This application claims the benefit of Korean Application No. 2005-66379, filed Jul. 21, 2005, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
Aspects of the present invention relate to an electron emission device, an electron emission type backlight unit, and a flat display apparatus having the same, and more particularly, to an electron emission device with improved electron emission efficiency and light-emitting uniformity, an electron emission type backlight unit employing the electron emission device, and a flat display apparatus having the electron emission type backlight unit.
2. Description of the Related Art
Generally electron emission devices can be classified into electron emission devices using a thermionic cathode and electron emission devices using a cold cathode as an electron emission source. Electron emission devices that use a cold cathode as an electron emission source include field emitter array (FEA) type devices, surface conduction emitter (SCE) type devices, metal insulator metal (MIM) type devices, metal insulator semiconductor (MIS) type devices, ballistic electron surface emitting (BSE) type devices, etc. Aspects of the present invention relate to the FEA type device.
An FEA type electron emission device uses the principle that, when a material having a low work function or a high β function is used as an electron emission source, the material readily emits electrons in a vacuum due to an electric potential. FEA devices that employ a tapered tip structure formed of, for example, Mo, Si as a main component, a carbon group material such as graphite, diamond like carbon (DLC), etc., or a nano structure such as nanotubes, nano wires, etc., have been developed.
FEA type electron emission devices can be classified into top gate types and under gate types according to the arrangement of a cathode electrode and a gate electrode. FEAs can also be classified into two-electrode, three-electrode, or four-electrode type emission devices according to the number of the electrodes.
Studies have been conducted into ways of using an electron emission device as a backlight unit of a non-emissive display device.
Referring to
The electron emission device 2 includes a base substrate 10 that faces and is parallel to the front substrate 90, a cathode electrode 20 formed in a strip on the base substrate 10, a gate electrode 30 formed in a strip parallel to the cathode electrode 20, and electron emission layers 40 and 50 formed around the cathode electrode 20 and the gate electrode 30. An electron emission gap G is formed between the electron emission layers 40 and 50 surrounding the cathode electrode 20 and the gate electrode 30.
A vacuum lower than the ambient air pressure is maintained in the space between the front panel 1 and the electron emission device 2, and a spacer 60 is disposed between the front panel 1 and the electron emission device 2 in order to support the pressure generated by the vacuum between the front panel 1 and the electron emission device 2 and to secure a light emitting space 103.
In the above-described electron emission type backlight unit 3, electrons are emitted from the electron emission layer 40 formed at the cathode electrode 20 by an electric field generated between the gate electrode 30 and the cathode electrode 20. The emitted electrons travel toward the gate electrode 30 initially and then are pulled by the strong electric field of the anode electrode 80 and move toward the anode electrode 80.
However, an electric field formed between the anode electrode 80 and the cathode electrode 20 interferes with the electric field formed between the gate electrode 30 and the cathode electrode 20 and thus a diode discharge, that is, electron emission and electron acceleration occurring at the same time due to the electric field of the anode electrode 80, is likely to occur. When a diode discharge occurs, the current density emitted by controlling the voltage applied to the gate electrode 30 cannot be controlled.
In addition, due to the light-emitting characteristic of phosphor materials, when light is emitted by electrons that are incident on a phosphor material, other incident electrons cannot contribute to light emitting. Thus light-emitting efficiency is not improved by increasing incident electrons on the phosphor layer 70 beyond this saturation level and an electron emission by a high anode voltage is detrimental from an energy efficiency aspect. In other words, electrons must be emitted stably and efficiently by a low gate voltage and at the same time the emitted electrons must be uniformly accelerated by a strong anode voltage. However, when electrons are emitted by a strong anode voltage, efficient electron emission and light emitting become impossible. Thus an electron emission type backlight unit with a new structure in which an electric field between the anode electrode 80 and the cathode electrode 20 can be blocked is required.
Aspects of the present invention provide an electron emission device with improved electron emission efficiency and an electron emission type backlight unit with a new structure using the electron emission device in which an electric field between an anode electrode and a cathode electrode is effectively blocked, and electrons are emitted continuously and stably by a low gate voltage, thereby improving light-emitting uniformity and light-emitting efficiency.
Aspects of the present invention also provide a flat display apparatus employing the electron emission type backlight unit.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided an electron emission device comprising: a base substrate; a cathode electrode that is formed on the base substrate and having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; a gate electrode that is formed on the base substrate and alternately separated from the cathode electrode, and having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; and an electron emission layer disposed on a surface of the cathode electrode toward the gate electrode.
While not required in all aspects, the electron emission layer may be formed on both sides of the cathode electrode.
While not required in all aspects, an insulating layer having a predetermined thickness may be formed between the cathode electrode and the gate electrode.
While not required in all aspects, the height of the cathode electrode and the height of the gate electrode may be substantially equal and the combined height of the insulating layer and the electron emission layer is substantially equal to the height of the cathode electrode and the gate electrode or the height of the cathode electrode and the height of the gate electrode may be substantially equal, where the height of the cathode electrode and the gate electrode is greater than the combined height of the insulating layer and the electron emission layer, and thus the electron emission layer is not formed in a portion of the upper end of the cathode electrode.
While not required in all aspects, the cathode electrode and the gate electrode may be formed in strips. Protrusions may be formed to a predetermined length and width on the cathode electrode. Concaves corresponding to the protrusions in the cathode electrode may be formed to a predetermined length and width in the gate electrode.
While not required in all aspects, a concave recess may be formed to a predetermined length and width in the cathode electrode and a protrusion corresponding to the concave recess formed in the cathode electrode may be formed on the gate electrode.
While not required in all aspects, a curved surface with a predetermined curvature may be formed in the cathode electrode. The curved surface may be convex toward the gate electrode. The curved surface may be concave toward the gate electrode. A curved surface corresponding to the curved surface of the cathode electrode may be formed in the gate electrode.
While not required in all aspects, both curved surfaces of the cathode electrode may be symmetrical around the center of the cathode electrode.
While not required in all aspects, the curved surface may be formed continuously along the cathode electrode.
While not required in all aspects, the electron emission layer may comprise an electron emission material selected from one of a group of carbon type materials comprising carbon nanotubes, graphite, diamond, and diamond-like carbon or one of a group of nano materials comprising nanotubes, nano wires, nanorods, and nanoneedles.
While not required in all aspects, the electron emission layer may be formed discontinuously at a side of the cathode electrode.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an electron emission type backlight unit comprising: a front substrate comprising an anode electrode and a phosphor layer; a base substrate separated from the front substrate by a predetermined distance; a plurality of cathode electrodes that are formed on the base substrate, each of the cathode electrodes having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; a plurality of gate electrodes that are alternately formed on the base substrate and separated from the cathode electrodes, each of the gate electrodes having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; an electron emission layer formed at a side of the cathode electrodes toward the gate electrodes; and a spacer maintaining a distance between the front substrate and the base substrate.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a flat display apparatus comprising: an electron emission type backlight unit comprising: a front substrate comprising an anode electrode and a phosphor layer; a base substrate separated from the front substrate by a predetermined distance; a plurality of cathode electrodes that are formed on the base substrate, each of the cathode electrodes having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; a plurality of gate electrodes that are alternately formed on the base substrate and separated from the cathode electrodes, each of the gate electrodes having a cross-section whose height is greater than its width; an electron emission layer formed at a side of the cathode electrodes toward the gate electrodes; a spacer maintaining a distance between the front substrate and the base substrate; and a non-emissive display device that is formed in front of the electron emission type backlight unit and controls the light supplied from the electron emission device to realize an image.
While not required in all aspects, the non-emissive display device may be a liquid display device.
Additional aspects and/or advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
These and/or other aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present invention by referring to the figures.
Referring to
The front panel 101 includes a front substrate 90, an anode electrode 80 disposed on a lower surface of the front substrate 90, and a phosphor layer 70 (see
The electron emission device 102 includes a base substrate 110 disposed at a predetermined interval from and parallel to the front substrate 90 whereby the vacuum space 103 is formed between the front panel 101 and the electron emission device 102, a cathode electrode 120 formed on a surface of the base substrate 110, a gate electrode 140 separated from and parallel to the cathode electrode 120, and an electron emission layer 150 disposed at a side of the cathode electrode 120 to face the gate electrode 140.
The cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 may have the same size and a height H1 thereof may be greater than a width W. When there are more than one, the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 are alternately disposed on the base substrate 110. The cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 form an electric field so that electrons can be easily emitted from the electron emission layer 150.
The cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 extend toward the anode electrode 80 such that an electric field formed between the anode electrode 80 and the cathode electrode 120 is prevented from interfering with the electron emission layer 150. Thus the electron emission is controlled by the voltage applied to the gate electrode 140 and the electric field formed by the anode electrode 80 only accelerates the emitted electrons. Thus the electron emission efficiency and the light-emitting efficiency of the phosphor layer can be improved, thereby also improving the electron emission uniformity and the light-emitting uniformity.
While not required in all aspects, an insulating layer 130 having a predetermined thickness may be further formed between the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140. The insulating layer 130 insulates the electron emission layer 150 and the gate electrode 140 and prevents a short circuit between the gate electrode 140 and the cathode electrode 120. The insulating layer 130 is disposed to be half the height of the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140. The electron emission layer 150 is formed at a side of the cathode electrode 120 toward the gate electrode and the combined height of the insulating layer 130 and the electron emission layer 150 is substantially the same as the height of the cathode electrode 120.
The vacuum space 103 between the front panel 101 and the electron emission device 102 is maintained at a pressure lower than the ambient air pressure, and the spacer 60 is disposed between the front panel 101 and the electron emission device 102 to support the pressure between the front panel 101 and the electron emission device 102 generated due to a vacuum and to partition the vacuum space 103. The spacer 60 is formed of an insulating material such as ceramics or glass that is not electrically conductive. Electrons may accumulate on the spacer 60 during the operation of the electron emission type backlight unit 100, and to emit these accumulated electrons, the spacer 60 may be coated with a conductive material.
Hereinafter, materials of components that constitute the above-described electron emission backlight unit 100 will be described.
While not required in all aspects, the front substrate 90 and the base substrate 110 are board members having a predetermined thickness and may be formed of a quartz glass, a glass including an impurity such as a small amount of Na, a flat glass, a glass substrate coated with SiO2, an oxide aluminum substrate or a ceramic substrate.
While not required in all aspects, the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 may be formed of general conductive materials. Examples of the general conductive materials include a metal (e.g., Al, Ti, Cr, Ni, Au, Ag, Mo, W, Pt, Cu, Sn, Sb, In, or Pd) or its alloy, a conductive material formed of either metal such as Pd, Ag, RuO2, Pd—Ag or its oxide and glass, a transparent conductive material such as indium tin oxide (ITO), In2O3 or SnO2, and a semiconductor material such as polysilicon.
While not required in all aspects, the electron emission layer 150 which emits electrons due to an electric field may be formed of any electron emission material that has a small work function and a high β function. Carbon type materials such as carbon nanotubes (CNT), graphite, diamond and diamond-like carbon or nano materials such as nanotubes, nano wires, nanorods, or nanoneedles may be preferable. CNTs particularly have a good electron emission property and can be driven at a low voltage. Therefore, devices using CNTs as an electron emission material can be applied to a larger electron emission display device.
The above-described electron emission type backlight unit 100 operates as follows.
For the electron emission, a negative (−) voltage is applied to the cathode electrode 120 and a positive (+) voltage is applied to the gate electrode 140 to emit electrons from the electron emission layer 150 formed on the cathode electrode 120. Also, a strong (+) voltage is applied to the anode electrode 80 to accelerate the electrons emitted toward the anode electrode 80. Thus electrons are emitted from the electron emission materials that form the electron emission layer 150 and travel toward the gate electrode 140 and are then accelerated toward the anode electrode 80. The electrons accelerated toward the anode electrode 80 collide with the phosphor layer 70 at the anode electrode 80 and thus generate visible light.
Since the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 are formed having a height extending significantly toward the anode electrode 80, the electric field formed by the anode electrode 80 can be prevented from interfering with the electric field between the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140. Thus the anode electrode 80 only accelerates the electrons, making it easy to control the electron emission with the gate electrode 140, and thus maximizing the light-emitting uniformity and the light-emitting efficiency of the phosphors and preventing diode discharge.
Hereinafter, other example embodiments of the electron emission device 102 illustrated in
As illustrated in
Hereinafter, other example embodiments of the electron emission type backlight unit 100 illustrated in
As illustrated in
That is, as illustrated in
Also, as illustrated in
Alternatively, as illustrated in
The shape of the concaves and protrusions formed in the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 is not limited to a rectangular shape and may be a trapezoidal shape or other polygonal shape.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
While not required in all aspects, the above-described electron emission type backlight unit 100 may be used as a backlight unit for a liquid crystal display, and in this case, the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140 are substantially disposed parallel to each other. Also, the phosphor layer may be formed of a phosphor emitting visible light of a desired color or a mix of red, green, and blue light emitting phosphors in a proper ratio to obtain white light.
As illustrated in
The backlight unit is one of the electron emission type backlight units 100 according to the previous embodiments of the present invention, and is supplied with power through a connection cable 104, and emits visible light V through the front panel 90 to supply the visible light V to the liquid crystal display device 700.
Hereinafter, the structure and the operation of the flat display apparatus of the present embodiment will be described with reference to
The electron emission type backlight unit 100 illustrated in
The liquid crystal display device 700 includes a front substrate 505, and a buffer layer 510 is formed on the front substrate 505, and a semiconductor layer 580 is formed in a predetermined pattern on the buffer layer 510. A first insulating layer 520 is formed on the semiconductor layer 580, and a gate electrode 590 is formed on the first insulating layer 520 in a predetermined pattern. A second insulating layer 530 is formed on the gate electrode 590. After the second insulating layer 530 is formed, the first and second insulating layers 520 and 530 are etched using a process such as dry etching and thus a portion of the semiconductor layer 580 is exposed and a source electrode 570 and a drain electrode 610 are formed in a predetermined area including the exposed portion of the semiconductor layer 580. After the source electrode 570 and the drain electrode 610 are formed, a third insulating layer 540 is formed, and a planarization layer 550 is formed on the third insulating layer 540. A first electrode 620 is formed in a predetermined pattern on the planarization layer 550 and a portion of the third insulating layer 540 and the planarization layer 550 that is etched. Thus a conduction path between the drain electrode 610 and the first electrode 620 is formed. A transparent base substrate 680 is formed separately from the front substrate 505, and a color filter layer 670 is formed on a lower surface 680a of the transparent base substrate 680. A second electrode 660 is formed on a lower surface 670a of the color filter layer 670, and a first alignment layer 630 and a second alignment layer 650 that align the liquid crystal layer 640 are formed on the surfaces of the first electrode 620 and the second electrode 660 facing each other. A first polarization layer 500 is formed on a lower surface of the front substrate 505 and a second polarization layer 690 is formed on a top surface 680b of the base substrate and a protection film 695 is formed on a top surface 690a of the second polarization layer. A spacer 560 which partitions the liquid crystal layer 640 is formed between the color filter layer 670 and the planarization layer 550.
The liquid crystal display device 700 operates as follows. An external signal controlled by the gate electrode 590, the source electrode 570, and the drain electrode 610 form a potential difference between the first electrode 620 and the second electrode 660, and the potential difference determines the alignment of the liquid crystal layer 640. According to the alignment of the liquid crystal layer 640, the visible light V supplied by the backlight unit 100 is blocked or transmitted. The light is transmitted through the color filter layer 670 and radiates color, thus realizing an image.
The flat display apparatus employing the electron emission type backlight unit 100 according to aspects of the present invention has improved image brightness and longer life span since the electron emission type backlight unit 100 has improved brightness and longer life span.
Also, as described above, the electron emission device having the above-described configuration can be used for an image display device according to an aspect of the invention. In this case, the electron emission device may have a structure, in which the gate electrode 140 and the cathode electrode 120 are formed in strips and cross each other, which is advantageous for applying signals to realize an image. For example, when the cathode electrode 120 is formed in strips extending in one direction, the gate electrode 140 may be formed of a main electrode crossing the cathode electrode 120 and a branch electrode extending from the main electrode to face the cathode electrode 120. The arrangement of the cathode electrode 120 and the gate electrode 140, of course, may be exchanged as shown in
As described above, the cathode electrode and the gate electrode are formed extending toward the anode electrode such that an electric field of the anode electrode is prevented from interfering with the electric field between the cathode electrode and the gate electrode. Thus the anode electrode only accelerates the electrons and the gate electrode can easily control the electron emission, thereby obtaining light-emitting uniformity and maximizing the light-emitting efficiency of the phosphors.
Also, While not required in all aspects, curved surfaces, protrusions, or concaves are formed in the cathode electrode and the gate electrode, which are formed in strips, and thus the area of the electron emission layer is increased, thereby increasing the electron emitting efficiency.
Furthermore, when a backlight unit is formed using the electron emission device of an embodiment of the present invention, a display apparatus employing the backlight unit can have improved brightness and light-emitting efficiency.
Although a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in this embodiment without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-66379 | Jul 2005 | KR | national |