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Damage Threshold Data (Summary) Optical Damage Thresholds for Various Samples Sample Fluence DT (J/cm 2 ) DNA/CTMA on SLG Substrate 2.3 to 2.6 DNA/CTMA W/O Substrate 2.1 (sample curved) Fused Silica 2.7 to 4.5 (AFRL = 4.3) SiC Semi-conducting 0.6 SiC Conducting 0.65 PMMA 380 0.5 PMMA 455 0.6 Optical Damage Threshold Comparable to that of Fused Silica

Damage Threshold Data (Summary) Optical Damage Thresholds for Various Samples SampleFluence DT (J/cm 2 ) DNA/CTMA on SLG Substrate 2.3 to 2.6 DNA/CTMA

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Damage Threshold Data(Summary)

Optical Damage Thresholds for Various Samples

Sample Fluence DT (J/cm2)

DNA/CTMA on SLG Substrate 2.3 to 2.6

DNA/CTMA W/O Substrate 2.1 (sample curved)

Fused Silica 2.7 to 4.5 (AFRL = 4.3)

SiC Semi-conducting 0.6

SiC Conducting 0.65

PMMA 380 0.5

PMMA 455 0.6

Optical Damage Threshold Comparable to that of Fused Silica

Thermal Conductivity

[2]

DNA & DNA/CTMA [measured - AFRL]

PMMA [1]

• Large Thermal Conductivity• 0.12 W/mK for PMMA[1] • 0.82 W/mK DNA (~7X > PMMA)• 0.62 W/mK DNA-CTMA (~5X > PMMA)

Potential ForGetting Heat Out

[1] Takashi Kodama, et al., “Heat Conduction through a DNA-Gold Composite,” Nano Letters, 9, 2005 (2009)[2] Hartnett, Cho, Greene and Bar-Cohen, Advances In Heat Transfer, Volume 39, p. 174, Academic Press, 2006

• Ce3+:YAG Phosphor:Merck: Isiphor YGA 588100 (LED phosphor)

• Epoxy:Epoxy Technology: EPO-TEK OG142-112 (LED epoxy)

• DNA-Biopolymer:12 wt% DNA-CTMA-C4H9OH

(500 KDa, soxhlet rinse - no dialysis)

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

Materials

• DNA – Ogata Research Laboratory• CTMA – Sigma Aldrich (25 wt% CTMA in solution)• C4H9OH – Sigma Aldrich

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy• 45 µl drop onto nylon cap• UV cure 100 mW for 10 min• bake @ 40oC for 60 min

Processing

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA• 45 µl drop onto nylon cap• bake @ 40oC for 60 min

(no UV curing required)

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

Sony 100 CameraSpeed: 1/160 second

Aperture: F5.6

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy

Characterization

Light Source: Photon Micro Light (λ = 470 nm)

Phosphor + Host

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

IGOR PRO

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA

iPhotoLux app for Apple iPod Touch

Central Bright Region 6X Larger for DNA-Based Material(6X Brighter ?)

Photon Micro Light(λ = 470 nm)

Sony 100 CameraSpeed: 1/160 second

Aperture: F5.6

J. Grote, “Light emitting diode with a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) biopolymer”, US Patent 8,093,802 B1, Jan. 10, 2012

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy

Blue LED

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA

More Blue Componentwith Epoxy-Based Host

More Longer Wavelength Componentswith DNA-Based Host

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

Chromaticity (CIE 1931 [x, y] Gamut Chart)

Exact White[0.3127, 0.3290]

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-Epoxy[0.1975, 0.2177]

33 wt% Ce3+:YAG-DNA/CTMA[0.2441, 0.2877]

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

Heat Exposure

Epoxy - 66.11 µm thick (flow coat)

DNA/CTMA - 59.33 µm thick (flow coat)

340 390 440 490 540 590 640 690 74020

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

DNA-CTMA

Before 24hr @ 90C

After 24hr @ 90C

2nd 24hr @90C

Wavelength (nm)

% T

rnas

mit

tan

ce

340 390 440 490 540 590 640 690 74020

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Epoxy

Before 24hr @ 90C

After 24hr @ 90C

2nd 24hr @90C

Wavelength (nm)

% T

ran

smit

tan

ce

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

24 Hour UV Exposure (λ = 365 nm)

Epoxy - 66.11 µm thick (flow coat)

DNA/CTMA - 59.33 µm thick (flow coat)

340 390 440 490 540 590 640 690 74020

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Epoxy

2nd 24hr @90C

Final 1hr UV Cure

Wavelength (nm)

% T

ran

smit

tan

ce

340 390 440 490 540 590 640 690 74020

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

2nd 24hr @ 90C

Final 1hr UV Cure

Wavelength (nm)

% T

ran

smit

tan

ce

DNA-CTMA

Cost Analysis

Cost Per Gram of Material

• DNA/CTMA $6.75• 0.5g DNA + 4 ml CTMA

(25 wt% solution of CTMA in H2O)

• 12 wt% DNA/CTMA in C4H9OH $0.86 (~4X more)• EPO-TEK OG142-112 Epoxy $0.20

DNA Biopolymer-BasedWhite Solid State Lighting

Future DNA materials (estimated 10X-100X cost reduction)• 12 wt% DNA/CTMA in C4H9OH $0.16 (~1.25X less)

$0.06 (~3X less)

Phosphor Coating Accounts for 5% - 10% of Cost of White LED

Deposition TechniquesThat Can Be Used

Spin Deposit

Cast

Flow Coat

Vacuum Deposit

Ink Jet Print

Pulsed Laser

Spray Deposit

Electro-Spin

Enhanced Fluorescence in Electrospun Dye-Doped DNA Nanofibers

Fluorescent Dye Hemi22λex = 460 nm

(Hemi22) 4-[4-dimethylaminostyryl]-1-docosylpyridinium bromide

Y. Ner, et. al., “Enhanced Fluorescence in Electrospun Dye-Doped DNA Nanofibers ", Soft Matter, 4, 1-7, (2008)

Acceptor Dye

DNA-CTMA-Hemi22

Normalized FluorescenceSample IntensityPMMA Film 2.2 x106

PMMA Nanofiber 1.1 x 107

DNA–CTMA Film 3.9 x 107

DNA–CTMA Nanofiber 2.3 x 108

Film

Nanofiber

~10X

Phosphor-DNA/CTMA

Increased Surface Area

Phosphor-DNA/CTMA

Summary & Conclusions(DNA-CTMA Host vs Epoxy)

+ Brighter (Higher Efficiency ?)

+ Closer to Exact White Light (More Longer Wavelengths Present)

+ Higher UV & Comparable Heat Tolerance (Longer Lifetime ?)

+ Lower Optical Loss+ Acceptable Temperature Stability+ Higher Thermal Conductivity+ Higher Optical Damage Threshold+ Higher Photochemical Stability+ Comparable Low Temperature Processing+ No UV Curing Required+ Longer Shelf Life+ Environmentally Friendly− ~4X More Expensive (Currently)

+ Potentially ~1.25X-3X Less Expensive (Future) Cost may not be an issue

Acknowledgments

Edison Materials Technology Center (EMTEC)

Air Force Research LaboratoryMaterials &Manufacturing Directorate (AFRL/RX)

Merck (Ce3+:YAG phosphor)

Rajesh Naik (jpeg to gamut chart conversion)

Timothy Gorman (IGOR PRO conversion)

Danny Grote (iPhotoLux conversion)

Elizabeth Steenbergen (spectral data)

ID Cast

Wright Brothers Institute