Friday, March 14, 2014
A team of researchers at the University of Washington (UW) has claimed to have built the thinnest-known LED that can be used as a source of light energy in electronics. According to them, the LED is made from flat sheets of tungsten diselenide that makes it possible to stack or use in much smaller and more diverse applications than prevailing technologies.
"We are able to make the thinnest-possible LEDs, only three atoms thick yet mechanically strong. Such thin and foldable LEDs are critical for future portable and integrated electronic devices," stated Xiaodong Xu, a UW assistant professor in materials science and engineering and in physics.
Xu along with Jason Ross, a UW materials science and engineering graduate student, co-authored the paper. Most consumer electronics use 3D LEDs, which are 10 to 20 times thicker than the LEDs being developed by the UW team.
These are 10,000 times smaller than the thickness of a human hair, yet the light they emit can be seen by standard measurement equipment, explained Ross. This is a huge leap of miniaturisation of technology, and because it is a semiconductor, you can do almost everything with it that is possible with existing, 3D silicon technologies.
The UWs LED is made from flat sheets of tungsten diselenide, a member of a group of 2D materials that have been recently identified as the thinnest-known semiconductors.
The researchers used adhesive tape to extract a single sheet of this material from thick, layered pieces in a method inspired by the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to the University of Manchester for isolating one-atom-thick flakes of carbon, called graphene, from a piece of graphite.
In addition to light-emitting applications, the technology could open doors for using light as interconnects to run nano-scale computer chips instead of standard devices that operate off the movement of electrons, or electricity. The latter process creates a lot of heat and wastes power, whereas sending light through a chip to achieve the same purpose would be highly efficient.
A promising solution is to replace the electrical interconnect with optical ones, which will maintain the high bandwidth but consume less energy, said Xu. Our work makes it possible to make highly integrated and energy-efficient devices in areas such as lighting, optical communication and nano lasers.
The research team is working on more efficient ways to create the thin LEDs and looking at what happens when 2D materials are stacked in different ways. Additionally, these materials have been shown to react with polarized light in ways that no other materials can, and researchers also will continue to pursue those applications.
Co-authors are Aaron Jones and David Cobden of the UW; Philip Klement of Justus Liebig University in Germany; Nirmal Ghimire, Jiaqiang Yan and D.G. Mandrus of the University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe and Kenji Kitamura of the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan; and Wang Yao of the University of Hong Kong.
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