Don’t be alarmed by the number of display related news, there’s SID display week going on in Texas. Over there, Seiko Epson has announced that they have made some good progress on the manufacturing process used to print OLED displays – this is particularly difficult as the screen size and the number of pixel increase. The last update that we got from Epson on this subject dates from March 2006!
At least one OLED displays layer is basically “printed” with something that would resemble an inkjet printer (hence the presence of Epson in this market). Improvements made by Seiko Epson make possible to build 37″ OLED displays without having yields going down the drain, which is the big problem. Epson demonstrated 40” OLED back in 2004. The bottom-line is that bigger OLEDs are coming, but don’t expect them in your living room before 2011 or 2012… Press release info in the full post. More articles about OLED.
Seiko Epson Corporation (“Epson”, TSE: 6724) today announced it has established inkjet technology that enables the uniform deposition of organic material in the production of large-screen organic light-emitting diode (OLED) televisions. The new technology represents a major step toward the realization of 37-inch and larger full-HD OLED TVs by resolving the uneven layering that had previously been an issue with the inkjet method.
OLED televisions are the odds-on favorite to supplant current technologies as the next generation display. Offering outstanding viewing characteristics, including high contrast, wide viewing angle and fast response time, OLED TVs are also lightweight, ultra-thin, and have low power requirements. A major roadblock preventing mass production of large-screen OLED TVs has been the lack of a technology capable of reliably forming uniform organic layers on large substrates. Vacuum thermal evaporation (VTE), currently the most widely used method of depositing organic materials, is surrounded by technical hurdles that have prevented it from solving the layer uniformity issue and making the jump to mass production of large panels. An inkjet process that deposits organic material in liquid form has long been viewed as the ideal alternative.
Epson has recently developed the long-awaited solution in the form of an OLED display fabrication process that leverages the company’s proprietary Micro Piezo inkjet technology to achieve markedly greater accuracy in organic material deposition than the conventional technology. The process has been used in trial production to fabricate a highly uniform prototype panel. Extremely uniform layers (volume error < 1%) are achieved by precisely controlling the selection and ejection of multi-size droplets of ink material on a substrate so that only the required volume of material is deposited. Epson’s technology dramatically improves both quality and throughput and brings the advent of large-screen OLED TV a significant step closer to realization.
“Large-screen OLED TVs are the future of displays, and Epson is committed to contributing to the transition to volume production through research and development projects involving inkjet fabrication technologies,” stated Satoru Miyashita, General Manager of Epson’s OLED Development Center.
Details about this technology will be presented at SID 2009, the Society for Information Display’s international symposium, seminar and exhibition, to be held in San Antonio, Texas from June 2. Epson will exhibit a 14-inch OLED display having resolution equivalent to a 37-inch full-HD display. The prototype display was trial-manufactured using Epson’s inkjet process.
Via akihabaranews