Stacking organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) leads to brighter, stabler,
longer lived light sources than individual OLEDs. Unfortunately, the
metal layers typically used to connect the individual elements are not
very transparent, reducing the resulting brightness of underlying OLEDs
in a tandem configuration.
Researchers in the Display Technology Laboratory at Eastman Kodak Company
have now managed to stack OLEDs that are connected through optically
transparent, organic semiconductor materials. The improvement in brightness
in the new, tandem OLED is essentially linearly related to the number
of individual light emitting segments included in the device, that is,
a three-segment tandem OLED is roughly three times as bright as a conventional
OLED.
High brightness, high efficiency tandem OLEDs could lead to brighter
TV's and computer screens. They could also make it easier to read cell
phone displays in bright sunlight, which often renders existing cell
phone displays unintelligible.
The researchers (contact: L. S. Liao, liang-sheng.liao@kodak.com) propose
that tandem OLEDs may also be useful as lighting sources for liquid
crystal display backlighting or as solid-state room lights. In addition,
varying the number of units in a tandem OLED stack changes the operating
voltage, allowing the possibility of tailoring the devices to match
different electrical sources, such as household 110 volt systems. Conventional
LED lighting, on the other hand, typically requires transformers to
adjust power sources to meet the lighting element's electrical specifications.
(L. S. Liao et al., Applied
Physics Letters, upcoming article)