The present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a flat display in which field emission type electron emission is controlled and, more particularly, to a method of manufacturing a control electrode structure for a flat display that uses a field emission type electron source.
In recent years, as a flat panel display such as a FED (Field Emission Display) or a flat vacuum fluorescent display in which electrons emitted from an electron-emitting source serving as a cathode are collided against a light-emitting portion formed of phosphors on a counter-electrode to emit light, various types that use nanotube fibers, e.g., carbon nanotubes or carbon nanofibers, as the electron-emitting source (CNT) have been proposed. As such a flat display using nanotube fibers as the electron-emitting source (CNT), one has been proposed in which an insulating substrate having electron-passing holes is arranged on a cathode formed with nanotube fibers and a control electrode which controls electron emission of the cathode is arranged on the insulating substrate.
A plurality of substrate ribs 102 vertically extend from one surface of the substrate 101 to be parallel to each other at predetermined intervals. Band-like cathodes 110, to the surfaces of which nanotube fibers are fixed as an electron-emitting source (CNT), are arranged in regions sandwiched by the substrate ribs 102 on the substrate 101, such that the cathodes 110 are almost the same height as that of the substrate ribs 102.
A plurality of front ribs 104 vertically extend from that surface of the front glass plate 103 which opposes the substrate 101, in a direction perpendicular or parallel to the substrate ribs 102 and cathode 110, at predetermined intervals. Band-like phosphor screens 105B, 105G, and 105R are arranged in those regions of the front glass plate 103 which are sandwiched by the front ribs 104. Metal-backed films 106 to serve as anodes are formed on those surfaces of the phosphor screens which oppose the substrate 101.
The control electrode structure 120 is arranged in the envelope, and is located between the substrate ribs 102 on the substrate 101 and the front ribs 104 of the front glass plate 103 to be separate from them.
Electron-passing holes 125, through which a field control electrode 122, insulating layer 121, control electrodes 123, and an insulating layer 124 communicate with each other, are formed in those regions of the control electrode structure 120 where the control electrodes 123 and cathodes 110 intersect.
The control electrode structure 120 includes the insulating layer 121, field control electrode 122 disposed on the front glass plate 103 side surface of the insulating layer 121, the band-like control electrodes 123 formed on the substrate 101 side surface of the insulating layer 121 in one-to-one correspondence with the phosphor screens 105B, 105G, and 105R, and the insulating layer 124 formed on the substrate 101 side surface of the insulating layer 121 so as to cover the control electrodes 123.
In this flat display, a predetermined potential difference is formed between the control electrode structure 120 and cathodes 110 such that the control electrode structure 120 side has a positive potential. Hence, electrons extracted from the intersecting regions of the cathodes 110 and control electrodes 123 are emitted through the electron-passing holes 125. When a positive potential (accelerating voltage) is applied to the metal-backed films 106, the electrons emitted from the electron-passing holes 125 are accelerated toward the metal-backed films 106, travel through the metal-backed films 106, and collide against the phosphor screens 105B, 105G, and 105R, so that the phosphor screens 105B, 105G, and 105R emit light.
In this flat display, a conventional control electrode structure is manufactured in the following manner. For example, a glass substrate printed with a separation layer is used as a workbench. An insulating layer 124′, control electrodes 123′, insulating layer 121′, and field control electrode 122′ are printed on the glass substrate in an overlapping manner at portions corresponding to electron-passing holes 125′ by using a screen having the pattern of the electron-passing holes 125′, and are calcined. If printing is performed from the field control electrode 122′ side, the insulating layers 121′ and 124′ may sag on the field control electrode 122′ and control electrodes 123′ to cover the respective electrodes. If printing is performed considering sagging, the control electrodes 123′ and an electron-emitting source (CNT) may undesirably come into contact with each other. Therefore, conventionally, the manufacture should not but be started from the insulating layer 124′ side, and the electron-passing holes 125′ are formed to gradually enlarge toward the anode electrode. In other words, a control electrode structure 120′ having a sectional structure as shown in
With the conventional manufacturing method of the control electrode structure 120′ as described above, when printing the respective layers, openings to form the electron-passing holes 125′ are also formed simultaneously. Accordingly, as shown in
It is, therefore, a principal object of the present invention to provide a method of manufacturing a control electrode structure for a flat display that uses a field emission type electron source, in which electron-passing holes can be formed in the flat display uniformly without causing sagging, blur, or the like and which is less influenced by an anode voltage.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of manufacturing a control electrode structure for a flat display, in which a flat display manufacturing process can be simplified.
In order to achieve the above objects, according to the present invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing a control electrode structure for a flat display that uses a field emission type electron source, comprising the steps of forming a field control electrode on one surface of an insulating substrate, a control electrode on the other surface of the insulating layer, and an insulating layer on the control electrode, and after the field control electrode, insulating substrate, control electrode, and insulating layer are formed, forming at once an electron-passing hole which extends through the field control electrode, insulating substrate, control electrode, and insulating layer which are stacked on each other.
An embodiment of a control electrode structure for a flat display that uses a field emission type electron source according to the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. The control electrode structure manufactured with the present invention is used for a flat display that uses the field emission type electron source described with reference to
First, the arrangement of the control electrode structure to be manufactured with a method of manufacturing a control electrode structure that uses a field emission type electron source according to this embodiment will be described with reference to
As shown in
In this case, the glass substrate 121 suffices as far as it is made of a material that hardly deforms or denatures during heating. For example, a glass substrate having a thickness of about 150 μm to 500 μm and made of borosilicate-based non-alkali glass or soda-lime glass is used.
The field control electrode 122 is formed on the entire portion of that surface of the glass substrate 121 which opposes the front glass plate 103. With the field control electrode 122, the control electrodes 123 and the cathodes 110 to which nanotube fibers are fixed as the electron-emitting source can be sealed electrically. At a region where the field control electrode 122 is formed, no electric field is generated by a potential difference between the cathodes 110 and metal-backed films 106 serving as anode electrodes, so that damage caused by field concentration on the electron-emitting source can be prevented. Although the field control electrode 122 is formed on the entire surface of the glass substrate 121 in the above embodiment, it can naturally be formed as a mesh.
The control electrodes 123 are arranged, on that surface of the glass substrate 121 which opposes the substrate 101, in the form of bands corresponding in number to the pixel arrays of the flat display, in a direction perpendicular to the cathodes 110 to be substantially parallel to each other. Spaces may be reserved, if necessary, between the arranged control electrodes 123.
The insulating layer 124 is made of, e.g., a glass ceramic material mixed with a glass material, chromium oxide, or the like which has a low secondary electron emission ratio, and is formed on the glass substrate 121 to cover the control electrodes 123, such that the thickness of the insulating layer 124 is, e.g., several ten μm to several hundred μm. The collision area where the electrons collide against the phosphor screens 105B, 105G, and 105R changes depending on the thickness of the insulating layer 124. For example, if the distance between the anode and the control electrodes 123 is constant, the larger the thickness of the insulating layer 124, the more the electrons passing through the control electrode structure 120 converge, and the narrower their collision area.
The electron-passing holes 125 are formed in the regions where the control electrodes 123 and cathodes 110 intersect. Electrons emitted from the electron-emitting source of the cathodes 110 pass through the electron-passing holes 125, and are accelerated toward the metal-backed films 106.
A method of manufacturing the control electrode structure 120 according to this embodiment will be described with reference to
First, a flat glass substrate 121 having a thickness of about 200 μm is prepared. As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Regarding the field control electrode 122, control electrodes 123, and insulating layer 124 to be formed on the respective surfaces of the glass substrate 121, the control electrodes 123 and insulating layer 124 may be formed first, and after that the field control electrode 122 may be formed.
Electron-passing holes 125 are formed at once in a control electrode structure 120 including the field control electrode 122, glass substrate 121, control electrodes 123, and insulating layer 124. For example, assume that the electron-passing holes 125 are to be formed by sandblasting. A resist material is applied to the insulating layer 124. The resist material is patterned to form a resist mask having holes at portions corresponding to the electron-passing holes 125. Alumina particles having a diameter of about 3 μm to 30 μm are blown like shower from the resist mask side toward the control electrode structure 120 at 50 m/sec to 100 m/sec. The alumina particles grind the respective constituent elements of the control electrode structure 120 exposed from the holes formed in the resist mask, so that the electron-passing holes 125 as shown in
In this case, the electron-passing hole 125 is formed in the control electrode structure 120 substantially as a frustum of right circular cone to gradually taper toward the anode electrode, in other words, to gradually enlarge with respect to the electron-emitting source, so that an electric field uniformly acts on the electron-emitting source (CNT). If the electron-passing hole 125 does not taper but is formed merely perpendicularly, an electric field acts on only a limited portion (where the electron-emitting source and control electrode are closest) of the electron-emitting source (CNT). Then, local electron emission occurs leading to non-uniform electron emission.
The sectional view of the control electrode structure 120 formed in accordance with this method is shown in
According to this embodiment, the field control electrode 122, control electrodes 123, and insulating layer 124 are formed on the glass substrate. After that, the electron-passing holes 125, through which the field control electrode 122, glass substrate 121, gate electrodes 123, and insulating layer 124 communicate with each other, are formed. Therefore, unlike in the conventional case, sagging, blur, or the like does not occur on the side surface of the electron-passing hole 125, and the side surface of the electron-passing holes 125 is formed smooth (flat), as often shown in
According to this embodiment, as the electron-passing holes 125 are formed from the insulating layer 124 side by sandblasting, each electron-passing hole 125 is formed substantially as a frustum of right circular cone the diameter of which gradually increases from the field control electrode 122 side toward the insulating layer 124 side. Because of this smooth shape, the shield effect and field application effect for the electrodes formed under the field control electrode 122 and the surface of the insulator are enhanced. Thus, the control electrode structure 120 can apply an electric field to the cathodes 110 effectively.
The method of forming the electron-passing holes 125 is not limited to sandblasting described above, but the electron-passing holes 125 can be formed by, e.g., etching or laser irradiation. These methods will be described hereinafter.
Assume that the electron-passing holes 125 are to be formed by etching. A resist material is applied to an insulating layer 124 of a control electrode structure 120 shown in
Assume that the electron-passing holes 125 are to be formed by laser irradiation. The control electrode structure 120 shown in
When the electron-passing holes 125 are formed by etching or laser irradiation described above, the same function and effect as in a case wherein the electron-passing holes 125 are formed by sandblasting can be obtained.
According to the present invention, the electron-passing holes are formed after the field control electrode, control electrodes, and insulating layer are formed on a flat glass substrate that uses a field emission type electron source. Thus, unlike in the conventional case, sagging, blur, or the like does not occur on the side surface of each electron-passing hole, and the respective surfaces and the side surface of each electron-passing hole are formed smooth. Consequently, the distances between the cathodes and control electrodes can be formed more uniform than in the conventional case, and the cathodes and control electrodes are formed close to each other. An electric field can thus be applied effectively to the electron-emitting source such as carbon nanotubes attaching to the cathodes. Therefore, electrons can be extracted from the cathodes effectively. Consequently, the uniformity of the brightness of the flat display increases, and a decrease in driving voltage can be realized.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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359476/2003 | Oct 2003 | JP | national |