2019-02-15

Research Shows LED Can Cool Down Electronics Devices with Reversed Electrodes

Researchers found a new method of photonic cooling by running LED with electrodes reversed. Researchers believe that this approach could improve cooling technology for future microprocessors, which will include various transistors in a small space that current methods cannot remove heat quickly enough. The finding was published on Nature on February 13 by a research team at the University of Michigan. Linxiao Zhu, the lead author on the research article, explained, “Usually for thermal radiation, the intensity only depends on temperature, but we actually have an additio...
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2014-07-18

University of Michigan Researcher Lowers LED Costs with Metal-Free Organic Material

Researchers at the University of Michigan have taken a major stride toward perfectly efficient lighting that is also relatively inexpensive and simple to make. The same material can also reveal the presence of water by changing color.
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2014-06-24

A Better Light Bulb: Pyramid Scheme for Brighter OLEDs

The most common kind of light bulb in the United States—the incandescent—is only about 5 percent efficient. The phosphorescent organic light-emitting diode, on the other hand, makes light out of 100 percent of the electricity that goes into it.
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1970-01-01

University of Michigan Raises OLED Light Extraction by 50%

Researchers at the University of Michigan have discovered a way to get 50% more light out of organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs), bringing them one step closer to more widespread adoption as a general lighting source, while increasing their value in displays.
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LEDVANCE, a global leader in lighting solutions, is expanding its partnership with the German football club Bayer 04 Leverkusen. Building on the successful upgrade of the stadium's floodlighting, the club is now relying on LEDVANCE’s... READ MORE

The world’s attention turns to the game as the 2026 FIFA World Cup, jointly hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, delivers one of the most anticipated sporting spectacles in history. Forty-eight national teams are competing ac... READ MORE