Light-Emitting Diodes: OLED pixel array is transparent
If windows and other transparent media could be made to display information, designers would have great latitude to create self-contained head-up displays for vehicles, advertisements appearing in the window glass of boutiques, or interactive art displays. Until now, however, most attempts to do thi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Laser focus world 2006-06, Vol.42 (6), p.24 |
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description | If windows and other transparent media could be made to display information, designers would have great latitude to create self-contained head-up displays for vehicles, advertisements appearing in the window glass of boutiques, or interactive art displays. Until now, however, most attempts to do this failed because of a lack of compatibility between the various manufacturing steps. Materials must be transparent, sufficiently conductive, and capable of light emission on demand. Transparent flexible plastics are one approach; however, they are sensitive to any manufacturing processes that raise the temperature of the plastic. Now, a group at the Technische Universitat, Institut fur Hochfrequenztechnik (Braunschweig, Germany) has taken an important step toward creating a practical transparent display. The scientists fabricated an array of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDS)-including their driving circuits-on a thin glass sheet, the whole being greater tha 70% transparent in the visible but able to emit green light from the pixels when energized. The electroluminescent area consists of a bilayer of hole and electron-transport hosts of organic compounds ,4,4,4-tris(N-carbazolyl)t riphenylamine and 1,3,5-tris(phenyl-2-benzimidazolyl)benzene, doped with facial tris(2-phenylpyridine)iridium. Such so-called double-emission layers equipped with a metal electrode had previously been fabricated and shown to be highly efficient; however, those devices were opaque. |
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title | Light-Emitting Diodes: OLED pixel array is transparent |
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