Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/JP2013197197A/en
Timestamp: 2020-04-05 14:50:43
Document Index: 588909448

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 15', 'art 15', 'art 15', 'art 15', 'art, 15', 'art, 16']

JP2013197197A - Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same - Google Patents
Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same Download PDF
JP2013197197A
JP2013197197A JP2012060933A JP2012060933A JP2013197197A JP 2013197197 A JP2013197197 A JP 2013197197A JP 2012060933 A JP2012060933 A JP 2012060933A JP 2012060933 A JP2012060933 A JP 2012060933A JP 2013197197 A JP2013197197 A JP 2013197197A
JP2012060933A
2012-03-16 Application filed by Toshiba Corp, 株式会社東芝 filed Critical Toshiba Corp
2012-03-16 Priority to JP2012060933A priority Critical patent/JP2013197197A/en
2013-09-30 Publication of JP2013197197A publication Critical patent/JP2013197197A/en
A semiconductor light emitting device capable of improving light extraction efficiency and a method of manufacturing the same are provided.
According to an embodiment, a semiconductor light emitting device includes a semiconductor layer including a first surface, a second surface provided on the opposite side of the first surface, and a light emitting layer, on the first surface. And a first electrode provided on the substrate. The first surface has a flat surface and a rough surface provided with a plurality of concave portions and a plurality of convex portions at random, and the maximum height of the convex portions is the same height as the flat surface. The first electrode includes a pad and a thin line electrode provided on the flat surface in a line shape thinner than the pad and not provided on the rough surface.
The surface electrode provided on the surface (light extraction surface) of the semiconductor layer including the light emitting layer is required to supply a uniform current to the light emitting layer and not to significantly prevent light extraction from the surface. Further, in order to increase the light extraction efficiency, the unevenness of the light extraction surface is often performed. However, there is a concern that the electrode formation on the uneven surface may increase the contact resistance.
JP 2011-66048 A JP 2011-9524 A
Embodiments of the present invention provide a semiconductor light emitting device capable of improving light extraction efficiency and a method for manufacturing the same.
According to the embodiment, the semiconductor light emitting device includes a semiconductor layer including a first surface, a second surface provided on the opposite side of the first surface, a light emitting layer, and the first surface. And a first electrode provided on the substrate. The first surface has a flat surface and a rough surface provided with a plurality of concave portions and a plurality of convex portions at random, and the maximum height of the convex portions is the same height as the flat surface. The first electrode includes a pad and a thin line electrode that is provided on the flat surface in a line shape thinner than the pad, and is not provided on the rough surface.
(A) is a schematic top view of the semiconductor light-emitting device of 1st Embodiment, (b) is A-A 'sectional drawing in (a). (A) is a schematic top view of the semiconductor light-emitting device of 2nd Embodiment, (b) is B-B 'sectional drawing in (a). The schematic cross section of the surface electrode of an embodiment. (A)-(d) is a schematic cross section which shows the manufacturing method of the semiconductor light-emitting device of embodiment. FIG. 6 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a semiconductor light emitting device according to a third embodiment.
FIG. 1A is a schematic top view of the semiconductor light emitting device 1 of the first embodiment, and FIG. 1B is a cross-sectional view taken along line AA ′ in FIG.
In FIG. 1A, the illustration of the insulating film 25 on the flat surface 14 shown in FIG. 1B is omitted. As will be described later, the insulating film 25 is the remaining portion of the mask when the rough surface 15 is formed, and may not remain on the flat surface 14 in some cases.
The semiconductor light emitting device 1 includes a substrate 10, a semiconductor layer 12 provided on the substrate 10, and a surface electrode 23 as a first electrode provided on a first surface (light extraction surface) 16 of the semiconductor layer 12. And a back electrode 18 as a second electrode provided on the back surface of the substrate 10.
The semiconductor layer 12 includes a first surface 16, a second surface 17 provided on the opposite side of the first surface 16, and the light emitting layer 13. The light emitting layer 13 extends over the entire surface of the chip. A current is supplied to the light emitting layer 13 through the front electrode 23 and the back electrode 18, and the light emitting layer 13 emits light.
The substrate 10 functions as a support for the semiconductor layer 12. The substrate 10 has conductivity for energizing between the semiconductor layer 12 and the back electrode 18, and for example, a silicon substrate can be used. The back electrode 18 is provided on, for example, the entire surface of the substrate 10 opposite to the semiconductor layer 12 (back surface). The back electrode 18 is in ohmic contact with the substrate 10.
For example, the semiconductor layer 12 is formed on another substrate (growth substrate) suitable for epitaxial growth of the semiconductor layer 12, and then joined to the substrate 10 through the metal layer 11. The metal layer 11 is interposed between the second surface 17 of the semiconductor layer 12 and the substrate 10.
The metal layer 11 has reflectivity with respect to the light emitted from the light emitting layer 13, and can also serve as a reflective layer that reflects the light emitted from the light emitting layer 13 toward the second surface 17 toward the first surface 16. Function.
A contact metal 19 is selectively provided on the second surface 17 of the semiconductor layer 12. The contact metal 19 is in ohmic contact with the semiconductor layer 12.
The first surface 16 of the semiconductor layer 12 has a flat surface 14 and a rough surface 15. In the top view of the first surface 16, the total area of the rough surface 15 is larger than the total area of the flat surface 14.
The rough surface 15 has irregularities (a plurality of concave portions 15b and convex portions 15a) that are randomly provided by etching, which will be described later. The convex part 15a is formed in the shape of a cone, for example. The size, shape, and pitch of the protrusions 15a are random.
The flat surface 14 is formed on the upper surface of the mesa-shaped portion. The maximum height of the convex portion 15 a is the same height as the flat surface 14. The height here is a height based on the light emitting layer 13 or the second surface 17.
The surface electrode 23 includes a pad 22 and a thin line electrode 21 that is thinner than the pad 22. The fine wire electrode 21 is provided on the flat surface 14 and is not provided on the rough surface 15. The pad 22 is also provided on the flat surface 14 and is not provided on the rough surface 15.
For example, the first surface 16 has a rectangular planar shape, and pads 22 are provided in the vicinity of the two corners. An external terminal (for example, a bonding wire) for connecting to an external circuit is bonded to the pad 22.
The fine wire electrode 21 is connected to the pad 22. For example, the pad 22 and the fine wire electrode 21 are integrally formed of the same material and in the same process and have the same thickness.
The thin wire electrode 21 has a function of diffusing current in the surface direction of the first surface 16, and is laid out without deviation in the surface direction of the first surface 16.
The rough surface 15 is divided into, for example, three regions. In the top view of the first surface 16 shown in FIG. 1A, the left rough surface region is surrounded by the fine wire electrode 21 and the pad 22 provided at the lower left corner, and the middle rough surface region is the fine wire electrode 21. The rough surface area on the right side is surrounded by the thin wire electrode 21 and the pad 22 provided at the lower right corner. All of the three rough surface regions are surrounded by the flat surface 14 in a top view of the first surface 16 shown in FIG.
The light emitted from the light emitting layer 13 is mainly emitted from the rough surface 15 of the first surface 16 to the outside of the semiconductor light emitting device 1. In order to improve the light extraction efficiency from the rough surface 15, it is advantageous that the processing depth of the rough surface 15 or the height of the convex portion 15 a is close to or less than the light emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13.
In the embodiment, the light emitting layer 13 emits light having a wavelength of 400 nm to 700 nm, for example, and the maximum height of the convex portion 15a is 1 μm or less. Moreover, the thickness of the surface electrode 23 is within twice the maximum height of the convex part 15a, for example, is 1 micrometer or less.
FIG. 3 shows an example of a cross-sectional structure of the surface electrode 23.
The surface electrode 23 includes an aluminum film 31, a titanium film 32, a platinum film 33, and a gold film 34 that are sequentially stacked from the first surface 16 side of the semiconductor layer 12. The thickness of the gold film 34 is larger than the thickness of each of the aluminum film 31, the titanium film 32, and the platinum film 33, and larger than the total film thickness of the aluminum film 31, the titanium film 32, and the platinum film 33. The aluminum film 31, the titanium film 32, and the platinum film 33 have substantially the same thickness, and the gold film 34 has a thickness that is about 14 times the thickness of the aluminum film 31, the titanium film 32, and the platinum film 33.
The aluminum film 31 functions as a contact metal that forms an alloy with the semiconductor layer 12 and makes ohmic contact with the semiconductor layer 12. The titanium film 32 and the platinum film 33 function as a barrier metal. Most of the thickness of the surface electrode 23 is occupied by the gold film 34 having low resistance and excellent oxidation resistance and corrosion resistance.
As shown in FIG. 1B, the contact metal 19 provided on the second surface 17 of the semiconductor layer 12 is provided below the rough surface 15 (back side), and below the flat surface 14 (back side). Not provided. The contact resistance between the semiconductor layer 12 and the contact metal 19 is lower than the contact resistance between the semiconductor layer 12 and the metal layer 11 responsible for bonding and reflection.
Here, as a comparative example, when a surface electrode is formed on a rough surface subjected to uneven processing, a certain degree of thickness (for example, about 5 μm) is required for the surface electrode in order to obtain good contact resistance with the semiconductor layer. However, thicker surface electrodes increase electrode material costs and process time. Moreover, the thick electrode on the light extraction surface obstructs extraction of light emitted from the light extraction surface in an oblique direction.
On the other hand, according to the embodiment, the surface electrode 23 is formed on the flat surface 14 instead of the rough surface 15 subjected to the uneven processing. Therefore, the thickness of the surface electrode 23 required to obtain a good contact with the semiconductor layer 12 can be reduced, and the electrode material cost and the process time can be suppressed.
According to the embodiment, good contact resistance with the semiconductor layer 12 can be obtained while suppressing the thickness of the surface electrode 23 to 1 μm or less. As an example of the structure of such a surface electrode 23, the laminated structure mentioned above with reference to FIG. 3 is mentioned. That is, the surface electrode 23 having the laminated structure shown in FIG. 3 has a thickness of 1 μm or less, and can obtain good contact with the flat surface 14 of the semiconductor layer 12 including the light emitting layer 13.
Moreover, when the surface electrode 23 becomes thin, the light emitted in an oblique direction from the light extraction surface and blocked by the surface electrode 23 can be reduced.
The maximum height of the convex portion 15 a on the rough surface 15 is the same height as the flat surface 14. For this reason, it can suppress that the light discharge | released from the convex part 15a is shielded by the mesa-shaped part which has the flat surface 14 on the upper surface.
According to the embodiment, the maximum height of the convex portion 15a (maximum depth of the concave portion 15b) is 1 μm or less, and the average height of the convex portion 15a (average depth of the concave portion 15b) is also 1 μm or less. The emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13 is about 400 nm to 700 nm. Therefore, the depth or height of the unevenness processing is close to or less than the emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13, and high light extraction efficiency can be obtained. Such fine irregularities can be easily and inexpensively formed by random processing by etching as will be described later.
The contact metal 19 provided on the second surface 17 of the semiconductor layer 12 is provided below the rough surface 15 and is not provided below the flat surface 14. That is, the contact metal 19 is provided on the back side of the portion where the surface electrode 23 is not provided, and is not provided on the back side of the portion where the surface electrode 23 is provided. Note that the contact metal 19 may slightly overlap the flat surface 14 in plan view.
The surface electrode 23 and the contact metal 19 respectively provided on the first surface 16 and the second surface 17 with the light emitting layer 13 interposed therebetween do not overlap in plan view. Thereby, the uniformity of the surface direction of the current supplied to the light emitting layer 13 through the surface electrode 23 and the contact metal 19 can be improved.
The surface electrode 23 (pad 22 and fine wire electrode 21) is not formed on the entire flat surface 14. The edge 22a on the rough surface 15 side of the pad 22 and the edge 21a on the rough surface 15 side of the thin wire electrode 21 are further away from the rough surface 15 than the edge 14a on the rough surface 15 side of the flat surface 14. The width of the thin wire electrode 21 (width in the direction orthogonal to the longitudinal direction) is smaller than the width of the flat surface 14 (width in the direction orthogonal to the longitudinal direction).
That is, the surface electrode 23 does not extend to the edge 14 a of the flat surface 14. On the flat surface 14, there is a region where the surface electrode 23 is not provided (a region without hatched lines and dots in FIG. 1A) between the edge 14 a of the flat surface 14 and the surface electrode 23. To do. For this reason, coupled with the fact that the surface electrode 23 is thin, it is possible to further improve the light extraction efficiency in the oblique direction from the vicinity of the edge 14a on the flat surface 14.
The insulating film 25 on the flat surface 14 is transmissive to the light emitted from the light emitting layer 13, and is a silicon oxide film, for example.
Next, a method for forming the rough surface 15 and the surface electrode 23 will be described with reference to FIGS. 4A to 4D, the structure below the semiconductor layer 12 is not shown.
First, as shown in FIG. 4A, the insulating film 25 is formed on the entire surface of the first surface 16 of the semiconductor layer 12. The insulating film 25 serves as an etching mask for roughing the surface, and for example, a silicon oxide film can be used.
The insulating film 25 formed on the entire surface of the first surface 16 is patterned using a resist (not shown). As a result, the insulating film 25 is selectively left as an etching mask on the first surface 16.
Then, etching is performed using the insulating film 25 as a mask. As a result, a rough surface 15 is formed in a portion of the first surface 16 that is not covered with the insulating film 25 as shown in FIG. By performing anisotropic dry etching (for example, RIE (Reactive Ion Etching)) as etching, irregularities are randomly formed due to an etching rate difference due to a difference in crystal plane. The surface covered with the insulating film 25 becomes the flat surface 14.
The etching conditions (etching time, etching gas, etc.) at this time are appropriately controlled so that the maximum height of the convex portion 15a on the rough surface 15 is the same as that of the flat surface 14.
After the rough surface 15 is formed, a resist film 41 shown in FIG. 4C is formed on the rough surface 15 and the insulating film 25, and then an opening 41a is formed in a portion of the resist film 41 on the insulating film 25. . Then, the insulating film 25 is etched using the resist film 41 in which the opening 41a is formed as a mask. Thereby, the flat surface 14 is exposed.
Next, after the surface electrode 23 is formed on the resist film 41 and the exposed flat surface 14 by, for example, vapor deposition, the surface electrode 23 on the resist film 41 is lifted off (removed) together with the resist film 41. As a result, the surface electrode 23 is left on the flat surface 14 as shown in FIG. The pad 22 and the fine wire electrode 21 are integrally formed of the same material at the same time.
According to the embodiment, the unevenness of the rough surface 15 is randomly formed due to the etching rate difference due to the difference in crystal plane. Therefore, the fine convex portion 15a (concave portion 15b) having a height (depth) close to or less than the emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13 can be easily obtained without greatly retreating the height of the convex portion 15a with respect to the flat surface 14. Can be formed.
In order to leave the convex portion 15a having the same height as the flat surface 14, it is not necessary to provide a mask on the convex portion 15a. Only the portion to be the flat surface 14 is simply covered with a mask, and the unevenness of the rough surface 15 is formed without a mask. That is, the fine processing of the mask corresponding to the fine unevenness is unnecessary, and the process difficulty and cost are not increased.
Note that after the rough surface 15 is formed, the resist film 41 may be formed after the insulating film 25 on the flat surface 14 is removed. In this case, the insulating film 25 does not remain on the flat surface 14.
2A is a schematic top view of the semiconductor light emitting device 2 according to the second embodiment, and FIG. 2B is a cross-sectional view taken along the line BB ′ in FIG. The same reference numerals are given to the same or corresponding elements as those in the first embodiment, and detailed description thereof may be omitted. Also in FIG. 2A, illustration of the insulating film 25 on the flat surface 14 shown in FIG. 2B is omitted.
Also in the second embodiment, the first surface 16 of the semiconductor layer 12 has a flat surface 14 and a rough surface 15. The surface electrode 23 includes a pad 51 and a thin wire electrode 21 that is thinner than the pad 51. The fine wire electrode 21 is provided on the flat surface 14 and is not provided on the rough surface 15.
The pad 51 is provided at the center of the first surface 16 in a plan view of the first surface 16 shown in FIG. An external terminal (for example, a bonding wire) for connecting to an external circuit is bonded to the pad 51.
Unlike the first embodiment, the pad 51 is provided on the rough surface 15. The pad 51 is formed conformally along the unevenness of the rough surface 15, and the unevenness reflecting the unevenness of the rough surface 15 is formed on the upper surface of the pad 51. The average thickness of the pad 51 is, for example, 1 μm or less.
By reducing the thickness of the pad 51 provided on the rough surface 15 (for example, the average thickness is set to 1 μm or less), the contact resistance between the pad 51 and the semiconductor layer 12 is reduced to a fine line electrode provided on the flat surface 14. The contact resistance between 21 and the semiconductor layer 12 is set higher. Thereby, current concentration just under the pad 51 can be suppressed and the current diffusion effect by the thin wire electrode 21 can be enhanced.
The pad 51 and the fine wire electrode 21 are connected. For example, the pad 51 and the fine wire electrode 21 are integrally formed of the same material and in the same process.
The maximum height of the convex portion 15a is 1 μm or less. Moreover, the thickness of the thin wire electrode 21 is within twice the maximum height of the convex portion 15a, for example, 1 μm or less.
Also in the second embodiment, as shown in FIG. 2B, the contact metal 19 provided on the second surface 17 of the semiconductor layer 12 is provided below (on the back side) of the rough surface 15, and the flat surface 14. It is not provided under (back side). For this reason, the uniformity in the surface direction of the current supplied to the light emitting layer 13 through the surface electrode 23 and the contact metal 19 can be improved.
According to the second embodiment, the thin wire electrode 21 is formed on the flat surface 14. Therefore, the thickness of the fine wire electrode 21 required for obtaining good contact with the semiconductor layer 12 can be reduced, and the electrode material cost and the process time can be suppressed. That is, good contact resistance with the semiconductor layer 12 can be obtained while suppressing the thickness of the thin wire electrode 21 to 1 μm or less.
An example of the structure of such a thin wire electrode 21 is the laminated structure described above with reference to FIG. That is, the laminated structure shown in FIG. 3 has a thickness of 1 μm or less, and can obtain good contact with the flat surface 14 of the semiconductor layer 12 including the light emitting layer 13.
Further, as described above, the average thickness of the pad 51 is also as thin as 1 μm or less. Therefore, since the pad 51 and the fine wire electrode 21 provided on the light extraction surface are thin, light emitted from the light extraction surface in an oblique direction and shielded by the pad 51 and the fine wire electrode 21 can be reduced.
Also in the second embodiment, the maximum height of the convex portion 15 a on the rough surface 15 is the same height as that of the flat surface 14, and the average height of the convex portion 15 a is 1 / ◯ or more of the height of the flat surface 14. It is. For this reason, it can suppress that the light discharge | released from the convex part 15a is shielded by the mesa-shaped part which has the flat surface 14 on the upper surface.
Furthermore, the maximum height of the convex portion 15a (maximum depth of the concave portion 15b) is 1 μm or less, and the average height of the convex portion 15a (average depth of the concave portion 15b) is also 1 μm or less. The emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13 is about 400 nm to 700 nm. Therefore, the depth or height of the unevenness processing is close to or less than the emission wavelength of the light emitting layer 13, and high light extraction efficiency can be obtained. Such fine irregularities can be formed easily and at low cost by random processing by anisotropic dry etching, as in the first embodiment.
The thin wire electrode 21 is not formed on the entire flat surface 14. The edge 21 a on the rough surface 15 side of the thin wire electrode 21 is farther from the rough surface 15 than the edge 14 a on the rough surface 15 side of the flat surface 14. The width of the thin wire electrode 21 (width in the direction orthogonal to the longitudinal direction) is smaller than the width of the flat surface 14 (width in the direction orthogonal to the longitudinal direction).
That is, the thin wire electrode 21 does not extend to the edge 14 a of the flat surface 14. On the flat surface 14, there is a region where the fine wire electrode 21 is not provided between the edge 14 a of the flat surface 14 and the fine wire electrode 21. For this reason, coupled with the thin wire electrode 21, the light extraction efficiency in the oblique direction from the vicinity of the edge 14a on the flat surface 14 can be further improved.
FIG. 5 is a schematic cross-sectional view of the semiconductor light emitting device 3 of the third embodiment.
In the first and second embodiments, the back electrode 18 is provided on the back surface of the substrate 10 as the second electrode. However, in the third embodiment, the second electrode 52 is provided on the metal layer 11.
That is, on the metal layer 11, there is a region where the semiconductor layer 12 is not provided, and the second electrode 52 is provided in that region. In this case, the substrate 10 does not necessarily have conductivity.
DESCRIPTION OF SYMBOLS 1-3 ... Semiconductor light-emitting device, 10 ... Board | substrate, 12 ... Semiconductor layer, 13 ... Light emitting layer, 14 ... Flat surface, 15 ... Rough surface, 15a ... Convex part, 15b ... Concave part, 16 ... 1st surface, 17 ... 2nd surface, 18, 52 ... back electrode (second electrode), 19 ... contact metal, 21 ... fine wire electrode, 22, 51 ... pad, 23 ... surface electrode (first electrode), 25 ... insulating film ( Mask), 31 ... aluminum film, 32 ... titanium film, 33 ... platinum film, 34 ... gold film
A semiconductor layer including a first surface, a second surface provided on the opposite side of the first surface, and a light emitting layer;
A first electrode provided on the first surface and having a thickness of 1 μm or less;
The first surface has a flat surface and a rough surface provided with a plurality of concave portions and a plurality of convex portions randomly, and the maximum height of the convex portion is the same height as the flat surface,
The first electrode includes a pad and a thin line electrode provided on the flat surface in a line shape narrower than the pad and not provided on the rough surface.
A first electrode provided on the first surface;
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 2, wherein a thickness of the thin wire electrode is within twice a maximum height of the convex portion.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 3, wherein the thin wire electrode has a thickness of 1 μm or less.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 2, wherein the pad and the thin wire electrode have the same thickness.
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, wherein the maximum height of the convex portion is 1 μm or less.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 2, wherein the thin wire electrode includes an aluminum film, a titanium film, a platinum film, and a gold film, which are sequentially stacked from the first surface side.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 7, wherein a thickness of the gold film is thicker than a thickness of each of the aluminum film, the titanium film, and the platinum film.
9. The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 7, wherein a thickness of the gold film is larger than a total film thickness of the aluminum film, the titanium film, and the platinum film.
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, wherein the pad is provided on the rough surface.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 10, wherein irregularities are formed on an upper surface of the pad, and an average thickness of the pad is 1 μm or less.
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, wherein a total area of the rough surface is wider than a total area of the flat surface.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 2, wherein an edge on the rough surface side of the first electrode is farther from the rough surface than an edge on the rough surface side of the flat surface.
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, further comprising a contact metal provided on the second surface of the semiconductor layer.
The semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 14, wherein the contact metal is provided below the rough surface and is not provided below the flat surface.
A conductive substrate provided on the second surface side of the semiconductor layer;
A second electrode provided on a surface of the substrate opposite to the semiconductor layer;
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, further comprising:
The semiconductor light-emitting device according to claim 2, further comprising a reflective layer that is provided on the second surface side and has reflectivity for light emitted from the light-emitting layer.
A mask is selectively formed on the first surface of the semiconductor layer including the first surface, the second surface provided on the opposite side of the first surface, and the light emitting layer, and etching is performed. Forming a rough surface in which a plurality of concave portions and a plurality of convex portions are randomly provided on a portion of the first surface not covered with the mask, wherein the maximum height of the convex portions is covered with the mask. Forming the rough surface to be the same height as the flat surface being
Forming a first electrode on the flat surface;
19. A pad and a fine line electrode that is thinner than the pad are simultaneously formed as the first electrode, and the fine line electrode is formed on the flat surface and not formed on the rough surface. Manufacturing method of the semiconductor light-emitting device.
The method for manufacturing a semiconductor light emitting device according to claim 18, wherein anisotropic dry etching is performed as the etching.
JP2012060933A 2012-03-16 2012-03-16 Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same Pending JP2013197197A (en)
JP2012060933A JP2013197197A (en) 2012-03-16 2012-03-16 Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same
US13/784,670 US20130248907A1 (en) 2012-03-16 2013-03-04 Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same
JP2013197197A true JP2013197197A (en) 2013-09-30
ID=49210951
JP2012060933A Pending JP2013197197A (en) 2012-03-16 2012-03-16 Semiconductor light-emitting device and manufacturing method of the same
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