High-quality white light-emitting diodes (w-LEDs) are mainly determined by conversion phosphors and the enhancement of cyan component that dominates the high color rendering index. New phosphors (LuM)(AlSi)O:Ce (M = Mg, Ca, Sr and Ba), showing a cyan-green emission, have been achieved via the co-substitution of Lu-Al by M-Si pair in LuAlO:Ce to compensate for the lack of cyan region and avoid using multiple phosphors. The excitation bands of (LuM)(AlSi)O:Ce (M = Mg, Ca, Sr and Ba) show a red-shift from 434 to 445 nm which is attributed to the larger centroid shift and crystal field splitting. The enhanced structural rigidity associated with the accommodation of larger M leads to a decreasing Stokes shift and the corresponding blue-shift (533 → 511 nm) in emission spectra, along with an improvement in thermal stability (keeping ∼93% at 150 °C). The cyan-green phosphor LuBaAlSiO:Ce enables to fabricate a superhigh color rendering w-LED ( R = 96.6), verifying its superiority and application prospect in high-quality solid-state lightings.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.8b03017 | DOI Listing |
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