1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electroluminescent cell and an electroluminescent particle, and more particularly to an electroluminescent cell of a dispersion type-like construction, in which electroluminescent particles including a phosphor are dispersed in an electroluminescent layer, and an electroluminescent particle suitable for use in such an electroluminescent cell.
2. Description of the Related Art
Electroluminescent cells are expected to be utilized as new display cells that emit light without employing a special light source. Conventional electroluminescent cells are of two general types, a dispersion type and a thin-film type. Initially, a brief description will be given of the respective basic structures, light-emitting mechanisms, and characteristics of the conventional dispersion type electroluminescent cell and thin-film type electroluminescent cell.
A typical dispersion type electroluminescent cell 60 is shown in
A phosphor particle in a dispersion type electroluminescent cell employs a particle where a deactivator is added to a phosphor base material. A typical example is ZnS:Cu, Cl that emits cyan light. According to the color desired, ZnS:Cu,Al (green), ZnS:Cu,Cl,Mn (orange), etc., are used. Because of a light-emitting mechanism described below, it is said that a deactivator needs to contain copper (Cu). The kinds of base materials to which copper can be added are limited and practical base materials are only ZnS, CaS, and SrS. Because of a limit to the base materials, in the phosphor particles of a dispersion type electroluminescent cell, a particle diameter of 20 μm or so is considered to be optimum. Phosphor particles slightly less than that particle diameter are sometimes employed, but if a particle diameter becomes less than 2 to 3 μm, it is known that brightness is considerably reduced, and consequently, a particle diameter cannot be reduced to less than 2 to 3 μm.
A dispersion type electroluminescent cell emits light by recombination that occurs when elements added as deactivators operate as a donor and an acceptor. For instance, in the case of (ZnS:Cu,Cl), Cl operates as a donor and Cu operates as an acceptor. It is contemplated that the emission of light does not occur uniformly over the entire phosphor particle but occurs locally at a portion where the needle crystal of Cu2S is deposited along lattice defects in a ZnS particle.
A typical thin-film type electroluminescent cell 80 is shown in
The dispersion type electroluminescent cell emits light by the recombination between a donor and an acceptor, whereas the thin-film type electroluminescent cell emits light by the collision excitation of an electroluminescent center by a hot electron running through the base material. This hot electron is produced by accelerating an electron, injected in the electroluminescent layer 88, from the interfaces between the electroluminescent layer 88 and insulating layers 86a, 86b and/or from a trap within the electroluminescent layer 88.
If electroluminescent cells of dispersion and thin-film types are compared with each other, they have advantages and disadvantages, respectively. The dispersion type has the following advantages: because the fabrication step includes no vacuum deposition, etc., the fabrication cost can be reduced and the size of the cell can be easily made large; and flexible electroluminescent cells with flexibility can also be fabricated. On the other hand, it has the following disadvantages: the brightness is low compared with the thin-film type; it lacks variety in color; and because the diameter of phosphor particles is large, it is unsuitable for a high-definition display, etc. The thin-film type has the following advantages: the brightness is high compared with the dispersion type; because it has a variety of electroluminescent centers that determine color, it can express various colors; and high-definition display is possible. On the other hand, it has the following disadvantages: the fabrication step is complex and the cost is high. In addition, in the thin-film type, the greater part of light emitted is totally reflected at the interface between the electroluminescent layer and insulating layer. As a result, the light taking-out efficiency is as low as 5 to 10%.
On the other hand, U.S. patent Laid-Open Ser. No. 20040119400 and Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2000-195674 show an electroluminescent cell of dispersion type-like construction which is similar to the construction shown in
Regardless of whether an electroluminescent cell employs a conventional phosphor containing Cu or a phosphor that was employed in the electroluminescent layer of the above-described thin-film type electroluminescent cell, the voltage applied across the cell needs to be efficiently applied to the phosphor particles of the electroluminescent layer, in order to obtain high light-emitting efficiency in an electroluminescent cell of dispersion type-like construction and/or start the emission of light with a low voltage. For that reason, for example, in the electroluminescent cell described in Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2000-195674, a dielectric with a high dielectric constant such as BaTiO3 is used as a binder in the electroluminescent layer, and phosphor particles are dispersed in that dielectric.
As described above, in order to obtain high light-emitting efficiency and start the emission of light with a low voltage in an electroluminescent cell of dispersion type-like construction, a dielectric with a high dielectric constant has hitherto been used in the binder of the electroluminescent layer. However, in the case of an electroluminescent layer where particles consisting of only a phosphor are dispersed in a binder, even if a binder consisting of a dielectric with a high dielectric constant is employed, an average electric-field intensity applied to phosphor particles is only about 1.2 times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer. Thus, light emission with high efficiency and high brightness cannot be obtained.
The present invention has been made in view of the circumstances described above. Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an electroluminescent cell of dispersion type-like construction in which the efficiency of voltage application to phosphor particles dispersed in the electroluminescent layer is improved and the light-emission efficiency and brightness are high. Another object of the invention is to provide an electroluminescent particle suitable for use in the electroluminescent cell of the present invention.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a first electroluminescent cell. The first electroluminescent cell includes a pair of electrodes and an electroluminescent layer arranged between the pair of electrodes. A plurality of electroluminescent particles, including a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, are dispersed in a dielectric binder of the electroluminescent layer. When a voltage is applied across the electroluminescent cell, an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer.
In the present invention, the “electroluminescent particle” indicates the entirety of a particle and, when it is used in an electroluminescent cell, indicates the entirety of each of the particles dispersed in the electroluminescent layer. Although the phosphor part of a particle emits light, the electroluminescent particle according to the present invention means the entirety of a particle including a dielectric core, a dielectric-covering layer, a buffer layer, etc.
In addition, the “dispersion” used in the present invention means that electroluminescent particles do not always need to be perfectly dispersed in a dielectric binder. That is, some of the electroluminescent particles may contact with one another.
The first electroluminescent cell according to the present invention has an electroluminescent layer between a pair of electrodes, but may further include additional layers. For example, the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention may be provided with one or two insulating layers formed on one side or both sides of the electroluminescent layer, a buffer layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
The electroluminescent particle employed in the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention includes a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, but may further include additional layers. For example, it may include a buffer layer between the dielectric layer and the phosphor-covering layer. On the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, it may also include a pair of additional dielectric-covering layer and phosphor-covering layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
In the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, it is preferable that an average core diameter of the dielectric cores of the electroluminescent particles be 1.2 μm or greater and that a layer thickness of the electroluminescent layer be 100 μm or less.
In the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, it is preferable that an average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles and an average radius r2 of the dielectric cores have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0.
In the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, it is preferable that a dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer and a dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core have a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a second electroluminescent cell. The second electroluminescent cell includes a pair of electrodes and an electroluminescent layer arranged between the pair of electrodes. A plurality of electroluminescent particles, including a dielectric core, a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, and a dielectric-covering layer formed on the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, are dispersed in a dielectric binder of the electroluminescent layer. When a voltage is applied across the electroluminescent cell, an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the plurality of electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer.
The second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, as with the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, has an electroluminescent layer between a pair of electrodes, but may further include additional layers. For example, the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention may be provided with one or two insulating layers formed on one side or both sides of the electroluminescent layer, a buffer layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
The electroluminescent particle employed in the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention includes a dielectric core, a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, and a dielectric-covering layer formed on the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, but may further include additional layers. For instance, it may include a buffer layer between the dielectric layer and the phosphor-covering layer and/or between the phosphor-covering layer and the dielectric-covering layer. On the outside of the dielectric-covering layer, it may also include a pair of additional phosphor-covering layer and dielectric-covering layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
In the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, as with the first electroluminescent cell, it is preferable that an average core diameter of the dielectric cores of the electroluminescent particles be 1.2 μm or greater and that a layer thickness of the electroluminescent layer be 100 μm or less.
In the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, it is preferable that an average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layers of the aforementioned electroluminescent particles, an average radius r2 of the dielectric cores, and an average layer thickness r3 of the dielectric-covering layers have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0 and r3/(r1+r2)<0.50.
In the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, it is preferable that a dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer, a dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core, and a dielectric constant ε3 of the dielectric-covering layer have a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0 and ε3/ε1 <20.
In the first and second electroluminescent cells of the present invention, it is preferable that the phosphor-covering layer of each electroluminescent particle comprise a phosphor including an electroluminescent center that collides with and is excited by a hot electron.
In the first and second electroluminescent cells of the present invention, it is preferable that a volume filling ratio for the electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer be 40% or greater.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a first electroluminescent particle. The first electroluminescent particle is made up of a dielectric core with a core diameter of 1.2 μm or greater and a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core.
The first electroluminescent particle of the present invention includes a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, but may further include additional layers. For instance, it may include a buffer layer between the dielectric layer and the phosphor-covering layer. On the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, it may also include a pair of additional dielectric-covering layer and phosphor-covering layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
In the first electroluminescent particle of the present invention, it is preferable that a layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layer and a radius r2 of the dielectric core have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0.
In the first electroluminescent particle of the present invention, it is preferable that a dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer and a dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core have a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a second electroluminescent particle. The second electroluminescent particle is made up of a dielectric core with a core diameter of 1.2 μm or greater, a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, and a dielectric-covering layer formed on the outside of the phosphor-covering layer.
The second electroluminescent particle of the present invention includes a dielectric core, a phosphor-covering layer formed on the outside of the dielectric core, and a dielectric-covering layer formed on the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, but may further include additional layers. For instance, it may include a buffer layer between the dielectric layer and the phosphor-covering layer and/or between the phosphor-covering layer and the dielectric-covering layer. On the outside of the dielectric-covering layer, it may also include a pair of additional phosphor-covering layer and dielectric-covering layer, a surface-protecting layer, etc.
In the second electroluminescent particle of the present invention, it is preferable that a layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layer, a radius r2 of the dielectric core, and a layer thickness r3 of the dielectric-covering layer have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0 and r3/(r1+r2)<0.50.
In the second electroluminescent particle of the present invention, it is preferable that a dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer, a dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core, and a dielectric constant ε3 of the dielectric-covering layer have a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0 and ε3/ε1<20.
In the first and second electroluminescent particles of the present invention, it is preferable that the phosphor-covering layer comprise a phosphor including an electroluminescent center that collides with and is excited by a hot electron.
The first electroluminescent cell of the present invention is constructed so that when a voltage is applied across the cell, an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer. Therefore, the efficiency of voltage application to phosphor particles dispersed in the electroluminescent layer is high and it becomes possible to realize high light-emission efficiency and/or to start light emission with a low voltage. At the same time, an electric field applied to the dielectric binder in the electroluminescent layer is uniform and suppressed to a low level by operation of the dielectric core, so load on the dielectric binder is lightened and the operating lifetime of the electroluminescent cell becomes longer.
In the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, if an average core diameter of the dielectric cores of the electroluminescent particles is 1.2 μm or greater and a layer thickness of the electroluminescent layer is 100 μm or less, the dispersibility of electroluminescent particles can be enhanced and the uniformity of an electroluminescent layer can be enhanced. In addition, it becomes possible to obtain the emission of light of sufficient brightness and/or to start the emission of light, with a practical voltage less than 400 V.
In the first electroluminescent cell of the present invention, an average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles and an average radius r2 of the dielectric cores may have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0, and/or a dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer and a dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core may have a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0. According to this construction, it becomes possible to easily realize the above-described construction in which an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer.
The second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, as with the first electroluminescent cell, is constructed so that when a voltage is applied across the cell, an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer. Therefore, the efficiency of voltage application to phosphor particles dispersed in the electroluminescent layer is high and it becomes possible to realize high light-emission efficiency and/or to start light emission with a low voltage. At the same time, an electric field applied to the dielectric binder in the electroluminescent layer is uniform and suppressed to a low level by operation of the dielectric core, so load on the dielectric binder is lightened and the operating lifetime of the electroluminescent cell becomes longer. In addition, the electroluminescent particle used in the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention further has a dielectric-covering layer formed on the outside of the phosphor-covering layer, so a phosphor typically weak in water can be protected from external water and moisture. This makes the operating lifetime of the electroluminescent cell ever longer.
In the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, as with the first electroluminescent cell, an average core diameter of the dielectric cores of the electroluminescent particles may be 1.2 μm or greater and a layer thickness of the electroluminescent layer may be 100 μm or less. According to this construction, the dispersibility of electroluminescent particles can be enhanced and the uniformity of an electroluminescent layer can be enhanced. In addition, it becomes possible to obtain the emission of light of sufficient brightness and/or to start the emission of light, with a practical voltage less than 400 V.
In the second electroluminescent cell of the present invention, an average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layers of the aforementioned electroluminescent particles, an average radius r2 of the dielectric cores, and an average layer thickness r3 of the dielectric-covering layers may have a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0 and r3/(r1+r2)<0.50. According to this construction, it becomes possible to easily realize the above-described construction in which an average electric-field intensity applied to the phosphor-covering layers of the electroluminescent particles is 1.5 or more times an average electric-field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer.
In the first and second electroluminescent cells of the present invention, if the phosphor-covering layer of each electroluminescent particle comprises a phosphor including an electroluminescent center that collides with and is excited by a hot electron, it becomes possible to obtain the emission of light of even higher brightness.
In the first and second electroluminescent cells of the present invention, if a volume filling ratio for the electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer is 40% or greater, it becomes possible to obtain the emission of light of even higher brightness, while achieving high light-emission efficiency, a reduction in an emission-starting voltage, and a reduction in load on a dielectric binder by operation of the dielectric core.
If the first and second electroluminescent particles of the present invention are employed, it becomes possible to fabricate an electroluminescent cell that has the above-described advantages.
The present invention will be described in further detail with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
Embodiments of the present invention will hereinafter be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
As previously described, in order to enhance the efficiency of voltage application to phosphor particles in an electroluminescent cell of dispersion type-like construction, a dielectric with a high dielectric constant has hitherto been used in the binder in the electroluminescent layer. However, in the case of using particles consisting of only a phosphor, even if a binder consisting of a dielectric with a high dielectric constant is employed, an average electric field intensity applied to phosphor particles is only about 1.2 times an average electric field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer.
However, if an electroluminescent layer is formed by dispersing in a dielectric binder electroluminescent particles having a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer, or electroluminescent particles further having a dielectric-covering layer, instead of dispersing particles consisting of only a phosphor, a voltage applied to the electroluminescent cell can be concentrated on the phosphor-covering layer by operation of the dielectric core. For that reason, if suitably adjusted electroluminescent particles with such a dielectric core is employed, the ratio of an average electric field intensity applied to the phosphor part of the electroluminescent particle to an average electric field intensity applied to the entire electroluminescent layer (hereinafter referred to simply as an electric field concentration degree) can be greatly improved.
One adjustable factor is a factor relating to dimensions, such as the size of a dielectric core, the thickness of a phosphor-covering layer, and in the case of providing a dielectric-covering layer, the layer thickness. Another adjustable factor is a factor relating to a dielectric constant, such as the dielectric constant of a dielectric core, the dielectric constant of a phosphor-covering layer, and in the case of providing a dielectric-covering layer, the dielectric constant. Furthermore, a filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in an electroluminescent layer is also a factor influencing an electric field concentration degree.
In addition, even if a high electric field concentration degree is realized, the value of a voltage to be applied to an electroluminescent layer will exceed a practical value and become high, in order to obtain light of sufficient brightness and start the emission of light, if the electroluminescent layer becomes too thick. Therefore, it is preferable that the electroluminescent layer be as thin as possible. When making the electroluminescent layer thin, it is preferable to reduce the size of electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer to a suitable size, but if the size of the electroluminescent particles is too small, dispersibility becomes bad and therefore uniform light emission cannot be obtained. In addition, there is a possibility that a short circuit will occur due to bad dispersibility.
The inventors have performed model simulations with respect to the electric field concentration degree and found the following facts. That is, a high electric field concentration degree equal to or greater than 1.5 could be realized in some of models of electroluminescent layers using electroluminescent particles that have a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer, and in some of models of electroluminescent layers using electroluminescent particles that have a dielectric core, a phosphor-covering layer, and a dielectric-covering layer. In order to realize such an electric field concentration degree equal to or greater than 1.5 in the case where electroluminescent particles, which have a dielectric core and a phosphor-covering layer, are used, it is preferable that a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0 be obtained between the average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layer and the average radius r2 of the dielectric core, and it is also preferable that a relationship of ε2/ε1≧2.0 be obtained between the dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer and the dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core. On the other hand, in the case where electroluminescent particles, which have a dielectric core, a phosphor-covering layer, and a dielectric-covering layer, are used, it is preferable that a relationship of r2/r1≧1.0 and r3/(r1+r2)<0.50 be obtained between the average layer thickness r1 of the phosphor-covering layer, the average radius r2 of the dielectric core, and the average layer thickness r3 of the dielectric-covering layer, and it is also preferable that a relationship of ε2/ε1>2.0 and ε3/ε1<20 be obtained between the dielectric constant ε1 of the phosphor-covering layer, the dielectric constant ε2 of the dielectric core, and the dielectric constant ε3 of the dielectric-covering layer.
In the simulations, an electrostatic field analysis was performed by a general purpose finite-element method, using software ElecNet, version 6.7.2 (Infolytica). As shown in
As shown in
The specified values of the simulation parameters and the electric field concentration degrees obtained are listed in Tables 1 and 2. Note that the value of the dielectric constant ε1 is 8 for all models.
The values of the dielectric constants ε1 to ε4 specified as simulation parameters are values specified by supposing materials to be used in actual electroluminescent cells. The specified values and supposed materials are listed in Table 3.
Although the layer thickness d of an electroluminescent layer for each model does not influence an electric field concentration degree during model simulations, the layer thickness d is specified. From the value of the obtained electric field concentration degree n and the value of the layer thickness d, the value of an applied voltage U to an electroluminescent layer required for starting light emission is calculated by the following equation:
U=kd/n
where k is an emission start electric-field intensity peculiar to a phosphor used in an electroluminescent particle. In the model simulations, ZnS:Mn is the supposed material of a phosphor for all models, as listed in Table 3. Therefore, k=5.0×107 V/m was employed as a unified value for k. The specified value of a layer thickness d and value of an obtained emission-starting voltage U for each model are also listed in Tables 1 and 2. The unified value for k is a value calculated from the fact that when an electroluminescent cell equivalent to comparative example 1 listed in Table 2 was fabricated and emitted light, the voltage applied to the electroluminescent layer at the time of the light emission was 417 V.
The results of the simulations listed in Tables 1 and 2 will hereinafter be examined in detail.
In the models employing a particle having no dielectric core, that is, an electroluminescent particle shown in
In the models using the electroluminescent particle shown in
From the results, obtained from the models of embodiments 1 and 9 and comparative example 5 which use the electroluminescent particle shown in
If the emission-starting voltage U is examined, it changes in proportion to the layer thickness d of an electroluminescent layer if the electric field concentration degree is the same, as clearly seen from the aforementioned equation, U=kd/n (see embodiments 1 and 3, or embodiments 4, 5, 6, and 12). In embodiment 12 where the layer thickness d of the electroluminescent layer is 120 μm, the electric field concentration degree is very satisfactory like 11.2, but since the layer thickness d of the electroluminescent layer is thick, the emission-starting voltage U is high like 536 V. In order to start the emission of light with a practical voltage less than 400 V, it is preferable that the layer thickness d of an electroluminescent layer be 100 μm or less. Note that the emission-starting voltages listed in Tables 1 and 2 are voltages applied to electroluminescent layers when there is no insulating layer or buffer layer. Therefore, in the case where an actual electroluminescent cell is provided with an insulating layer or buffer layer, it is necessary to determine a voltage required of the entire electroluminescent cell in consideration of a voltage to be consumed by that layer.
In embodiment 13, the electric field concentration degree and emission-starting voltage are both good in the model simulation, but in the case where it is constructed as an actual electroluminescent cell, dispersibility is bad because the size of the electroluminescent particle is too small, and it is difficult to emit light uniformly. In addition, there is a possibility that a short circuit will occur due to bad dispersibility. In order to assure satisfactory dispersibility, it is preferable that an electroluminescent particle have an average core diameter of 1.2 μm or greater at the dielectric core.
Embodiment 11 differs from embodiment 1 in only the dielectric constant of the binder. In the embodiment 11, the electric field concentration degree is one-half that of the embodiment 1, but is higher by far than 1.5. This result indicates that even if a binder with a low dielectric constant of about 2 is employed, a high electric field concentration degree equal to or greater than 1.5 can be realized according to the present invention.
In the case of using the electroluminescent particle, shown in
From
On the other hand, it is found that in the case where the electroluminescent particle of the embodiment 1 having a dielectric core is employed, the electric field concentration degree to the phosphor is very high compared with the dielectric binder, and an electric field is also applied to the dielectric binder to some degree, but the manner in which an electric field is applied is uniform. That is, if an electroluminescent particle with a dielectric core, such as the electroluminescent particle of the embodiment 1, is employed, there is no local thermal load on the dielectric binder even if a volume filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer is raised to enhance brightness, and therefore the operating lifetime of the cell becomes longer. Therefore, it is contemplated that in the case where an electroluminescent particle with a dielectric core is employed, it is preferable to increase a volume filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer to some degree in order to enhance brightness, if the increase in the volume filling ratio has little influence on the electric field concentration and emission-starting voltage.
Hence, in the embodiment 1 with the particle structure shown in
From the results, it is found that if a volume filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in an electroluminescent layer is increased, an electric field concentration degree to the electroluminescent particles is slightly reduced, but the reduction is not so great. In addition, if a volume filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in an electroluminescent layer is increased, the emission-starting voltage is slightly increased, but in the range of model simulations, it changes by about 20 V. Since such a change has little influence on the handling performance and operating lifetime of an electroluminescent cell, the advantage of brightness enhancement by an increase in a volume filling ratio is not impaired. Therefore, in an electroluminescent cell according to the present invention that employs electroluminescent particles having a dielectric core, it is preferable that a volume filling ratio for electroluminescent particles in the electroluminescent layer be 40% or greater and further preferable that it be 60% or greater.
The experiments relating to the above-described embodiments and comparative examples were made by computer simulations, but an electroluminescent cell using an electroluminescent particle shown in
In addition, an electroluminescent cell using an electroluminescent particle shown in
Note that the relative thickness of each layer, which constitutes the electroluminescent cells and electroluminescent particles shown in
While embodiments of an electroluminescent cell according to the present invention have been described in detail, each layer of the cell, materials of the electroluminescent particle, and layer construction are not to be limited to the above-described embodiments.
The material of the phosphor-covering layer of an electroluminescent particle may employ a phosphor containing copper (Cu) such as ZnS:Cu, Cl employed in conventional dispersion type electroluminescent cells, and may employ a phosphor containing an electroluminescent center that collides with and is excited by a hot electron, employed in conventional thin-film type electroluminescent cells, like ZnS:Mn employed in each of the above-described embodiments. In the case where the latter is employed, the light-emitting mechanism itself is similar to conventional thin-film type electroluminescent cells, total reflection conditions are not met due to the shape effect of a phosphor-covering layer and light scattering effect of an electroluminescent layer, and the efficiency of taking out light from an electroluminescent layer is enhanced compared with conventional thin-film type electroluminescent cells. Therefore, there is an advantage that high brightness is obtained compared with conventional dispersion type electroluminescent cells and thin-film type electroluminescent cells. Phosphors other than ZnS:Mn are listed in Table 6.
The material of the electric core and dielectric-covering layer of an electroluminescent particle can employ Y2O3, Ta2O5, BaTa2O6, Sr(Zr, Ti)O3, PbTiO3, Si3N4, ZnS, ZrO2, PbNbO3, Pb(Zr, Ti)O3, etc., in addition to BaTiO3, SrTiO3, HfO2, SiO2, TiO2, and Al2O3 listed as supposed materials in Table 3. In the case where an electroluminescent particle further has a dielectric-covering layer, the same material may be employed in the dielectric-covering layer and dielectric core, but in order to reduce the shielding effect of the dielectric-covering layer and efficiently apply an electric field to the phosphor-covering layer, it is preferable to use in the dielectric core a material whose dielectric constant is higher.
The material of the dielectric binder of an electroluminescent layer can employ polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene resin, silicon resin, vinylidene-fluoride resin, etc., in addition to cyanoethyl cellulose and epoxy resin employed in the above-described embodiments. These materials may be mixed with dielectric particles having a high dielectric constant such as BaTiO3, SrTiO3, etc., in order to adjust dielectric constants.
In the case where an insulating layer is provided like the electroluminescent cells shown in
The material of the substrate may employ a flexible sheet such as the aforementioned PET sheet and may also employ a glass substrate such as barium borosilicate glass, aluminosilicate glass, etc.
The material of the transparent electrode, in addition to ITO, can employ a material containing ZnO:Al, Zn2In2O5, (Zn, Cd, Mg)O—(B, Al, Ga, In, Y)2O3—(Si, Ge, Sn, Pb, Ti, Zr)O2, (Zn, Cd, Mg)O—(B, Al, Ba, In, Y)2O3—(Si, Sn, Pb)O, or MgO—In2O3 as a main component, a GaN material, a SnO2 material, etc.
The back electrode may be formed by application of carbon paste.
The minimum layer construction of an electroluminescent cell according to the present invention is a pair of electrodes and an electroluminescent layer. Therefore, the insulating layer and surface-protecting layer, provided in the electroluminescent cells shown in
Note that the electroluminescent particles, used in the embodiments of the electroluminescent cell according to the present invention, correspond to embodiments of the electroluminescent particle of the present invention.
While the present invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, the invention is not to be limited to the details given herein, but may be modified within the scope of the invention hereinafter claimed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
(PAT.)416579/2003 | Dec 2003 | JP | national |
(PAT.)184834/2004 | Jun 2004 | JP | national |