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Novel Photopatterning Approach for OLEDs Inveiled

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A light-mediated methodology for growing patterned, emissive polymer brushes with micron feature resolution could lead to a more efficient, cost-effective method for creating OLED displays. Although many fabrication methods for OLEDs exist, they all have limitations with regard to scalability, pattern control or feature resolution.

Solution-based patterning of OLED arrays, UC Santa Barbara, Dow Chemical Co.
OLED arrays generated in solution can overcome many fabrication challenges. Courtesy of Zak Page.

To photopattern OLEDs more efficiently, emissive polymer brushes were grafted from conductive substrates via photocatalysis. Starting with a substrate of indium tin oxide, researchers from the University of California, Santa Barbara and Dow Chemical Company used light-activated chemistry to pinpoint specific locations on the surface for polymer growth. Light was also used for subsequent atom transfer radical polymerization of methacrylate-based fluorescent and phosphorescent iridium monomers.

The iridium centers were key in photocatalyzing and mediating polymer growth while also emitting light in the final OLED structure. They served two roles: first as the catalyst to build the emissive brush polymers and second as a necessary dopant for the resulting OLED arrays.

The researchers used their solution-based approach to fabricate functional multi-colored OLED arrays. Color tunability, micron pixel features, thickness control and diblocks were demonstrated.

This novel approach could facilitate the synthesis of a library of polymers with emissive colors spanning the visible spectrum, where the dopant incorporation, position of brush growth, and brush thickness could be readily controlled. The chain-ends of the polymer brushes remain intact, allowing subsequent chain extension and formation of well-defined diblock architectures. Such a high level of structure and function control could support the facile preparation of random ternary copolymers and red-green-blue arrays to yield white emission.

The researchers believe that their method could enable high throughput manufacturing of OLEDs using many technologies, including inkjet printing, in the future.

The research was published in ACS Central Science, a publication of the American Chemical Society (doi: 10.1021/acscentsci.7b00165).
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Published: June 2017
Research & TechnologyeducationAmericasDisplaysLEDsOLEDsLight SourcesConsumerindustrialphotopatterningphotocatalystTech Pulse

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