This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 05425255.6, filed on Apr. 21, 2006, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a device for the presentation of information, characterized in that it is at the same time transparent, i.e., it enables vision of the scene at the rear of the device, and emissive, i.e., it presents the user with information in the form of light emitted by the device itself.
A device of this type is of particular interest for the vehicle sector in so far as it enables presentation of the information on two different planes, namely, the background, i.e., the external scene visible to the user through the windows of the vehicle, such as the windscreen, rear window and side windows, and the light image generated by the device.
The interest of this type of devices is not limited, however, to the vehicle sector; the advertising sector or that of information to the public are just two examples of the possible fields of application of the device.
Transparent devices based upon light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are already present in the known art; for example, the patent application No. EP1460609 describes a solution for transparent and programmable LED displays comprising: an array of LEDs in a row-column configuration, each row of said LEDs being connected by an electric wire, each column being connected to a transparent-conductive-oxide (TCO) layer deposited on the underlayer, said transparent layer being electrically insulated from said row of wires; and means for electrical turning-on associated to said array.
The use of metal wires for interconnecting the LEDs of each row enables a reduction in the voltage drops due to the electrical resistance of the row and hence use of decidedly lower supply voltages. Said metal wires are bonded on the underlayer of TCO only in areas corresponding to purposely provided pads obtained by cutting the layer of TCO along a closed circular path, so as to insulate said pads electrically from the corresponding column of TCO.
The solution described in the patent application No. EP1460609 presents a series of limitations:
In order to overcome the drawbacks described above, the subject of the invention is a display according to claim 1. Further advantageous characteristics are indicated in claims 2-19 and 25-36. Also forming the subject of the invention is a method for making the display, having the characteristics indicated in claim 20.
The present invention is consequently able to overcome the drawbacks of the known art through:
LED sources can be integrated directly in the form of chips or dice (multilayer semiconductor elements that emit light radiation if electrically supplied) on a printed circuit. Some typical applications are light signalling devices, headlights or other lights for motor vehicles, devices for information to the public, etc.
The technique for fabrication of said devices goes under the name of chip-on-board (COB) technology and consists in the mounting of arrays of LED chips directly on an appropriate underlayer. Said technology comprises first the process known by the term “die-bonding” (i.e., thermal or electro-thermal connection of the die to the underlayer), associated to which are possible operations of “wire bonding” (electrical connection of the chip to the circuit). Amongst the die-bonding techniques, flip-chip methodology envisages the turning of the chip upside down and electro-thermal connection to the circuit of its pads without using wires for the electrical connection, thus excluding a further wire-bonding process. In the flip-chip process, the connections of the pads are typically obtained by means of metal bumps (balls). As final step, the COB process envisages packaging or protection of the source from the external stresses using appropriate resins.
The invention will now be described with reference to the annexed plate of drawings, in which:
In the preferred embodiment represented in
In the solution represented in
1) preparation of the (glass or plastic) underlayer coated with transparent conductive oxide (for example, indium-tin oxide—ITO);
2) separation of the columns of TCO 10 (through a photolithographic process or a laser-ablation process);
3) formation of metal pads, two for each die, of which one, 11, at least in part set on top of the respective column of TCO and the other, 22, set between said column of TCO and the adjacent column of TCO, in areas corresponding to the row; the formation of the pads can be obtained, for example, through a technique of shadow masking, or else through a uniform evaporation of the metal and a subsequent removal via photolithography; this step is necessary for guaranteeing a good adhesion of the metal bond on the underlayer;
4) pick-and-place of the die 2 on the respective metal pad 22;
5) die-attach of the die 2 with electrically and thermally conductive resin;
6) wire bonding between the top electrode of each individual die and the respective metal pad 11;
7) wire bonding between the metal pad 22 of each individual die and the metal pad 22 of the subsequent die along the same address row; and
8) protective coating with transparent resin (for example, silicone or epoxy resin) and overlayer (of glass or plastic).
The use of an overlayer 1′ (of glass or plastic) has the function of guaranteeing planarity of the protective layer of transparent resin, not only in order to ensure transparency of the device, but also to ensure that the panel will not distort the view of the background and/or will not introduce optical power.
In the embodiment described above (represented in
In a further embodiment, represented in
The steps of the process described above are replaced by the following steps:
1) preparation of the (glass or plastic) underlayer coated with transparent conductive oxide (TCO; for example, indium-tin oxide—ITO);
2) separation of the columns of TCO 10 (through a photolithographic process or a laser-ablation process);
3) formation of metal pads, 3 for each LED chip, of which the first (11) at least in part overlying the respective column of TCO, the second (12) and the third (22) set between said column of TCO and the adjacent column of TCO, in areas corresponding to the row; the formation of the pads can be obtained, for example, through a technique of shadow masking, or else through a uniform evaporation of the metal and a subsequent removal via photolithography; this step is necessary for guaranteeing a good adhesion of the metal bond on the underlayer.
4) pick-and-place of the die on the respective metal pad 12;
5) die-attach of the die with thermally conductive resin;
6) wire bonding between the electrodes of one and the same type (for example, the cathodes) of each individual die and the respective pads 11;
7) wire bonding between the electrodes of the other type (for example, the anodes) and the respective pads 22;
8) wire bonding between the metal pad 22 of each individual LED chip and the metal pad 22 of the subsequent LED chip along the same address row;
9) protective coating with transparent resin (for example, silicone or epoxy resin) and overlayer (glass or plastic).
In a further embodiment, represented in
b presents a variant, in which an insulating layer is deposited on top of the paths 10 in areas corresponding to said points of intersection 35 so as to prevent said stretches of wire 21 from coming into electrical contact with said paths 10 on account of a deformation of the wire.
A further variant of the present invention is represented in
A further variant of the present invention is represented in
Again with reference to
In order to limit the number of LED sources, at the same time reducing this effect of dashed appearance of the image, according to a variant of said invention (
Said effect can be further strengthened by the metal pads that are deposited on the paths made of TCO for the purpose of improving adhesion of the bonding operations (or else directly by the conductive paths 10, 20 that connect the sources, in the case where said paths are made of metal instead of TCO). In fact, said pads tend to reflect part of the light emitted by the lateral surfaces of the die; the reflected light impinges upon the micro-indentations 36, which produces an increase in the actual dimensions of the source.
A further solution that can be adopted is to deposit the protective resin 1″ in the form of paths that connect the different dice. The light emitted by the dice is thus in part entrapped by said paths of resin (light-guide effect) and subsequently extracted by purposely provided micro-indentations 36 made on the surface of said path of resin, or else, in the case where an overlayer 1′ is used, on the surface of said overlayer.
Said micro-indentations 36 may be in the form of cylindrical microlenses with axis perpendicular to the line of connection of the dice (
Alternatively, said micro-indentations can be in the form of microlenses with rotational symmetry, each microlens having its axis of symmetry perpendicular to said underlayer 1 and passing through the centre of one of said dice.
The micro-indentations 36 can also be simply areas with high roughness, such as to diffuse the light emitted by the LEDs.
According to a further variant of the present invention, said effect of dashed appearance of the image can be reduced or eliminated using a density of LED sources, i.e., a number of dice per unit length, such that the angular separation between two sources with respect to the eye of the user is comparable with the angular resolution of the eye.
By way of example, if the display is installed at a distance of 1 m from the driver and the distance between two adjacent dice is 0.3 mm, i.e., comparable with the dimensions of the die, the angular separation between the LEDs is approximately 1 minute of arc, equal to the resolution of the eye in the fovea.
It is known, however, how the eye will tend to merge points angularly separated by up to 3 minutes of arc, which would enable the spacing between the pixels to be increased up to 1 mm, thus reducing the number of sources necessary by a factor of 3.
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