1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to light-emitting devices having a plurality of organic electroluminescent elements, and in particular, to a light-emitting device in which variations in brightness are suppressed.
2. Description of the Related Art
Light-emitting devices having a plurality of organic electroluminescent elements attract a considerable attention as selfluminous devices that hold promise for low profile and low power consumption. The organic electroluminescent element has an organic compound layer between an anode and a cathode and emits light using energy generated when electrons and holes injected into the organic compound layer from the cathode and the anode, respectively, are recombined.
It is known that the organic electroluminescent element exhibits degradation, such as decreasing in brightness, with a lapse of driving time to increase the driving voltage. Since the degradation differs from one organic electroluminescent element to another, variations in brightness occur in a light-emitting device having a plurality of organic electroluminescent elements. The variations in brightness are a phenomenon in which brightness differs for the same input signal among organic electroluminescent elements to cause differences in visual brightness. To correct the variations in brightness, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2006-30317 proposes an organic electroluminescent display in which a photosensor is provided in each pixel, and the brightness is compensated for each pixel depending on the emission quantity of each organic electroluminescent element.
The present invention suppresses variations in brightness.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a light-emitting device including a plurality of pixels including an organic electroluminescent element, a drive transistor driving the organic electroluminescent element, and a hold capacitor holding a control signal for controlling the drive transistor, the organic electroluminescent element being electrically connected to one of a source electrode and a drain electrode of the drive transistor. The hold capacitor includes a metal layer, an insulating layer, and a semiconductor layer in this order. The semiconductor layer receives light emitted from the organic electroluminescent element. One of the metal layer and the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor is electrically connected to a gate electrode of the drive transistor, and the other of the metal layer and the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor is specified at a fixed potential.
With the light-emitting device according to the aspect of the present invention, variations in brightness can be suppressed.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
An embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings.
The hold capacitor used in the embodiment of the present invention includes a metal layer, an insulating layer, and a semiconductor layer in this order. The semiconductor layer is provided at a position that receives light emitted from the organic electroluminescent element and has the function of photoelectric conversion, such as an amorphous silicon layer.
When the light-emitting device is to be driven, first, a binary potential that turns on or off the select transistor 6 is applied in sequence to the select line 2. The pixel 1 in which a potential that turns on the select transistor 6 is applied to the select line 2 is given a control signal through the signal line 3, and the control signal is held in the hold capacitor 20. Specifically, a charge quantity corresponding to a potential difference between the signal potential and a potential applied to the GND line 8 (hereinafter referred to as a signal voltage) is held in the hold capacitor 20. Even if a potential that turns off the select transistor 6 is thereafter applied to the select line 2 during the emission period of the organic electroluminescent element 10, the charge quantity corresponding to the signal voltage is kept held in the hold capacitor 20. Then, a drive current corresponding to the potential difference between the gate and source of the drive transistor 30, that is, corresponding to the control signal held in the hold capacitor 20, is supplied to the organic electroluminescent element 10 through the feeder line 7, so that the organic electroluminescent element 10 emits light at an emission intensity responding to the control signal.
Next,
Next, an operation in which variations in brightness in the pixel 1 are suppressed in the light-emitting device in which this action is applied according to the embodiment of the present invention will be described. In the circuit diagram of
In contrast, with the hold capacitor 20 according to the embodiment of the present invention, the emission of the pixels X and Y becomes uneven during the emission period. That is, as shown in
The organic electroluminescent element 10 has a configuration in which the second electrode 11, an organic compound layer 12, and a first electrode 13 are provided on the insulative substrate 40 made of, such as glass, quartz, and ceramic, in order from the substrate 40, and is disposed in the emission region 4. The organic electroluminescent element 10 is stacked on the hold capacitor 20, with an insulating layer 41 made of SiOx, SiNx, or a film stack thereof therebetween. Emission of the organic electroluminescent element 10 uses energy when electrons or holes are injected from the second electrode 11 and the first electrode 13, respectively, into the organic compound layer 12 and are recombined in the organic compound layer 12. In this embodiment, a so-called top-emission type light-emitting device in which light from the organic electroluminescent element is extracted from the opposite side of the substrate 40 (from the first electrode 13 side) will be described.
The second electrode 11 may be a metal layer made of simple metal, such as Al, Cr, Ag, and an alloy thereof. The second electrode 11 has the function of reflecting the light from the organic electroluminescent element 10. The second electrode 11 needs to be used at a thickness between 30 nm and 200 nm, more preferably, between 30 nm and 50 nm to allow part (between 0.01% and 10%) of the light from the organic electroluminescent element to pass through the hold capacitor 20, to be described later. Furthermore, a metal oxide conductive layer with high light transmittance, such as a compound layer made of indium oxide and tin oxide and a compound layer made of indium oxide and zinc oxide, may be formed on the metal layer. In the present invention, the high light transmittance means that the transmittance at the peak wavelength of the spectrum of light extracted from the organic electroluminescent element is between 50% and 100%.
The organic compound layer 12 has at least a light-emitting layer and has a charge transport layer, such as a hole transport layer and an electron transport layer, as necessary. The layer that constitutes the organic compound layer can be formed of a known material using a known method, such as a resistance heating evaporation method and a spin coating method.
The first electrode 13 may be the above-described metal layer with a thickness between 5 nm and 20 nm or a single layer of the above-described metal oxide conductive layer with high light transmittance to allow 60% or more of the light generated in the organic electroluminescent element 10 to pass therethrough. The first electrode 13 may also adopt a stacked structure thereof.
Reference numeral 42 denotes an insulating layer for preventing shorting of the second electrode 11 and the first electrode 13 and may be formed of acryl resin or polyimide resin with a thickness between 1 μm and 3 μm.
The hold capacitor 20 adopts a configuration in which a metal layer 21, an insulating layer 22, the semiconductor layer 23, and a conductive layer 24 are disposed on the substrate 40 in order from the substrate 40. The semiconductor layer 23 is formed of a photoelectric conversion layer that generates electric charge by receiving light. In this embodiment, the hold capacitor 20 is disposed between the second electrode 11 of the organic electroluminescent element 10 and the substrate 40. The light emitted from the organic electroluminescent element 10 passes through the second electrode 11 and is received by the semiconductor layer 23 of the hold capacitor 20. By receiving the light from the organic electroluminescent element 10 with the semiconductor layer 23, the hold capacitor 20 can be used also as a photo detector and as compensating means for compensating variations in brightness.
To allow the light to be received by the semiconductor layer 23 more efficiently, the area of the hold capacitor 20 in the direction of the plane of the substrate 40 is preferably larger than the emission area of the organic electroluminescent element 10 in the emission region 4. The emission area is the area of the emission region 4 and also the area of a region in the direction of the plane of the substrate 40 in which the second electrode 11, the organic compound layer 12, and the first electrode 13 overlap in the vertical direction on the substrate 40, and the insulating layer 42 is not disposed. In
The semiconductor layer 23 serving as a photoelectric conversion layer may be either of N-type and P-type semiconductor layers. Specifically, an amorphous silicon layer or a microcrystalline silicon layer may be used; the amorphous silicon layer is preferable in view of photoelectric conversion efficiency. The semiconductor layer 23 may adopt a configuration in which an amorphous silicon layer and an N-type or P-type amorphous silicon layer in which impurities are doped. The thickness of the semiconductor layer 23 is preferably between 50 nm and 300 nm. The semiconductor layer 23 formed of the N-type amorphous silicon layer will be described hereinbelow.
The metal layer 21 can be made of Mo, Ti, W, Ni, Ta, Cu, Al, an alloy thereof, or a stacked structure thereof. The thickness is preferably between 5 nm and 300 nm.
The insulating layers 22 and 41 can be made of SiOx, SiNx, or a film stack thereof. The thickness is preferably between 100 nm and 500 nm. The capacity of the hold capacitor 20 can be changed depending on the thickness of the insulating layer 22.
The conductive layer 24 can be made of the same material as that of the metal layer 21. However, since the light from the organic electroluminescent element 10 needs to reach the semiconductor layer 23 through the conductive layer 24, the conductive layer 24 preferably has a thickness between 5 nm and 200 nm so as to provide a transmittance of 1% or higher. The conductive layer 24 can be a metal oxide conductive layer with high light transmittance, such as a compound layer made of indium oxide and tin oxide and a compound layer made of indium oxide and zinc oxide.
The terminal N1 of the hold capacitor 20 in
The drive transistor 30 includes the gate electrode 31, the insulating layer 22, a semiconductor layer 32, the source electrode 33, and a drain electrode 34 and is formed in the nonemission region 5. The drain electrode 34 is electrically connected to the second electrode 11 of the organic electroluminescent element 10. The semiconductor layer 32 is made of amorphous silicon. The region of the semiconductor layer 32 on which the source electrode 33 and the drain electrode 34 are formed is doped with N-type impurities. With this configuration, the drive transistor 30 serves as an N-type transistor. The gate electrode 31, the source electrode 33, and the drain electrode 34 can be made of the same material as that of the metal layer 21 of the hold capacitor 20.
In
The semiconductor layer 32 may be made of either the same material as that of the semiconductor layer 23 of the hold capacitor 20 or a different material therefrom.
In this embodiment, although the organic electroluminescent element 10 is connected to the drain electrode 34 of the drive transistor 30, the organic electroluminescent element 10 may be connected to the source electrode 33 of the drive transistor 30.
The pixel 1 may have an auxiliary capacitor (not shown) connected to the gate electrode 31 of the drive transistor 30, in addition to the hold capacitor 20.
The terminal N1 of the hold capacitor 20 in
In the first embodiment, the signal voltage across the hold capacitor 20 is the voltage across the gate and source of the drive transistor 30. Therefore, if the emission intensity of the organic electroluminescent element is low, the signal voltage across the hold capacitor 20 is small, so that the light sensitivity of the hold capacitor 20 is small as shown in
Although the first embodiment and the second embodiment have been described using the N-type drive transistor 30, a P-type drive transistor can also be used. For example, to form the circuit configuration shown in
Alternatively, if the drive transistor is of N type, and a P-type semiconductor layer is used as the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor, the metal layer of the hold capacitor is electrically connected to the gate electrode of the drive transistor, and the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor is set at a fixed potential lower than the signal potential. Alternatively, if the drive transistor is of P-type, and an N-type semiconductor layer is used as the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor, the metal layer of the hold capacitor is electrically connected to the gate electrode of the drive transistor, and the semiconductor layer of the hold capacitor is set at a fixed potential higher than the signal potential.
To enhance the effect of compensation, there is a method of increasing the capacity of the hold capacitor in addition to increasing the voltage across the hold capacitor, as described above. Specifically, there are a method of increasing the area of the hold capacitor in the direction of the plane of the substrate and a method of decreasing the thickness of the insulating layer of the hold capacitor. Alternatively, there are a method of decreasing the thickness of the insulating layer between the hold capacitor and the organic electroluminescent element and a method of decreasing the thickness of the second electrode of the organic electroluminescent element.
The light-emitting devices according to the embodiments of the present invention can be applied to various uses, such as a back light for a display. Furthermore, they can also be applied to displays of television systems, personal computers, digital cameras, and mobile phones.
As shown in
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2009-250832 filed Oct. 30, 2009, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-250832 | Oct 2009 | JP | national |