Sustainable Next-generation Color Converters of P. harmala Seed Extracts for Solid-State Lighting
Talha Erdem, Ali Orenc, Dilber Akcan, Fatih Duman, Zeliha Soran-Erdem

TL;DR
This study explores the use of P. harmala seed extract as an eco-friendly color converter in solid-state lighting, demonstrating high quantum yields and successful integration with LEDs to produce efficient, environmentally friendly lighting.
Contribution
It introduces a sustainable method to develop high-efficiency plant-based color converters for solid-state lighting, with detailed structural and optical characterization and practical LED integration.
Findings
P. harmala extract achieves 75.6% QY in solution and 44.7% in paper.
Sucrose and cellulose platforms enable homogeneous fluorophore distribution.
The LED with P. harmala converter reaches 21.9 lm/W luminous efficiency.
Abstract
Traditional solid-state lighting relies on color converters with a serious environmental footprint. As an alternative, natural materials such as plant extracts could be employed if their low quantum yield (QYs) in liquid and solid states were higher. With this motivation, here, we investigate the optical features of P. harmala extract in water, develop its efficient color-converting solids using a facile, sustainable, and low-cost method, and integrate it with a light-emitting diode. To obtain a high-efficiency solid host for the P. harmala-based fluorophores, we optically and structurally compared two crystalline and two cellulose-based platforms. Structural characterizations indicate that sucrose crystals, cellulose-based cotton, and paper platforms allow fluorophores to be distributed relatively homogenously as opposed to the KCl crystals. Optical characterizations reveal that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant tissue culture and regeneration
