Organic Materials Are Poised As Never Before To Transform
the world of circuit and display technology. Major electronics firms such
as Philips and Pioneer, and smaller companies such as Cambridge
Display Technology, Universal Display, and Uniax, are betting
that the future holds tremendous opportunity for the low cost
and sometimes surprisingly high performance offered by organic
electronic and optoelectronic devices. Using organic light-emitting
devices (OLEDs), organic full-color displays may eventually
replace liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) for use with laptop and
even desktop computers. Such displays can be deposited on flexible
plastic foils [Fig. 1], eliminating the fragile and heavy glass substrates
used in LCDs, and can emit bright light without the pronounced directionality
inherent in LCD viewing, all with efficiencies higher than can
be obtained with incandescent light bulbs.
M. Weaver And M. Rothman, Universal Display Corp.
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[1]:
An organic passive-matrix display on a substrate of polyethylene terephthalate, a lightweight plastic,
will bend around a diameter of less than a centimeter. The 18-mm-thick, 5-by-10-cm monochrome display
consists of 128 by 64 pixels, each measuring 400 by 500 µm, and is being operated at conventional
video brightness of 100 cd/m2. It was fabricated by Universal Display Corp.,
Ewing, N.J., with a moisture barrier built into the plastic that prevents degradation of the pixels.
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Organic electronics are already entering the commercial world. Multicolor
automobile stereo displays are now available from Pioneer Corp.,
of Tokyo, and Royal Philips Electronics NV, Amsterdam, is gearing
up to produce both OLED backlights to be used in LCDs and organic
integrated circuits. It is possible that soon, portable and
lightweight roll-up OLED displays will cover our walls, replacing
the bulky and power-hungry cathode ray tube that has been the
television standard for 50 years.
Given the need for very low-cost (but not always high-performance)
circuits for everything from smart cards carrying personal information,
to building entry cards, to inventory control, it is reasonable
to assume that within 10 years, the square footage of organic
circuitry might exceed that of silicon electronics (though one
expects that silicon transistors would still vastly outnumber
and outperform those fabricated from organic materials.)
Organic semiconductors have been the subjects of intense scientific
investigation for the past 50 years. During most of that time,
these materials, primarily consisting of carbon, hydrogen and
oxygen, were considered to be merely a scientific curiosity.
Organic materials' weak intermolecular bonds in the solid state
give them properties of both semiconductors and insulators;
so their study has deepened our fundamental understanding of
the electronic and optical properties of solids. But, organic
semiconductors attracted industrial interest when it was recognized
that many of them are photoconductive under visible light. This
discovery led to their use in electrophotography (or xerography)
and as light valves in LCDs. There were even hopes that very
low-cost thin-film solar cells and superconductors could be
made using such substances.
Unfortunately, the potential of active electronic devices such as solar cells,
light emitters, and thin-film transistors remained unfulfilled
for decades because organic materials have often proved to be
unstable. Further, making reliable electrical contacts to organic
thin films is difficult, and when exposed to air, water, or
ultraviolet light, their electronic properties can degrade rapidly.
Finally, the low carrier mobilities characteristic of organic
materials obviates their use in high-frequency (greater than
10 MHz) applications. These shortcomings are compounded by the
difficulty of both purifying and doping the materials.
But in 1987 Ching Tang and Steven Van Slyke of Eastman Kodak Co.,
Rochester, N.Y., successfully addressed many of these problems
when they produced the first efficient light emission from a
two-layer organic structure resembling a pn junction. The Kodak
group used a class of synthetic dyes that is closely related
to well-understood xerographic materials to develop a device
called a small-molecule OLED that produced light with about
1 percent efficiency. The materials used consist of often no
more than 30 or 40 atoms covalently bonded into stable, individual
molecular units, called monomers.
While this first demonstration of reasonably efficient light emission
at low voltage attracted interest from potential display manufacturers,
particularly in Japan, the technology attracted public attention
when, in 1990, researchers at Cambridge University in England
under the direction of Richard Friend reported a similar effect
in a semiconducting organic polymer film consisting of poly
para-(phenylene vinylene), or PPV. Unlike small molecule compounds,
polymers are long chain molecules whose monomer segments are
attached in a continuous covalently bonded, high-molecular-
weight chain. Polymers tend to be environmentally rugged and
flexible although, like small molecules, their electronic properties
can rapidly degrade when exposed to oxygen or water.