Shuji Nakamura – Keynote Speaker

Nobel Prize Winner and Inventor of the Blue LED

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Specialist Subjects

  • Innovation
  • Research and Development
  • Science
  • Future of Energy
  • Sustainability/ Energy

Biography

Shuji Nakamura invented blue LED, a major breakthrough in lighting technology. Together with Isamu Akasaki and Hiroshi Amano, he was the recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize for Physics “for the invention of efficient blue light-emitting diodes, which has enabled bright and energy-saving white light sources”.

The LEDs use as little as one-seventh the energy as an incandescent bulb and can last about 100 times as long, up to 100,000 hours and if they were widely used, it could lead to enormous energy savings and carbon-emissions. Nakamura has also worked on green LEDs, and is responsible for creating the white LED and blue laser diodes used in Blu-ray Discs and HD DVDs .

In 1988, Nakamura spent a year at the University of Florida as a visiting research associate. He started the research of blue LEDs using group-III nitride materials. In the 1990s he developed the first group-III nitride-based blue/green LEDs. He also developed the first group-III nitride-based violet laser diodes (LDs).

Since 2000, Nakamura has been Professor at the Materials Department of University of California, and is also the Research Director of the Solid State Lighting & Energy Centre. He holds more than 100 patents and has published more than 400 papers. In 2008, Nakamura, along with fellow UCSB professors Dr. Steven DenBaars and Dr. James Speck, founded Soraa, a developer of solid-state lighting technology built on pure gallium nitride substrates.

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