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Microcavity white‐emitting OLED devices
Authors:Ronald S. Cok  Joel D. Shore
Affiliation:Eastman Kodak Co., 1999 Lake Ave., Rochester, NY 14650
Abstract:Abstract— Microcavity designs for OLED devices with an unpatterned white emitter have the potential to provide greater brightness and larger color gamut than non‐microcavity designs while still enabling lower‐cost large‐format manufacturing. In this paper, such microcavity and non‐microcavity designs are compared. Color filters must still be employed to provide an adequate color gamut. Top‐emitter structures have somewhat greater on‐axis luminance and color gamut, but increased angular change, than bottom‐emitter designs. In a single‐stack bottom‐emitter active‐matrix TFT device using an RGBW format, the use of microcavities is estimated to reduce the average power usage by 35% and the peak power by 58%, while increasing the NTSC ratio for color gamut area by about 10%. Angular luminance and color change is likely to be acceptable, especially for hand‐held applications. Tandem devices employing multiple emitter stacks increase the lifetime of OLED devices but require larger driving voltages; for such devices, microcavity structures are useful although the percentage reduction obtained in power usage is not quite as large. Generally, tandem devices with microcavities have a slightly stronger cavity effect yielding slightly larger color gamut, but also greater angular color and luminance shift. Therefore, microcavity architectures are less appealing for tandem devices.
Keywords:OLED  organic light‐emitting diode  architecture  top emitter  bottom emitter  microcavity  tandem  stack
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