Monday, April 28, 2008

New OLED encapsulation method reduces water intrusion and increases lifetime

GTRI senior research scientist Wusheng Tong uses ion assisted deposition to produce a high-density, pinhole-free thin silicon oxynitride film on an organic light emitting diode surface, which reduces moisture intrusion....
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Researchers have developed an improved organic light emitting diode (OLED) sealing process to reduce moisture intrusion and improve device lifetime.
OLEDs are promising for the next generation of displays and solid state lighting because they use less power and can be more efficiently manufactured than current technology. However, the intrusion of moisture into the displays can damage or destroy an OLED뭩 organic material.
밢LEDs have better color and flexibility and the capability of larger displays, but companies still need an inexpensive encapsulation method that can be used to mass produce organic electronics that don뭪 allow moisture in,?said Wusheng Tong, a senior research scientist at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI).

GTRI senior research scientist Wusheng Tong uses ion assisted deposition to produce a high-density, pinhole-free thin silicon oxynitride film on an organic light emitting diode surface, which reduces moisture intrusion....
Click here for more information.
Manufacturers now seal displays in an inert atmosphere or in a vacuum environment. They glue a glass lid on top of the display substrate with a powder inside the display to absorb moisture that diffuses through the glue. These seals are expensive and labor-intensive to assemble.
With funding from GTRI뭩 independent research and development program, Tong and his GTRI collaborators ?senior research scientist Hisham Menkara and principal research scientist Brent Wagner ?have replaced the glass enclosure with a thin-film barrier formed by a less expensive conventional deposition method.
밯e chose a passivation coating process that could be performed at room temperature so that the organic material remained intact,?said Tong.
The researchers selected advanced ion assisted deposition, which utilizes reactive ions to deposit a high-density, pinhole-free thin silicon oxynitride (SiON) film on the OLED surface.

GTRI senior research scientist Wusheng Tong has reduced moisture intrusion into OLEDs by replacing the typical glass enclosure with a thin-film barrier formed by a less expensive conventional deposition method...

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