City College of New York graduate researchers are reporting two breakthroughs with the successful demonstration of an LED (light-emitting diode) based on half-light half-matter quasiparticles in atomically thin materials. This is also the first successful test of an electrically driven light emitter using atomically thin semiconductors embedded in a light trapping structure (optical cavity).

Schematic of a half-light- half-matter quasiparticle based LED developed in Vinod Menon’s group using atomically thin materials. Image Credit: Visakh Menon, City College of New York. Click image for the largest view.

The research was led by graduate physics student Jie Gu and post-doctoral fellow Biswanath Chakraborty, in collaboration with another graduate student, Mandeep Khatoniyar.

According to Vinod Menon, chair of physics in City College’s Division of Science and the research team’s mentor, their double feat, reported in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, marks an important milestone in the field of 2D materials and, more broadly, LEDs.

While such LEDs have been realized in other materials at low temperatures, this device operates at room temperature and is fabricated using the now well known “scotch tape” based technique.

Menon added “The fact that this device is fabricated using stacks of atomically thin materials and operates at room temperature makes it an important first step towards a technologically relevant device demonstration. One potential application of such hybrid LEDs is the speed of operation – which can translate to using them for LED based communication systems including LiFi.”

LiFi is a wireless optical networking technology that uses LEDs for data transmission. Benefits of LiFi include higher speeds than Wi-Fi.

The device was fabricated at the CCNY-based CUNY Advanced Science Research Center’s nanofabrication facility and tested in Menon’s lab. In follow- up research, the CCNY team is attempting to realize quantum emitters (single photon emitters) using similar architecture.

Just when one might think LED technology might be maturing they come along with another easy to produce, low cost breakthrough. While this is quite early, LEDs are far from mature, much more, better and cheaper light sources from LED are coming, and sooner than one might think.


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