
Understanding Compound Semiconductor Materials in LEDs
Chemistry
When the LED first became commercially available, over 40 years ago, no one really paid much attention to how it was made or what it consisted of chemically. This was in part due to the fact that only a few basic types and colors were available (such as GaP – red and green, and GaAsP – yellow). Today, in order to obtain new colors, or wavelengths, and improve performance and reliability, there are many new types of chemical structures being created. Because of this, LEDsare no longer referred to strictly by their color but also by their chemical name, such as InGaAlP or GaAlAs. If the user is not familiar with LED technology or does not have a degree in chemistry and materials, this hodgepodge of letters can be very confusing. The following information is provided to help alleviate some of this confusion.
Gallium
The first and primary element used in the manufacture of almost all semiconductor LED devices is gallium. Gallium is a metallic material which is found as a trace element in coal, bauxite and other minerals. The symbol for gallium is “Ga” – (atomic number 31). When combined with arsenic “As” (atomic number 33), a highly poisonous gray metallic element, at temperatures of about 4000 degrees Fahrenheit, the compound gallium arsenide “GaAs” is formed. This dark gray crystalline compound is the basis for the original semiconductor LEDs manufactured almost 40 years ago. When current/energy is applied to this material, photons or particles of light are emitted. GaAs by itself emits light in the infrared range which is not visible to the human eye, however, if another element, phosphorus (a highly reactive white or yellow, non-metallic element, occurring naturally in phosphates, with atomic number 15 and symbol “P”) is introduced, a mixed crystal of gallium aresenide phosphide “GaAsP” is formed. Depending on the proportional amount of phosphorus, light in the visible range from red to yellow is achieved.
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