1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method of bonding a transparent substrate and a substrate together with a liquid adhesive in a manner that brings the two into full-surface contact with each other. For example, the present invention relates to bonding a transparent cover plate of a cellular phone or other similar devices to a flat display such as a liquid crystal display device, a plasma display, an organic EL display, an inorganic EL display, or an FED, or bonding a touch panel to a flat display.
2. Description of the Related Art
A known method to place a transparent touch panel on a display panel is to fix the transparent touch panel to the perimeter of the display panel by adhesion provided by double-sided adhesive tape between 0.3 to 0.5 mm and 1 mm in thickness, or thicker. Another known method is to bond the display panel and the touch panel together in full-surface contact with the use of an optical adhesive (see, for example, JP 09-274536 A, which is hereinafter referred to as Patent Document 1).
A liquid crystal panel as a display screen of a cellular phone and a transparent cover plate over the display screen are assembled together with a 0.3 to 0.5-mm thick elastic member made of rubber or the like interposed between the two, in a non-transparent area formed by printing or the like between the perimeter of a display area of the liquid crystal panel and an outer area of the transparent cover plate which is outside the display area.
In cellular phones in particular, the demand for a thinner model which measures 0.2 mm or less between the transparent cover plate and the display panel is growing.
Employed for the transparent cover plate is an acrylic, polycarbonate or other transparent plastic material, or glass. The transparent cover plate is, in many cases, covered on the surface with a low reflective film made up of layers of materials to vary the refractive index in stages, or with an electromagnetic shield formed of copper, aluminum, or the like and having a grid-like etching pattern, or with a hard coat for preventing scratches. In the case of a glass cover plate, a film sheet for preventing cracking, a film sheet subjected to anti-glare treatment to prevent specular reflection, or the like is stuck over the glass surface. The transparent cover plate and the display element have a rectangular shape inmost cases. Variations of the touch panel include resistive panels (analog resistive film type and digital resistive film type), capacitive (CAP) panels, and surface acoustic wave (SAW) panels.
Thinning the gap between the perimeter of the flat display and the transparent cover plate into 0.1 mm or less is difficult because it causes problems including the lowering of the impact resistance and the generation of Newton rings. Air bubbles can also be a problem in the case where an optical adhesive sheet is used to bond the touch panel or the transparent cover plate and the flat display together in full-surface contact. The air bubbles that are a problem are ones large enough to be visible to the human eye, about 100 μm or more in size. Bonding by lamination without allowing air bubbles to form is particularly difficult for a thicker and more rigid touch panel or transparent cover plate. With an optical adhesive sheet, air bubbles form also when one or both of the display and the transparent cover plate themselves are warped and become detached from each other due to some reliability test condition or use environment.
The warp is particularly common in Chip-on-Glass, where a driver IC is mounted directly to a glass substrate with the use of an anisotropic conductive film and heat from the mounting causes the IC and the glass to warp away from each other. When a driver IC 0.5 mm in thickness and 2×20 mm in size is mounted to a non-alkali glass substrate with a thickness of 0.5 mm, the warp amounts to about 20 to 15 μm. The warp caused many samples prepared in this way and bonded by an optical adhesive sheet to peel beginning from an area near where the IC was mounted. In the case where the display and the transparent cover plate are bonded together in full-surface contact with the use of a liquid optical transparent adhesive which is cured by light such as UV or visible light, the warp of one or both of the two does not cause detachment from each other in a reliability test or a use environment as often. However, with a bonding method disclosed in Patent Document 1, filling the gap with the adhesive uniformly was difficult when the adhesive dripped only on the central part as shown in
Also, even air bubbles formed during bonding that are smaller than 100 μm in diameter cause conspicuous bright spots which look larger than the diameter of the air bubbles when the flat panel display is of reflective type and irradiated with intense outside light, or lit by backlight.
Therefore, the present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a display device in which a polygonal transparent member and a display element are bonded together with a transparent adhesive, the method including: applying a fixed amount of a liquid transparent adhesive member to one of a bonding surface of the polygonal transparent member and a bonding surface of the display device, in a dot shape in multiple spots; applying the liquid transparent adhesive member linearly in a manner that connects the dots of applied liquid transparent adhesive member; reversing one of the polygonal transparent member and the display element onto which the liquid transparent adhesive member has been applied; letting the liquid transparent adhesive member applied in dots to cause drip; bringing the liquid transparent adhesive member into contact with an opposite bonding surface while avoiding an impact to the dripping adhesive, to fill a gap further with the liquid transparent adhesive member; and curing the liquid transparent adhesive member. In this case, the liquid adhesive is a UV-curable adhesive or a visible light-curable adhesive, and has a curing shrinkage percentage of 1 to 6%. Also, the transparent member is exemplified by a touch panel, a plastic plate, or a glass plate. Further, in the curing the liquid adhesive, the liquid adhesive, which is a photo-curing adhesive such as a UV-curable adhesive or a visible light-curable adhesive, is cured by two different curing means, which are a first curing means for irradiating the adhesive with light through the transparent member and a second curing means for directly irradiating the adhesive with light from a direction of a side surface of the transparent member.
Also, the present invention relates to a method of bonding a polygonal transparent plate and a plate-like bonding member together with a transparent adhesive, the method including: applying a fixed amount of the liquid transparent adhesive member to a bonding surface of the polygonal transparent plate in a dot shape in multiple spots; applying the liquid transparent adhesive member linearly in a manner that connects the dots of applied liquid transparent adhesive member; reversing the polygonal transparent plate to which the liquid transparent adhesive member has been applied; letting the liquid transparent adhesive member applied in dots to cause drip; bringing the liquid transparent adhesive member into contact with the plate-like bonding member while avoiding an impact to the dripping adhesive, to fill a gap between the transparent plate and the bonded member further with the liquid transparent adhesive member; and curing the liquid transparent adhesive member. Further, the liquid adhesive is a photo-curing adhesive such as a UV-curable adhesive or a visible light-curable adhesive, and in curing the liquid transparent adhesive member, the liquid adhesive is cured by two different curing means, which are a first curing means for irradiating the adhesive with light through the transparent plate and a second curing means for directly irradiating the adhesive with light from a direction of a side surface of the transparent plate.
In the accompanying drawings:
The present invention provides a method of bonding a polygonal transparent plate and a plate-like member together with a transparent adhesive, and the method includes: applying a fixed amount of the liquid transparent adhesive member to a bonding surface of the transparent plate, or a bonding surface of the plate-like member, at least in multiple spots; and applying more adhesive in a manner that connects the spots of applied adhesive linearly, or includes the step of applying the adhesive in a continuous line and then in a dot or dots along the line in an amount larger than the one used for the linear adhesive application. The method further includes: reversing the transparent plate or the plate-like member to which the adhesive has been applied; letting the adhesive to cause drip bring the adhesive into contact with the opposite bonding surface and fill the gap further with the adhesive; and irradiating the adhesive with light from the transparent plate side to cure the adhesive.
Applying a fixed amount of the adhesive to parts of the bonding surface near the corners particularly helps to balance the amount of adhesive among different parts of the bonding surface and make the thickness of the applied adhesive even. Also, the problem of air bubbles due to air caught during the filling is solved by applying the adhesive in spots around the corners and at the center and then applying the adhesive linearly to connect the spots. The adhesive may be applied in one stroke by repeating applying the adhesive in a fixed amount, applying the adhesive linearly, further applying the adhesive in a fixed amount, and further applying the adhesive linearly. In the case of the single-stroke application, the linear adhesive application may go over the same place twice. After the adhesive application is finished, one of the two substrates to which the adhesive has been applied is reversed, causing the adhesive to drip slowly onto the opposite substrate. At the time the adhesive dripping from the spots around the corners and at the center comes into contact with the opposite substrate, the descending speed of the substrate to which the adhesive has been applied may be increased.
The present invention is equally effective for a transparent touch panel and a transparent cover plate, and can bond whichever of the two to a flat display by an adhesive layer of uniform thickness without generating air bubbles. With a UV-curable adhesive or a visible light-curable adhesive that has a curing shrinkage percentage of 1 to 6%, the shrinkage of the adhesive from curing does not cause the color to look uneven on the flat display, while air bubbles contained in the adhesive before curing become smaller as the adhesive shrinks from curing. The present invention can thus reduce air bubbles smaller than 100 μm in diameter.
In the case of a transparent plate that has a non-transparent area, the method of curing the adhesive by irradiating the adhesive with light from the front side of the transparent plate through the transparent plate is not effective since the non-transparent area prevents the light from reaching a part of the adhesive that overlaps with the non-transparent area. The part of the adhesive that overlaps with the non-transparent area can be cured by radiating light from a side of the transparent plate.
A method suitable to bond a rectangular transparent cover plate or touch panel to a flat display is as follows. A suitable viscosity of the adhesive is 3,000 to 2,000 cP. When the thickness of an adhesive layer that bonds the transparent cover plate (or touch panel) and the flat display together is set to about 100 μm, the amount of the adhesive to be applied, which is calculated with respect to the area of the bonding surface, is 0.0135 g/cm2±10%. The adhesive is applied to the bonding surface of the transparent cover plate in dots around the corners and at the center of the bonding surface. The applied adhesive is later caused to drip. The application amount per spot is calculated by dividing 50 to 80% of the total application amount into substantially equal parts. The remaining adhesive is applied linearly in a manner that connects the dots of applied adhesive around the corners and at the center to one another. Air bubbles should not be let in during this adhesive application. After the adhesive has been applied, the transparent cover plate is reversed to cause the dots of applied adhesive to drip. The reversed transparent cover plate and the flat display are positioned with respect to each other from end to end and side to side, and the dripping adhesive is brought into contact with the flat display at a rate of about 20 m/sec. while avoiding an impact. The distance between the flat display and the transparent cover plate is also closed at substantially the same rate. At the time the adhesive applied linearly to the transparent cover plate has dripped onto the flat display, the motion of the transparent cover plate is stopped making sure that the correct position is maintained from end to end and side to side. In this state, the adhesive is let drip by its own weight for about 30 to 120 seconds to fill the gap, coating the entire bonding surfaces. After the filling is completed, the adhesive is irradiated with UV for curing the adhesive from the front and sides of the transparent cover plate, whereby the bonding is completed. The adhesive is a UV-curable type adhesive that has a curing shrinkage percentage of about 2%.
An embodiment of the present invention is described below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Next, as shown in
The reversing causes the dots of the applied adhesive 2 to drip as shown in
The dots of the applied adhesive 2 come into contact with the display 3 and start to smear the display 3. The display 3 viewed from above the transparent plate 1 at this point is shown in
In this state, the transparent plate 1 is freed and the adhesive is let drip by its own weight to fill the gap between the transparent plate 1 and the display 3. The gap is filled with the adhesive 10 as shown in
The filling of the gap between the transparent plate 1 and the display 3 is completed as shown in
Air bubbles smaller than 100 μm in diameter that are contained in the adhesive 2 before curing can be eliminated through curing by employing an ultraviolet-curable or visible light-curable adhesive that has a curing shrinking percentage of 1 to 6%. As long as air bubbles about 100 μm in diameter or larger are formed during the bonding, the bonded substrates are free from air bubbles.
The transparent substrate may be an analog type touch panel, a capacitive (CAP) touch panel, or a surface acoustic wave (SAW) touch panel. The transparent substrate may also be made of sapphire glass, alkali glass, or soda glass, or reinforced glass of the above, or PMMA or PC, or may be a laminate of the above. The flat display 3. is not limited to the TFT liquid crystal type, and other types of flat display can be employed including STN or other liquid crystal displays, organic EL or inorganic EL displays, and plasma displays. The adhesive 2 may be a visible light-curable type instead of a UV-curable type, or may be a type cured by a combination of UV light and visible light.
The bonding method described above solves the detachment of a transparent cover plate and a flat panel display with age, which is caused by contained air bubbles and the warping of one or both of the bonded members. Also, an adhesive layer containing no air bubbles and having a uniform thickness is obtained. The above bonding method thus makes it possible to thin the gap between the transparent cover plate and the flat panel display to approximately 20 to 30 μm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-344302 | Nov 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2006/323268 | 11/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/21/2008 |