by what the LED is made of, as we will see.
The Visualizer TreeLocomotive Park,Lewiston Idaho
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PARTS OF AN LED
While LEDs come in many shapes and sizes, they all work in similar ways.
Here are some parts.
When we apply electricity to the wires on the LED, it lights up!
Colored lens(protects other parts and directs the light)
Wires for electricity, called the anode and cathode
Cathode
Anode
Semiconductor and reflector (more soon!)
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INSIDE AN LED
Let’s take off the lens… And now let’s zoom in… The tiny piece of
semiconductor, called a die, is what emits the light we see.
There is also a reflector around the die to help light get out.
Let’s take an even closer look.
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THE SEMICONDUCTOR DIE
The semiconductor portion is made of two parts:
a layer of semiconductor called “p-type”
a layer of semiconductor called “n-type”
There are also metal layers connected to the anode and cathode wires. These metal layers allow us to apply electricity to the semiconductor.
p-type
n-type
Cathode
Anode
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ELECTRONS AND HOLES
Let’s look at the semiconductor closely.
The n-type region has many extra electrons.
The p-type region is missing electrons: we call these “holes”.
The thin boundary is called the “depletion region”.
p-typen-type
Depletion region
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ELECTRONS AND HOLES
If we apply electricity across the die in the right direction…
The electrons and holes will move toward each other.
They recombine and the semiconductor emits light from the depletion region!
p-typen-type
LightLight
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IN ORDER TO UNDERSTAND WHY THE DIE EMITS LIGHT, WE HAVE TO DISCUSS SOME MATERIALS PHYSICS
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A SEMICONDUCTOR (IN BRIEF)
Any semiconductor can be understood with a simple picture called an “energy band diagram”.
There are many energy states electrons can occupy.
The lower energy states are called the “Valence band”.
The higher energy states are the “Conduction band”.
The region with no energy states is called the “band gap”.
Conduction bandValence band
Band gap
Energy states
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SEMICONDUCTORDOPING
Conduction bandValence band
Normally, the valence band is full of electrons and the conduction band is empty.
When a semiconductor is doped as n-type, extra electrons are added, and these electrons begin to fill up the conduction band.
n-type
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SEMICONDUCTORDOPING
Conduction bandValence band
p-type doping is similar to n-type, but electrons are removed, leaving empty states in the valence band.
We call these empty states “holes”.
p-type
Missing electrons
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p-typen-type
Conductionband
Valenceband
Band gap
Depletion region
p-type
n-type
Recall the n-type side has extra electrons in the conduction band…
and the p-type side is missing electrons in the valence band.
When we sandwich the n‐type and p-type layers, we get an energy band structure like this
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p-typen-type
When we apply electricity, we change the shape of the energy bands, making them look more like this.
The electricity shrinks the depletion region and makes it easier for the electrons to find the holes.
p-typen-type
Depletion region
Depletion region
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p-typen-type
Conductionband
Valenceband
Band gap
The electrons combine with the holes and give off energy as the light we see.
LightLight
Light
Depletion region
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Medium
band gap
Light
How much energy is released by the electrons is what determines the color of the LED.
This amount of energy is in turn determined by the band gap.
LightSmallband gap
Large band gapLight
Each semiconductor material has a different band gap, and thus emits a different color.
Indium
gallium
nitride
Aluminum gallium Indium
phosphide
Aluminum
gallium arsenide
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And that’s how an LED works!
We hope you learned something.MATERIALS PHYSICS IS AWESOME!
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Supported by
THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATIONUNDER GRANT NO. DMR-1202532