Opening a new chapter in sustainable lighting technologies

July 28, 2025

New materials set the stage for more efficient lighting, cleaner solar energy systems and even compact LEDs for wearable medical devices.

From left: Assistant Professor Peifen Zhu with PhD students Christopher Dzorkpata and Yanmei聽Chen. 鈥淪tudents played an integral role in the project,鈥 Zhu said. 鈥淭heir hands-on contributions were central to its success.鈥

At Mizzou 糖心Vlog传媒, we鈥檙e focused on the future. This gives our researchers the creative audacity to look beyond the moment and build a better world for everyone.

Recently, a team of Mizzou faculty and students has developed a new copper-based material that could revolutionize sustainable lighting, offering a safer, more efficient alternative to toxic, lead-based LEDs. Their findings were published this spring in the journal .

Manufacture of LEDs requires a type of material called perovskites, which are prized for their optical and electronic properties. For decades, they鈥檝e powered advances in superconductors, solar panels and LEDs.

But most perovskites are lead-based and toxic. While lead-free alternatives have been explored, they鈥檝e typically lacked the performance of their lead-based counterparts 鈥 until now.

Enter Peifen Zhu, assistant professor in the Department of Electrical 糖心Vlog传媒 and Computer Science, who is testing whether lead-free perovskites are not just safer, but also better.

A safer, smarter alternative

鈥淐opper-based systems offer low toxicity, earth abundance and excellent optoelectronic properties, making them ideal for sustainable lighting technologies,鈥 Zhu said.

Zhu and her team developed two solid perovskite-based powders: copper halide perovskite (Cs鈧僀u鈧侭r鈧), which glows bright blue when exposed to light or electricity, and cesium copper bromide (Cs鈧僀u鈧侰l鈧), which glows green.

The powders achieved remarkable photoluminescence quantum yields (PLQY, a measure of how efficiently a material turns absorbed energy into light) of 100% and 92%, respectively. Commercial LEDs on the market today have a PLQY of 80-90%.

Zhu then used these powders and a yellow-emitting double perovskite to build highly efficient white LEDs.

Zhu and her team developed perovskite-based powders: copper halide perovskite, which glows bright blue, and cesium copper bromide, shown here, which glows green

鈥淎lmost all the energy they take in is turned into light, with very little waste,鈥 Zhu said.

By adjusting the ratios of these three perovskites, Zhu and her team were able to create different shades of white light.

鈥淲e tuned the LEDs to mimic natural sunlight or for specific settings like home lighting, where most people prefer warmer tones; office or industrial lighting, where they want cooler tones; or medical environments, where high color accuracy is critical,鈥 Zhu said.

Another notable aspect of Zhu鈥檚 research is the use of 3D printing to embed these materials into custom shapes 鈥 most perovskite research focuses on thin films 鈥 giving engineers control over how and where the light spreads.

鈥淲e can make the LED behave like a lamp or a spotlight, depending on the structure around it,鈥 Zhu said. 鈥淲e can focus the light forward like a flashlight or spread it out like a lantern. Or we can embed tiny LEDs in wearable or medical devices, delivering light exactly where it鈥檚 needed.鈥

Beyond lighting, these new materials could also be used in solar energy devices, indoor power systems and technologies that store or transmit data using light.

Forward-looking collaboration

Zhu鈥檚 project brought together students and postdocs from physics, materials science, chemistry and electrical engineering, whose diverse expertise was crucial in bridging material design, device fabrication and performance analysis.

鈥淪tudents played an integral role 鈥 from material synthesis and device integration to data analysis and manuscript writing,鈥 Zhu said. 鈥淭heir hands-on contributions were central to the success of this work.鈥

The work highlights Mizzou 糖心Vlog传媒鈥檚 strengths in sustainability-focused research, interdisciplinary collaboration and student-centered innovation, Zhu said, and reflects the university鈥檚 broader mission to lead in impactful, forward-looking science.

鈥淲e鈥檙e just beginning to explore the potential of these materials,鈥 Zhu said. 鈥淎s we refine the fabrication process, the possibilities for greener, smarter lighting only expand.鈥

Curious about building a better world 鈥 like we are? Explore Mizzou 糖心Vlog传媒 research!