The present invention relates to an electro-optic device, having a planar substrate and at least one electrode layer and an active layer on a first surface of the substrate. The invention further relates to a method for producing such a device, and to a substrate.
A device of the above mentioned kind has been disclosed e.g. by C. W. Tang and S. A. Van Slyke in Appl. Phys. Lett. 51 (1987) 913-915. That device is an OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) device for lighting purposes, having an active organic light emitting layer sandwiched between a transparent anode, placed on a transparent substrate, and a cathode. When a voltage is applied between the anode and the cathode, the organic layer emits light, through the anode and the substrate.
One problem with such a device is that, when the active surface becomes larger, a voltage drop occurs over the electrode surfaces. This is due to the fact that the electrode layers are very thin. This means, for the above case with the OLED device, that the current density, and consequently the light emission, will not be uniform over the device surface.
An obvious way to cure this problem would of course be to provide thicker electrode layers. This is however not always useful solution. Firstly, thicker electrode layers reduce light transmission. This is particularly relevant for so-called top emission OLEDs, where the light is propagated through an extremely thin metal cathode layer, but also for e.g. transparent ITO (Indium Tin Oxide) anode layers.
Secondly, depositing thicker layers with evaporation techniques means longer cycle times in expensive machines and hence more expensive products.
An object of the present invention is therefore to provide an organic diode device of the initially mentioned kind where an electrode layer may be thin and still provide a uniform voltage over its surface.
This object is achieved with a device according to claim 1, which may be produced with a method as claimed in claim 14. The object may further be achieved using a substrate as defined in claim 16.
More specifically, the invention then relates to an electro-optic device, having a planar substrate, and at least one electrode layer and an active layer, on a first surface of the substrate. The substrate comprises a plurality of conductive wires, which are embedded in the substrate and are arranged in a structure, such that the wires meander to and from said first substrate surface, and adjoins this surface at a number of locations thereof, and said at least one electrode layer is connected to a plurality of said wires at a plurality of said locations.
In such an electro-optic device, the wires in the woven structure may be used to equalize the potential over the entire surface of a very thin electrode layer by providing shunt connections.
Moreover, it is also possible to provide different voltages to different parts of an electrode layer or different electrode layers, by providing different voltages to different wires.
The wires may be arranged in a woven structure which inherently makes the wires meander in suitable way, and the wires, crossing each other in the woven structure, may be electrically insulated from each other.
A first set of wires, running in a first direction in the woven structure, may be connected to a first electrode layer, and a second set of wires, running in a second direction in the woven structure, may be connected to a second electrode layer through apertures in the first electrode layer. Then, wires in at least one of the first or second set of wires may be interconnected to remain on the same electrical potential.
Sub-sets of wires in at least one of the first or second set of wires may be arranged to be controlled separately.
This allows, in e.g. an OLED device, the application of different voltages to different parts of an electrode layer.
At least one of the first or second electrode layers may be divided into mutually insulated sub-sections and different sub-sections may be connected to different wires in the structure. This allows the possibility to provide individually addressable pixels in the device, which is useful if the device is a display or an image sensor.
The substrate may further be flexible.
The device may be realized as a lighting device, e.g. an OLED device, a solar cell, an OLED display, a TFT display or an image sensor.
The invention also relates to a method for producing an electro-optic device of the above indicated kind, the method comprising
arranging a plurality of conductive wires in a structure, on a planar base substrate part,
forming a top substrate layer on top of the base substrate part, such that the structure is embedded in a substrate formed by the base substrate part and the top substrate part,
removing an upper portion of the top substrate layer, such that parts of the conductive wires in the woven structure become exposed at locations in the substrate surface, and
applying at least one electrode layer and an active layer on the substrate, such that said at least one electrode layer is connected to a plurality of said wires at a plurality of said locations.
Further, a planar substrate for electro-optical devices may be achieved, the substrate comprising a plurality of conductive wires, which may be arranged in a woven structure. The wires are embedded in the substrate and are arranged such that they meander to and from a first substrate surface, and adjoins this surface at a number of locations thereof. This substrate offer the possibility of the above mentioned advantages.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
a and 1b illustrate the embedding of a woven wire structure in a substrate.
a illustrates a substrate with an applied anode layer.
b illustrates an alternative way to apply an anode layer.
A description will first be given of how a woven wire structure may be embedded in a glass or plastic substrate. Then descriptions will be given of how substrates of this type may be used in planar electro-optic devices, such as OLEDs (Organic Light Emitting Diodes) and LCDs (Liquid Crystal Displays).
a and 1b illustrate the embedding of a woven wire structure in a substrate. In
On a top surface of the bottom part, a woven structure consisting of thin wires 3 is placed. The wires may be e.g. 25 μm in diameter and may be of the type often used to wind transformers.
By a woven structure is here meant any generally flat wire assembly accomplished by weaving. In the art of producing fabrics, many useful weaving techniques are know. In addition to the simple warp and weft structure illustrated in
The thickness of the wires, in relation to the distance between two adjacent parallel wires, is exaggerated in
As alternatives to a woven structure, in which the wires will inherently meander, there are of course other possible structures that will exhibit similar properties. E.g. the substrate base part may provided with grooves and wires may be placed on the base part perpendicularly to the grooves. If the wires are then pressed into the grooves and are deformed, they will be arranged in a structure where they meander to and from the plane of the base part.
In order to embed the woven structure of
The glass paste may be composed of glass particles and a solvent, and by heating the substrate to e.g. 400° C. the solvent will be removed and a solid layer will be formed by the remaining substance of the paste. The woven structure may thus be completely embedded in the substrate as illustrated in
The substrate 7 now comprises a base part 1 and a top part 5, and the woven structure consisting of the wires is embedded in the top part 5.
When the polishing is completed, the finished substrate has the appearance illustrated in
Outside the substrate, the wires may be connected to each other or to different voltage sources, depending on the application. It is also possible to use the embedded wires only to interconnect different parts of an electrode or different electrodes.
In some devices, the woven structure should be used to shunt only one single and continuous electrode layer. In such cases all wires 3 in the woven structure can be interconnected and may have the same potential. Thus, there is no reason to keep the wires insulated from each other at locations where they cross. The wires may thus contact each other as shown in
However, as will be exemplified later, in other circumstances the wires should be insulated from each other. This may be accomplished in different ways.
In the case of a glass substrate top part the situation in
Next, the production of an OLED device is described, where both the cathode and the anode are connected to wires in the substrate. Such a device may be used for lighting and display purposes but also as a solar cell.
A polished substrate, similar to the one illustrated in
b illustrates an alternative way to apply an anode layer. In this case the ITO layer is applied as a number of strips, which may be directed at 45° angle with the warp an weft directions and are place on top of the locations where wires in either the warp or weft adjoins the substrate surface. Thus the strips cover every second diagonal row of wire contact surfaces.
Now an organic layer 23 is applied on top of the ITO layer and extending somewhat into the free area around the locations where the weft wires adjoins the surface, as illustrated in
In a further step the cathode layer 25 which may consist of aluminum together with a Ba or LiF sublayer is applied over the entire surface using an evaporation technique. The cathode layer extends down to the areas where the weft wires adjoin the substrate surface, such that the cathode is allowed to be electrically connected to these wires. Note that the drawing in
In this device, both the anode and cathode layers will be shunted, such that the anode and cathode voltage may be substantially uniform over the entire surface.
If a substrate with a first electrode layer applied as in
On the other hand, by applying different voltages to different wires in the warp and weft respectively, different areas of the OLED device may also be controlled to output different brightness levels. This however usually requires that the anode and/or cathode layers are divided into a plurality of mutually insulated segments.
The substrate illustrated in
An inorganic LED display can be addressed in a similar way even without TFTs.
Thus the substrate described above may be used e.g. in different electro-optic devices comprising plural electrode layers.
OLEDs have already been mentioned. The disclosed substrate structure is applicable to types used for illumination or display purposes. In OLEDs for illumination, uniform light emission is achieved, and in display types the wires provide simple and reliable addressing. Solar cell and image sensor applications are also possible. As mentioned, the structure is also useful in TFT LCD devices.
In summary, the invention relates to a planar electro-optic device and a method for producing the same. The device comprises an embedded woven structure of conductive wires, which adjoin the top surface of the substrate at locations thereof. Different electrode layers may be connected to the wires at these locations. The wires may then be used e.g. to provide a uniform potential over an entire electrode surface, even if the electrode itself is very thin. A substrate of this kind may also be used for addressing purposes.
The invention is not restricted to the described embodiments. It can be altered in different ways within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06112683.5 | Apr 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB07/51266 | 4/10/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2008 |