MULTI-LAYER LARGE-FORMAT IMPRINTED STRUCTURE
A filled large-format imprinted structure includes a substrate and a first cured layer located over the substrate. One or more first micro-cavities are imprinted in the first cured layer, each first micro-cavity having a first micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns. A second cured layer is located over the first layer and the one or more first micro-cavities. One or more second micro-cavities are imprinted in the second cured layer, each second micro-cavity having a second micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns. A common first cured material is located in the first micro-cavity and in the second micro-cavity, thereby defining a filled large-format imprinted structure.
Reference is made to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001725) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Filled Large-Format Imprinted Structure by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001727) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Filled Large-Format Imprinting Method by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001728) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Ribbed Large-Format Imprinted Structure by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001729) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Ribbed Large-Format Imprinting Method by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001731) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Multi-Layer Large-Format Imprinting Method by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001732) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Stacked Large-Format Imprinted Structure by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Serial No. (Docket K001733) filed concurrently herewith, entitled Stacked Large-Format Imprinting Method by Cok; to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/784,866 filed Mar. 5, 2013 entitled Variable Depth Micro-Channel Structure by Cok; and to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/784,869 filed Mar. 5, 2013 entitled Micro-Channel Structure with Variable Depths by Cok; the disclosures of which are incorporated herein.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to multi-layer imprinted structures having micro-cavities filled with cured materials.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONColor filter arrays are widely used with liquid crystal displays (LCDs) to provide color pixels. In such displays, each pixel is arranged to emit or reflect light through a color filter. The pixels are typically substantially rectangular with sides having lengths ranging from tens of microns to hundreds of microns, depending on the display size and resolution. For example, a pixel and corresponding color filter can have a size of 100 microns by 200 microns and a thickness of approximately a micron to tens of microns. A typical display can have a fill factor (the percentage of the display area covered by pixels and color filters) of 50% or even more.
The color filters are typically made using photolithographic processes in which surfaces are coated with a material (for example by evaporation, thermal transfer, or by a liquid coating containing dyes or pigments). The coated layer is then cured, if necessary, and photolithographically patterned, for example by coating a photoresist, exposing the resist to light such as ultra-violet (UV) light through a mask to develop a pattern in the resist corresponding to the mask, and etching the patterned resist and the underlying coated layer to form a color filter pattern corresponding to the mask. This process is expensive and time consuming because it is a subtractive process that is wasteful of etched materials, uses additional, expensive materials such as photoresists and masks, and requires expensive optical alignment equipment.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,497,981 describes a method of forming a color filter array. A substrate having a passivation layer thereon is provided. A negative color photoresist layer is formed over the passivation layer. A photolithographic exposure process is conducted using a light source with a wavelength less than or equal to 248 nm so that a pattern for forming a color filter array is imprinted on the negative color photoresist layer. In an alternative method, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20130038958 discloses a manufacturing method of a color filter array including providing a substrate; forming a light shielding layer on the substrate, the light shielding layer having a plurality of openings, the openings exposing a surface of the substrate, the light shielding layer having a height H;
performing an inkjet printing process to inject color filter ink into the openings of the light shielding layer; and performing a solidifying process to solidify the color filter ink to form a plurality of color filter patterns. In yet another approach, EP0365219 teaches a method of making an array of a repeating mosaic pattern of colorants carried on a support using (a) a plurality of donor materials each comprising respectively a sublimable dye of a different color, and (b) a receiver element comprising a support having thereon a dye-receiving layer, wherein each donor material is in turn brought into face-to-face contact with the receiver and heated patternwise by contact with a heated embossed surface to transfer the desired pattern of dye to the dye-receiving layer.
It is also known to form small-scale features in thin layers of curable materials such as cross-linkable polymers using an embossing or imprinting process. In such processes, a curable layer is coated over a substrate, the curable layer is imprinted with a stamp having desired relief features that project from the stamp surface into the curable layer, the curable layer is cured using heat or radiation depending on the attributes of the cross-linkable polymer, and the stamp is removed. Such processes can be fast, cover large areas, and are applicable to inexpensive roll-to-roll manufacturing processes. However, the area that is imprinted with a relief pattern is typically much smaller than the area that is not imprinted, since the imprinting process displaces material that must flow to another location in the imprinted layer. Thus, the imprinted area is relatively small compared to the total area of the cured material and the size of the features in the relief pattern is likewise relatively small, for example less than 20 microns in width. Thus, imprinted structures over a substrate typically have a small fill factor.
Methods for filling imprinted features in a layer are known, for example coating curable material over an imprinted substrate with relief features, removing excess curable material from the surface of the imprinted substrate but not the imprinted relief features, and curing the curable material in the relief features. However, as with the imprinting process itself, it is difficult to uniformly fill a large, imprinted area with a liquid that is subsequently cured. For example, the coffee-ring effect is widely known to compromise the uniformity of a dried coating because of capillary flow induced by differential evaporation rates over the extent of the coating.
Therefore, because of such imprinting and drying problems, it is difficult to form large fill-factor substrates, such as color filter substrates, using imprint-and-fill processes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThere is a need, therefore, for improved methods and materials for forming filled large-format imprinted structures including color filters with a large fill factor that provide improved uniformity and size, increases manufacturing speed, and requires less material and equipment.
In accordance with the present invention, a filled large-format imprinted structure comprises:
a substrate;
a first cured layer located over the substrate;
one or more first micro-cavities imprinted in the first cured layer, each first micro-cavity having a first micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns;
a second cured layer located over the first layer and the one or more first micro-cavities;
one or more second micro-cavities imprinted in the second cured layer, each second micro-cavity having a second micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns; and
a common first cured material in the first micro-cavity and in the second micro-cavity, thereby defining a filled large-format imprinted structure.
Structures and methods of the present invention provide color filters on a large fill-factor substrate and, more generally, provide filled large-format imprinted structures having improved uniformity and size using a process that decreases material requirement, increases manufacturing speed, and requires less material and equipment.
The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent when taken in conjunction with the following description and drawings wherein identical reference numerals have been used to designate identical features that are common to the figures, and wherein:
The Figures are not necessarily to scale, since the range of dimensions in the drawings is too great to permit depiction to scale.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONAccording to various embodiments and methods of the present invention, filled large-format imprinted structures such as color filters having improved uniformity and size are provided by using structures and processes that decrease material requirements, increase manufacturing speed, and require less equipment. As is described more fully below, imprinting processes form relief features or structures such as micro-cavities in a curable layer. Once the curable layer is cured, the micro-cavities are filled with a curable material and dried to form, for example, color filters. Multiple stacked cured layers, arrangements of micro-cavities in the stacked cured layers, and structures formed in the micro-cavities in the cured layers mitigate problems found in structures and methods of the prior art.
Additive imprinting processes are known to form small features such as micro-cavities in cured layers at a relatively high rate compatible with inexpensive roll-to-roll processes with less waste than other processes such as photo-lithographic processes. Multiple cured layers reduce the relative quantity of imprinted material in a given layer and structures within the imprinted micro-cavities improve the distribution of curable material, such as color filter material, within the micro-cavities.
Referring to
As is readily observed in
According to embodiments of the present invention, a filled large-format structure 5 includes a layer of cured material having imprinted micro-cavities that are filled with a cured material, for example forming color filters. Referring to
In an embodiment, the substrate 8 is a transparent substrate and the first, second, and third cured layers 10, 20, 30 are transparent layers. In another embodiment, the substrate 8 is a component of a display 6 such as an LCD or OLED display, for example the cover or substrate of the display 6 through which light from an array of pixels is emitted, reflected, or transmitted. The display 6 includes an array of pixels such as a first pixel 16, a second pixel 26, and a third pixel 36, each of which independently controls emitted, transmitted, or reflected light and corresponds, for example, to colored pixels such as red, green, and blue pixels. As is well known in the art, some LCD and OLED displays use a white-light backlight whose light is patterned according to pixels controlled by a display controller (not shown) and colored by color filters. The display 6 in the present invention can emit white light that is colored by color filters provided by the large-format imprinted structures 5 of the present invention. The large-format imprinted structures 5 are filled with dyes or pigments to color light from the display pixels transmitted through the filled large-format imprinted structures 5. According to the present invention, the large-format imprinted structures 5 filled with dyes or pigments are referred to as color filters, but the present invention is not limited to color filter applications only.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, the large-format imprinted structure 5 further includes the display 6 having at least the first, second, and third pixels 16, 26, 36 located beneath the first cured layer 10, the first pixel 16 located at least partially beneath the first micro-cavity 12, the second pixel 26 located at least partially beneath the second micro-cavity 22, and the third pixel 36 located at least partially beneath the third micro-cavity 32.
As used herein, the first, second, and third micro-cavities 12, 22, 32 are structures imprinted in the first, second, and third cured layers 10, 20, 30, respectively, and can also be referred to as micro-channels or micro-structures. The term micro-cavity is used in other arts to refer to an optical cavity with reflective surfaces that cause constructive optical interference at particular optical frequencies corresponding to the depth of the micro-cavity. However, in the present invention, reflective surfaces are not necessarily present in the micro-cavities and the term micro-cavity simply refers to a small imprinted cavity, opening, indentation, or channel in a cured layer and does not imply any optical interference or constructive resonant effects. The micro-cavities can have any useful shape, regular or irregular, for example rectangular, polygonal, or with curved edges. The micro-cavities can be immediately adjacent in a layer or layers, for example having a common edge in a direction orthogonal to a surface of the substrate 8. The micro-cavities can form long, thin structures that are termed micro-channels. Alternatively, each micro-cavity is separated from other micro-cavities by a gap in one or two dimensions.
Referring to the plan view of
Referring to both
As shown in
In an embodiment, the groups G correspond to full-color pixels and each individual first, second, or third pixel 16, 26, 36 is a single-color pixel or sub-pixel. Thus, the first pixel 16 and corresponding first cured material 14 aligned with the second pixel 26 and corresponding second cured material 24, and the third pixel 36 and corresponding third cured material 34 forms a full-color pixel and is separated from a neighboring full-color pixel by the separation gap S, at least in a direction orthogonal to the extent of the imprinted micro-channels and parallel to a surface of the substrate 8. Such an arrangement can enable efficient filling of the micro-cavities with liquid curable materials. Although the illustration of
As shown, the first micro-cavity 12 has a first depth D4 that is less than the first cured layer 10 thickness D1, the second micro-cavity 22 has a depth D5 that is less than the second cured layer 20 depth D2, or the third micro-cavity 32 has a depth D6 that is less than the third cured layer 30 thickness D3. The depth is taken in a direction orthogonal to a surface of the substrate 8. For clarity, as used herein the thickness of a layer or material is also referred to as the depth of the layer or material and refers to the thickness of the layer or material in a direction perpendicular to a surface of the substrate 8. Generally, micro-cavities are referred to as having a depth and layers and materials are referred to as having a thickness. By ensuring that the thickness of a layer is greater than the depth of a micro-cavity imprinted in the layer, the amount of material that is displaced by imprinting relative to the total amount of material in the layer is reduced. At the same time, it is useful to employ relatively thin layers, for example less than 20 microns, less than 10 microns, less than five microns, less than two microns, or even less than one micron to reduce the total amount of material in the imprinted cured layers. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the depth of the micro-cavities will depend, at least in part, by the desired thickness of the first, second, and third cured materials, 14, 24, 34 necessary to filter the light from the first, second, and third pixels 16, 26, 36 to a desired color saturation. This thickness will depend on the nature of the cured materials (e.g. dye or pigment load and material type) and the spectrum of light from the corresponding pixel.
In other embodiments, the first cured layer 10 has a thickness D1 that is different from the thickness D2 of the second cured layer 20, the first cured layer 10 has a thickness D1 that is different from the thickness D3 of the third cured layer 30, or the second cured layer 20 has a thickness D2 that is different from the thickness D3 of the third cured layer 30. Correspondingly, the first micro-cavity 12 has a depth D4 that is different from the depth D5 of the second micro-cavity 22, the first micro-cavity 12 has a depth D4 that is different from the depth D6 of the third micro-cavity 32, or the second micro-cavity 22 has a depth D5 that is different from the depth D6 of the third micro-cavity 32. Similarly, the first cured material 14 has a thickness D4 that is different from the thickness D5 of the second cured material 24, the first cured material 14 has a thickness D4 that is different from the thickness D6 of the third cured material 34, or the second cured material 24 has a thickness D5 that is different from the thickness D6 of the third cured material 34. Since different color filters require different materials providing different amounts of saturated light from a white-light source with a variable-intensity spectrum, it is useful to employ different thicknesses of materials in differently colored filters.
In another useful embodiment illustrated in
As noted above and illustrated in
As shown in
The arrangement of
Although the fourth cured layer 40 is shown on a side of the first, second, and third cured layers 10, 20, 30 opposite the display 6, it can be located between any of the first, second, or third layers 10, 20, 30 or, in a useful embodiment, between the first, second, and third layers 10, 20, 30 and the display 6 (not shown). Likewise, the order of the first, second, or third layers 10, 20, 30 relative to the substrate 8 are interchangeable. Thus, the words above or below are relative and can be interchanged depending on the relative orientation and location of the substrate 8, the first layer 10, the second layer 20, the third layer 30, and the fourth layer 40. Moreover, when a micro-cavity or cured material is located above or below a pixel or other micro-cavity, a line directed orthogonally to a surface of the substrate 8 passes through the micro-cavity or cured material and the pixel or other micro-cavity. Thus, light emitted or reflected by the pixel orthogonally to the substrate will pass through the micro-cavity or cured material. Similarly, when a layer is located above or below another layer, a line directed orthogonally to a surface of the substrate 8 passes through the two layers.
In the arrangement of
Referring to
According to embodiments of the present invention, the first micro-cavity 12 is less than or equal to 20 microns wide, the second micro-cavity 22 is less than or equal to 20 microns wide, or the third micro-cavity 32 is less than or equal to 20 microns wide.
The present invention is especially useful when relatively large areas are imprinted or filled. In particular as noted above with respect to
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the third cured layer 30 is located over the second cured layer 20 and the one or more second micro-cavities 22. One or more third micro-cavities 32 is imprinted in the third cured layer 30, each third micro-cavity 32 having a third micro-cavity width W3 less than or equal to 20 microns. A fourth cured layer 40 is located over the third layer 30 and the one or more third micro-cavities 32. One or more fourth micro-cavities 42 is imprinted in the fourth cured layer 40, each fourth micro-cavity 42 having a fourth micro-cavity width W4 less than or equal to 20 microns. A common cured material (e.g. second cured material 24) is located in the third micro-cavity 32 and in the fourth micro-cavity 42. The third and fourth micro-cavities 32, 42, and second cured materials 24 make up a second area 28 that corresponds to the area of the second pixel 26.
A fifth cured layer 50 is located over the fourth layer 40 and the one or more fourth micro-cavities 42. One or more fifth micro-cavities 52 is imprinted in the fifth cured layer 50, each fifth micro-cavity 52 having a fifth micro-cavity width W5 less than or equal to 20 microns. A sixth cured layer 60 is located over the fifth cured layer 50 and the one or more fifth micro-cavities 52. One or more sixth micro-cavities 62 is imprinted in the sixth cured layer 60, each sixth micro-cavity 62 having a sixth micro-cavity width W6 less than or equal to 20 microns. A common cured material (e.g. third cured material 34) is located in the fifth micro-cavity 52 and in the sixth micro-cavity 62. The fifth and sixth micro-cavities 52, 62, and third cured materials 34 make up a third area 38 that corresponds to the area of the third pixel 36.
In yet another embodiment, a seventh cured layer 70 is located over the sixth cured layer 60 and the one or more sixth micro-cavities 62. One or more seventh micro-cavities 72 are imprinted in the seventh cured layer 70 and include cured material (e.g. fourth cured material 44) therein. In an embodiment, the width of the seventh micro-cavities is less than 20 microns. Although not shown, in an embodiment an eighth layer with imprinted micro-cavities is also formed over the seventh cured layer 70 and includes the same cured material as in the seventh micro-cavities 72.
As in other embodiments of the present invention, the substrate 8 can be the display 6 or element of the display 6 such as the display cover or display substrate. The display 6 can have first, second, and third pixels 16, 26, 36 arranged in groups G to form full-color pixels. The first cured material 14 in the first and second micro-cavities 12, 22 are associated with the first pixel 16 of the display 6 and can form a single effective color filter for the first pixel 16. Likewise, the second cured material 24 in the third and fourth micro-cavities 32, 42 are associated with the pixel 26 of the display 6 and can form a single effective color filter for the pixel 26. Similarly, the third cured material 34 in the fifth and sixth micro-cavities 52, 62 are associated with the pixel 36 of the display 6 and can form a single effective color filter for the pixel 26. In a useful embodiment, the cured material in the seventh layer 70 (and eighth layer, if present) is a black fourth cured material 44 and serves as a black matrix for the display 6.
Thus, in an embodiment of the present invention, the filled large-format imprinted structure 5 further includes the display 6 located beneath the first cured layer 10. The display 6 has a single pixel (e.g. first pixel 16) located at least partially beneath the first and at least partially beneath the second micro-cavities 12, 22. Thus, the cured material 14 in the first and second micro-cavities 12, 22 serve as a single effective color filter for the first pixel 16.
Although
Referring to
As shown in
Referring to
In this case, the two or more first micro-cavities 12 located in the first cured layer 10 are separated by the gap P less than the width W2 of the second micro-cavities. Similarly, the two or more second micro-cavities 22 located in the second cured layer 10 are separated by the gap P less than the width W1 of the first micro-cavities 12.
The cured layers 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70 are illustrated in a particular order in
According to embodiments of the present invention, the first and second cured layers 10 and 20 of the embodiments of
The embodiments of the present invention shown in
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the large-format imprinted structure 5 includes the second cured layer 20 having a second cured layer surface 21 having one or more second areas 28. The second cured layer 20 is formed on the first cured layer 10, the first micro-cavities 12, and the first cured materials 14. A plurality of second micro-cavities 22 are imprinted in each second area 28, each of the second micro-cavities 22 having a micro-cavity width W2 less than or equal to 20 microns. The rib 90 separates each second micro-cavity 22 from an adjacent second micro-cavity 22 by a rib width R that is less than the second micro-cavity width W2, the rib 90 extending from a bottom of the second micro-cavity 22 to the second cured layer surface 21. In an embodiment, the plurality of second micro-cavities 22 and rib 90 are located at least partly between the first micro-cavities 12 in a direction parallel to a substrate surface. A common second cured material 24 is in each second micro-cavity 22. In an embodiment, the common second cured material 24 is a color filter.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the large-format imprinted structure 5 includes the third cured layer 30 having a third cured layer surface 31 having one or more third areas 38. The third cured layer 30 is formed on the second cured layer 20, the second micro-cavities 22, and the second cured materials 24. A plurality of third micro-cavities 32 are imprinted in each third area 38, each of the third micro-cavities 32 having a micro-cavity width W3 less than or equal to 20 microns. The rib 90 separates each third micro-cavity 32 from an adjacent third micro-cavity 32 by a rib width R that is less than the third micro-cavity width W3, the rib 90 extending from a bottom of the third micro-cavity 32 to the third cured layer surface 31. In an embodiment, the plurality of third micro-cavities 32 and rib 90 are located at least partly between the first micro-cavities 12 or second micro-cavities 22 in a direction parallel to a substrate surface. A common third cured material 34 is in each third micro-cavity 32. In an embodiment, the common third cured material 34 is a color filter.
In yet another embodiment of the present invention, the large-format imprinted structure 5 includes the fourth cured layer 40 having a fourth cured layer surface 41 having one or more fourth areas 48. The fourth cured layer 40 is formed on the third cured layer 30, the third micro-cavities 32, and the third cured materials 34. A plurality of fourth micro-cavities 42 are imprinted in each fourth area 48, each of the fourth micro-cavities 42 having a micro-cavity width W4 less than or equal to 20 microns. The rib 90 separates each fourth micro-cavity 42 from an adjacent fourth micro-cavity 42 by a rib width R that is less than the fourth micro-cavity width W4, the rib 90 extending from a bottom of the fourth micro-cavity 42 to the fourth cured layer surface 41. The common fourth cured material 44 is in each fourth micro-cavity 42.
In other embodiments, the ribs 90 have a width that is less than or equal to 20 microns, for example 10 microns, 5 microns, two microns, or one micron. Alternatively, the ribs 90 have a rib width R that is less than or equal to one half, one quarter, one tenth, or one twentieth of the width (W1, W2, W3, W4) of the micro-cavities (12, 22, 32, 42) that the ribs 90 separate. For example, in the first cured layer 10, the rib 90 has a width R that is one tenth of the width W1 of the first micro-channel 12. The micro-cavities 12, 22, 32, 42 in each cured layer 10, 20, 30, 40 respectively can have a depth that is less than the cured layer thickness or less than 20 microns. Referring specifically to
In an embodiment, the common fourth cured material 44 is a color filter or a black material forming a black matrix and the first, second, and third cured materials are red, green, and blue cured materials. Although the cured layers 10, 20, 30, 40 are illustrated in a particular order in
Referring further to
In another embodiment, not separately illustrated, the fourth cured layer 40 includes only fourth micro-cavities 42 aligned with the ribs 90 in the first, second, or third cured layers 10, 20, 30. In such an arrangement, one or more fourth micro-cavities 42 are imprinted in the fourth cured layer 40, each of the second micro-cavities 42 having a micro-cavity width and a micro-cavity height both less than or equal to 20 microns. The fourth cured material 44, for example a black material, is located in each fourth micro-cavity 42. The fourth micro-cavities 42 are located above or below the ribs 90 in a direction perpendicular to a surface of the substrate 8. Although labeled as the fourth cured layer 40 in
In an embodiment, the first, second, and third cured materials 14, 24, 34 have different colors, for example red, green, and blue and the fourth cured material 44 is black. In various embodiments, any of these colors could be provided in the cured materials of any of the cured layers.
In another embodiment, one of the plurality of micro-cavities imprinted in an area is a different size or a different shape than another of the plurality of micro-cavities imprinted in the area.
As shown in
The embodiments of
In various embodiments of the present invention (see also
In a further embodiment, the large-format imprinted structure 5 further includes the display 6 beneath the first cured layer 10 and the display 6 has the first pixel 16 located at least partially beneath the first micro-cavity. The first pixel 16 can have a shape and the first micro-cavity 12 can have a shape that corresponds to the shape of the first pixel 16. Further, the display 6 can have a second and third pixels 26, 36 located at least partially beneath the second and third micro-cavities 22, 32, respectively. Each plurality of first, second, or the third micro-cavities 12, 22, 32 and ribs 90 is located in the first, second, or third areas 18, 28, 38, respectively and associated with the corresponding first, second, or third pixels 16, 26, 36. In an embodiment, the first, second, and third cured materials 14, 24, 34 are color filters having one of the colors red, green, and blue, and the fourth cured material 44 is black. Although not shown in
The embodiments illustrated in
In an embodiment, the cured layers 10, 20, 30, 40 of
In operation for each of the embodiments, a display controller (not shown) controls the first, second, and third pixels 16, 26, 36 of the display 6 to emit, reflect, or transmit light Z through the corresponding first, second, and third cured materials 14, 24, 34 to filter the light Z and provide colored-light pixels for the display 6 as illustrated in
All of the embodiments illustrated in the figures and discussed above can be constructed using similar or the same methods and processes. Referring first to
Each of the steps 201-204 can be performed using the steps 205-235 of step 200 illustrated in
In step 225, the cured layer surface and the micro-cavities are coated with a curable material, for example a cross-linkable material in liquid form with dyes or pigments using coating methods known in the art, for example spray or curtain coating. Excess curable material is removed from the surface of the cured layer (but not the micro-cavities) in step 230, for example by wiping the surface, using methods known in the art. In the prior art, this wiping step is problematic since it can remove curable material that is desirably located in the micro-cavities. The limitation of micro-cavity width to 20 microns or less and the use of ribs within or separating micro-cavities mitigate this wiping problem in various embodiments of the present invention. Once the excess curable material is removed, the remaining curable material in the micro-cavities is cured in step 235, for example by drying, heating, or exposure to radiation, as is known in the art. As noted above with reference to
In an embodiment, the steps 225 to 235 are repeated for each cured layer until the micro-cavities in the layer are satisfactorily filled with cured material.
The use of multiple layers having micro-cavities filled with cured material or ribs within or separating micro-cavities in a layer enable filled large-format imprinted structures 5 that are larger than those made by other methods known in the art. In turn, the filled large-format micro-cavity structures 5 enable color filters or black matrix structures that are useful with displays having pixels with a spatial dimension greater than 20 microns.
The different steps 201-204 of
Thus, the present invention provides a way to construct a variety of multi-layer micro-cavity structures using common steps and with differences for each layer only in the imprinting stamp and in the selection of curable materials for filling the imprinted micro-cavities in each layer. For example, in the embodiment of
In an alternative method, the micro-cavities are formed in alignment with the first, second, and third pixels 16, 26, 36 of the display 6. In the embodiment of
The structures of
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the first cured material 14 is cross-linked to the first cured layer 10, the second cured material 24 is cross-linked to the second cured layer 20, the third cured material 34 is cross-linked to the third cured layer 30, or the fourth cured material 44 is cross-linked to the fourth cured layer 40. Alternatively, the first cured layer 10 is cross-linked to the second cured layer 20, the second cured layer 20 is cross-linked to the third cured layer 30, or the fourth cured layer 40 is cross-linked to the third cured layer 40. More generally, any cured layer is cross linked to a cured layer with which it is in contact or the cured material in the cured layer.
In such embodiments, both the curable materials and the curable layers include cross-linkable materials that cross link when cured. For example, both the first curable material 14 and the first curable layer 10 can include a common curable resin, for example cured with ultra-violet radiation or heat, that cross links when cured. Such cross-linking between the first cured material 14 and the first cured layer 10 improves the strength and the scratch resistance of the imprinted structure. This is accomplished by only partially curing the curable layer and then more completely curing the curable layer at the same time as the curable material is cured. Similarly, two curable layers that are in contact can be cross-linked by only partially curing the first located curable layer or curable material and then more completely curing the curable layer or curable material when the second curable layer is cured. More generally, the curable layers or curable materials are only cured sufficiently at each step to enable the subsequent processing step (for example coating the second curable material over the first cured layer surface or coating the second curable layer over the first cured material). Each subsequent cure step then cures the layers present more completely until, at the end, the entire structure is completely cured. Such partial curing steps at each stage of the process also reduce processing time and intensity of radiation or heat in the curing steps. Thus, according to an embodiment of the present invention, the curing step is a partial curing step and layers or materials are repeatedly partially cured. By cross-linking the various curable layers and materials, the filled large-format imprinted structure 5 is strengthened.
According to various embodiments of the present invention, the substrate 8 is any material having a substrate surface on which the first curable layer 10 can be formed. For example, glass and plastic are suitable materials known in the art from which the substrates 8 can be made into sheets of material having substantially parallel opposed sides, one of which is the substrate surface. In various embodiments, substrate 8 is rigid, flexible, or transparent. The substrate 8 can have a wide variety of thicknesses, for example 10 microns, 50 microns, 100 microns, 1 mm, or more.
Methods for the preparation, coating, and curing of light-absorbing curable materials including pigments, dyes, or carbon black are known, as are ultra-violet and heat curable cross-linkable resins. In another embodiment, the curable material includes a colored dye or a colored pigment other than black.
In various embodiments, imprinted micro-cavities are holes, indentations, pits, grooves, trenches, or channels formed in the cured layers and extending from a surface of the cured layer (for example first, second, third, or fourth cured layer surface 11, 21, 31, 41) toward the substrate 8. Micro-cavities can have a cross-sectional width W, for example less than or equal to 20 microns, 10 microns, 5 microns, 4 microns, 3 microns, 2 microns, 1 micron, or 0.5 microns. In an embodiment, the cross-sectional depth D of an imprinted micro-cavity is less than or equal to the width of the micro-cavity, less than or equal to twice the width of the micro-cavity, less than or equal to four times the width of the micro-cavity, or less than or equal to ten times the width of the micro-cavity. The micro-cavities can have a rectangular cross-section, as shown. Other cross-sectional shapes, for example trapezoids, are known and are included in the present invention.
Material compositions useful in the curable layer or the curable material can be provided in one state and then processed into another state, for example converted from a liquid state into a solid state. Such conversion can be accomplished in a variety of ways, for example by drying, heating, or exposure to radiation. Furthermore, useful material compositions can include a set of materials that, after deposition and processing, is reduced to a subset of the set of materials, for example by removing solvents from the material composition. For example, a material composition including a solvent is deposited and then processed to remove the solvent leaving a material composition without the solvent in place. Thus, according to embodiments of the present invention, a material composition that is deposited on a layer or in the imprinted micro-cavities is not necessarily the same composition as that found in the cured material composition.
Methods and device for forming and providing substrates, coating substrates and other layers, patterning coated substrates or layers, or pattern-wise depositing materials on a substrate or layer are known in the photo-lithographic arts. Hardware controllers for controlling displays and software for managing display systems are all well known. All of these tools and methods can be usefully employed to design, implement, construct, and operate the present invention. Methods, tools, and devices for operating displays can be used with the present invention.
The present invention is useful in a wide variety of electronic devices. Such devices can include, for example, photovoltaic devices, OLED displays and lighting, LCD displays, inorganic LED displays and lighting, electrophoretic displays, and electrowetting displays.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
PARTS LIST
- A cross section line
- D1-D6 depth/thickness
- G group
- L length
- H height
- O portion
- OW portion width
- P, P1, P2 gap
- R rib width
- S gap
- S1 first gap
- S2 second gap
- S3 third gap
- S4 fourth gap
- W1-W6 width
- Z light
- 5 large-format imprinted structure
- 6 display
- 8 substrate
- 10 first cured/curable layer
- 11 first cured layer surface
- 12 first micro-cavity
- 14 first cured/curable material
- 16 first pixel
- 18 first area
- 20 second cured/curable layer
- 21 second cured layer surface
- 22 second micro-cavity
- 24 second cured/curable material
- 26 second pixel
- 28 second area
- 30 third cured/curable layer
- 31 third cured layer surface
- 32 third micro-cavity
- 34 third cured/curable material
- 36 third pixel
- 38 third area
- 40 fourth cured/curable layer
- 41 fourth cured layer surface
- 42 fourth micro-cavity
- 44 fourth cured/curable material
- 48 fourth area
- 50 fifth cured layer
- 52 fifth micro-cavity
- 60 sixth cured layer
- 62 sixth micro-cavity
- 70 seventh cured layer
- 72 seventh micro-cavity
- 80 overlap
- 90 rib
- 100 provide substrate step
- 200 form patterned cured layer over surface step
- 201 form first patterned cured layer on substrate step
- 202 form second patterned cured layer on first patterned cured layer step
- 203 form second patterned cured layer on first patterned cured layer step
- 204 form second patterned cured layer on first patterned cured layer step
- 205 coat curable layer over surface step
- 210 stamp curable layer to form micro-cavities step
- 215 cure curable layer step
- 220 remove stamp step
- 225 coat cured layer surface and micro-cavities with curable material step
- 230 remove excess curable material from cured layer surface step
- 235 cure curable material step
- 240 align display pixels with micro-cavities step
Claims
1. A filled large-format imprinted structure, comprising:
- a substrate;
- a first cured layer located over the substrate;
- one or more first micro-cavities imprinted in the first cured layer, each first micro-cavity having a first micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns;
- a second cured layer located over the first layer and the one or more first micro-cavities;
- one or more second micro-cavities imprinted in the second cured layer, each second micro-cavity having a second micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns; and
- a common first cured material in the first micro-cavity and in the second micro-cavity, thereby defining a filled large-format imprinted structure.
2. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the cured material is a color filter.
3. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the first micro-cavity has a depth that is less than the first cured layer thickness or the second micro-cavity has a depth that is less than the second cured layer thickness.
4. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the first cured layer is cross-linked to the first cured material or the second cured layer is cross-linked to the first cured material.
5. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, further including a display beneath the first cured layer, the display having a single pixel located at least partially beneath the first and at least partially beneath the second micro-cavities.
6. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the first cured layer includes two or more first micro-cavities located above the single pixel or the second cured layer includes two or more second micro-cavities located above the single pixel or both.
7. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the two or more first micro-cavities located in the first cured layer are separated by a gap equal to or less than the width of the second micro-cavities or wherein the two or more second micro-cavities located in the second cured layer are separated by a gap equal to or less than the width of the first micro-cavities, or both.
8. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the two or more first micro-cavities located in the first cured layer are separated by a gap less than the width of the second micro-cavities or wherein the two or more second micro-cavities located in the second cured layer are separated by a gap less than the width of the first micro-cavities, or both.
9. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, further including:
- a third cured layer located over the second layer and the one or more second micro-cavities;
- one or more third micro-cavities imprinted in the third cured layer, each third micro-cavity having a third micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns;
- a fourth cured layer located over the third layer and the one or more third micro-cavities;
- one or more fourth micro-cavities imprinted in the fourth cured layer, each fourth micro-cavity having a fourth micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns; and
- a common second cured material in the third micro-cavity and in the fourth micro-cavity.
10. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 9, wherein the first cured material is located between the second cured materials in a direction parallel to a surface of the substrate.
11. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 10, wherein the first cured material partially overlaps with the second cured materials in a direction orthogonal to a surface of the substrate.
12. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 1, wherein the third cured layer is cross-linked to the second cured material or the second cured layer is cross-linked to the third cured material.
13. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 9, further including:
- a fifth cured layer located over the fourth layer and the one or more fourth micro-cavities;
- one or more fifth micro-cavities imprinted in the fifth cured layer, each fifth micro-cavity having a fifth micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns;
- a sixth cured layer located over the fifth layer and the one or more fifth micro-cavities;
- one or more sixth micro-cavities imprinted in the sixth cured layer, each sixth micro-cavity having a sixth micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns; and
- a common third cured material in the fifth micro-cavity and in the sixth micro-cavity.
14. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 13, wherein the third cured material is located between the first and second cured materials in a direction parallel to a surface of the substrate.
15. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 13, wherein the third cured material partially overlaps with the first or second cured materials in a direction orthogonal to a surface of the substrate.
16. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 13, wherein the second cured material is located between the first and third cured materials in a direction parallel to a surface of the substrate.
17. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 13, further including:
- a seventh cured layer located over the sixth layer and the one or more sixth micro-cavities;
- one or more seventh micro-cavities imprinted in the seventh cured layer, each seventh micro-cavity having a seventh micro-cavity width less than or equal to 20 microns; and
- a fourth cured material in the seventh micro-cavity.
18. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 17, wherein the cured material is a black material.
19. The filled large-format imprinted structure of claim 17, wherein the fourth cured material is located between the first and second cured materials, between the second and third cured materials, or between the third and first cured materials in a direction parallel to a surface of the substrate.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 3, 2014
Publication Date: Mar 3, 2016
Inventor: Ronald Steven Cok (Rochester, NY)
Application Number: 14/475,917