This relates generally to evaporation tools and, more particularly, to thermal evaporation tools for forming display pixel structures.
Electronic devices often include displays. For example, an electronic device may have an organic light-emitting diode display or other display with an array of display pixels. The display pixels may include emissive layers or other structures of different colors. For example, red, blue, and green pixel structures may be used in a display to present color images to a user.
Emissive layers and other structures in a display can be formed by evaporation. A shadow mask may be placed adjacent to a display substrate. The shadow mask may have an array of openings. The openings have a pattern that corresponds to a desired pattern for an array of colored pixels or other display pixel structures. Material to be deposited is heated until it evaporates and is deposited onto the substrate.
Some evaporators include a linear evaporation source that is translated across the shadow mask during evaporation operations. A customized horizontal correction plate may be used to help ensure even deposition from a linear array of orifices in the source. The correction plate may have an opening that runs along the length of the linear source. The opening has a shape that helps reduce hotspots along the linear source. However, angular variations in the material being deposited from different positions along the length of the linear source are not controlled and adversely affect deposition uniformity.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved evaporation tools and improved components such as displays formed using such evaporation tools.
An evaporation tool is provided that has an elongated evaporation source. The elongated evaporation source may have elongated edges that run parallel to a longitudinal axis and shorter edges that run perpendicular to the longitudinal axis. The evaporation source may have multiple evaporation sources extending along its longitudinal axis that are formed by respective source orifices through which material is evaporated. Evaporated material from the evaporation source may be used to form display pixel structures on a display substrate.
An evaporation control structure is mounted to the evaporation source to enhance the directionality of the evaporated material. A shadow mask is provided adjacent to the display substrate to pattern evaporated material that is being deposited on the display substrate. To ensure that the entire display substrate is covered with evaporated material, a positioner may translate the evaporation source relative to the shadow mask in a direction perpendicular to the longitudinal axis.
The shadow mask has a rectangular frame for supporting a metal mask layer with a pattern of openings. The evaporation control structure ensures that the evaporated material from the source is evaporated towards the shadow mask. Angled walls in the evaporation control structure are attached to the elongated edges. Vertical walls extend between the angled walls. The vertical walls may have upper edges that are aligned with the edges of corresponding vertical wall extensions attached to the frame of the shadow mask. The vertical walls and the vertical wall extensions divide the evaporation control structure into a series of separate sections each of which contains a different respective group of the source orifices. The walls are used to block evaporated material following trajectories that are angled with respect to vertical and thereby ensure that the evaporated material is directed towards the shadow mask and does not strike the shadow mask at oblique angles.
Material may be deposited on a target using an evaporation tool. The evaporation tool, which may sometimes be referred to as a vacuum thermal evaporation device, may deposit material in thin layers. Illustrative arrangements for using an evaporation tool to deposit colored organic materials onto a display substrate are sometimes described herein as an example. This is, however, merely illustrative. The evaporation tool may be used to deposit material onto any suitable target structure.
An illustrative display is shown in
Display 14 may have an array of display pixels 22 for displaying images for a user. The array of display pixels 22 may be formed from rows and columns of display pixel structures (e.g., display pixels formed from structures on display layers such as substrate 24). There may be any suitable number of rows and columns in the array of display pixels 22 (e.g., ten or more, one hundred or more, or one thousand or more).
During operation, display control circuitry asserts signals on gate lines G (sometimes referred to as scan lines) and on data lines D (sometimes referred to as source lines). These signals cause display pixels 22 to emit light and form images for a viewer. To provide display 14 with the ability to display color images, display pixels 22 may be provided in different colors. As an example, display pixels 22 may include red display pixels that emit red light, green display pixels that emit green light, and blue display pixels that display blue light. Other display pixel types may be used if desired. The use of red, green, and blue display pixels in display 14 is merely illustrative.
With one illustrative configuration, display 14 is an organic light-emitting diode display and display pixels 22 are each formed from a corresponding organic light-emitting diode. In color displays, display pixels 22 may include red organic light-emitting diodes, green light-emitting diodes, and blue light-emitting diodes (as an example). The color of light emitted by each organic light-emitting diode may be determined by the color of its organic emissive layer and/or a color filter element. Configurations in which display pixels 22 have emissive layers of different colors are described herein as an example.
A cross-sectional side view of a configuration that may be used for the pixels of display 14 of device 10 is shown in
The layers of material between cathode 44 and anode 32 form a light-emitting diode. These layers may include layers such as electron injection layer 42, electron transport layer 40, emissive layer 38, hole transport layer 36, and hole injection layer 34. Layers 42, 40, 38, 36, and 34 may be formed from organic materials. Emissive layer 38 is an electroluminescent organic layer that emits light 46 in response to applied current.
Light-emitting diodes in display 14 may have different colors. These different colors may be produced using emissive layers 38 that emit light 46 of different colors. For example, display 14 may have red display pixels each of which has an emissive layer 38 that emits light 46 that is red, may have blue display pixels each of which has an emissive layer 38 that emits light 46 that is blue, and may have green display pixels each of which has an emissive layer that emits light that is green. Emissive layer 38 (and other layers in display 14) may, if desired, be patterned by depositing these layers through a shadow mask using an evaporation tool (i.e., an evaporator). For example, red pixels formed form portions of emissive layer 38 may be formed on a display by evaporating a red emissive material with an evaporation tool while an appropriate red shadow mask is aligned with display substrate 24. The red shadow mask has an array of red pixel openings that allow red emissive material 38 to be deposited in a desired pattern on display substrate 24. Blue and green pixels may be deposited in the same way, using a blue pixel shadow mask and green pixel shadow mask, respectively.
A portion of display 14 having an illustrative pattern that may be used for forming red pixels R, blue pixels B, and green pixels G is shown in
A cross-sectional side view of an evaporation tool of the type that may be used to pattern emissive layer material for red, green, and blue pixels or that may be used to deposit other materials is shown in
Evaporation source 58 has heating elements that heat materials to be evaporated. Source 58 may have orifices that serve as point sources emitting evaporated material. Evaporated material 60 from source 58 passes through openings 64 in metal mask layer 66 of shadow mask 62. The portions of material 60 that pass through openings 64 form deposited structures (layers) 60 on substrate 24. Openings 64 in metal mask layer 66 are arranged in a pattern appropriate for a given one of the pixel colors of
Source 58 may be a linear source that is thin in lateral dimension X (i.e., into the page in the orientation of
Mask 62 may have a rectangular shape (i.e., a shape that matches a desired display shape for display 14). The lateral dimension L of linear source 58 along its longitudinal axis may be sufficient to cover the entire width of mask 62 and display substrate 24, as shown in
Linear source 58 may be made up of a number of discrete source elements. As shown in the side view of
If care is not taken, material 60 will be evaporated not only in desired vertical directions such as direction 74 towards the evaporation target (i.e., mask 62 of
A perspective view of an illustrative evaporation tool that has features for restricting angle A for evaporated material from source 58 and thereby improving the directionality of the evaporated material and the accuracy of the deposited structures on substrate 28 is shown in
Evaporation control structure 78 includes angled sidewalls 94, end walls 96, and a series of inner walls 84. Angled walls 94 may be attached to the elongated edges of source 58 and may be angled outwardly from source 58. Vertical end walls 96 and vertical inner walls 84 lie in the X-Z plane of
The presence of walls 84 helps to prevent material 60 from being evaporated at large transverse angles A (i.e., at large angles A in the Y-Z plane with respect to vertical dimension Z), as described in connection with
During evaporation operations, substrate 24 is placed on top of shadow mask 62 to receive evaporated material 60 through the openings in the metal mask layer of mask 62. If desired, mask 62 may have vertical walls 86 that are aligned with corresponding walls in structure 78 such as inner walls 84 and that therefore serve as vertical wall extensions for walls 84. Some of walls 86 may be aligned with end walls 96, if desired. Vertical walls 86 extend downwardly from mask 62 and lie in the same planes as inner walls 84 (and optionally lie in the same planes as end walls 96). As source 58 and associated structure 78 are moved in direction 88 during evaporation operations, walls 84 remain in alignment with walls 86.
A cross-sectional side view of evaporation tool 50 of
Additional control of the angular spread of evaporated material may be provided by incorporating additional structures onto walls 84 and/or 86. A cross-sectional end view of an illustrative vertical inner wall 84 that has been provided with horizontal blocking structure 110 is shown in
The foregoing is merely illustrative and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the described embodiments. The foregoing embodiments may be implemented individually or in any combination.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 61/973,337 filed Apr. 1, 2014, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61973337 | Apr 2014 | US |