This application claims priority to and the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2004-0038238 filed on May 28, 2004in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electron emission device, and in particular, to an electron emission device and a method of manufacturing the same which enhances the structure of a focusing electrode for controlling the electron beams and an insulating layer for supporting the focusing electrode.
2. Description of Related Art
Generally, electron emission devices are classified into a first type where a hot cathode is used as an electron emission source, and a second type where a cold cathode is used as the electron emission source.
Cold cathode electron emission devices include, for example, field emitter array (FEA) devices, surface conduction emitter (SCE) devices, metal-insulator-metal (MIM) devices, metal-insulator-semiconductor (MIS) devices, and ballistic electron surface emitting (BSE) devices.
Electron emission devices vary in their structure depending upon the specific type of the device. However, most have a basic structure including a vacuum chamber formed by two substrates, electron emission regions and driving electrodes that are formed on one of the substrates, and phosphor layers that are formed on the other substrate. The driving electrodes help emit electrons from the electron emission regions and phosphor layers emit light to display the desired images.
In an electron emission device with the above general structure, correcting the trajectory of electron beams to enhance the display characteristics has been a challenge. For example, electrons emitted from the electron emission regions on one of the substrates may diffuse before colliding against the phosphor layers on the other substrate. As a result, the diffused electrons do not strike the intended phosphor layers; instead, they land on other-neighboring phosphor layers causing them to emit an unintended color.
Metallic mesh-shaped grid electrodes or focusing electrodes have been used to control the trajectory of the electron beams. A grid electrode is placed between the two substrates while set apart from them using spacers. Focusing electrodes are located over the first substrate, which includes the electron emission regions, and surround the electron emission regions.
Fabrication of electron emission devices using grid electrodes involves difficult and complicated processing steps. At first, spacers are mounted on one of the two substrates; then, the grid electrode is aligned to the substrates; and then, the substrates are attached to each other to form a vacuum chamber.
Effective use of focusing electrodes may also lead to difficulty in the required fabrication process. The electron beam focusing effect of a focusing electrode is enhanced if the focusing electrode is set at a distance from the electron emission regions. To set the focusing electrode away from the electron emission regions, the thickness of the insulating layer, that supports the focusing electrode, must increase. An increased insulator thickness, in turn, results in longer and deeper opening portions, passage wells or holes through the insulator layer to the electron emission regions on the substrate. Forming holes with a high vertical to horizontal ratio involves fabrication processing difficulties. For example, if a wet etch process is used to form a hole, the etchant may tend to widen the hole as it deepens it. Therefore, achieving a deep hole while keeping the width small is not trivial.
In one exemplary embodiment of the present invention, there are provided an electron emission device and a method of manufacturing the same which improve the structure of a focusing electrode and an insulating layer for supporting the focusing electrode to thereby enhance the electron beam focusing effect.
In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an electron emission device includes one or more driving electrodes for controlling the emission of electrons from electron emission regions formed on a substrate. Two or more insulating layers are formed on the driving electrodes, and a focusing electrode is formed on the insulating layers. The insulating layers have opening portions exposing the electron emission regions on the substrate, and the opening portions of the insulating layers are differentiated in size from each other.
The insulating layer contacting the driving electrodes has a first opening portion, and the insulating layer contacting the focusing electrode has a plurality of second opening portions smaller than the first opening portion. The plurality of second opening portions are arranged within the area of the first opening portion. The insulating layers are differentiated in etching rate from each other, and the etching rate of the insulating layer placed apart from the focusing electrode is greater than the etching rate of the insulating layer placed close to the focusing electrode.
In another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an electron emission device includes first and second substrates facing each other, and cathode and gate electrodes placed on the first substrate while being insulated from each other by interposing a lower insulating layer. Electron emission regions are electrically coupled to the cathode electrodes. A focusing electrode is placed on the electron emission regions while surrounding the electron emission regions. Two or more insulating layers are placed under the focusing electrode while supporting the focusing electrode. The insulating layers are based on different kinds of insulating materials with opening portions exposing the electron emission regions on the first substrate, and the opening portions of the insulating layers are differentiated in size from each other.
In a method of manufacturing the electron emission device, cathode and gate electrodes are first formed on a substrate. An insulating layer with a relatively high etching rate and an insulating layer with a relatively low etching rate are sequentially deposited onto the electrodes to form two or more insulating layers differentiated in etching rate from each other. A focusing electrode is formed on the insulating layers such that the focusing electrode has an opening portion with a predetermined size. The insulating layers are etched using the focusing electrode as a mask layer to thereby form an opening portion with a relatively large width at the insulating layer placed apart from the focusing electrode while forming a plurality of opening portions with relatively small widths at the insulating layer contacting the focusing electrode.
As shown in
Cathode electrodes 6 may be formed with a stripe pattern on the first substrate 2 along one of the axes of the substrate. In
In the embodiment shown in
In one embodiment, shown in
The electron emission regions 12 may be formed from a carbonaceous material or a nanometer-sized material that emit electrons when an electric field is applied to them. For example, the electron emission regions 12 may be formed with carbon nanotube, graphite, graphite nanofiber, diamond, diamond-like carbon, C60, silicon nanowire, a combination of the foregoing, or any like material. The electron emission regions 12 may be formed through direct growth, screen printing, chemical vapor deposition, sputtering, or similar processes.
In the embodiment shown on
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The focusing electrode 16 is capable of focusing the electrons emitted from the electron emission regions 12, and when a high voltage is applied to the second substrate 4, prevents the electron emission regions 12 from being influenced by the electric field due to the high voltage. The gate electrode 10 and the focusing electrode 16 are separated by the upper insulating layer 14 to prevent the gate and focusing electrodes 10, 16 from contacting with each other and creating a short-circuit. The beam focusing effect of the focusing electrode 16 is enhanced as the thickness of the upper insulating layer 14 is increased.
In one embodiment, the upper insulating layer 14 may have a two-tiered structure with a first or lower tier 18 and a second or upper tier 20. Opening portions 18a, 20a, that may be holes, are formed through tiers 18, 20 of the double-tiered upper insulating layer 14 for exposing the electron emission regions 12 to the vacuum chamber. Each part of an opening portion 18a, 20a may have a different thickness or depth corresponding to the different thicknesses of the tiers 18, 20 of the double-tiered upper insulating layer 14. A relatively long opening portion 18a may be formed through the first or lower tier 18 of the insulating layer 14. A relatively short opening portion 20a may be formed through the second or upper tier 20 of the upper insulating layer 14 directed toward the focusing electrode 16. As a result, in this embodiment, the focusing electrode 16 will have a sufficient distance from the electron emission regions 12.
More than two tiers may be used to create the upper insulating layer 14. A several-tiered upper insulating layer 14 may be formed by depositing a sequence of insulating layers of different thickness and characteristics.
In one embodiment, the upper insulating layer 14 may have a laminated structure of the first or lower insulating tier 18 and the second or upper insulating tier 20. When an opening portion 18a is formed through the first insulating tier 18, one or more opening portions 20a, 16a may be formed through the second insulating tier 20 and the focusing electrode 16 corresponding to the opening portion 18a. The opening portion 18a of the first insulating tier 18 may be formed at pixel regions. Then, one or more opening portions 20a, 16a are formed through the second insulating tier 20 and the focusing electrode 16, also, at each pixel region. So, one opening portion 18a of the first or lower insulating tier 18 may correspond to several opening portions 20a, 16a through the second or upper insulating tier 20 at each pixel region.
In some embodiments, the opening portions 18a formed in the first insulating tier 18 of the upper insulating layer 14 may have a larger cross-sectional area than the opening portions 20a formed in the second insulating tier 20. In these embodiments, the first or lower tier 18 functions as support for the second or upper tier 20 and for the focusing electrode 16. The second insulating tier 20 has opening portions 20a with smaller cross-sectional areas. The smaller area of the second or upper opening portions 20a, allows intricate patterns for the opening portions 16a, of the focusing electrode 16, that are formed over opening portions 20a. Again, considering the respective functions of the first and the second insulating tiers 18, 20, the first or lower insulating tier 18 is usually formed with a larger thickness and the second or upper insulating tier 20 is formed with a smaller thickness. In some embodiments, the thickness of the first insulating tier 18 may be one to five times greater than the thickness of the second insulating tier 20.
In some embodiments, the first and the second insulating tiers 18, 20 are formed with different kinds of materials, which exhibit different etching rates with respect to an etching solution or an etching gas. In these embodiments, the upper insulating layer 14 can be easily removed to create the required opening portions 18a, 20a through one etching process. For example, if the thickness of first insulating tier 18 is greater than the thickness of the second insulating tier 20, then if the etching rate of the first insulating tier 18 is also greater than that of the second insulating tier 20, the two layers may be removed in one etch step. For example, when it is intended to etch through the upper insulating layer 14 by one wet etching process and the first insulating tier 18 is ten to twenty times as thick as the second insulating tier 20, then the etching rate of the first insulating tier 18 may be established to be ten to twenty times greater than that of the second insulating tier 20.
In embodiments where more than two tiers are used to form the upper insulating layer 14, the respective functions of each tier determine the thickness and the etch rate of each tier.
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In one embodiment (not shown), the anode electrode 26 may be formed with a transparent conductive material, such as indium tin oxide (ITO). In this embodiment, the anode electrode 26 is formed under the phosphor layers 22 and the black layers 24 and directly on the second substrate 4. This anode electrode 26 may be formed on the entire surface of the second substrate 4, or divided into a number of portions with a predetermined pattern covering only parts of the second substrate 4.
As described above, the upper insulating layer 14 for supporting the focusing electrode 16 is formed over a laminated structure of first and second insulating tiers 18, 20. The fist and second insulating tiers 18, 20 have opening portions 18a, 20a with different thicknesses and different cross-sectional areas so that the focusing electrode 16 has a sufficient height with respect to the electron emission regions 12, and the opening portions 16a of the focusing electrode 16 may be minutely patterned.
Consequently, the electron emission device 100 involves an enhanced electron beam focusing effect, and shields the anode electric field with respect to the electron emission regions 12 more effectively, thereby preventing the unintended light emission.
A method of manufacturing the electron emission device 100, 200 will be now explained with reference to
As shown in
First and second insulating tiers 18, 20, forming an upper insulating layer 14, are deposited onto the surface of the first substrate 2, over the gate electrodes 10 and the lower insulating layer 8. The first and the second insulating tiers 18, 20 are formed with materials with different etch rates with respect to an etching solution or an etching gas. For example, the etching rate of the first insulating tier 18 may be ten to twenty times greater than that of the second insulating tier 20.
The first insulating tier 18 supports the focusing electrode 16 to be formed later and may repeatedly suffer printing and firing. For example, the thickness of the first insulating tier 18 may vary from several micrometers to tens of micrometers. The second insulating tier 20 has a role of forming minute opening portions 20a adjacent to the focusing electrode 16 to be formed later. For example, the thickness of the second insulating tier 20 may be several micrometers to tens of micrometers.
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Consequently, in an embodiment shown in
Finally, a paste containing an electron emission material and a photosensitive material is screen-printed onto the cathode electrodes 6, and exposed to light, followed by developing and firing to form electron emission regions 12 on the cathode electrodes 6.
The first substrate 2, with an electron emission structure, faces a second substrate 4, with phosphor layers 22 and an anode electrode 26, and the two substrates 2, 4 are separated by a predetermined distance. The two substrates 2, 4 are attached by using a sealing material, such as a frit. The inner space between the first and the second substrates 2, 4 is partially exhausted and kept in a partial vacuum state, thereby forming an electron emission device.
As described above, with the electron emission device of this invention 100, 200, the focusing electrode 16 has a sufficient height with respect to the electron emission regions 12, and the opening portions 16a, 16a′ of the focusing electrode 16 are small. Accordingly, the electron beam focusing effect by way of the focusing electrode 16 is enhanced, and the anode electric field with respect to the electron emission regions 12 is intercepted more effectively.
Although exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, those skilled in the art would appreciate that changes may be made in the embodiments 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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10-2004-0038238 | May 2004 | KR | national |