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Transistor test: The glass slides in this image are patterned with transistors designed for driving OLED displays. The metal probes and wires are being used to test their performance.
Andrew Rinzler
Stacked components could make OLED screens competitive with LCDs.
Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays are energy-efficient and crisp, but high manufacturing costs have kept them from being as widely available as liquid-crystal displays (LCDs), especially in larger devices such as TVs. A new type of OLED electronics could help bring down manufacturing costs and make the technology much more widely available.
"There is no good solution to make OLED electronics that can be scaled up inexpensively," says Andrew Rinzler, professor of physics at the University of Florida. Rinzler led the work on developing a type of electronics for OLEDs that he hopes will provide such a solution. The work was funded in part by the venture capital firm Nano Holdings.
The pixels in OLED displays use transistors to stimulate organic molecules, which then emit different colors of light. OLED displays do not need the light-wasting filters that make LCDs such energy hogs. But LCDs dominate the market in large part because the amorphous-silicon transistor arrays used to drive LCDs can be made over areas as big as a single-car garage door and then sliced into smaller pieces to make displays for TVs and other devices. Manufacturing at this scale helps keep costs down.
OLED display makers can't use the same electronics because switching the pixels in an OLED requires relatively high currents that rapidly burn out amorphous-silicon transistors. Instead, today's OLED displays are built on more expensive polycrystalline-silicon transistor arrays. The largest OLED display on the market (in Europe, but not yet available in the U.S.) is a 15-inch model made by LG. It sells for just over $2,300; the same size LCD TV costs under $200.
Less-expensive OLED electronics could, in theory, be made by using organic materials for the electronics as well as the pixels. Transistors made using organic semiconductors provide the high currents needed to drive OLED pixels. But electrons move through conventional organic transistors slowly, which results in a display that doesn't refresh the picture fast enough. To speed these transistors up, engineers have altered the design, shrinking components to bring the source and drain electrodes closer together and make the channel smaller. This makes the device faster because the electrons don't have to travel as far through the organic material that makes up the channel, which can't conduct the electrons very fast. But making such high-resolution devices requires expensive lithography techniques.
A less expensive method, developed by Rinzler and colleagues, is to bring the source and drain electrodes of a transistor closer together by stacking components on top of one another instead of side by side. Rinzler's group, including graduate students Mitchell McCarthy and Bo Liu, made these transistors by depositing a film of aluminum on a glass substrate to act as the gate electrode, then oxidizing it to create a thin insulating layer on top. Next the researchers deposited an ultrathin, dilute layer of carbon nanotubes to act as a source electrode, followed by a layer of organic materials to act as the channel, and finally a top layer of gold as a drain electrode. Each of these films is very thin, enabling good performance without the need for high-resolution lithography techniques, says Rinzler.
I hadn't heard of the OLEDs hitting the market in Europe and I'm very anxious to see one in action if/when they come to the US. I use samsung displays and they are very bright and easy to read. I wonder how the OLEDs will stack up end user wise.
Thanks for the post.
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190 Comments
Transistor descriptor
Aluminum oxide (an insulator) as a gate electrode? So I looked up the article. Your description of the transistor is completely different from the article. The gate electrode, deposited on the glass substrate, is aluminum, with oxide formed above it as insulator. Then comes the carbon nanotube source electrode, with a gold contact above part of it. Horizontally displaced from the gold contact is an organic channel layer topped by a gold drain electrode.
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Katherine Bourzac
27 Comments
Re: Transistor descriptor
After consultation with the U Florida researchers, the description of the device structure has been corrected.
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