Physics Today
Jump to Content
Increase text size Decrease text size
  • Sign In
  • View Items in Cart View Cart
  • Advanced
  • Keyword
 
  • Home
  • Print Edition
  • Daily Edition
    • News Picks
    • The Dayside
    • Physics Update
    • Singularities
    • Points of View
    • Politics and Policy
    • Science and the Media
    • Obituaries
    • We Hear That
    • Events Calendar
  • Advertising
  • Buyer's Guide
  • About us
    • Our mission
    • Our people
    • American Institute of Physics
    • Member societies
    • Register
    • Subscribe
    • Submit content
    • Marketing reprints
    • Rights and permissions
    • Help/FAQ
    • Change mailing address
    • Contact us
  • Jobs
    • Job Seeker Login
    • Search Jobs
    • Post Resumes
    • Career Resources
    • For Employers
    • Success Stories
    • Resume Templates
    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Display Advertising
    • Employer Resources
    • Banner Advertising
    • Security Tips
Follow us: Facebook    Twitter    rss    E-mail alert
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
Letters

Moving Through Curved Spacetime

November 2003, page 12

More on Early LEDs

In their article "The Promise and Challenge of Solid-State Lighting" (Physics Today, December 2001, page 42), Arpad Bergh, George Craford, Anil Duggal, and Roland Haitz show a graph (page 43) of performance of light-emitting diodes as a function of time. The graph obscures the early history by suggesting that GaP:Zn,O devices first appeared in 1968, whereas by that time a number of manufacturers had them on the market. The breakthrough in gallium phosphide came in 1962 when Jerzy Starkiewicz and I discovered that good red emission required both zinc and oxygen to be present, and we mapped the appropriate concentration ranges.1 That work allowed for the development of devices (we called them "crystal lamps") with sufficient reproducibility for manufacture. They were described in March 1962 in a journal that was restricted at the time, and a more complete description was given in the open literature later that year.2

Sample devices were sent to potential military users in May and June 1962. The response was enthusiastic, so toward the end of the year, a proper production line was set up in Phil Gurnell's semiconductor device group in the Services Electronics Research Laboratory in Baldock, England. One application was a film marker for Royal Air Force reconnaissance planes: An array of emitters put digital information about flight parameters onto each frame of the film. Obviously the array had to be small so that the marker used up very little of the frame. For that, the encapsulated lamps were 1/32 inch (just under 1 mm) in diameter and were mounted within the thickness of a printed-circuit board. That application was secret at the time but was later made public.

References

1. J. Starkiewicz, J. W. Allen, J. Phys. Chem. Solids 23, 881 (1962).
2. J. W. Allen, J. R. Nav. Sci. Serv. 17, 72 (1962); New Sci. 15, 43 (1962); Instrum. Pract. 16, 1463 (1962).

John W. Allen
(jwa@st-andrews.ac.uk)
University of St. Andrews
Fife, Scotland
  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Free this month
  • Nuclear Bunker Busters, Mini-Nukes, and the US Nuclear Stockpile
  • The Growth of Astrophysical Understanding
  • The Business of Academic Physics
  • Physics Salaries Rise
  • No Time to Be Brief: A Scientific Biography of Wolfgang Pauli
  • New Books
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Gedanken experiment: Levitate a physics sitcom?
    Points of View
  • Nanoplasmonics: The physics behind the applications
    February 2011
  • Half-quantum vortices
    Physics Update
  • Quantum criticality
    February 2011
  • Related from the archive
  • The Force Need Not Be With You: Curvature Begets Motion

 



SERVICES
Physics Today Jobs
Physics Today Buyers Guide
Event Calendar
Obituaries
DAILY EDITION
The Dayside
News Picks
Science in the Media
Politics & Policy
Singularities
Physics Update
Points of View
THE MAGAZINE
This month in print
Institutional subscriptions
Information for advertisers
READER SERVICE
Register
Sign in
Subscribe
Email alert
MORE INFO
FAQ
Contact us
About Physics Today
Privacy Policy
Marketing reprints
Rights and Permissions

Copyright © by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved

Find articles by AUTHORNAME

This PublicationThis Publication
ScitationScitation
SPINSPIN
ScitopiaScitopia
Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
PubMedPubMed