"With our approach, you can do it all in the same vacuum chamber," said L. Jay Guo, U-M professor of electrical and computer engineering and corresponding author of the study.
"Untreated, it is the strongest waveguiding layer in the OLED," Guo said. "We want to address the root cause of the problem."
By swapping out the ITO for a layer of silver just five nanometers thick, deposited on a seed layer of copper, Guo's team maintained the electrode function while eliminating the waveguiding problem in the OLED layers altogether.
This benefit is tricky to see, though, in a relatively simple lab device. Even though light is no longer guided in the OLED stack, that freed-up light can still be reflected from the glass. In industry, engineers have ways of reducing that reflection—creating bumps on the glass surface, or adding grid patterns or particles that will scatter the light throughout the glass.
"Some researchers were able to free up about 34% of the light by using unconventional materials with special emission directions or patterning structures," Jeong said.
In order to prove that they had eliminated the waveguiding in the light-emitter, Guo's team had to stop the light trapping by the glass, too. They did this with an experimental set-up using a liquid that had the same index of refraction as glass, so-called index-matching fluid—an oil in this case. That "index-matching" prevents the reflection that happens at the boundary between high-index glass and low-index air.
Once they'd done this, they could look at their experimental set-up from the side and see whether any light was coming sideways. They found that the edge of the light-emitting layer was almost completely dark. In turn, the light coming through the glass was about 20% brighter.
The University of Michigan has filed for patent protection.
Source and top image: University of Michigan
"light" - Google News
June 30, 2021 at 05:32PM
https://ift.tt/2UckED1
Nanotech OLED Electrode Frees 20% More Light, Could Slash Power Use - Printed Electronics World
"light" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Wm8QLw
https://ift.tt/2Stbv5k
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Nanotech OLED Electrode Frees 20% More Light, Could Slash Power Use - Printed Electronics World"
Post a Comment