This application is related to commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/743,940 filed Jun. 18, 2015, entitled Micro-Assembled LED Displays and Lighting Elements, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to displays having color-conversion materials such as phosphors or quantum dots that are excited by light having a higher frequency and radiate light having a lower frequency and light diffusers. More particularly, light excitation is provided by a light-emitting diode or light-emitting-diode laser.
Conventional cathode ray tube (CRT) displays rely on an electron beam that sweeps over a phosphor-coated display surface on the inside of the tube to form an image. Different phosphors are stimulated by the high-energy electrons to emit different colors of light, for example red, green, and blue corresponding to pixels in the displayed image. Phosphors are also commonly used with solid-state light-emitting diodes to emit white light. For example, a blue-light emitting diode (LED) coated with phosphors that absorb a portion of the emitted blue light and emitted yellow light appears white to the human visual system. Similarly, organic light-emitting diode (OLED) illumination devices using phosphors are described in WO 2010032603.
Flat-panel light-emitting diode (LED) displays that incorporate luminescence-converting elements (such as phosphors) are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,994,722. Alternatively, OLED displays can employ a single high-frequency light emitter together with color-conversion materials (also known as color-change materials) to provide a variety of color light output. The color-conversion materials absorb the high-frequency light and re-emit light at lower frequencies. For example, an LED or OLED device can emit blue light suitable for a blue sub-pixel and employ a green color-conversion material layer to absorb the blue light to emit green light and employ a red color-conversion material layer to absorb the blue light to emit red light. The color-conversion materials can be combined with color filters to further improve the color of the emitted light and to absorb incident light and avoid exciting the color-conversion materials with ambient light, thereby improving device contrast. Light-scattering phosphorescent or fluorescent particles excited by organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,834,541. U.S. Patent Pub. No. 20050116621 A1 entitled Electroluminescent devices and methods of making electroluminescent devices including a color conversion element also describes the use of color-conversion materials.
Layers having color-conversion materials can be combined with scattering particles to enhance the performance of the color-conversion materials by increasing the likelihood that incident light will interact with the color-conversion materials, thereby reducing the concentration or thickness of the layer. Such a combination may also prevent light emitted by the color-conversion material from being trapped in the color-conversion material layer. U.S. Pat. No. 7,791,271 describes a top-emitting OLED with color conversion materials and U.S. Pat. No. 7,969,085 discloses a color change material layer. U.S. Patent Pub. No. 20050275615 A1 entitled Display device using vertical cavity laser arrays describes such a layer as does U.S. Patent Pub. No. 20040252933 entitled Light Distribution Apparatus. U.S. Patent Pub. No. 20050012076 entitled Fluorescent member, and illumination device and display device including the same teaches the use of color-conversion materials as scattering particles. U.S. Patent Pub. No. 20040212296 teaches the use of scattering particles in a color-conversion material layer to avoid trapping the frequency-converted light. Diffusers are also useful in increasing the viewing angle of display pixels. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/361,094, filed Feb. 24, 2006, entitled Light-Scattering Color-Conversion Material Layer describes integral light-scattering color-conversion material layers.
Flat-panel displays typically rely on thin-film semiconductor structures to provide control signals that control the pixels in the flat-panel display. However, such thin-film structures have relatively low performance when compared to crystalline semiconductor structures typically used in integrated circuits. Furthermore, LED emitters, and especially micro-LED emitters have a relatively small light-emitting area and aperture ratio when used in flat-panel displays. Color-conversion layers coated over an entire flat-panel substrate are therefore wasteful since most of the layer is not excited by light-emission from the LEDs. Patterning the substrate at the resolution needed with micro-LEDs is difficult and the use of larger LEDs that are individually coated with color-conversion material limits the resolution of the flat-panel display.
There is a need, therefore, for devices, systems and methods for providing color-conversion structures in combination with micro-LEDs in a flat-panel display that enable high resolution, effective use of color-conversion material, and excellent performance efficiency, viewing angle, and colors.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a flat-panel display with improved electrical performance, improved optical performance, simplified structures, and reduced costs. In one aspect, the present invention provides a micro-transfer printable color-conversion structure that can be micro-transfer printed to a destination or display substrate. Micro-light-emitting diodes (micro-LEDs or μLEDs) are also micro-transfer printed to the same substrate and disposed so that some light emitted from the μLEDs at a relatively higher frequency is absorbed by the color-conversion structure and re-emitted at a relatively lower frequency. Arrays of different color-conversion structures can include different color-conversion materials that emit light of different colors, for example red, green, and blue, providing pixels in a full-color display.
Micro-light-emitting diodes can be micro-transfer printed onto a micro-transfer printable color-conversion structure to form a heterogeneous pixel structure (a heterogeneous structure has different kinds of elements making up a pixel device or a portion of a pixel device that emits light to provide a display pixel). The heterogeneous pixel structure can be micro-transfer printed as a unit onto a substrate. Alternatively, the color-conversion structures are micro-transfer printed onto the micro-light-emitting diodes to form a pixel structure that can be micro-transfer printed as a single unit onto a substrate. In other embodiments, the micro-light-emitting diodes and color-conversion structures are separately micro-transfer printed onto the substrate to provide the display pixels. Diffusers and reflectors can be included to increase the efficiency of the pixel structures in the display.
By providing micro-transfer printable color-conversion structures on a source substrate at higher density and with a larger fill factor than on a display substrate, the amount of color-conversion material wasted is reduced. The percentage of the source substrate that is dedicated to color-conversion structures is much greater than for a display substrate, particularly because the light-emissive area of the micro-LEDs and the consequent aperture ratio of the display substrate is relatively small. Thus, a greater percentage of the color-conversion material is applied to the color-conversion structures in a coating on the source substrate than in a coating on the display substrate so that less color-conversion material is wasted in the source substrate coating than is wasted in the display substrate coating.
Local pixel controllers can also be included in each pixel structure to provide active-matrix control. The pixel controllers together with the micro-LEDs and the color-conversion structures can be constructed in a compound micro assembly structure, for example forming a display tile on a tile substrate. The display tiles can be surface-mountable structures that are readily manipulated, printed, or interconnected on a display substrate using established surface mount technology techniques. Alternatively, the tiles can be micro-transfer printable to a display substrate.
The micro-light-emitting diodes can be made using crystalline semiconductors in a semiconductor wafer and then micro-transfer printed to a display substrate, for example a glass substrate, thus increasing the light-output efficiency and resolution of the micro-LEDs and reducing the substrate and assembly cost. Not all colors of light are emitted with equal efficiency by micro-LEDs. Therefore, a single type of high-efficiency micro-LED that emits blue, violet, or ultra-violet light that is absorbed by the different color-conversion structures making up each pixel in a display enables differently colored saturated light output with improved efficiency. In one embodiment, the micro-LEDs are solid-state organic or inorganic micro-LED lasers.
The foregoing and other objects, aspects, features, and advantages of the present disclosure will become more apparent and better understood by referring to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The features and advantages of the present disclosure will become more apparent from the detailed description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings, in which like reference characters identify corresponding elements throughout. In the drawings, like reference numbers generally indicate identical, functionally similar, and/or structurally similar elements. The figures are not drawn to scale since the variation in size of various elements in the Figures is too great to permit depiction to scale.
Referring to the cross sections of
At least a portion of a tether 12 is connected to the article 35 and extends or protrudes from the article 35, for example from a periphery, edge or side of the article 35. The color-conversion structure 10 can be attached with the tether 12 to an anchor 14 of a source substrate 20 (e.g., a native substrate on which the color-conversion structure 10 is formed). The anchor 14 can be a portion of the source substrate 20 to which a tether 12 is attached. In one configuration, the source substrate 20 has one or more sacrificial portions 18 and a corresponding color-conversion structure 10 is disposed or formed on or over each sacrificial portion 18 of the source substrate 20. The sacrificial portion 18 can be a designated area or portion of the source substrate 20 (e.g., as in
As shown in
As intended herein, an optical-conversion structure 10 includes color-conversion materials 30 that redirect or re-emit light emitted from a light source, such as an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) or an inorganic light-emitting diode (iLED) or LED laser. A color-conversion material 30 is any material that absorbs electromagnetic radiation of a relatively higher frequency and emits electromagnetic radiation of a relatively lower frequency. The higher frequency electromagnetic radiation can be visible light, ultra-violet radiation, or infrared radiation. The higher-frequency electromagnetic radiation can be blue or violet visible light. The lower-frequency electromagnetic radiation can also be visible, ultra-violet radiation, or infrared radiation. According to one embodiment of the present invention, the higher frequency radiation is ultra-violet, violet, or blue and the lower frequency electromagnetic radiation is visible light, such as blue, cyan, green, yellow, orange, or red light. The color-conversion material 30 can include one or more of an inorganic phosphor, an organic phosphor, a ceramic phosphor, an inorganic fluorophore, an organic fluorophore, yttrium aluminum garnet, doped yttrium aluminum garnet, cesium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG), yttrium phosphate-vanadate, and a quantum dot.
According to a further embodiment of the present invention, the source substrate has one or more sacrificial portions 18, for example forming an array of sacrificial portions 18 over, on, or in the source substrate 20. Each sacrificial portion 18 has a color-conversion layer 34 disposed on or over each of the sacrificial portions 18. In each case, a tether 12 extends from an anchor 14 (e.g., from a periphery of the sacrificial portion 18) to a periphery of the color-conversion structure 10 to connect the color-conversion structure 10 to the source substrate 20. The array of color-conversion structures 10 can be micro-transfer printed from the source substrate 20 to a destination substrate 22 (e.g., a display substrate 22) as is described further below and, for example, in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/743,981, filed Jun. 18, 2015, entitled Micro Assembled LED Displays and Lighting Elements, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In
The patterned color-conversion layer 34, as shown in
Referring to
As illustrated in
In an embodiment of the present invention, the first layer 36 is transparent, the second layer 38 is transparent, or both the first layer 36 and the second layer 38 are transparent. In another embodiment, the first layer 36 is reflective and the second layer 38 is transparent. In yet another embodiment, the second layer 38 is reflective and the first layer 36 is transparent. Transparent materials can include photoresist materials, such as SU8 or other resins, epoxies, polymers, or glasses that can be coated in a liquid state and cured or laminated over and adhered to layers. Reflective layers can include metals such as silver or aluminum that can be evaporated or laminated onto a surface.
Referring to
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the micro-LED 40 can emit higher-frequency light 50 that is absorbed by the color-conversion materials 30 in the color-conversion layer 34. The color-conversion materials 30 then emit color-converted light 52 of a lower frequency than the higher-frequency absorbed light 50. As illustrated in the embodiment of
In a different embodiment shown in
Referring to
In addition to the micro-LED 40 on which the article 35 is located, an optional reflective structure 44 such as a reflective layer is disposed between the micro-LED 40 and the destination substrate 22. Alternatively, the destination substrate 22 can be reflective. If present, the reflective structure 44 serves to reflect light 50 emitted from the micro-LED 40 toward the destination substrate 22 to the color-conversion layer 34. The reflective structure 44 can be a metal layer, for example a metal such as silver or aluminum, or other metals or reflective materials evaporated or laminated onto either the destination substrate 22 or the micro-LED 40. Alternating layers of materials having different refractive indices can also be used to form a reflector for light having desired wavelengths. The reflective structure 44 can be electrically conductive or electrically insulating. If the reflective structure 44 is electrically conductive, the reflective structure 44 can spread current provided to the micro-LED 40. If the reflective structure 44 is not present and if the destination substrate 22 is transparent to the light 50 emitted from the micro-LED 40, light 50 emitted from the micro-LED 40 can pass through the destination substrate 22.
The micro-LED 40 is provided with electrical current through first and second electrodes 46, 48. The first and second electrodes 46, 48 are electrically connected to the micro-LED 40 at desired locations, as shown, and electrically insulated from the edges of the micro-LED 40 by dielectric layers 42 (for example oxides such as silicon dioxide). By electrically connecting the first and second electrodes 46, 48 at desired locations, the location of hole and electron recombination in the micro-LED 40 is controlled to optimize light emission from the micro-LED 40.
The pixel structure 60 of
Referring to
The micro-LED 40 is provided with electrical current through first and second electrodes 46, 48. The first and second electrodes 46, 48 are electrically connected to the micro-LED 40 at desired locations, as shown, and electrically insulated from the edges of the micro-LED 40 by dielectric layers 42 (for example oxides such as silicon dioxide). By electrically connecting the first and second electrodes 46, 48 at desired locations, the location of hole and electron recombination in the micro-LED 40 is controlled to optimize light emission.
The pixel structure 60 of
Referring to the embodiment of
As in the configuration of
The pixel structure 60 of
In the top-emitting configuration of
A plurality of pixel structures 60 of the present invention can be provided in an array over a display substrate 22 to form a display. For example, an array of color-conversion structures 10 including micro-LEDs 40 can be disposed on the display substrate 22 and the micro-LEDs 40 interconnected using electrically conductive wires, such as metal wires, formed on the display substrate 22 to provide electrical current to the micro-LEDs 40 to emit light 50 that is color converted by the color-conversion materials 30.
Referring to
In one embodiment of the present invention, all of the micro-LEDs 40 emit light 50 having a frequency greater than the red, green, and blue light 52 emitted by the corresponding red, green, and blue color-conversion articles 35R, 35G, 35B including the red, green, and blue color-conversion materials 30R, 30G, 30B. In this embodiment, the micro-LEDs 40 pump each of the red, green, and blue color-conversion articles 35R, 35G, 35B with the same frequency of micro-LED-emitted optical pump light, regardless of the color of light 52 emitted by the red, green, and blue color-conversion articles 35R, 35G, 35B. In an alternative embodiment, a blue color-conversion article 35B is not used and is replaced by a micro-LED 40 that emits blue light 50. The blue-light-emitting micro-LEDs 40 can also be used to pump the red and green color conversion articles 35R, 35G. In this configuration, the micro-LEDs 40 all emit light 50 having a frequency greater than the green light 52.
In a further embodiment of the present invention, an array of pixel structures 60 is complemented by an array of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). This arrangement is useful if at least one of the colors of light in a pixel is more efficiently or inexpensively provided by an organic rather than an inorganic LED. For example, a red OLED can be provided together with a green- and a blue-light-emitting pixel structure 60 to form a full-color pixel in the display 62.
The embodiments of
Referring again to
As shown in
Light emission from the various color-conversion structures 10 of the present invention can be enhanced with the use of diffusers that diffuse incident light, for example specular light propagating in a single direction, into diffuse light that propagates in a variety of directions. Because semiconductor materials found in micro-LEDs 40, color-conversion materials 30, or transparent matrix 32 materials can have optical refractive indices greater than the optical index of air and because the micro-LEDs 40 and color-conversion materials 30 are typically isotropic light emitters, emitted light can be trapped in the color-conversion structures 10 of the present invention due to total internal reflection. Light diffusers can modify the trajectory of trapped light and redirect it at an angle at which the light can escape.
According to an embodiment of the present invention and as illustrated in
As shown in
As noted above, with respect to
In all of the display embodiments of the present invention, the micro-LEDs 40 or (micro-LED lasers) of a pixel group can be located in a row, as shown in the Figures, or in a two-dimensional arrangement, for example forming a triangle on the display substrate 22 surface (not shown).
In an embodiment of the present invention, the display 62 or micro-LED laser display 64 is a backlight unit (BLU). Control of the individual micro-LEDs 40 can enable local dimming, for example in a liquid crystal display.
Referring to
In an alternative embodiment of the present invention referring to
Referring to
In an alternative embodiment of the present invention and referring to
In yet another embodiment of the present invention referring to
In all of these embodiments, the reflective structures 44 or light-diffusive layers 54 or 56, or encapsulation layer 16 can be formed and patterned as necessary using photolithographic or lamination processes.
In various methods of the present invention, the pixel structures 60, micro-LEDs 40, or color-conversion layers 34 are micro-transfer printed to a display substrate 22. For a discussion of micro-transfer printing techniques see, U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,722,458, 7,622,367 and 8,506,867, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
In another method of the present invention, the pixel structures 60 are disposed on the display substrate 22 by micro-transfer printing using compound micro assembly structures and methods, for example as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/822,868, filed Aug. 10, 2015, entitled Compound Micro-Assembly Strategies and Devices, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. The micro-LED 40 structures on the display substrate 22 can be interconnected using photolithographic methods or using printed circuit board methods and materials, for example to a display controller (not shown).
In useful embodiments, the display substrate 22 includes material, for example glass or plastic, different from a material in an integrated-circuit or chiplet substrate, for example a semiconductor material such as silicon. The display substrate 22 usefully has two opposing smooth sides suitable for material deposition, photolithographic processing, or micro-transfer printing of color-conversion structures 10. The display substrate 22 can have the size of a conventional display, for example a rectangle with a diagonal of a few centimeters to one or more meters. Such substrates are commercially available. The display substrate 22 can include polymer, plastic, resin, polyimide, PEN, PET, metal, metal foil, glass, a semiconductor, or sapphire and have a transparency greater than or equal to 50%, 80%, 90%, or 95% for visible light. In some embodiments of the present invention, the color-conversion structures 10 emit light 52 through the display substrate 22. In other embodiments, the color-conversion structures 10 emit light 52 in a direction opposite the display substrate 22. The display substrate 22 can have a thickness from 5 to microns, 10 to 50 microns, 50 to 100 microns, 100 to 200 microns, 200 to 500 microns, 500 microns to 0.5 mm, 0.5 to 1 mm, 1 mm to 5 mm, 5 mm to 10 mm, or 10 mm to 20 mm. According to embodiments of the present invention, the display substrate 22 can include layers formed on an underlying structure or substrate, for example a rigid or flexible glass or plastic substrate.
According to various embodiments, the micro-transfer-printed displays 62, 64 of the present invention include a variety of designs having a variety of resolutions, color-conversion structure 10 sizes, and displays having a range of display areas. For example, display areas ranging from 1 cm by 1 cm to 10 m by 10 m in size are contemplated. The resolution of color-conversion structures 10 over a display area can also vary, for example from tens of color-conversion structures 10 per inch to hundreds of color-conversion structures 10 per inch. Thus, the present invention has application in both low-resolution and very high-resolution displays and from very small to very large displays.
In an embodiment, the micro-LEDs 40 are formed in substrates or on supports separate from the display substrate 22. For example, the color-conversion structures 10, micro-LEDs 40 are separately formed in a semiconductor source wafer. The color-conversion structures 10 micro-LEDs 40 are then removed from the source wafer and transferred, for example using micro-transfer printing, to the display substrate 22 or to a compound micro-assembly substrate (not shown).
By employing a multi-step transfer or assembly process, intermediate testing is enabled, increased yields are achieved, and costs are reduced for the micro-transfer-printed displays 62, 64 of the present invention. Additional details useful in understanding and performing aspects of the present invention are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/743,981, filed Jun. 18, 2015, entitled Micro Assembled LED Displays and Lighting Elements, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
As is understood by those skilled in the art, the terms “over”, “under”, “above”, “below”, “beneath”, and “on” are relative terms and can be interchanged in reference to different orientations of the layers, elements, and substrates included in the present invention. For example, a first layer on a second layer, in some embodiments means a first layer directly on and in contact with a second layer. In other embodiments, a first layer on a second layer can include another layer there between. Additionally, “on” can mean “on” or “in.” As additional non-limiting examples, a sacrificial layer or sacrificial portion 18 is considered “on” a substrate when a layer of sacrificial material or sacrificial portion 18 is on top of the substrate, when a portion of the substrate itself is the sacrificial layer, or when the sacrificial layer or sacrificial portion 18 comprises material on top of the substrate and a portion of the substrate itself.
Having described certain embodiments, it will now become apparent to one of skill in the art that other embodiments incorporating the concepts of the disclosure may be used. Therefore, the invention should not be limited to the described embodiments, but rather should be limited only by the spirit and scope of the following claims.
Throughout the description, where apparatus and systems are described as having, including, or comprising specific components, or where processes and methods are described as having, including, or comprising specific steps, it is contemplated that, additionally, there are apparatus, and systems of the disclosed technology that consist essentially of, or consist of, the recited components, and that there are processes and methods according to the disclosed technology that consist essentially of, or consist of, the recited processing steps.
It should be understood that the order of steps or order for performing certain action is immaterial so long as the disclosed technology remains operable. Moreover, two or more steps or actions in some circumstances can be conducted simultaneously. 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.
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