The invention is related to a compound substrate, and in particular to a double-sided luminous compound substrate with novel structure and material.
A promising flat-panel display developed at 1980s is the field emission display (FED), which is a cathode ray tube (CRT) in disguise and is similar in operation to CRTs in that phosphor is excited by a stream of electrons traveling through a vacuum. The FED, however, is matrix-addressed, one entire row at a time with millions of electron-emitting cathodes. These emitters are a fraction of a millimeter (or up to 5 mm in the case of high-voltage FEDs) away from the phosphor screen, and they are produced by cold cathode emission. From the above description, it is noted that, unlike CRTs which generate hot cathode electrons by a cathode heater, FEDs have no cathode heater and discharge a stream of cold cathode electrons by cold cathode emission.
As shown in
In the FED, the cathode is formed by a field emission array (FEA) which is different from the CRT forming an electron beam by , focusing electrons from a heat electron source. The FEA is also different from VFD which has an planar electron source formed by several heat lines to become a real two-dimensional electron source. The FED employs an electrical field to attract electrons away from the cathode to the vacuum space, and the electrons are accelerated by the attraction of the anode to collide with the fluorescence screen for creating cathodoluminescence.
In the conventional FED, light can emit from only one side thereof, that is, only from the side of the anode panel since the light emitting from the anode panel to the cathode side is shielded by the poor transparence of the dielectric layer of the cathode panel.
In view of the above description, it is preferred to have a field emission device capable of emitting light from both topside and bottomside thereof.
It is an object of the invention is to provide a double-sided luminous compound substrate employing a novel structure of transparent cathodes and gates for allowing light to be emitted from the topside and the bottomside thereof, and thus being used in a double-sided display as the backlight module thereof.
These and other valuable objects are achieved by means of a double-sided luminous compound substrate, comprising:
Preferably, each first conductor is made of a transparent material such as indium tin oxide and the likes.
Preferably, the double-sided luminous compound substrate further comprises a transparent insulator disposed between the first conductors and the second conductors, where the first conductors and the second conductors are arranged perpendicular to each other.
Preferably, the first conductors and the second conductors are parallel and alternatively disposed.
Preferably, the double-sided luminous compound substrate further comprises a transparent conducting layer between the fluorescence layer and the second transparent substrate while the transparent conducting layer is made of a transparent material such as indium tin oxide and the likes.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the fluorescence layer is formed by a method selected from the group consisting of the screen print method, the electrophoresis method and the lithography method.
A detailed description is given in the following embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The present invention can be more fully understood by reading the subsequent detailed description and examples with references made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to
Referring to
The double-sided luminous compound substrate further comprises a second transparent substrate 239 parallel to the first transparent substrate 231. A fluorescence layer 237 is formed on the side of the second transparent substrate 239 facing the first transparent substrate 231. The method of forming the fluorescence layer 237 can be one of the screen print method, the electrophoresis method and the lithography method. In this structure, a flat metal layer such as a aluminum layer or a ITO layer is formed on the second transparent substrate 239 by evaporation coating for electrical conduction. A plurality of spacers (not shown) is disposed between the first and second transparent substrates 231 and 239.
When actuated, a electrical field is imposed to the double-sided luminous compound substrate, electrons on the first conductors (cathode) 233 are attracted by the electrical field and launched from the emit tips 2331. The electrons away from the first conductors 233 are attracted and thus accelerated by the second transparent 239 to collide the fluorescence layer 237 to create cathode fluorescence 2371 and 2373.
The cathode fluorescence 2371 passes through the second transparent substrate 239 to display the image. In prior art, the first conductors 233, however, are most made of opaque metal, and the number of emit points are insufficient (the emit point is where the electrons launch, the boundary of the first conductors 233 and the second conductor 235) to cause the cathode fluorescence 2373 covered by the cathodes, and light cannot emit from the first transparent substrate 231.
In the invention, the first conductors (cathode) 233 and the second conductors (gate) 235 have a novel structure as shown in
Referring to
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been set forth for the purpose of disclosure, modifications of the disclosed embodiment of the invention as well as other embodiments thereof may occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to cover all embodiments which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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93138233 | Dec 2004 | TW | national |