Large organic light-emitting diodes and methods of fabricating large organic light-emitting diodes
Large, light-weight organic light emitting diode (OLED) devices and methods of preparing large, light-weight displays of organic light emitting diode (OLED) devices for area-lighting. Specifically, flexible and rigid light-weight plastics are implemented. The flexible plastic may be disposed from a reel. A metal grid is fabricated on the flexible plastic to provide current conduction over the large area. A transparent oxide layer is provided over the metal grid to form the bottom electrode of the OLED. A light emitting organic layer is disposed on the transparent oxide layer. A second electrode is disposed over the organic layer. Electrodes are coupled to the metal grid and the second electrode to provide electrical current to facilitate light emission from the organic layer.
This is a divisional of co-pending application Ser. No. 10/324,417 filed on Dec. 20, 2002.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONHigh efficiency lighting sources are continually being developed to compete with traditional area lighting sources, such as fluorescent lighting. For example, while light emitting diodes have traditionally been implemented FOR indicator lighting and numerical displays, advances in light emitting diode technology have fueled interest in using such technology for area lighting. Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) and Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) are solid-state semiconductor devices that convert electrical energy into light. While LEDs implement inorganic semiconductor layers to convert electrical energy into light, OLEDs implement organic semiconductor layers to convert electrical energy into light. Generally, OLEDs are fabricated by disposing multiple layers of organic thin films between two conductors or electrodes. The electrode layers and the organic layers are generally disposed between two substrates, such as glass substrates. When electrical current is applied to the electrodes, light is produced. Unlike traditional LEDs, OLEDs can be processed using low cost, large area thin film deposition processes. OLED technology lends itself to the creation of ultra-thin lighting displays that can operate at lower voltages than LEDs. Significant developments have been made in providing general area lighting implementing OLEDs.
However, while traditional OLEDs having a relatively low efficacy (e.g. 3-4 lumens per watt) may be able to achieve sufficient brightness for area lighting at low voltages, the operating life of the OLED may be limited due to the heat generated by the high power level and relatively low efficiency of the device. To provide commercially viable light sources implementing OLEDs, the efficacy of the devices should be improved to reduce the heat generation when operating at a brightness sufficient to provide general illumination.
To emit light having a brightness that is equivalent to the light produced by conventional lighting sources such as fluorescent lighting sources, the OLED may be large, approximately one square meter, for example. A number of issues may arise when contemplating fabrication of a large OLED, such as and OLED having a front surface area of one square meter. When fabricating OLED devices, conventional OLED devices implement top and bottom glass plates. Advantageously, glass substrates provide adequate hermeticity to seal the device from exposure to water and oxygen. Further, glass substrates allow for high temperature processing of the OLED devices. However, glass substrates may be impractical and less desirable when contemplating the fabrication of large area OLED devices for area lighting when compared to conventional area lighting sources, such as fluorescent lighting sources. Generally speaking, glass may be impractically heavy for area-lighting applications. For instance, to produce the light equivalent to a four foot T12 fluorescent lamp, for example, an OLED device implementing glass substrates having a thickness of ⅛ of an inch and a front surface area of one square meter may weigh approximately 31 pounds. The T12 fluorescent lamp weighs less than one-half a pound. One method of reducing the weight of the OLED device is to implement plastic substrates. However, while plastic substrates advantageously reduce the weight of the device, the hermeticity of the device may be compromised.
Further, as can be appreciated, general area lighting is widely used and the demands for such lighting are understandably high. Accordingly, to provide a viable alternative source for area lighting to that of fluorescent lighting, for example, the alternative source should be fairly robust and easy to manufacture. OLED devices implementing large glass substrates may be difficult to mass produce in a highly automated process. The weight of glass and fragility of glass substrates may disadvantageously burden the manufacturing process.
Still further, as can be appreciated, the active layers of organic polymers implemented in OLED devices are disposed between conducting electrodes. The bottom electrode generally comprises a reflective metal such as aluminum, for example. The top electrode generally comprises a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) material, such as Indium-Tin-Oxide (ITO), that allows light produced by the active layers to be emitted through the top electrode. To maximize the amount of light that is emitted from the OLED device, the thickness of the ITO layer may be minimized. In typical OLED devices, the ITO layer has a thickness of approximately 1000 angstroms. However, the conductivity of 1000 angstroms of ITO may not be adequate to supply sufficient electrical current across the entire surface area of the large OLED. Accordingly, the electrical current may be insufficient to generate enough light across the large OLED for use in area lighting applications.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONIn accordance with one aspect of the present techniques, there is provide a method of fabricating a general area lighting source comprising the acts of: fabricating a transparent backer portion; fabricating an active portion, wherein the active portion comprises an organic layer disposed between a first electrode and a second electrode; coupling the transparent backer portion to the active portion; and coupling electrical leads to each of the first electrode and the second electrode.
In accordance with another aspect of the present techniques, there is provide a method of fabricating a general area lighting source comprising the acts of: providing a flexible transparent film; forming a metal grid pattern on the flexible transparent film; disposing a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) layer over the metal grid pattern and the transparent film; disposing the organic layer over the transparent conductive oxide layer; and disposing a metal layer over the organic layer.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present techniques, there is provide an area lighting system comprising: a rigid plastic layer; a hermetic coating layer disposed on the rigid plastic layer; a flexible transparent film coupled to the hermetic coating layer; a metal grid pattern formed on the flexible transparent film; a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) layer disposed over the metal grid pattern and the transparent film; an organic layer disposed over the transparent conductive oxide layer; and a metal layer disposed over the organic layer.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSAdvantages and features of the invention may become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings in which:
The plastic 10 should be large enough to provide sufficient light for use in area-lighting. In the present exemplary embodiment, the plastic 10 may have a length of approximately 4 feet and a width of approximately 1 foot, for example. As can be appreciated, other desirable dimensions of the plastic 10 may be implemented. The plastic 10 may have a thickness T in the range of approximately 1-125 mils. As can be appreciated, a material having a thickness of less than 10 mils may generally be referred to as a “film” while a material having a thickness of greater than 10 mils may generally be referred to as a “sheet.” It should be understood that the plastic 10 may comprise a plastic film or a plastic sheet. Further, while the terms may connote particular thicknesses, the terms may be used interchangeably, herein. Accordingly, the use of either term herein is not meant to limit the thickness of the respective material, but rather, is provided for simplicity. Generally speaking, a thinner plastic 10 may provide a lighter and less expensive material. However, a thicker plastic 10 may provide more rigidity and thus structural support for the OLED device. The thickness of the plastic 10 may depend on the particular application.
In fabricating the transparent backer, apertures 12 are provided to facilitate the electrical connection of the OLED, as illustrated in
In the present embodiment of the transparent backer, a hermetic coating 14 is applied over the plastic 10, as illustrated in
In one specific exemplary embodiment, the hermetic coating 14 comprises a hybrid organic-inorganic multi-layer barrier coating formed on a heat stabilized polyethylene terephthalate (PET) material having a thickness of approximately 175 microns. The composite barrier may comprise alternating layers of polyacrylate films and an inorganic oxide, for example. An acrylic monomer layer may be deposited onto the surface of the PET material by flash evaporation in a vacuum, for example. After deposition, the condensed acrylic monomer maybe cured using ultraviolet light to form a non-conformal highly cross-linked polyacrylate film that planarizes the surface of the PET layer. Next a layer of aluminum oxide (Al2O3) may be deposited onto the polyacrylate film layer at a thickness in the range of approximately 100-300 angstoms, for example, to provide a barrier to the diffusion of water and oxygen. Advantageously, by alternately repeating the processes to deposit multiple layers, the polymer layers (e.g., polyacrylate film) decouple any defects in the oxide layers (e.g., aluminum oxide layer) thereby preventing propagation of defects through the multi layer hermetic coating 14. In one embodiment, the processes are repeated 4-5 times, for example.
As previously described, typical OLEDs which are implemented for indicator lighting, for example, generally comprise a number of organic layers disposed between two electrodes. One of the electrodes generally comprises a transparent conductive oxide (TCO), such as indium-tin-oxide (ITO), for example. ITO is a conductive ceramic having a conductivity of approximately 10 ohms/square. This amount of electrical conductivity is generally adequate to produce the necessary light emissions to illuminate the small OLEDs used for indicator lighting. However, as can be appreciated, the power output of a conventional ITO layer may be insufficient to produce the necessary current to illuminate a large area OLED, such as the present device, since the resistance losses across the large surface area may be large. Because the electrode comprises a transparent material to allow light emissions to pass from the underlying organic layers to the ambient environment, a metal layer having a higher conductivity may not be used. Further, while increasing the thickness of the ITO layer may increase the conductivity, the increased thickness may disadvantageously reduce the transparency of the layer.
One solution to the limited conductivity of the ITO is to implement a metal grid 22, as indicated in
After formation of the bottom electrode (here, ITO layer 24), an organic layer 26 may be disposed on the surface of the ITO layer 24, as illustrated in
As previously described, the transparent film 20 is advantageously capable of reel-to-reel processing. Accordingly, the deposition of the thin organic light emitting polymer layers in the organic layer 26 may be more difficult than in conventional, small-area indicator lighting OLEDs. It should be understood that to apply the various layers that constitute the organic layer 26, a number of coating steps may be implemented. Accordingly, further discussion regarding disposition of the organic layer 26 generally refers to a number of iterative coating steps. Also, as previously described, the layers deposited on the transparent film 20 may not comprise continuous layers. That is to say that each of the ITO layer 24, the organic layer 26 and the top electrode 28 (described below with reference to
One technique of disposing the organic layer 26 is “micro-gravure coating” which is a continuous coating process specially adapted to apply thin uniform layer of low-viscosity liquids. An engraved roll (“gravure roll”) having a small diameter is dipped with coating solution, thereby filling the cells or grooves in the surface of the roll. Excess liquid may be scraped from the surface of the roll. The gravure roll is reverse-wiped across a moving tensioned reel-to-reel surface, such as the transparent film 20 having the ITO layer 24 disposed thereon, to transfer a fraction of the liquid contained in the engraving onto the surface. Because microgravure is a continuous coating technique, the disposed layer may be subsequently patterned. One patterning technique is to apply a patterned monolayer that will either attract or repel the underlying coating. Alternatively, the coating may be patterned via a laser ablation process. As can be appreciated, the organic layer 26 may remain as a continuous layer since the patterning (pixelating) of the electrodes (ITO layer 24 and the top electrode 28) may provide sufficient electrical isolation.
Alternatively a gravure printing is a process where the desired pattern is directly engraved on the gravure roll as millions of tiny cells. The roll is directly pressed onto the application surface to transfer coating from these cells. The organic material layer may be disposed onto the surface of the ITO layer 24 through a series of elastohydrodynamic processes, as can be appreciated by those skilled in the art.
Further, flexographic printing, screen printing or inkjet printing may be implemented to dispose the individual organic materials that form the organic layer 12. Flexographic printing is a process wherein the area to be printed is raised on a flexible plate attached to a roll. Coating is transferred to the raised image from an engraved roll, after which the coating is transferred to the surface. Rotary screen printing uses a squeegee to push coating through open areas of a fine fabric mesh onto the substrate. Inkjet printing starts with drop formation at the nozzle of an inkjet device. The drop is dispensed onto the surface and inertial force causes the drop to spread as it hits the surface. <<Don—please make sure that I have not disclosed anything that should remain GE proprietary with regard to these exemplary coating techniques.>>
Referring now to
To provide electrical current to the bottom electrode (ITO layer 24), electrical leads may be coupled to the metal grid 22. To provide access to the metal grid 22, the apertures 12 are extended through the transparent film 20, as illustrated in
Referring to
The OLED device 32 may be sealed by an encapsulating layer 38, as illustrated in
While the invention may be susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and have been described in detail herein. However, it should be understood that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following appended claims.
Claims
1. A system comprising:
- a rigid plastic layer;
- a hermetic coating layer disposed on the rigid plastic layer;
- a flexible transparent film coupled to the hermetic coating layer;
- a metal grid pattern formed on the flexible transparent film;
- a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) layer disposed over the metal grid pattern and the transparent film;
- an organic layer disposed over the transparent conductive oxide layer; and
- a top electrode disposed over the organic layer.
2. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the flexible transparent film comprises a film disposed from a reel.
3. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the metal grid pattern comprises a plurality of electrically isolated metal squares.
4. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the transparent conductive layer comprises an indium-tin-oxide (ITO) layer.
5. The system, as set forth in claim 1, comprising electrical leads coupled to each of the metal grid pattern and the top electrode.
6. The system, as set forth in claim 1, comprising electrical leads coupled to some of the plurality of metal squares.
7. The system, as set forth in claim 1, comprising a hermetic coating disposed over the top electrode.
8. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the top electrode comprises a reflective metal to reflect impinging light through the system.
9. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein an adhesive is disposed between the flexible transparent film and the hermetic coating.
10. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein a color changing layer is disposed between the flexible transparent film and the hermetic coating.
9. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the system comprises an area lighting system.
10. The system, as set forth in claim 1, wherein the system comprises a photovoltaic system.
11. A system comprising:
- a transparent backer portion;
- a transparent film coupled to the transparent backer portion;
- a metal pattern formed on the flexible transparent film;
- a transparent conductive layer disposed over the metal pattern and transparent film;
- an organic layer disposed over the transparent conductive layer; and
- a top electrode layer disposed over the organic layer.
12. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the transparent backer portion comprises a plastic layer, a hermetic coating disposed over the plastic layer, and an adhesive layer disposed over the hermetic coating.
13. The system, as set forth in claim 12, wherein a color changing layer is disposed between the hermetic coating and the adhesive layer.
14. The system as set forth in claim 11, wherein apertures extend through the transparent backer portion coincident with the metal pattern.
15. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the transparent film comprises a film disposed from a reel.
16. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the metal pattern comprises a plurality of electrically isolated metal squares.
17. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the transparent conductive layer comprises an indium-tin-oxide (ITO) layer.
18. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the top electrode layer comprises a reflective metal to reflect impinging light through the transparent portions of the system.
19. The system, as set forth in claim 11, comprising a hermetic coating disposed over the top electrode layer.
20. The system, as set forth in claim 11, comprising electrical leads coupled to each of the metal pattern and the top electrode layer.
21. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the system comprises an area lighting system.
22. The system, as set forth in claim 11, wherein the system comprises a photovoltaic system.
23. An area lighting system comprising:
- a transparent backer portion having a plurality of apertures;
- a transparent film coupled to the transparent backer portion and having a plurality of apertures coincident with the plurality of apertures of the transparent backer portion;
- a metal pattern formed on the flexible transparent film;
- a transparent conductive layer disposed over the metal pattern;
- an organic layer disposed over the transparent conductive layer;
- a metal layer disposed over the organic layer; and
- electrical leads coupled to each of the metal pattern and the metal layer disposed over the organic layer.
24. The area lighting system, as set forth in claim 23, wherein the transparent backer comprises a plastic layer, a hermetic coating over the plastic layer, and an adhesive layer over the hermetic coating.
25. The system, as set forth in claim 24, wherein a color changing layer is disposed between the hermetic coating and the adhesive layer.
26. The area lighting system, as set forth in claim 23, wherein the transparent film comprises a film disposed from a reel.
27. The system, as set forth in claim 23, comprising a hermetic coating disposed over the metal layer disposed over the organic layer.
28. The area lighting system, as set forth in claim 23, wherein the electrical leads coupled to the first electrode are disposed in the apertures extending through the transparent backer portion and the transparent film and coincident with the metal pattern formed on the flexible transparent film.
29. The system, as set forth in claim 23, wherein the system comprises a photovoltaic system.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 5, 2005
Publication Date: Nov 3, 2005
Inventors: Donald Foust (Glenville, NY), Anil Duggal (Niskayuna, NY)
Application Number: 11/175,808