College of Engineering  |  Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science  |  ECE Division













Contact Information:
Prof. J. Kanicki
University of Michigan
EECS Department
2307 EECS Bldg.
1301 Beal Ave
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2122

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Tel: (734) 936-0972
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Tel: (734) 615-6363
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Email: Kanicki@eecs.umich.edu

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Research Archives Index

Thin-Film Encapsulation of Organic Light-Emitting Devices

Aaron R. Johnson and Jerzy Kanicki

research 18 imageThis project seeks to extend the lifetime of organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs) by blocking the transmission of ambient oxygen and moisture in to the delicate emissive region of the device. Our approach is to encapsulate the organic device with hybrid thin-film stacks of both organic and inorganic materials. It is projected that, for commercial applications, such an encapsulation scheme will need to reduce the water vapor transmission to 1x10-6 g/m2-day and the oxygen transmission to 1x10-5 cm3 (STP)/m2-day. We have developed a low temperature (100ºC) PECVD (ltPECVD) process for both amorphous silicon nitride and amorphous silicon oxide layers which yield optically transparent layers (>85% transmission) with low stress (-1.6 x 109 dyne/cm2, -0.42 x 109 dyne/cm2, for nitride and oxide, respectively) and an index of refraction similar to thin films grown at higher temperatures (1.71, 1.8, for nitride and oxide, respectively). We have begun to incorporate organic thin films into the encapsulation schemes which, while they do not possess the barrier properties of inorganic films, do have the advantage of conformal coverage, which both seals in particulate matter as well as planarizes the encapsulating stack. One difficulty arising from the low temperature PECVD processes is the formation of particulate matter on the surface of the OLED. This can be mitigated, somewhat, through an optimization of the PECVD recipes used to deposit films, but could not be eliminated. The best solution, we have found, is to include an organic capping layer of parylene atop the deposited inorganic multi-layers. This project is supported by Department of the Navy through eMagin Corporation.

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