1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to OLED displays and in particular to testing the integrity of the connection of driver circuits to the OLED
2. Description of Related Art
One of the more difficult tasks in forming OLED (organic light emitting diode) display modules is the attachment of driver chips to the substrate, such as glass. The attachment process uses anisotropic glue, which is to provide contact between signal and power contacts. The major source of problems are with open contacts and shorts between adjacent contacts. The method of determining a good process has been by visual inspection either by the human eye or by image processing equipment, such as cameras. Visual inspection by a human eye is prone to error and provides limited data for yield improvement. Visual inspection with image processing equipment is expensive, complicated and difficult to reproduce.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,336,035 B2 (Koyama) is directed to a OLED light emitting device wherein a current mirror circuit is formed to control drive current and luminance. In U.S. Pat. No. 7,196,536 B2 (Nystrom et al.) a method and apparatus is directed to non-contact electrical probes using corona discharge for testing OLED panels. In U.S. Pat. No. 7,123,043 B2 (Ysai et al.) a method and apparatus is directed to testing a plurality of driver circuits of an AMOLED before OLED devices are implanted by using data lines, scan lines and the power line of the AMOLED. U.S. Pat. No. 7,122,970 B2 (Ono et al.) is directed to a method for testing an OLED substrate including a switching element connected to a signal line. In U.S. Pat. No. 7,116,295 B2 (Shih) a method and system is directed to testing a plurality of driver circuits of an AMOLED where the drivers are connected to the OLED after the OLED is formed and is connected to a test element to form a loop during testing and wherein the drivers are tested one at a time. U.S. Pat. No. 7,091,738 B2 (Nakano et al.) is directed to an inspection system for inspecting characteristics of an active matrix panel before formation of an OLED, which includes a roller contact probe. U.S. Pat. No. 6,965,361 B1 (Sheats et al.) is directed to an OLED having a plurality of light emitting pixels, an isolation transistor and a driver circuit where connection points are bonded to corresponding second electrodes by a bonding layer.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,946,307 B2 (Shih) a method and system is directed to testing circuits of an AMOLED before implantation of the OLED, wherein each circuit includes a connection to the OLED after the OLED is implanted and is configured as a test point. U.S. Pat. No. 6,859,052 B1 (Vaucher) is directed to the electrical test of electrical interconnections on a substrate by means of non-contact testing. U.S. Pat. No. 6,734,636 B2 (Sanford et al.) is directed to a method for driving an OLED comprising a first signal to set the state of a pixel circuit and a second signal to view the state. US Patent Application Publication US 2005/0078057 (Chang et al.) is directed to a display panel comprising a plurality of gate lines, data lines, switching elements, pixel electrodes, test pads, and a gate driver for generating gate signals to be applied to gate lines. In US Patent Application Publication US 2004/0239598 A1 (Koyama) a testing method is directed to active matrix display devices by checking a TFT substrate before depositing EL material and using a capacitor connected to a driver TFT in a pixel portion by visually observing the charging and discharging of the capacitor. In US Patent Application Publication US 2004/0201372 (Tsai et al) a method and apparatus is directed to testing the plurality of driver circuits of an AMOLED before the OLED is installed. In an article by Akatsu et al titled “OLED Failure Analysis and Pinpoint Shot Repair of Fault using an Optical Coaxial System of High Sensitive CCD and a Laser”, by Mitsutoshi Akatsu, Naganori Tsutsui, Nobuthito Miura and Yoshihiro Miyazaki, SID Symposium Digest 37, 426 2006 discusses detecting and repair using an optical coaxial system.
It is an objective of the present invention to measure open and short circuits resulting from the attachment of anode driver and cathode driver chips to an OLED (organic light emitting diode) device.
It is further an objective of the present invention to integrate a current detection circuit with each anode driver circuit to allow detection of open circuits involving the connection of an anode driver chip and the cathode driver chip to the OLED device.
It is still further an objective of the present invention to detect short circuits between anode driver chip pads using the integrated current detection circuit coupled to each anode driver circuit.
It is also further an objective of the present invention to detect short circuits between cathode driver chip pads using a voltage detection circuit integrated with each cathode driver circuit.
In the present invention anode and cathode driver chips are attached to an OLED device using an electrical conducting attachment medium such as anisotropic glue. The large number of circuit pads, greater than one thousand, space by approximately 26 um with a gap separating circuit pads of less than approximately 13 um, which provides many opportunities for both open circuit and short circuit conditions to exist between the glass substrate OLED device and the anode driver and cathode driver chips. The circuitry and methods of the present invention provides capability to automatically check for open and short circuits during assembly of the display module production within which the OLED device is an integral part.
A current detection circuit integrated with each anode driver detects an open contact between the OLED device and the anode driver chip. The anode open test is performed with cathode driver circuits set to a low voltage state. Whereas the anode open circuit test can be made by measuring anode current, a voltage measurement of the anode pad to which the anode driver is connected can be used to determine proper current flow and therefore contact between the OLED device and the anode driver chip. Cathode driver chip open circuits formed when attaching the cathode driver chips to the OLED device is tested by setting one, or all, anode driver circuits to an on state. All cathode driver circuits are set to the off (HiZ) state, only the cathode pulldowns are set to an on state. If a cathode voltage is not detected, there is a cathode driver open and the product is rejected. Short circuits between anode driver chip pads are detected by setting all cathode driver circuits to a high impedance off state (HiZ), turning on the current drive for each anode driver circuit, in turn, with all other anode driver circuits in a low voltage state and detecting current of the anode circuit that is turned on.
Short circuits between cathode driver chip pads are tested by setting all anode driver circuits off (high impedance) and setting the pulldown of the cathode driver circuits on. Then all cathode driver circuits are first set low voltage on and then low voltage off to address capacitive load of the OLED array. Next each cathode driver circuit is set to high voltage on. Then if no cathode driver circuit detects a voltage, excluding the cathode driver circuit that is set to a high voltage on state, the particular cathode driver circuit is not shorted to any adjacent cathode driver circuits. If a voltage is detected in adjacent or neighboring cathode driver circuits, a short circuit exist between cathode driver circuits resulting from the attachment of the cathode driver chip to the OLED device.
It should be noted that the circuitry and techniques used to detect open and short circuits at the joining of electrical pads of driver chips and an OLED device can also be used to detect and diagnose failing pixels (open faults) within the OLED device.
This invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In
There are over 1000 small, closely spaced contact pads on the OLED substrate that must be physically electrically connected to the anode and cathode driver chips. The fine structure of the closely spaced contact pads provide opportunity for both short circuits between contact pads and open circuits between the joined driver chips 1314 to the contact pads of the OLED substrate 15. These open and short circuits can be detected by visual observation of various images that allow recognition of open faults (row or column stays dark) and short faults (row or column emits light together with neighbor instead of staying dark). This is a time consuming inspection with opportunity to miss a defect. The electrical techniques of the present invention allow an automatic and thorough detection of the integrity of the electrical connection of the driver chips to the OLED substrate.
The circuit of
The precharge transistor M3 and the discharge transistor M4 provide a means of charging and discharging, respectively, the capacitive loaded OLED anode lines of the OLED device in preparation for the next operation of the OLED device 10. The current drive transistor M1 gates the current source 21 to the anode pad and therefore, to a row of OLED devices. During the connection of the current source 21 to the anode pad the pulldown transistor M2, The precharge transistor M3 and the discharge transistor M4 are controlled off. The pulldown transistor M2 connects the anode pad to the low voltage VL. The pull down function is required to insure a discharge state of the OLED array and to suppress unwanted visual effects during power-up transition. The gate drive for M2 is the digital supply (always available) whereas M4 is driven from VH.
Shown in
The addition of current detection to the anode driver circuit provides the capability to determine an open circuit in the connection of the anode and cathode driver circuits to the OLED device and is used to determine an anode short circuit to a neighboring anode pad during and after assembly of the OLED device to the anode and cathode driver devices.
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Continuing to reference
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It should be noted that although the present invention as described herein uses a constant current source in the anode circuit and a voltage source in the cathode circuit, it is within the scope of the present invention that the constant current source can be an integral part of the cathode driver circuitry with the voltage source being an integral part of the anode circuitry, wherein current detection is used to detect open and shorted contacts between pads joining the OLED and the cathode driver device, and wherein voltage detection is used to detect open and shorted contacts between pads joining the OLED and the anode driver device. Further, implementation of a design that integrates a current source into the cathode driver circuits and a voltage source into the anode driver circuits may be similar to the circuitry shown herein, or different, while allowing similar, or different, techniques to provide capability to detect open and short circuit conditions associated with the joining cathode drive devices and anode driver devices to an OLED device, or similar display devices, wherein the fine stricture of the contact pads and the method of attachment provide opportunities for open and short conditions during manufacture and thereafter.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10368025 | May 2010 | EP | regional |
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7091738 | Nakano et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7116295 | Shih | Oct 2006 | B2 |
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7663395 | Chang et al. | Feb 2010 | B2 |
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Number | Date | Country |
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1 538 588 | Jun 2005 | EP |
Entry |
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“P-60: OLED Failure Analysis and Pinpoint Shot Repair of Fault using an Optical Coaxial System of High Sensitive CCD and a Laser,” by Mitsutoshi Akatsu et al., SID Symposium Digest 37, 2006, pp. 426-428. |
European Search Report. 10368025.2-2205 Mail date—Nov. 8, 2010, Dialog Semiconductor GmbH. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110279128 A1 | Nov 2011 | US |