Saturday, January 7, 2012

How do OLEDs Emit Light?

How do OLEDs Emit Light?
OLEDs emit light in a similar manner to LEDs, through a process called electrophosphorescence.
The process is as follows:
The battery or power supply of the device containing the OLED applies a voltage across the OLED.
An electrical current flows from the cathode to the anode through the organic layers (an electrical current is a flow of electrons). The cathode gives electrons to the emissive layer of organic molecules. The anode removes electrons from the conductive layer of organic molecules. (This is the equivalent to giving electron holes to the conductive layer.)
At the boundary between the emissive and the conductive layers, electrons find electron holes. When an electron finds an electron hole, the electron fills the hole (it falls into an energy level of the atom that's missing an electron). When this happens, the electron gives up energy in the form of a photon of light (see How Light Works).
The OLED emits light.
The color of the light depends on the type of organic molecule in the emissive layer. Manufacturers place several types of organic films on the same OLED to make color displays.
The intensity or brightness of the light depends on the amount of electrical current applied: the more current, the brighter the light.
Small Molecule OLED vs. Polymer OLED
The types of molecules used by Kodak scientists in 1987 in the first OLEDs were small organic molecules. Although small molecules emitted bright light, scientists had to deposit them onto the substrates in a vacuum (an expensive manufacturing process called vacuum deposition -- see previous section).

Since 1990, researchers have been using large polymer molecules to emit light. Polymers can be made less expensively and in large sheets, so they are more suitable for large-screen displays.

http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/

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