Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Microcavity effect, OLEDs

The phenomenon known as "microcavity effect" refers to the enhancement or annihilation of the emitted irradiance related to the position of the emitting material relative to this resonance peak of the irradiance. A weak microcavity effect is usually present in conventional OLEDs because internal reflections are caused by the higher refractive index of the ITO anode compared to most organic layers, and the cathode is highly reflective (Bulovic, 1998). This is usually considered a nuisance, but has been exploited in microcavity OLEDs (Jordan, 1996). With Fabry-Perot filters, the phase condition for the appearance of resonance peaks is given by the following equation ... [Pg.129]

A small microcavity effect, as seen in Sec. 2, is necessary for maintaining a good emission of the device. For that purpose, internal reflections Ranode and Rcathode must not be reduced to zero, and the organic layers inside the OLED act as cavity layers, so that the position of the emitting layer (the thin recombination layer) must be at a resonance peak of the electric field. [Pg.132]

As shown in Fig. 1, the combination of good AR coating and small microcavity effect apparently lead to a contradiction of the anode s role it must have simultaneously a low external reflectance when seen from the substrate and a relatively large internal reflectance when seen from the cavity layers. It has been observed for a long time in thin-fUm optics that a thin layer of a material with a large extinction coefficient k can lead to the kind of asymmetric reflectance (Goos, 1937). In our design, such a layer has thus to be introduced on the anode side of the OLED structure. [Pg.133]

We have demonstrated the concept of a multilayer anode comprising an Au/ Ag bilayer and a metal-dielectric AR coating that has both a high internal reflectance and a low outside reflectance. The former property is used to maintain a microcavity effect in the OLED that is tuned to maximize light out-coupling, and the latter to improve the OLED contrast ratio. [Pg.138]

Although the basic concepts described concerning the microcavity effect have been applied in the present work to bottom-emission OLEDs and specific materials only, they are general and will remain true whatever the materials used in the device (i.e. pwlymer-based), and for other device structures (such as top-emitting-OLED, tandem-OLED, etc.). [Pg.139]

This chapter provides the general theories and discussions of optical sfruc-tures and characteristics of OLEDs. To start with, it presents a simple and analytical formulation of microcavity effects in OLEDs based on the concepts of the Fabry-Perot cavity this provides a clearer physical insight but is more limited in its description of the effects of microcavity. Subsequently, this chapter provides a brief description of rigorous electromagnetic modeling of optical characteristics of OLEDs. These notions are then used as the... [Pg.266]

The unfiltered OLED shows a deep absorption peak due to the Fabry-Perot resonance of the naturally-occurring weak microcavity, and the filtered OLED shows oscillations in the reflectance due to the same effect. Lower reflectance filters could be designed with more layers in the DBR, at the expense of added complexity. [Pg.138]

Microcavity/Interference Effects in Weak Microcavity OLEDs.272... [Pg.265]


See other pages where Microcavity effect, OLEDs is mentioned: [Pg.235]    [Pg.543]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.286]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.578]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.361]   


SEARCH



Microcavity

OLEDs

OLEDs-Microcavity

© 2024 chempedia.info