• Jimbabwe@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      LEDs are the result of electricity passing through very specific chemical crystal configurations and the first two (red and green) were relatively obvious to find, but creating blue was an extreme undertaking. Lots of big companies tried for years to get it right, but eventually a rogue Japanese scientist, ignoring the commands of his bosses, toiled day and night pursuing configurations of elements long declared to be dead-ends, using his own custom crystal baking machine, cracked the code and figured out a way of doing it in a commercially viable way.

      Of course, as is expected in these stories, the company tried to give him $175 and a $60k salary for his efforts, but in a pleasant surprise he sued for 8mill and now has hundreds of patents and is pursuing nuclear power as his next goal

    • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      Diodes on a fundamental level always emit light, because when an electron falls down a diode it ejects the energy as a photon. Early diodes would emit this as a low frequency infrared but they found ways of making diodes that eject their light at a higher frequency. They just needed to figure out blue, which has the highest frequency required to make RGB possible. Once they had that, we could make white LEDs.

      EDIT: there were a few blue LEDs but they were dookie dogshit, requiring way more power and putting out barely a piddle of light. There are natural converters (called phosphors) but those only work from high frequency to lower frequency, which is why we need blue to make white.