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Final Report _ Oled

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    ABSTRACT

    The seminar is about polymers that can emit light when a voltage is applied to it. The

    structure comprises of a thin film of semiconducting polymer sandwiched between two

    electrodes (cathode and anode).When electrons and holes are injected from theelectrodes, the recombination of these charge carriers takes place, which leads to

    emission of light .The band gap, i.e. The energy difference between valence band and

    conduction band determines the wavelength (color) of the emitted light.

    They are usually made by ink jet printing process. In this method red green and blue

    polymer solutions are jetted into well defined areas on the substrate. This is because,

    OLEDs are soluble in common organic solvents like toluene and xylene .The film

    thickness uniformity is obtained by multi-passing (slow) is by heads with drive per

    nozzle technology .The pixels are controlled by using active or passive matrix.

    The advantages include low cost, small size, no viewing angle restrictions, low power

    requirement, biodegradability etc. They are poised to replace LCDs used in laptops and

    CRTs used in desktop computers today.

    Their future applications include flexible displays which can be folded, wearable displays

    with interactive features, camouflage etc. Unlike other flat panel displays OLED has a

    wide viewing angle (upto 160 degrees), even in bright light. Their low power

    consumption (only 2 to 10 volts) provides for maximum efficiency and helps minimize

    heat and electric interference in electronic devices. Because of this combination of this

    features, OLED displays communicate more information in a more engaging way while

    adding less weight and taking up less space. Their application in numerous devices is not

    only a future possibility but a current reality.

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    LIST OF FIGURES

    Figure No. Title Page No.

    2.1 OLED schematic 6

    2.2 OLED working principle 7

    3.1 Alq3 9

    3.2 poly (p-phenylene vinylene) 10

    3.3 Ir (mppy)3 11

    3.4 OLED structure 12

    3.5 Schematic of the ink jet printing 13

    3.6 Active and passive matrices 15

    3.7 Conjugation of 18

    3.8 Series of orbital diagrams 19

    4.1 Active matrix OLED Structure 22

    4.2 Passive matrix OLED structure 23

    4.3 Transparent OLED structure 24

    4.4 Top-emitting OLED structure 25

    4.5 Foldable OLED 26

    4.6 White OLED 27

    6.1 A Sony PSP having foldable OLED display 32

    6.2 Toshiba Laptop having Transparent OLED 33

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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)
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    INTRODUCTION

    History

    Eastman Kodak Company & Universal laboratories, USA has started the research

    towards the OLED technology but the cup of victory gone to the Kodak researchers havemade a number of major breakthroughs which led to patents on OLED material, device

    structure, dopping techniques to drastically improve efficiency and colour control, thin

    film deposition method, patterning methods as well as design & fabrication methods for

    both active & passive matrix OLED panels.

    The OLED technology initially grew from research on organic electronic devices used in

    solar cells & electrophotography. At this time Kodak is the worlds only company who

    has patent on this OLED technology. The intrinsic quality of this technology is superb

    because of its high brightness & efficiency, low drive voltage fast response. Low cost

    manufacturing methods are already in use for passive matrix OLED display. The advanceof the complementary low temperature polySi technology has enabled the fabrication of

    high resolution, full colour, active matrix OLED display. An organic light emitting diode

    (OLED) is a light-emitting diode (LED) in which the emissive electroluminescent layer is

    a film of organic compounds which emit light in response to an electric current. This

    layer of organic semiconductor material is situated between two electrodes. Generally, at

    least one of these electrodes is transparent. OLEDs are used in television screens,

    computer monitors, small, portable system screens such as mobile phones and PDAs,

    watches, advertising, information and indication. OLEDs are also used in light sources

    for space illumination and in large-area light-emitting elements. Due to their early stage

    of development, they typically emit less light per unit area than inorganic solid-state

    based LED point-light sources.

    An OLED display functions without a backlight. Thus, it can display deep black levels

    and can be thinner and lighter than liquid crystal displays. In low ambient light conditions

    such as dark rooms, an OLED screen can achieve a higher contrast ratio than an LCD

    using either cold cathode fluorescent lamps or the more recently developed LED

    backlight.

    Evolution

    With the imaging appliance revolution underway, the need for more advanced handheld

    devices that will combine the attributes of a computer, PDA, and cell phone is increasing

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    and the flat-panel mobile display industry is searching for a display technology that will

    revolutionize the industry. The need for new lightweight, low-power, wide viewing

    angled, handheld portable communication devices have pushed the display industry to

    revisit the current flat-panel digital display technology used for mobile applications.

    Struggling to meet the needs of demanding applications such as e-books, smart

    networked household appliances, identity management cards, and display-centric

    handheld mobile imaging devices, the flat panel industry is now looking at new displays

    known as Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLED).

    Over the time there are many changes came into the field of output/display devices. In

    this field first came the small led displays which can show only the numeric contains.

    Then came the heavy jumbo CRTs (Cathode Ray Tubes) which are used till now. But the

    main problem with CRT is they are very heavy & we couldnt carry them from one place

    to another the result of this CRT is very nice & clear but they are very heavy & bulky &

    also required quiet large area then anything else.

    Then came the very compact LCDs (Liquefied Crystal Displays). They are very lighter in

    weight as well as easy to carry from one place to the other. But the main problem with

    the LCDs is we can get the perfect result in the some particular direction. If we see from

    any other direction it will not display the perfect display. To overcome this problems of

    CRTs & LCDs the scientist of Universal Laboratories, Florida, United States & Eastman

    Kodak Company both started their research work in that direction & the overcome of

    their efforts is the new generation of display technologies named OLED (Organic Light

    Emitting Diode) Technology.

    In the flat panel display zone unlike traditional Liquid-Crystal Displays OLEDs are self

    luminous & do not required any kind of backlighting. This eliminates the need for bulky

    & environmentally undesirable mercury lamps and yields a more thinner ,more compact

    display. Unlike other flat panel displays OLED has a wide viewing angle (up to 160

    degrees), even in bright light. Their low power consumption (only 2 to 10 volts) provides

    for maximum efficiency and helps minimize heat and electric interference in electronic

    devices. Because of this combination of this features, OLED displays communicate more

    information in a more engaging way while adding less weight and taking up less space.

    Their application in numerous devices is not only a future possibility but a current reality.

    An organic light emitting diode (OLED) is a light-emitting diode (LED) in which theemissive electroluminescent layer is a film of organic compounds which emit light in

    response to an electric current. This layer of organic semiconductor material is situated

    between two electrodes. Generally, at least one of these electrodes is transparent. OLEDs

    are used in television screens, computer monitors, small, portable system screens such as

    mobile phones and PDAs, watches, advertising, information and indication. OLEDs are

    also used in light sources for space illumination and in large-area light-emitting elements.

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    Due to their early stage of development, they typically emit less light per unit area than

    inorganic solid-state based LED point-light sources.

    An OLED display functions without a backlight. Thus, it can display deep black levels

    and can be thinner and lighter than liquid crystal displays. In low ambient light conditions

    such as dark rooms, an OLED screen can achieve a higher contrast ratio than an LCDusing either cold cathode fluorescent lamps or the more recently developed LED

    backlight.

    There are two main families of OLEDs: those based upon small molecules and thoseemploying polymers. Adding mobile ions to an OLED creates a Light-emitting

    Electrochemical Cell or LEC, which has a slightly different mode of operation. OLED

    displays can use either passive-matrix (PMOLED) or active-matrix addressing schemes.Active-matrix OLEDs (AMOLED) require a thin-film transistor backplane to switch each

    individual pixel on or off, and can make higher resolution and larger size displays

    possible.

    WORKING PRINCIPLE

    A typical OLED is composed of an emissive layer, a conductive layer, a substrate, and

    anode and cathode terminals. The layers are made of special organic molecules that

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    conduct electricity. Their levels of conductivity range from those of insulators to those of

    conductors, and so they are called organic semiconductors. The first, most basic OLEDs

    consisted of a single organic layer, for example the first light-emitting polymer device

    synthesized by Burroughs et al involved a single layer of poly(p-phenylene vinylene).

    Multilayer OLEDs can have more than two layers to improve device efficiency. As well

    as conductive properties, layers may be chosen to aid charge injection at electrodes by

    providing a more gradual electronic profile, or block a charge from reaching the opposite

    electrode and being wasted.

    A voltage is applied across the OLED such that the anode is positive with respect to the

    cathode. This causes a current of electrons to flow through the device from cathode to

    anode.

    1. The battery or power supply of the device containing the OLED applies a voltage

    across the OLED.

    2. An electrical current flows from the cathode to the anode through the organic layers

    (an electrical current is a flow of electrons).

    3. The cathode gives electrons to the emissive layer of organic molecules.

    4. The anode removes electrons from the conductive layer of organic molecules. (This is

    the equivalent to giving electron holes to the conductive layer.)

    5. At the boundary between the emissive and the conductive layers, electrons find

    electron holes.

    Figure 2.1 OLED schematic

    6. When an electron finds an electron hole, the electron fills the hole (it falls into an

    energy level of the atom that's missing an electron). When this happens, the electron

    gives up energy in the form of a photon of light (see How Light Works).

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    Figure 2.2 OLED working principle

    7. The OLED emits light.

    8. The color of the light depends on the type of organic molecule in the emissive layer.Manufacturers place several types of organic films on the same OLED to make color

    displays.

    9. The intensity or brightness of the light depends on the amount of electrical current

    applied: the more current, the brighter the light.

    CONSTRUCTION

    Material technologies

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    A) Small molecules:

    Figure 3.1 Alq3, commonly used in small molecule OLEDs.

    Efficient OLEDs using small molecules were first developed by Dr. Ching W. Tanget al.

    at Eastman Kodak. The term OLED traditionally refers specifically to this type of device,

    though the term SM-OLED is also in use.

    Molecules commonly used in OLEDs include organometallic chelates (for exampleAlq3,

    used in the organic light-emitting device reported by Tang et al.), fluorescent and

    phosphorescent dyes and conjugated dendrimers. A number of materials are used for their

    charge transport properties, for example triphenylamine and derivatives are commonly

    used as materials for hole transport layers. Fluorescent dyes can be chosen to obtain light

    emission at different wavelengths, and compounds such as perylene, rubrene and

    quinacridone derivatives are often used. Alq3 has been used as a green emitter, electron

    transport material and as a host for yellow and red emitting dyes.

    The production of small molecule devices and displays usually involves thermal

    evaporation in a vacuum. This makes the production process more expensive and of

    limited use for large-area devices than other processing techniques. However, contrary to

    polymer-based devices, the vacuum deposition process enables the formation of well

    controlled, homogeneous films, and the construction of very complex multi-layer

    structures. This high flexibility in layer design, enabling distinct charge transport and

    charge blocking layers to be formed, is the main reason for the high efficiencies of the

    small molecule OLEDs.

    Coherent emission from a laser dye-doped tandem SM-OLED device, excited in the

    pulsed regime, has been demonstrated. The emission is nearly diffraction limited with a

    spectral width similar to that of broadband dye lasers.

    B) Polymer light-emitting diodes:

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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ching_W._Tanghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastman_Kodakhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastman_Kodakhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrimerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triphenylaminehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perylenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubrenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinacridonehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporation_(deposition)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporation_(deposition)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:AlumQ3.pnghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ching_W._Tanghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastman_Kodakhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminiumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrimerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triphenylaminehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perylenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubrenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinacridonehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporation_(deposition)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporation_(deposition)
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    Figure 3.2poly (p-phenylene vinylene), used in the first PLED.

    Polymer light-emitting diodes (PLED), also light-emitting polymers (LEP), involve an

    electroluminescent conductive polymer that emits light when connected to an external

    voltage. They are used as a thin filmforfull-spectrum colour displays. Polymer OLEDs

    are quite efficient and require a relatively small amount of power for the amount of light

    produced.

    Vacuum deposition is not a suitable method for forming thin films of polymers.

    However, polymers can be processed in solution, and spin coatingis a common method

    of depositing thin polymer films. This method is more suited to forming large-area films

    than thermal evaporation. No vacuum is required, and the emissive materials can also be

    applied on the substrate by a technique derived from commercial inkjet printing.

    However, as the application of subsequent layers tends to dissolve those already present,

    formation of multilayer structures is difficult with these methods. The metal cathode may

    still need to be deposited by thermal evaporation in vacuum.

    Typical polymers used in PLED displays include derivatives of poly(p-phenylene

    vinylene)andpolyfluorene. Substitution of side chains onto the polymer backbone may

    determine the colour of emitted light or the stability and solubility of the polymer for

    performance and ease of processing.

    While unsubstituted poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (PPV) is typically insoluble, a number

    of PPVs and related poly(naphthalene vinylene)s (PNVs) that are soluble in organic

    solvents or water have been prepared via ring opening metathesis polymerization.

    C) Phosphorescent materials:

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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroluminescencehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conductive_polymerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_filmhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_filmhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full-spectrumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_coatinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_coatinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(printing)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(printing)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(printing)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inkjet_printerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyfluorenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_reactionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_opening_metathesis_polymerizationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_opening_metathesis_polymerizationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Polyphenylene_vinylene.pnghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroluminescencehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conductive_polymerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lighthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_filmhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full-spectrumhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_coatinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substrate_(printing)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inkjet_printerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly(p-phenylene_vinylene)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyfluorenehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_reactionhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_opening_metathesis_polymerization
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    these charge carriers takes place, which leads to emission of light that escapes through glass

    substrate. The bandgap, i.e. energy difference between valence band and conduction band of the

    semiconducting polymer determines the wavelength (colour) of the emitted light.

    Figure 3.4 OLED structure

    Light-emitting devices consist of active/emitting layers sandwiched between a cathode

    and an anode. Indium-tin oxides typically used for the anode and aluminum or calcium

    for the cathode. Fig.2.1(a) shows the structure of a simple single layer device with

    electrodes and an active layer.

    In order to manufacture the polymer, a spin-coating machine is used that has a plate

    spinning at the speed of a few thousand rotations per minute. The robot pours the plastic

    over the rotating plate, which, in turn, evenly spreads the polymer on the plate. This

    results in an extremely fine layer of the polymer having a thickness of 100 nanometers.

    Once the polymer is evenly spread, it is baked in an oven to evaporate any remnant

    liquid. The same technology is used to coat the CDs.

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    Single-layer devices typically work only under a forward DC bias. Fig.2.1(b) shows a

    symmetrically configured alternating current light-emitting (SCALE) device that works

    under AC as well as forward and reverse DC bias.

    INK JET PRINTING PROCESS

    Although inkjet printing is well established in printing graphic images, only now are

    applications emerging in printing electronics materials. Approximately a dozen

    companies have demonstrated the use of inkjet printing for PLED displays and this

    technique is now at the forefront of developments in digital electronic materials

    deposition. However, turning inkjet printing into a manufacturing process for PLED

    displays has required significant developments of the inkjet print head, the inks and the

    substrates .Creating a full color, inkjet printed display requires the precise metering of

    volumes in the order of pico liters. Red, green and blue polymer solutions are jetted into

    well defined areas with an angle of flight deviation of less than 5. To ensure the displays

    have uniform emission, the film thickness has to be very uniform.

    Fig. 3.5 Schematic of the ink jet printing

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    For some materials and display applications the film thickness uniformity may have to be

    better than 2 per cent. A conventional inkjet head may have volume variations of up to

    20 per cent from the hundred or so nozzles that comprise the head and, in the worst

    case, a nozzle may be blocked. For graphic art this variation can be averaged out by

    multi-passing with the quality to the print dependent on the number of passes. Although

    multi-passing could be used for PLEDs the process would be unacceptably slow.

    Recently, Spectra, the worlds largest supplier of industrial inkjet heads, has started to

    manufacture heads where the drive conditions for each nozzle can be adjusted

    individually so called drive-per-nozzle (DPN). Litrex in the USA, a subsidiary of CDT,

    has developed software to allow DPN to be used in its printers. Volume variations across

    the head of 2 per cent can be achieved using DPN. In addition to very good volume

    control, the head has been designed to give drops of ink with a very small angle-of-flight

    variation. A 200 dots per inch (dpi) display has colour pixels only 40 microns wide; the

    latest print heads have a deviation of less than 5 microns when placed 0.5 mm from the

    substrate. In addition to the precision of the print head, the formulation of the ink is keyto making effective and attractive display devices. The formulation of a dry polymer

    material into an ink suitable for PLED displays requires that the inkjets reliably at high

    frequency and that on reaching the surface of the substrate, forms a wet film in the

    correct location and dries to a uniformly flat film. The film then has to perform as a

    useful electro-optical material. Recent progress in ink formulation and printer technology

    has allowed 400 mm panels to be colour printed in under a minute. However, turning

    inkjet printing into a manufacturing process for PLED displays has required significant

    developments of the inkjet print head, the inks and the substrates Creating a full color,

    inkjet printed display requires the precise metering of volumes in the order of pico liters.

    Red, green and blue polymer solutions are jetted into well defined areas with an angle offlight deviation of less than 5 are used. In order to manufacture the polymer, a spin-

    coating machine is used that has a plate spinning at the speed of a few thousand rotations

    per minute.

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    ACTIVE AND PASSIVE MATRIX

    Many displays consist of a matrix of pixels, formed at the intersection of rows and

    columns deposited on a substrate. Each pixel is a light emitting diode such as a PLED,

    capable of emitting light by being turned on or off, or any state in between. Coloured

    displays are formed by positioning matrices of red, green and blue pixels very closetogether. To control the pixels, and so form the image required, either 'passive' or 'active'

    matrix driver methods are used. Pixel displays can either by active or passive matrix. Fig.

    2.1.2 shows the differences between the two matrix types, active displays have transistors

    so that when a particular pixel is turned on it remains on until it is turned off.

    The matrix pixels are accessed sequentially. As a result passive displays are prone to

    flickering since each pixel only emits light for such a small length of time. Active

    displays are preferred, however it is technically challenging to incorporate so many

    transistors into such small a compact area.

    Fig 3.6 Active and passive matrices

    In passive matrix systems, each row and each column of the display has its own driver,

    and to create an image, the matrix is rapidly scanned to enable every pixel to be switched

    on or off as required. As the current required to brighten a pixel increases (for higher

    brightness displays), and as the display gets larger, this process becomes more difficult

    since higher currents have to flow down the control lines. Also, the controlling current

    has to be present whenever the pixel is required to light up. As a result, passive matrix

    displays tend to be used mainly where cheap, simple displays are required.

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    Active matrix displays solve the problem of efficiently addressing each pixel by

    incorporating a transistor (TFT) in series with each pixel which provides control over the

    current and hence the brightness of individual pixels. Lower currents can now flow down

    the control wires since these have only to program the TFT driver, and the wires can be

    finer as a result. Also, the transistor is able to hold the current setting, keeping the pixel at

    the required brightness, until it receives another control signal. Future demands on

    displays will in part require larger area displays so the active matrix market segment will

    grow faster.

    PLED devices are especially suitable for incorporating into active matrix displays, as

    they are processable in solution and can be manufactured using ink jet printing over

    larger areas.

    BASIC PRINCIPLE AND TECHNOLOGY

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    Polymer properties are dominated by the covalent nature of carbon bonds making up the

    organic molecules backbone. The immobility of electrons that form the covalent bonds

    explain why plastics were classified almost exclusively insulators until the 1970s.

    A single carbon-carbon bond is composed of two electrons being shared in overlapping

    wave functions. For each carbon, the four electrons in the valence bond form tetrahedraloriented hybridized sp3 orbitals from the s & p orbitals described quantum mechanically

    as geometrical wave functions. The properties of the spherical s orbital and bimodal p

    orbitals combine into four equal , unsymmetrical , tetrahedral oriented hybridized sp3

    orbitals. The bond formed by the overlap of these hybridized orbitals from two carbon

    atoms is referred to as a sigma bond.

    A conjugated pi bond refers to a carbon chain or ring whose bonds alternate between

    single and double (or triple) bonds. The bonding system tend to form stronger bonds than

    might be first indicated by a structure with single bonds. The single bond formed between

    two double bonds inherits the characteristics of the double bonds since the single bond isformed by two sp2 hybrid orbitals. The p orbitals of the single bonded carbons form an

    effective pi bond ultimately leading to the significant consequence of pi electron de-

    localization. Unlike the sigma bond electrons, which are trapped between the carbons,

    the pi bond electrons have relative mobility. All that is required to provide an effective

    conducting band is the oxidation or reduction of carbons in the backbone. Then the

    electrons have mobility, as do the holes generated by the absence of electrons through

    oxidation with a dopant like iodine.

    LIGHT EMISSION

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    The production of photons from the energy gap of a material is very similar for organic

    and ceramic semiconductors. Hence a brief description of the process of

    electroluminescence is in order.

    Electroluminescence is the process in which electromagnetic(EM) radiation is emitted

    from a material by passing an electrical current through it. The frequency of the EMradiation is directly related to the energy of separation between electrons in the

    conduction band and electrons in the valence band. These bands form the periodic

    arrangement of atoms in the crystal structure of the semiconductor. In a ceramic

    semiconductor like GaAs or ZnS, the energy is released when an electron from the

    conduction band falls into a hole in the valence band. The electronic device that

    accomplishes this electron-hole interaction is that of a diode, which consists of an n-type

    material (electron rich) interfaced with p-type material (hole rich). When the diode is

    forward biased (electrons across interface from n to p by an applied voltage) the electrons

    cross a neutralized zone at the interface to fill holes and thus emit energy.

    The situation is very similar for organic semiconductors with two notable exceptions. The

    first exception stems from the nature of the conduction band in an organic system while

    the second exception is the recognition of how conduction occurs between two organic

    molecules.

    With non-organic semiconductors there is a band gap associated with Brillouin zones that

    discrete electron energies based on the periodic order of the crystalline lattice. The free

    electrons mobility from lattice site to lattice site is clearly sensitive to the long-term

    order of the material. This is not so for the organic semiconductor. The energy gap of the

    polymer is more a function of the individual backbone, and the mobility of electrons and

    holes are limited to the linear or branched directions of the molecule they statisticallyinhabit. The efficiency of electron/hole transport between polymer molecules is also

    unique to polymers. Electron and hole mobility occurs as a hopping mechanism which

    is significant to the practical development of organic emitting devices.

    PPV has a fully conjugated backbone (figure 2.2.1), as a consequence the HOMO (exp

    link remember 6th form!) of the macromolecule stretches across the entire chain, this

    kind of situation is ideal for the transport of charge; in simple terms, electrons can simply

    "hop" from one orbital to the next since they are all linked.

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    Figure 3.7 A demonstration of the full conjugation of

    PPV is a semiconductor. Semiconductors are so called because they have conductivity

    that is midway between that of a conductor and an insulator. While conductors such as

    copper conduct electricity with little to no energy (in this case potential difference or

    voltage) required to "kick-start" a current, insulators such as glass require huge amountsof energy to conduct a current. Semi-conductors require modest amounts of energy in

    order to carry a current, and are used in technologies such as transistors, microchips and

    LEDs.

    Band theory is used to explain the semi-conductance of PPV, see figure 5. In a diatomic

    molecule, a molecular orbital (MO) diagram can be drawn showing a single HOMO and

    LUMO, corresponding to a low energy orbital and a high energy * orbital. This is

    simple enough, however, every time an atom is added to the molecule a further MO is

    added to the MO diagram. Thus for a PPV chain which consists of ~1300 atoms involved

    in conjugation, the LUMOs and HOMOs will be so numerous as to be effectivelycontinuous, this results in two bands, a valence band (HOMOs, orbitals) and a

    conduction band (LUMOs, * orbitals). They are separated by a band gap which is

    typically 0-10eV (check) and depends on the type of material. PPV has a band gap of

    2.2eV (exp eV). The valence band is filled with all the electrons in the chain, and thus

    is entirely filled, while the conduction band, being made up of empty * orbitals (the

    LUMOs) is entirely empty).

    In order for PPV to carry a charge, the charge carriers (e.g. electrons) must be given

    enough energy to "jump" this barrier - to proceed from the valence band to the

    conduction band where they are free to ride the PPV chains empty LUMOs.

    Figure 3.8 a series of orbital diagrams.

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    In this model, holes and electrons are referred to as charge carriers, both are free to

    traverse the PPV chains and as a result will come into contact. It is logical for an electron

    to fill a hole when the opportunity is presented and they are said to capture one another.

    The capture of oppositely charged carriers is referred to as recombination. When

    captured, an electron and a hole form neutral-bound excited states (termed excitons) that

    quickly decay and produce a photon up to 25% of the time, 75% of the time, decay

    produces only heat, this is due to the the possible multiplicities of the exciton. The

    frequency of the photon is tied to the band-gap of the polymer; PPV has a band-gap of

    2.2eV, which corresponds to yellow-green light.

    Not all conducting polymers fluoresce, polyacetylene, one of the first conducting-

    polymers to be discovered was found to fluoresce at extremely low levels of intensity.

    Excitons are still captured and still decay, however they mostly decay to release heat.

    This is what you may have expected since electrical resistance in most conductors causes

    the conductor to become hot.

    Capture is essential for a current to be sustained. Without capture the charge densities of

    holes and electrons would build up, quickly preventing any injection of charge carriers.

    In effect no current would flow. A diatomic molecule has a bonding and an anti-bonding

    orbital, two atomic orbitals gives two molecular orbitals. The electrons arrange

    themselves following, Auf Bau and the Pauli Principle. A single atom has one atomic

    obital. A triatomic molecule has three molecular orbitals, as before one bonding, one anti-

    bonding, and in addition one non-bonding orbital. Four atomic orbitals give four

    molecular orbitals. Many atoms results in so many closely spaced orbitals that they are

    effectively continuous and non-quantum. The orbital sets are called bands. In this case

    the bands are separated by a band gap, and thus the substance is either an insulator or asemi-conductor. It is already apparent that conduction in polymers is not similar to that of

    metals and inorganic conductors , however there is more to this story! First we need to

    imagine a conventional diode system, i.e. PPV sandwiched between an electron injector

    (or cathode), and an anode. The electron injector needs to inject electrons of sufficient

    energy to exceed the band gap, the anode operates by removing electrons from the

    polymer and consequently leaving regions of positive charge called holes. The anode is

    consequently referred to as the hole injector.

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    TYPES OF OLED

    Active-matrix OLED - AMOLED

    AMOLEDs have full layers of cathode, organic molecules and anode, but the anode layer

    overlays a thin film transistor (TFT) array that forms a matrix. The TFT array itself is the

    circuitry that determines which pixels get turned on to form an image. AMOLEDs

    consume less power than PMOLEDs because the TFT array requires less power than

    external circuitry, so they are efficient for large displays. AMOLEDs also have faster

    refresh rates suitable for video. The best uses for AMOLEDs are computer monitors,

    large screen TVs and electronic signs or billboards.

    Active-matrix OLED displays provide the same beautiful video-rate performance as their passive-matrix OLED counterparts, but they consume significantly less power. This

    advantage makes active-matrix OLEDs especially well suited for portable electronics

    where battery power consumption is critical and for displays that are larger than 2 to 3

    in diagonal

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    Figure 4.1 Active matrix OLED Structure

    An active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) display consists of OLED pixels that have been

    deposited or integrated onto a thin film transistor (TFT) array to form a matrix of pixels

    that illuminate light upon electrical activation. In contrast to a PMOLED display, where

    electricity is distributed row by row, the active-matrix TFT backplane acts as an array of

    switches that control the amount of current flowing through each OLED pixel.

    Passive-matrix OLED - PMOLED

    PMOLEDs have strips of cathode, organic layers and strips of anode. The anode strips

    are arranged perpendicular to the cathode strips. The intersections of the cathode and

    anode make up the pixels where light is emitted. External circuitry applies current to

    selected strips of anode and cathode, determining which pixels get turned on and which

    pixels remain off. Again, the brightness of each pixel is proportional to the amount of

    applied current.

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    Figure 4.2 Passive matrix OLED structure

    PMOLEDs are easy to make, but they consume more power than other types of OLED,

    mainly due to the power needed for the external circuitry. PMOLEDs are most efficient

    for text and icons and are best suited for small screens (2- to 3-inch diagonal) such as

    those you find in cell phones, PDAs and MP3 players. Even with the external circuitry,

    passive-matrix OLEDs consume less battery power than the LCDs that are currently used

    in these devices.

    Transparent OLED

    Transparent OLEDs have only transparent components (substrate, cathode and anode)

    and, when turned off, are up to 85 percent as transparent as their substrate. When a

    transparent OLED display is turned on, it allows light to pass in both directions. A

    transparent OLED display can be either active- or passive-matrix. This technology can be

    used for heads-up displays.

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    Figure 4.3 Transparent OLED structure

    Top emission: Using the same transparent structure, TOLED technology can also be used

    for top-emitting structures for active-matrix displays and with opaque substrates.

    Especially desirable for high-resolution, active-matrix OLED applications, a top-

    emittingstructure can improve the effective active area and the power consumption of the

    display by directing the emitted light away from the thin film transistor (TFT) backplane

    rather than through it (see schematic below). Top-emitting OLEDs can also be built on

    opaque surfaces such as metallic foil and silicon wafers. To illustrate this point, the video(to the right) shows an icon-format TOLED demonstrator that Universal Display

    Corporation built on metallic foil with Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), a subsidiary

    of Xerox Corporation, and Vitex Systems, Inc. Potential TOLED applications include

    smart cards or displays on furniture, automotive parts and other opaque surfaces, to

    suggest a few.

    Top-emitting OLED

    Top-emitting OLEDs have a substrate that is either opaque or reflective. They are best

    suited to active-matrix design. Manufacturers may use top-emitting OLED displays insmart cards. TOLED transparent and top-emitting OLED technology uses a proprietary

    transparent contact structure to create displays that can be transparent, that is, top- and

    bottom-emitting or, selectively, top-emitting only.

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    Figure 4.4 Top-emitting OLED structure

    TOLEDs can significantly enhance display performance and open up many new product

    applications. Transparency: TOLEDs can be 70% to 85% transparent when switched off,

    nearly as clear as the glass or plastic substrate on which they are built. To better picture

    this, please refer to the video (to the right) where a simple transparent OLED pixel is

    shown turning on and off. This feature paves the way for TOLEDs to be built into vision-

    area applications, such as architectural windows for home entertainment and

    teleconferencing purposes, and automotive windshields for navigation and warning

    systems. TOLEDs may also enable the development of novel helmet-mounted or "heads-

    up" systems for virtual reality, industrial and medical applications.

    Foldable OLED

    Foldable OLEDs have substrates made of very flexible metallic foils or plastics. Foldable

    OLEDs are very lightweight and durable. Their use in devices such as cell phones and

    PDAs can reduce breakage, a major cause for return or repair. Potentially, foldable

    OLED displays can be sewn into fabrics for "smart" clothing, such as outdoor survival

    clothing with an integrated computer chip, cell phone, GPS receiver and OLED display

    sewn into it.

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    Figure 4.5 Foldable OLED

    FOLED flexible OLEDs are organic light emitting devices that are built on flexible

    substrates such as plastic or metallic foil. FOLED displays can offer significant

    performance advantages over LCD displays that are typically built on rigid glass

    substrates and contain a bulky backlight.Today, the primary substrate candidates are thin

    plastics, such as PET and PEN polyester films. While these materials offer many

    attractive features, they also currently impose limitations with respect to thermal

    processing and barrier performance. Companies are developing coatings for these

    substrates as well as new plastic substrates to compensate for these constraints. UniversalDisplay Corporation is actively working with a number of these companies.

    White OLED

    A white organic LED (OLED) incorporating a blue phosphorescent dye and a down-

    conversion phosphor has achieved a luminous efficacy of 25 lm/W. This high-efficacy

    device was enabled by lowering the device operating voltage, increasing the outcoupling

    efficiency, and incorporating highly efficient phosphorescent emitters.

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    Figure 4.6 White OLED

    Solid-state white lighting using PHOLED, TOLED and FOLED technologies represents a

    true breakthrough for next-generation lighting. Among the exciting advances in white

    OLED lighting technology are the PHOLED technology and materials present the

    potential to combine the power efficiencies of fluorescent tubes with the pleasing color

    quality associated with incandescent bulbs in a thoroughly new flat form factor. In

    collaboration with Toyota Industries Corporation, at the 2004 Society for Information

    Display Symposium and Exhibition, we reported record-breaking white PHOLED

    performance exceeding 18 lm/W at an operating voltage of < 6.5 V, brightness of 1000

    cd/m2 and CIE color coordinates of (0.38, 0.38).

    ADVANTAGES & DRAWBACKS

    OLEDs offer many advantages over both LCDs and LEDs:

    Require only 3.3 volts and have lifetime of more than 30,000 hours.

    Low power consumption.

    Self luminous.

    No viewing angle dependence.

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    Display fast moving images with optimum clarity.

    Cost much less to manufacture and to run than CRTs because the active material

    is plastic.

    Can be scaled to any dimension.

    Fast switching speeds that are typical of LEDs.

    No environmental draw backs.

    No power in take when switched off.

    All colours of the visible spectrum are possible by appropriate choose of

    polymers.

    Simple to use technology than conventional solid state LEDs and lasers.

    Very slim flat panel. The plastic, organic layers of an OLED are thinner, lighter

    and more flexible than the crystalline layers in an LED or LCD.

    Because the light-emitting layers of an OLED are lighter, the substrate of an

    OLED can be flexible instead of rigid. OLED substrates can be plastic rather than the

    glass used for LEDs and LCDs. OLEDs are brighter than LEDs. Because the organic layers of an OLED are much

    thinner than the corresponding inorganic crystal layers of an LED, the conductive and

    emissive layers of an OLED can be multi-layered. Also, LEDs and LCDs require glass

    for support, and glass absorbs some light. OLEDs do not require glass.

    OLEDs do not require backlighting like LCDs. LCDs work by selectively

    blocking areas of the backlight to make the images that you see, while OLEDs generate

    light themselves. Because OLEDs do not require backlighting, they consume much less

    power than LCDs (most of the LCD power goes to the backlighting). This is especially

    important for battery-operated devices such as cell phones.

    OLEDs are easier to produce and can be made to larger sizes. Because OLEDs areessentially plastics, they can be made into large, thin sheets. It is much more difficult to

    grow and lay down so many liquid crystals.

    OLEDs have large fields of view, about 170 degrees. Because LCDs work by

    blocking light, they have an inherent viewing obstacle from certain angles. OLEDs

    produce their own light, so they have a much wider viewing range.

    OLED seems to be the perfect technology for all types of displays, but it also has

    some problems:

    Lifetime - While red and green OLED films have longer lifetimes (46,000 to 230,000

    hours), blue organics currently have much shorter lifetimes (up to around 14,000 hours.

    The major drawback is the limited lifetime of organic materials. This problem still needs

    to be solved to push OLED technology to be more successful in the future. Blue OLEDs

    have only a lifetime of around 5,000 hours, when used in flat panel displays, which is

    much lower than the typical lifetimes of LCDs or plasma displays. But there are various

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    experimentations to increase the lifetime, some are reporting that they already reached a

    lifetime up to 10,000 hours and above.

    Water - Water can easily damage OLEDs. Organic materials can easily be damaged by

    water intrusion into the displays. Therefore an improved sealing process is necessary for

    OLED displays.

    Vulnerable to shorts due to contamination of substrate surface by dust.

    Voltage drops.

    Mechanically fragile.

    Potential not yet realized.

    The development of the technology is restrained by patents held by Kodak and other

    companies. For commercial development of OLED technology it is often necessary toacquire a license.

    APPLICATIONS & FUTURE SCOPE

    Applications of OLEDs

    OLEDs have been proposed for a wide range of display applications including magnified

    micro displays, wearable, head-mounted computers, digital cameras, personal digital

    assistants, smart pagers, virtual reality games, and mobile phones as well as medical,

    automotive, and other industrial applications. This OLEDs with its full color displays will

    replace todays liquid crystal displays (LCDs) used in laptop computers and may even

    one day replace ordinary CRT-screens. OLED technology is already used in some

    devices. On this page we will name some products that are powered by OLED displays.

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    Most of them are cellular phones or portable music players, but also other products use

    this new technology. Cellular/mobile phones There are many mobile phones that use

    OLED displays. Samsung has several models like the SGH-E700, E715 or E730. All

    these models use an external OLED screen with different resolutions (64 x 96, 96 x 96

    pixels) and different color depths (either 256 colours or 65k colours). The Samsung SGH-

    X120 uses a main OLED screen with 128 x 128 pixels. The S88 phone from BenQ-

    Siemens uses a two inch active-matrix OLED display with about 262k colors and 176 x

    220 pixels. LG Electronic offers several mobile phones with an OLED technology. LG

    LP4100 has an external display powered with the new technology.

    Figure 6.1 A Sony PSP having foldable OLED display

    LG's model VX8300 has an organic light-emitting diode display with 262,000 colors and

    a resolution of 176 x 220 pixels.

    Other mobile phone manufacturers like Motorola, Nokia, Panasonic or Sony Ericsson are

    also using organic light emitting diodes for their external displays. MP3 playersMobiBLU ships an mp3 player that features an OLED display, the DAH-1500i model.

    The popular Creative Zen Micro has also an organic LED display with 262k colors. The

    Sony NW-A3000 and NW-A1000 both have an OLED display. The Zen Sleek music

    player from Creative has a new 1.7 inch organic LED display. The Giga beat audio player

    from Toshiba features also an OLED screen. The Kodak Easy Share LS633 is the world's

    first digital camera with an organic LED display. The Sanyo Xacti HD1 is a high

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    definition camera that features an OLED display. Other digital cameras with an OLED

    screen are from Hasselblad (H2D-39 and 503CWD for example).

    Figure 6.2 Toshiba Laptop having Transparent OLED

    Future scope of OLEDs

    In OLEDs as crystalline order is not required, organic materials, both molecular and

    polymeric, can be deposited far more cheaply than the inorganic semiconductors ofconventional LEDs. Patterning is also easier, and may even be accomplished by

    techniques borrowed from the printing industry. Displays can be prepared on flexible,

    transparent substrates such as plastic. These characteristics form the basis for a displaytechnology that can eventually replace even paper, providing the same resolution and

    reading comfort in a long-lived, fully reusable (and eventually recyclable) digital

    medium.

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    OLED is emerging as the new technology for thin panel displays. It can be used for mp3

    players, cell phones, digital cameras or hand-held gaming devices. The field of

    applications for OLED displays has a wide scale. According to a report of Maxim Group

    revenues will rise from 600 million dollars in 2005 to more than five billion dollars by

    2009. Other reports have shown that the total number of sold OLED units grew up to

    over fifty percent in the past year. It is expected that this number will rise up to 80 or 90

    percent in the following year. One of the future visions is to roll out OLEDs or to stick

    them up like post-it notes. Another vision is the transparent windows which would

    function like a regular window by day. At night it could be switched on and become a

    light source. This could be possible because OLED allows transparent displays and light

    sources. It will take considerably longer, of course, for OLED to keep its promise of

    cheap manufacturing costs. The challenge is to compete against the industrial powers that

    overwhelmingly support LCD and therefore achieve massive price advantages. Currently,

    the wallpaper screen is nothing more than a vision, a clever one though. For future,

    further improvement of Lifetime will be necessary while improving power efficiency. If adevice of longer Lifetime is realized, the foot of the application spreads out greatly. We

    hope that the development discussed in this paper opens up a course to practical use of

    OLED as lighting sources for illumination use, backlights and others.

    REFERENCE

    1. www.Whatis.com

    2. www.Infopedia.com

    3. www.Wikipedia.com4. www.Answers.com

    5. www.Webopedia.com

    6. www.About.com

    7. www.Engiguide.com


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