Nine projects selected for Dept. of Energy SSL R&D Funding

The projects will focus on the areas of Core Technology Research for both LEDs and OLEDs.

4 MIN READ

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced the competitive selection of nine projects for solid-state lighting (SSL), in response to its SSL R&D funding opportunity announcement (FOA) DE-FOA-0001364. The projects, which will span an 18 to 24-month period, will focus on the areas of Core Technology Research. This involves the application of fundamental scientific concepts to SSL technology; Product Development, which incorporates basic or applied research to develop or improve commercially viable SSL materials, devices, or systems; and Manufacturing Research and Development, which accelerates SSL technology adoption through manufacturing innovations and improvements that reduce costs and enhance quality and consistency. Funding for the nine projects translates to more than $10.5 million and leverages a cost-share contribution from each recipient, bringing the total public-private investment to more than $13.5 million.

This is the eleventh round of the DOE investments in SSL core technology research and product development. No manufacturing projects were selected in this 11th round. This program is part of the DOE’s ongoing initiatives to promote the adoption of SSL technology. The project selections are listed below (final details are subject to negotiations):

Recipient: Cree, Durham, N.C.
Project Title: High Efficacy, Multi-Functional SSL Platform
Summary: This project will incorporate a high-efficacy LED light engine into a demonstration luminaire, with concurrent advancements in LED light engines, optics, and sensors integrated to result in high efficacy as well as additional features such as spectral tuning.
DOE Share: $1,499,986; Cost Share: $499,996

Recipient: Columbia University, New York, N.Y.
Project Title: Graded Alloy Quantum Dots for Energy Efficient Solid State Lighting
Summary: This project will use an inexpensive and widely tunable library of quantum dot (QD) synthesis reagents along with automated high-throughput synthesis and analysis tools to grade the alloy composition of QD heterostructures, in order to provide stable and efficient narrow-band red down-converters for LEDs.
DOE Share: $1,014,798; Cost Share: $257,534

Recipient: GE Global Research, Niskayuna, N.Y.
Project Title: Highly Integrated Modular LED Luminaire
Summary: This project will build a scalable, efficient, modular luminaire to address the integration of driver, optics, and package in a flexible integration platform that allows for simplified manufacturing to customized performance specifications.
DOE Share: $1,177,064; Cost Share: $392,355

Recipient: Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa
Project Title: Enhanced Light Extraction from Low Cost White OLEDs (WOLEDs) Fabricated on Novel Patterned Substrates
Summary: This project will demonstrate a way to increase the outcoupling of simple white OLEDs while maintaining a high color rendering index, by disrupting the internal wave-guiding, using a unique and innovative corrugation pattern.
DOE Share: $1,318,938; Cost Share: $331,598

Recipient: Lumenari, Lexington, Ky.
Project Title: Narrow Emitting Red Phosphors for Improving pcLED Efficacy
Summary: This project will develop a narrow-bandwidth red phosphor to improve phosphor-converted LED efficacy up to 28%. This will be accomplished through a combination of experimental and computational techniques to develop a novel host material for the selected emitter ion.
DOE Share: $1,499,089; Cost Share: $374,773

Recipient: Lumileds, San Jose, Calif.
Project Title: High-Efficacy High-Power LED for Directional Applications
Summary: This project will develop a high-efficacy, high-power LED emitter enabled by patterned sapphire substrate flip-chip architecture, die development to include novel contact design, phosphors with reduced bandwidth, and new optical materials for light extraction from the die.
DOE Share: $1,498,228; Cost Share: $499,410

Recipient: North Carolina State University, Raleigh, N.C.
Project Title: Low Cost Corrugated Substrates for High Efficiency OLEDs
Summary: This project will develop OLEDs fabricated on low-cost high index corrugated substrates with a semi-random periodicity to give enhancements in extraction efficiency across the entire visible spectrum, due to the extraction of the thin-film-guided and surface-plasmon modes.
DOE Share: $583,953; Cost Share: $157,000

Recipient: Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pa.
Project Title: Understanding, Predicting, and Mitigating Catastrophic Shorts for Improved OLED Lighting Panel Reliability
Summary: This project will develop a way to better understand and predict the occurrence of short circuits in OLED lighting panels, in order to reduce failure rates by means of new, more-informative panel diagnostics, a modeling capability to predict mean time to failure, and new anti-shorting strategies that address the root cause of the problem.
DOE Share: $1,087,981; Cost Share: $271,996

Recipient: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Project Title: Getting All the Light Out: Eliminating Plasmon Losses in High Efficiency White Organic Light Emitting Devices for Lighting Applications
Summary: This project will develop innovative methods to outcouple the light within OLED devices in order to increase external quantum efficiency. This will be accomplished through nanoscale texturing beneath the anode outside the active region, fabricating sub-anode gratings along with micro-lens arrays, and top emitting structures with a sub-anode grid coupled with a reflective mirror at the base.
DOE Share: $900,000; Cost Share: $225,269

For more information about the DOE’s SSL initiatives visit the SSL section of the DOE website.

About the Author

Elizabeth Donoff

Elizabeth Donoff is Editor-at-Large of Architectural Lighting (AL). She served as Editor-in-Chief from 2006 to 2017. She joined the editorial team in 2003 and is a leading voice in the lighting community speaking at industry events such as Lightfair and the International Association of Lighting Designers Annual Enlighten Conference, and has twice served as a judge for the Illuminating Engineering Society New York City Section’s (IESNYC) Lumen Award program. In 2009, she received the Brilliance Award from the IESNYC for dedicated service and contribution to the New York City lighting community. Over the past 11 years, under her editorial direction, Architectural Lighting has received a number of prestigious B2B journalism awards. In 2017, Architectural Lighting was a Top Ten Finalist for Magazine of the Year from the American Society of Business Publication Editors' AZBEE Awards. In 2016, Donoff received the Jesse H. Neal Award for her Editor’s Comments in the category of Best Commentary/Blog, and in 2015, AL received a Jesse H. Neal Award for Best Media Brand (Overall Editorial Excellence).Prior to her entry into design journalism, Donoff worked in New York City architectural offices including FXFowle where she was part of the project teams for the Reuters Building at Three Times Square and the New York Times Headquarters. She is a graduate of Bates College in Lewiston, Me., and she earned her Master of Architecture degree from the School of Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis.

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