Polymer electroluminescent devices processed by inkjet printing: I. Polymer light-emitting logo
- 25 May 1998
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Applied Physics Letters
- Vol. 72 (21), 2660-2662
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.121090
Abstract
Inkjet printing (IJP) technology is a popular technology for desktop publishing. Since some of the conducting (or conjugated) polymers are solution processable, IJP technology becomes an ideal method for printing polymer light-emitting diodes with high resolution. Unfortunately, the polymer film printed from an inkjet printer usually consists of pin-holes, and this intrinsic character makes it unsuitable for fabricating high quality polymer electronic devices, particularly for devices in the sandwich structure. In this letter, we submit a hybrid structure, which consists of an inkjet printed layer in conjunction with another uniform spin coated polymer layer, as an alternative to the regular inkjet printed structure. The uniform layer serves as a buffer layer to seal the pin-holes and the IJP layer is the layer consisting of the desired pattern, for example the red–green–blue dots for a multicolor display. To demonstrate, we applied this hybrid technology to fabricate efficient and large area polymer light-emitting logos. The use of this concept represents a whole new technology of fabricating polymer electronic devices with lateral patterning capability.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Operating stability of light-emitting polymer diodes based on poly(p-phenylene vinylene)Applied Physics Letters, 1997
- Charge separation and photovoltaic conversion in polymer composites with internal donor/acceptor heterojunctionsJournal of Applied Physics, 1995
- Efficient photodiodes from interpenetrating polymer networksNature, 1995
- Optocoupler made from semiconducting polymersJournal of Electronic Materials, 1994
- Polyaniline as a transparent electrode for polymer light-emitting diodes: Lower operating voltage and higher efficiencyApplied Physics Letters, 1994
- Visible light emission from semiconducting polymer diodesApplied Physics Letters, 1991
- Light-emitting diodes based on conjugated polymersNature, 1990
- New semiconductor device physics in polymer diodes and transistorsNature, 1988
- Field-effect mobility of poly(3-hexylthiophene)Applied Physics Letters, 1988