Universal Display Corporation’s phosphorescent organic LED display can be built on a flexible plastic substrate. The company, working with researchers at the University of Southern California and Princeton University, has now made near-infrared emitting LEDs and plans to make a near-infrared version of the flexible display. The display would be invisible to the naked eye but visible through night-vision goggles for covert military operations.
Julie Brown, Universal Display Corporation

Computing

Organic LEDs Shine Invisibly

Long-lasting near-infrared LEDs could be used to make cheap, flexible night-vision displays and sensors.

  • Tuesday, January 30, 2007
  • By Prachi Patel

Researchers at the University of Southern California have designed a phosphorescent dye molecule that emits near-infrared light and have used it to make long-lasting organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs).

The diodes could be used to make a cheap and flexible near-infrared (NIR) display that would be unreadable to the naked eye but could be read with night-vision goggles. Such a display could be integrated into a soldier's uniform or a device that could be stashed in a pocket, allowing soldiers to read communications at night without being spotted by enemy snipers.

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These organic LEDs could also be converted into the infrared-detector diodes that make night vision possible. Infrared detectors are essentially the reverse of LEDs, converting light into an electric current. Warm objects emit infrared radiation, which has wavelengths longer than near-infrared radiation and is also invisible to the human eye. Just as the light detectors in cameras sense visible light, infrared sensors made of inorganic semiconductors detect infrared light in the night-vision goggles and cameras used by the military, police, border security agents, and firefighters. But detectors based on OLEDs would offer an important benefit: because the thin organic polymers that make up these diodes can be deposited on a variety of substrates, including bendable plastic, organic IR detectors could be flexible enough to incorporate into a helmet visor.

"Flexibility is very beneficial ... next-generation displays are all going to be on flexible substrates," says Mark Thompson, a chemistry professor at the University of Southern California, who led the research. Organic LEDs are the crucial technology for flexible displays, because they are easy and cheap to pattern on bendable substrates, he says. They are already being used in camera and cell-phone displays, and they hold tremendous promise for future large-area computer and television screens.

Research in organic LEDs has largely focused on visible-light applications; no one has previously made an organic LED that efficiently emits NIR light. Thompson and his colleagues at Princeton University and Universal Display Corporation, a company based in Ewing, NJ, described their organic LED online in Angewandte Chemie on January 9.

Organic LEDs that emit invisible NIR wavelengths could be used to make displays that you do not want everyone to see. "For covert military applications, night-vision displays will be very important, and these diodes would be key to that," says Ghassan Jabbour, an optical-sciences professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson, who developed the first NIR-emitting organic molecules.

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amgillard

10 Comments

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Enemy Snipers

So what is to stop the "enemy snipers" using their own night vision goggles to see the light emitted by these displays ?

Reply

briang1621

173 Comments

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

Nothing, snipers with Night vision will be able to faintly detect these displays.  However, most applications of Night Vision are expect to be against adversaries that do not have night vision, thus for a percentage of the application there is a combat advantage.
Brian Glassman
Innovation Management
Commercialization of technology

Reply

emadsenus

1 Comment

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

This is very true. More than likely, imperialist forces such as the US invariably pick enemies they feel they can overcome with no more than a moderate effort, as long as the payoff in corporate contracts outweighs the cost.

Reply

Sly

11 Comments

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

Yeah, but still, they lose !
That's because they are missing the diplomatic part...

Reply

gabrielg01

450 Comments

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

Reply

jsessex

14 Comments

  • 1842 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

Flame wars aside, this technology provides people using night vision devices the ability to read text and graphics more eaisly.  Normal illuminated displays show up as very bright flairs of light to people using NVGs.  Non-illuminated displays do not show up.  This tecnnology provides a display less ob vious to observers (dim glow vs. flare) while allowing the user to continue to use their NVGs without removing them to read a display.

It is better for the west to use every technological advantage against our enimies.  We do not have the stomach to out brutalize them, the alternative method for subduing an opponent without killing them all.

Reply

Sly

11 Comments

  • 1378 Days Ago
  • 05/08/2008

Re: Enemy Snipers

The problem is "who is the enemy".
Are you sure those would be used against your real enemy or just to help harvest petrol?
( don't tell me petrol is really the thing you need, to be happy...)

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miloc

1 Comment

  • 1836 Days Ago
  • 02/05/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers

There would be a lot more applications most probably that anyone can come up with with this led's.

Reply

bani

1 Comment

  • 1826 Days Ago
  • 02/15/2007

Re: Enemy Snipers-other uses

There are tons of real world uses. Here's one, how a bout a tv, could watch content with glasses that you don't want kids to see, or wife could be reading a book, while you watch, sports, action movie, whatever, without other parties being disturbed

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Sly

11 Comments

  • 1378 Days Ago
  • 05/08/2008

Re: Enemy Snipers-other uses

I believe this would be monochrome.
Not much for TV.

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