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Technology

First Ultraviolet Quantum Dots Shine In an LED 47

ckwu with word that South Korean researchers have created the first UV-emitting quantum dots, and employed them in the creation of a flexible LED. Their achievement is notable because no one has previously succeeded in making quantum dots capable of emitting light at wavelengths shorter than 400 nm, which defines the upper range of the UV spectrum. Writes ckwu: To get quantum dots that emit UV, the researchers figured out how make them with light-emitting cores smaller than 3 nm in diameter. They did it by coating a light-emitting cadmium zinc selenide nanoparticle with a zinc sulfide shell, which caused the core to shrink to 2.5 nm. The quantum dots give off true UV light, at 377 nm. An LED made with the quantum dots could illuminate the anticounterfeiting marks on a paper bill. The article names a few applications of the technology, besides, including water sterilization and industrial applications.
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First Ultraviolet Quantum Dots Shine In an LED

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 29, 2015 @06:53PM (#49802811)

    Water sterilization is, I think, the single most important application for this. Current UVs for sterilizing water (I work with these) are still bound to using fluorescent lamp technology. It's bulky, requires a way of way of keeping a thin glass lamp separated from the water but still shining through it (we use quartz sleeves: major $$$), and requires constant maintenance (usually annual or biannual bulb changes, more $$$) and requires an external ballast to operate the lamp (even more $$$$). Cheap, easily cleanable plumbing fixtures that just plug in to sterilize water would be a major win both in cost of clean water here at home and in provisioning to developing nations.

    If you're wondering what the scope of the applicatoin is, if you're drinking out of a municipal water supply right now it is probably both chlorinated and UV treated.

    • What level of luminescence and at what frequency do current UV sterilizers need to be for current treatment systems? And what wattage/gal are we talking about here? If they can find a way to mass produce these, there could be some significant wins globally for water sanitation.

      Also: would this make it possible to create portable systems that you could carry with you whle hiking/carry to remote locations and operate via solar power/battery?

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        carry with you whle hiking/carry to remote locations and operate via solar power

        It would be difficult to beat the existing system on price: PET bottles. [wikihow.com]

      • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 29, 2015 @07:08PM (#49802887)

        The NSF standard, which is the gold standard for UV sterilization, currently requires an irradiation of 40 mJ/cm2. It works best at wavelengths around 250nm, which is still considerably tighter than the LEDs developed in this research.

      • About 264 nanometers (Score:5, Informative)

        by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday May 29, 2015 @07:47PM (#49803023) Homepage Journal

        Peak effectiveness for sterilization is around 264 nanometers. DNA has a specific absorption at that wavelength, so light at this frequency destroys DNA.

        This wavelength is in the UV-C band, which is the radiation blocked by the ozone layer, which is one reason people are concerned about ozone: it protects us from DNA-damaging radiation.

        Mercury emits UV at around 254, which is close enough to the DNA absorption peak to have good effect. A fluorescent bulb without phosphor and UV-transparent glass will work.

        The wavelengths cited in the post, 377nm, are too long for germicidal effect. If the work can be extended, it would result in much more efficient germicidal bulbs by generating wavelengths closer to optimal, and because quantum dots are generally very efficient.

        You can get UV bulbs for your furnace that stick into the plenum and disinfect the air as it blows past. You might be able to run one of these from an inverter while hiking. Be sure to cover the bulb and be *very* careful not to look at it when it's on.

    • by Sowelu ( 713889 ) on Friday May 29, 2015 @07:10PM (#49802893)

      It's amazing how big of a global impact you could get, from what seems at first glance to be an everyday iterative improvement to an esoteric technical product. Thank you for sharing!

    • Could this sterilization tech beat the Steri-Pen for portability, for the outdoors market?

    • Wrong wavelength, don't you need UVC 280 – 100 nm to kill bugs?
  • by trout007 ( 975317 ) on Friday May 29, 2015 @06:57PM (#49802835)

    They sell UV lights to put in your air handler to keep mold and mildew growth down but the units are expensive and the bulbs need replacement quite often. A long lasting UV source could be built into the units and keep them clean.

  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Friday May 29, 2015 @07:08PM (#49802883) Homepage Journal

    If development took only a few more years, we wouldn't have paper money to counterfeit.

    • Development of the surveillance state?
      I think its neither my banks nor my governments responsibility or right to know precisely where I spend my money. Even if I trusted my government, I don't want shops to know my name or account ID, this would be the ultimate tracking for them. But I guess they are already developing face recognition based approaches that match my face with internet footage (like data bought from facebook) to get my identification.
      I don't like the snooping and control the future has for t

      • Have you ever filed a Federal and State Income tax form? If so the government already knows where you work, your income, how many dependents you have, where you live, your age, your marital status, and details about any property you own.They started collecting this information way before there was any electronic information age in all it's various manifestations. And to top it off the government doesn't need a search warrant to access any of this information they have compiled and stored. The IRS makes the

        • For tax forms, this form of data collection does make sense. And where you live, your age, your marital status and any real estate or car you own should be already known to several parts of the state. Things like income are basic to know for collecting taxes.

      • Even though it would help the government perform surveillance, I think most of the money should be plastic chips with RFID. Perhaps down to 25 cent pieces and up to 5 dollars (or maybe more). Sure, I'd have to swap out my wallet for a change purse, but I don't really carry large amounts of cash with me anyways.

        It's nice to have some cash on hand when your cellphone's payment system isn't working.

    • In my country, we already don't. We switched to polymer bills a few years back. We also got rid of that money waster - the penny.
  • by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Friday May 29, 2015 @07:22PM (#49802933)

    We already have robust conventional LEDs that emit high power at comparable wavelengths (considered "longwave UV"). This wavelength is not especially useful for purification and sterilization. For that, you need UVC, in the range of 250nm and below. That's still difficult with anything other than a fluorescent emitter or an arc; solid-state emitters in that range have very low power and short life, at least last time I checked.

    The other problem with very short wavelengths is finding packaging materials that will transmit and withstand them over long periods. Even longwave UV will cause materials to deteriorate over the lifespan of a solid-state emitter; UVC is much more harsh.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      lifetime isn't terrible, but not as good as visible LEDs. a 250nm 0.5milliwatt diode costs $350 for quantity of one. unit price for 10000 is still over $50

    • by Khyber ( 864651 )

      "solid-state emitters in that range have very low power and short life, at least last time I checked."

      What, a decade ago? The UV-C LEDs keeping my aquarium water algae-free have been in operation for at least five years.

      • by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Saturday May 30, 2015 @09:12AM (#49804653)

        Links, please? Last I checked, UV-C emitting diodes were essentially experimental items, with output power below 1mW, and sky-high prices. Feel free to ridicule me mercilessly if I'm wrong, but please post links; I'm a lot more interested in learning about UV-C emitters than in defending my hypothetical reputation.

        This page [hexatechinc.com] crows about UV-C LEDs, but is conspicuously silent about output power (beyond calling it "stable"), availability, or price.

        This page [cisuvc.com] claims 5-10mW per device, adding that "limited release engineering samples are available today." The datasheet is mum on device lifespan.

        This looks more promising [ledsmagazine.com] -- 10mW per device, 10,000 hour life -- but where are the products, and where are the prices?

        Obviously, I could be missing some products that are already shipping. But if you actually have a bank of UV-C LEDs that's been putting out enough power to kill algae in your aquarium for the last five years, it looks like a lot of electronics and physics journals would be interested in hearing from you. And so, as I said, would I.

        • by Khyber ( 864651 )

          http://www.nichia.co.jp/en/pro... [nichia.co.jp] - you can contact them for UV-C LEDs, they'll send you a catalog with the less-often purchased UV-B and UV-C diodes there as well. You can also custom-order UV arrays and such.

          Cree quit making high-power UV-C LEDs a couple of years ago. HaSun Optoelectronics has 0.5w+ UV-C LEDs. Yes they are expensive. Almost $80 each.

          Seoul Semiconductor (rather Seoul Viosys, a subsidiary that focuses on the UV side of LEDs) has high power UV-C LEDs as well, the S265 and S255, for example.

          • It almost seems like you're interpreting "UV-C" to include the range from 360-380nm. There are apparently some results indicating that emitters in this range can be germicidal, if you use enough power and enough exposure time; is that where our disconnect is arising?

            The Nichia page you linked lists only longwave emitters, with 365nm the shortest wavelength. I'm sure they have shortwave emitters, and maybe even samples for some of them, but if they aren't listed on the Web site, I'm not confident how much of

            • by Khyber ( 864651 )

              "It almost seems like you're interpreting "UV-C" to include the range from 360-380nm."

              No, 100-280nm is what I consider. Don't use Aliexpress, nor Alibaba (first off they can't even properly copy/paste data from their own datasheets. Almost every listing is written by a salesperson, not an engineer.) The GOOD SHIT is hidden directly in paper-only catalogs.

              Cree most certainly made UV-C LEDs. I'm one of their primary product testers and have been for getting close to a decade (everyone that liked LEDs was piss

  • Very interesting. I have an application for this where I'm using 365 to 395 nm older style to attract bugs efficiently. The water sterilization is another important application of this. It could reduce cost and increase component life and reliability meaning better water.

    • I have an application for this where I'm using 365 to 395 nm older style to attract bugs efficiently.

      Come on, give us a few details. Are you collecting the bugs for research or are you using the lights as bait for your backyard zapper? Or are you collecting bugs to feed to your pet iguanas?

      That's too tantalizing a statement for you not to tell us a little more.

    • UV can be used to make scorpions glow in the dark, e.g. http://johnbokma.com/pet/scorp... [johnbokma.com] It also works with some opiliones (harvestmen) and millipedes.

      BTW, don't built the one I made years ago. Nowadays one can buy a better UV source online, e.g. UltraFire WF-502B with UV LED.

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