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Flexible Displays and E-paper Maxim Dolgobrod Advanced Display and Image Technologies. Contents. What are flexible displays Current status Development roadmap Challenges Market Main technologies Application Future Conclusion. What is a flexible display?.
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Flexible Displays and E-paper Maxim Dolgobrod Advanced Display and Image Technologies
Contents • What are flexible displays • Current status • Development roadmap • Challenges • Market • Main technologies • Application • Future • Conclusion
What is a flexible display? Flexible displays are essentially very thin display screens that can be printed onto flexible or stretchable material and then attached to other surfaces or produced in a variety of shapes.
Flexible display • Ultimate flexible display is a combination of TFT-LCD and OLED techniques— with advances developed in various fields such as processing, component, and materials. • Display might not be flexible in its application • Core materials: • semiconductor material • insulation material • electrode material • substrate
Substrate • substrate is critical to flexible displays development • different types of materials are under investigation, including glass, plastic, polymer films, and metallic foils • must be readily bendable and rollable • must accommodate different types of display technologies at high levels of brightness, contrast ratios, and resolution • must offer low power dissipation • should be able to provide full-color capability to enhance their market acceptability
Current status • There is a considerable research • Most of technologies are still in development and available in form of prototypes • The display panel itself is only a small part of the battle. All the ancillary electronics, the power, transistors and circuitry are all things today that are not yet fully flexible at large scales. • Industry interest and competition is fierce • The Flexible Display Center, at Arizona State University: flexible displays ready for test trials in approximately 3 years. • Currently E Ink one of most popular technologies available for commercial use
Flexible displays roadmap Source: Displaybank, 'Flexible Display Technology and Market (2007~2017)' report
Challenges • From traditional rigid substrates to flexible substrate • Satisfy the requirements of both substrate and deposited electronics • Handle the high processing temperatures encountered when making rigid displays • Laminate adhesives that can perform reliably at high temperatures without being affected by stresses • Achieving large quantity supply with comparative low cost
Flexible displays market - demand forecasts Source: Displaybank, 'Flexible Display Technology and Market (2007~2017)' report
History 1970 Electronic paper first developed at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center 1990 Printing of OLED on flexible substrate discovered 2000 World's first flexible display using electronic ink from E Ink Corporation 2002 Philips finds way to 'paint' LCD screens 2007 First production-ready flexible display manufacturing method developed by FlexiDis, a European-Commission funded technology project 2008 Hewlett-Packard and Arizona State University introduce a prototype of a paper-like, flexible computer display made almost entirely of plastic
Main flexible display technologies Flexible LCDs FOLED, Flexible AMOLED E-paper: Electrophoretic, CholestericLCDs, Electrowetting Displays (EWD), ElectrochromicDisplays InterferometricModulatorTechnology
Flexible LCDs • Many display experts believe LCDs are most likely to succeed in large-scale, cost-effective flexible displays • Samsung prototyped 5-in. diagonal LCD panel that uses amorphous silicon TFTs. • Fujitsu has shown monochrome and color cholesteric LCD, flexible, 3.8-in. diagonal panel. • Pixel-isolated LCDs for enhancing a flexible LCD's mechanical stability
FOLED • Organic light emitting device (OLED) built on a flexible base material, such as clear plastic film or reflective metal foil, instead of the usual glass base. • Developed by Universal Display Coporation • Started in 1990s after discovery by research partner at Princeton University that small-molecule OLEDs could be built on flexible substrates
FOLED Source: Universal Display Corporation
FOLED developed by Universal Display Corporation. Passive matrix display: 0.175 mm thick sheet of plastic, resolution of 80 dpi; 64 levels of grey scale; can show full motion video. Credit: Image courtesy of Universal Display Corporation.
FOLED Pros • Brighter than LCDs • Wider viewing angles and faster response times • Don't need a backlighting source • Thinner and lighter weight • More durable, safer and impact resistant • Flexible • Cost-effective Cons • Require a strong barrier against moisture • Limited lifetime particularly for the blue color
t Vaio with flexible OLED screen (Credit: Scott Ard/CNET)
The Sony Reader and Walkman redone with flexible OLED technology. (Credit: Scott Ard/CNET)
Flexible AMOLED • enables a lighter and thinner display • high refresh rate • rugged and not prone to breakage • consume significantly less power • large area displays can be made cheaply because of the low temperature process used and their possible roll-to-roll manufacturing. • at the proof-of-concept stage for conformable and rollabledisplays • Samsung is the leading developer of AMOLED displays • 2009 world’s first flexible AMOLED display with a 6.5” screen announced
LCD vs Flexible AMOLED Winner!
Electronic paper, e-paper • A display technology designed to mimic the appearance of ordinary ink on paper • Also known as Electrophoretic Paper Display or EPD • Capable of holding text and images indefinitely without drawing electricity, while allowing the image to be changed later • More comfortable to read than conventional displays due to stable image • Considered an eco-friendly technology due to low power consumption • More than a dozen companies have announced work on active e-paper programs • Colour prototypes exist, but their commercialistaion has yet to be started • EPD only recently took off as "the" modern textual and still image display technology
E-paper: key features • Flexible and durable • Impact resistant • Long lifetime: It can be updated up to 1 million times • Image retain without power • Reflects light like ordinary paper • Extremely thin • High contrast • Wide view angle: almost 180 degree
E-paper • First developed in 1970s by Xerox inspired by the idea of a paperless office • Fujitsu, E Ink and others introduced the EPD in film (active matrix display), flexible form, Seiko launched the first e-paper wristwatch in 2005 • In November 2007 the EPD finally hits the market with Amazon launching Kindle, Sony its e-reader, Bookeen launched the Cybook and iRex its iLiad. • In March 2009 Fujitsu begins consumer sales of world’s first color e-paper mobile terminal FLEPia
Electronic paper • Comprisestwodifferentparts: • electronicink, "frontplane” • electronicsrequired to generate the pattern of text and images on the e-inkpage, the "backplane".
E-paper: production aspects • The production structure of electronic paper is fairly complex. • In many cases this manufacturing is contracted out. • Backplane is manufactured by another group of firms. • Additional group of firms—consumer product firms—who design and market the product into which the e-paper display fits • For example, the e-readers marketed under the Sony brand have incorporated e-paper technology from E Ink and backplane technology from Polymer Vision.
E-paper: frontplanes • Electrophoretic Technology • E Ink • SiPix • Bridgestone • Cholesteric LCD Technology • Fujitsu • Hitachi • Kent Display • Kodak • Nemoptic • ZBD Display • Electrowetting Technology • Liquivista • Electrofluidic Technology • Gamma Dynamics • Electrochromic Technology • Acreo • Aveso • Ntera • Siemens • Interferometric Modulator Technology • Qualcomm • Photonic Crystal Technology • Opalux • REED Technology • Zikon • Bistable LCDs
E-paper: backplanes • HP • NEC • Plastic Logic • Polymer Vision • Prime View International • Ricoh • Samsung • Seiko Epson
Gyricon • first electronic paper • greek for ”rotating image” • based on electrocapillarity : movement of coloured liquids against a white background • consists of polyethylene spheres between 75 and 106 micrometres across embedded in a transparent silicone sheet, with each sphere suspended in a bubble of oil so that they can rotate freely.Each coloured sphere is white on one side and black on the other. • Xerox closed its Gyricon operation in December 2005 for financial reasons, but is still licensing technology to other companies • Further developed by other companies • at the FPD 2008 exhibition, Japanese company Soken has demonstrated a wall with electronic wall-paper using this technology
E Ink • E Ink is a specific proprietary type of electronic paper • Also know as electrophoretic frontplane technology • Manufactured by E Ink Corporation, founded in 1997 based on research started at the MIT Media Lab • Currently mostly available commercially in grayscale • Commonly used in mobile devices such as e-Readers and to a lesser extent mobile phones and watches • Material is processed into a film for integration into electronic displays • Main use for an text-based rendering
E Ink Microcapsules, ~ 100 microns in diameter
Cons slow response time, not suitable for motion picture not possible to implement sophisticated interactive applications due to response time ghosting costly E Ink Pros • paper-like high contrast appearance • twice the contrast of a LCD panel • ultra-low power consumption • thin, light form • unrestricted size
Citizen's flexible digital wall clock • 21-inches x by 52-inches • battery lasts 20 h more than traditional digital clock • costs $4000+
Cholesteric liquid crystal displays (ChLCD) • Developed by companies IBM, Philips, HP and Fujitsu, which have demonstrated actual devices • Cholesteric liquid crystal • same crystals as in LCDs • a type of liquid crystal with a helical structure • by applying a current crystals change from a vertical to a horizontal position. • ChLCD technology could become the dominant e-paper technology of the next decade.
Cholesteric liquid crystal displays (ChLCD) Pros • flexibility and even bendability • thinness, at approximately 0.8 millimeters • Lightness • a bi-stable nature, requiring no power to maintain an image and very little power to change it • good brightness, contrast, and resolution; • vivid color and a decent refresh rate capable of displaying animation and possibly even video.
Electrowetting display (EWD) • Developed and patented by Dutch company called Liquavista • Merges the advantages of LCDs and e-ink displays • Uses a process called electrowetting, which uses small electrical charges to move colored oil within each pixel • Electrowetting is a proven process, used for focus mechanisms in cameras and cellphones • All the assets of LCD, but with 2x, 3x, 4x the performance • Fundamentally brighter, more colourful displays • Simplified LCD-like manufacturing process • Initially targeted at e-reader markets followed by mobile phones