LED的效率超过100%
LED's Efficiency Exceeds 100%

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2012-03-efficiency.html

麻省理工学院的研究人员展示了一种效率超过100%的LED,其发出的光比消耗的电能更多。这是通过将输入电压和功率大幅降低到仅30皮瓦实现的,从而产生69皮瓦的光输出(效率为230%)。这种效应取决于LED的效率随着其输出功率降低而增加的原理。原子晶格振动(熵)产生的多余热量有助于发光,从而使LED略微冷却,类似于热电冷却器。虽然由于效率和输出之间的反比关系,这种方法不适用于高亮度LED,但这项“热泵”方法暗示了其在固态冷却、无热照明和发电方面的潜在应用。研究人员希望这种方法能够促进对节能电磁通信极限的测试。

Hacker News 上的一个帖子讨论了一篇声称 LED 效率超过 100% 的文章。用户很快指出这并不违反热力学定律。额外的光能来自 LED 从周围环境吸收热量,本质上就像一个微型热泵。这类似于打开水龙头时,水龙头会吸附周围现有的水滴。虽然这种效应是真实存在的,并且有充分的报道,但它只在非常低的功率水平下才会发生。 几位评论者批评了耸人听闻的标题,认为“>100%”的效率只适用于电输入到光输出的比率,而不是整体能量转换。一位用户开玩笑地建议使用 LED 和光伏电池制造一台永动机,而其他人则承认其在改善大功率 LED 散热方面的潜在应用。总的来说,讨论强调了仔细解读科学声明的重要性,以及这种现象的有趣应用(尽管有限)的潜力。

原文

(PhysOrg.com) -- For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that an LED can emit more optical power than the electrical power it consumes. Although scientifically intriguing, the results won’t immediately result in ultra-efficient commercial LEDs since the demonstration works only for LEDs with very low input power that produce very small amounts of light.

The researchers, Parthiban Santhanam and coauthors from MIT, have published their study in a recent issue of Physical Review Letters.

As the researchers explain in their study, the key to achieving a conversion above 100%, i.e., “unity efficiency,” is to greatly decrease the applied voltage. According to their calculations, as the voltage is halved, the input power is decreased by a factor of 4, while the emitted light power scales linearly with voltage so that it’s also only halved. In other words, an LED’s efficiency increases as its output power decreases. (The inverse of this relationship - that LED efficiency decreases as its output power increases - is one of the biggest hurdles in designing bright, efficient LED lights.)

In their experiments, the researchers reduced the LED’s input power to just 30 picowatts and measured an output of 69 picowatts of light - an efficiency of 230%. The physical mechanisms worked the same as with any LED: when excited by the applied voltage, electrons and holes have a certain probability of generating photons. The researchers didn’t try to increase this probability, as some previous research has focused on, but instead took advantage of small amounts of excess heat to emit more power than consumed. This heat arises from vibrations in the device’s atomic lattice, which occur due to entropy.

This light-emitting process cools the slightly, making it operate similar to a thermoelectric cooler. Although the cooling is insufficient to provide practical cooling at room temperature, it could potentially be used for designing lights that don’t generate heat. When used as a heat pump, the device might be useful for solid-state cooling applications or even power generation.

Theoretically, this low-voltage strategy allows for an arbitrarily efficient generation of photons at low voltages. For this reason, the researchers hope that the technique could offer a new way to test the limits of energy-efficiency electromagnetic communication.

More information: Parthiban Santhanam, et al. “Thermoelectrically Pumped Light-Emitting Diodes Operating above Unity Efficiency.” Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 097403 (2012). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.097403
Physics Synopsis

© 2011 PhysOrg.com

Citation: LED's efficiency exceeds 100% (2012, March 5) retrieved 20 March 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2012-03-efficiency.html

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