Enhancement of luminous efficacy for LED lamps by introducing polyacrylonitrile electrospinning nanofiber film

Opt Express. 2018 Oct 15;26(21):27716-27725. doi: 10.1364/OE.26.027716.

Abstract

Polyacrylonitrile electrospinning nanofiber film was introduced into a light emitting diode (LED) lamp to exploit the strong reflective and scattering effects. The light extraction mechanism was studied systematically for three different electrospinning types in three different types of LED lamps. For the all-electrospinning types, the luminous efficacy increased for the white LED, outwards remote phosphor layer, and inwards remote phosphor layer lamps by 10.98, 16.97, and 18.35%, respectively, compared with the reference lamp. Lamps with stronger backscatter had larger luminous efficacy enhancements. The reflector-electrospinning type helped redirect lights with large emission angles. The substrate-electrospinning type was beneficial for recycling the total interior reflection lights and increasing the yellow to blue ratio. Additionally, the all-electrospinning white LED lamps remains 97.89% luminous flux after a 96-hour aging process. Electrospinning fiber films are favorable luminous efficacy enhancers for the future generation of LED lamps.