Category Archives: Displays

Blogger Mike Fury reports from the MRS Spring 2012 meeting in San Francisco. Highlights from the second day: OLED TFT displays, single transistor DRAMs, silicon photonic wires, CNTs, 3D optical interconnects, graphene for RF and sensing, transparent ZnO, epidermal electronic systems, stretchable electronics, ultra-low-k dielectrics, patterning of electroceramics, PRAM (an alternative to NRAM), and inkjet printing of superconducting films.

Day 2 of the MRS Spring 2012 meeting opened Tuesday in Moscone West in San Francisco under overcast skies and a light drizzle. The halls were packed at 8am as so many of the symposia lead off with presentations that have high audience appeal.

K1.1 Kazumasa Nomoto of Sony offered Sony’s outlook for the future of ultra flexible AM-OLED TFT displays, enough so to merit the labels foldable and rollable. In a full color 4.1 inch 121 ppi FWQVGA format, an 80µm thick AM-OLED display has a bending radius of 4mm. In a 13.3 inch 150 dpi UXGA format, a 120µm thick electrophoretic display (EPD) has a bending radius of 5mm. This is facilitated by integrating flexible OTFT gate driver circuitry into the backplane. The 20nm thick PXX gate oxide consists of alternative self-assembled layers. Both screen printing and inkjet printing techniques are employed in the process flow.

E1.1 Sorin Cristoloveanu of IMEP-LAHC Minatec guided us along the path to single transistor DRAM (1-T DRAM) in which the capacitor storage cell scales proportionally to the drive transistor. Metastable dip (MSD) DRAM is a hysteresis device that has no associated capacitor. Another variation is ARAM. Below a storage channel width of 10nm, it is not longer possible to sustain a separation of holes and electrons. Inserting a 3nm separator between the two sides of the channel (suggesting a squared off “A”) makes it possible to reduce the total width below 10nm. A new device called Z2-FET is a PIN junction with zero subthreshold swing and zero impact ionization. The fabrication process is compatible with SOI CMOS. URAM is the combination of a 1-T DRAM with a non-volatile memory (NVM) element. Several additional concepts were presented more rapidly than I could keep up.

L1.1 Siegfried Janz of NRC Canada talked about the use of silicon photonic wires as optical sensor elements. Folded waveguides can be configured in dense spirals or grids to achieve, for example, a 2mm long sensing element in a 150µm2 area. These elements can be applied to photonic wire evanescent field (PWEF) affinity binding sensors for DNA, protein and bacteria analysis to 200 pico molar sensitivity. The entire waveguide detector system is fabricated in an oxide layer 200nm thick. Microfluidic channels 200µm wide are aligned and pressed over the PWEF array to flow analyte over the sensor elements. The PWEF sensor arrays are manufactured with 500 chips per wafer in the CMOS foundry at LETI.

J3.1 Rahul Sen of Nantero described the use of CNT formulations in electronic devices. Materials are 300mm CMOS compatible spin coated films that can be lithographically patterned with conventional oxygen plasma techniques. Facilities fabricating with these films include ON Semi and SVTC. The CNT solution has <25ppb metal impurities; the final film has <1×1011 atoms/cm2 for BEOL compatibility. Sporadically high calcium levels >30ppb was resolved with an ion exchange process. One application of this material is the development of an NRAM™ universal memory device using CNT as the switching element.

M1.6 Soenke Steenhusen of Fraunhofer ISC took us from research to reality as regards 3D optical interconnects. The energy required to operate processers suggests a limit of 1.25 TFLOPS/chip which translates to an energy threshold of 6 GFLOPS/watt using conventional metal interconnects. This becomes the fundamental driver for integrating optical interconnects in their stead. The optical waveguide fabrication methodology described involved 2 photon polymerization (2PP) of polymer materials using femtosecond laser pulses.

DD5.2 Tomás Palacios of MIT presented the use of graphene for RF and sensing devices. His approach is to fabricate graphene devices on top of completed CMOS structures, or to make the graphene devices directly on flexible substrates. He uses the PMMA transfer method for graphene grown at 1000°C from CH4 on Cu. His applications of interest cover the whole range of known markets that have been discussed elsewhere. For on-chip interconnects in the range of 100nm wide down to 1nm wide, graphene has a low constant resistivity; in this range, the resistivity of copper spikes exponentially. By fabricating a top-gated GFET on an insulating substrate rather than conductive silicon, the GFET device can exhibit a high fT >20GHz in which the parasitic capacitance is low, meaning that the de-embedded fT is quite comparable to the non-de-embedded value.

BB1.11 Chia-Lin Chuang of National Taiwan U discussed a highly transparent p-ZnO prepared from a non-toxic sol gel. Generally, p-type ZnO is difficult to fabricate for a variety of reasons including native donor defects, deep acceptor levels and unintentional hydrogen doping. Their non-toxic composition included zinc acetate, indium nitrate, IPA, MEA and ammonium acetate. The resulting films have a resistivity of 4.43 Ω∙cm with a carrier concentration of 1.36×1018/cm3.

K2.1 Nanshu Lu (now at UT Austin) of the John Rogers group at U Illinois Urbana presented the groups’ recent achievements in epidermal electronic systems. Micro-transfer printing is the method of choice for interconnecting small rigid silicon electronics elements with thin nanoribbons of silicon or metal. Depositing onto a pre-stretched elastomer substrate provides a resting state in which the interconnects are buckled or canted and can endure up to 100% elongation while imparting ≤1% stress to the rigid circuit elements. The trick of fabricating extremely thin silicon for flexibility applies to the PDMS polymer substrate as well when the objective is to apply the device to the skin and tolerate stretching and bending without adhesion loss. The thin polymer stability is maintained until it is applied using technology similar to that used in applying temporary tattoos. For some device types, the rigid silicon electronics can be eliminated by integrating the active device elements into the serpentine interconnects themselves. For development of integrated devices, functions that have been demonstrated include amplifiers, temperature sensors, strain gauges, solar power sources, induction couplers and wireless transmitters & receivers for device control. Current devices, however, use wires to connect to external control and power sources. The only three elements in contact with the skin are gold, silicon and polyimide, all of which are FDA approved.

K2.2 Michael Melzer of IFW Dresden extended the family of stretchable electronics from silicon and optoelectronics to now include magneto electronics. Stretchable GMR multilayers are fabricated by depositing GMR thin films on a pre-strained PDMS substrate. Data indicates no loss of magnetic performance through this process to 2.5% strain even though resistance starts to rise above 1.6% strain. For greater detection sensitivity, stretchable spin valves were developed using the same process flow as for the GMR multilayers. After some refinement of the process, they were able to achieve 29% strain without losing functionality or sensitivity.

K2.5 A Gaikwad of City College NY described a stretchable battery embedded in cloth with Zn and MnO2 as the active materials. Cracking and delamination due to flexing and stretching was addressed by embedding these materials in a non-conducting nylon mesh in an earlier version. In the new version, a silver coated nylon cloth is used as the substrate for the Zn electrode and separately for the MnO2 electrode. No delamination or electrical degradation was observed at 100% strain in either the x- or the y-direction. The capacity of 4 mAh/cm2 was maintained even with this stretching 100% level.

C2.6 Yusuke Matsuda of Reinhold Dauskardt’s group at Stanford presented a new class of ULK dielectric materials in work done jointly with IBM and RPI. Moisture-assisted cracking is a pervasive problem with current silica-based ULK material options. Polycarbosilane dielectrics (CLPCS) are introduced, their salient feature being a network of Si-CH2-Si bonds. The films have a dielectric constant 2.3-2.5 with no porosity. In comparison with MSSQ and CDO films, CLPCS has a higher fracture strength, lower density  and no sensitivity to moisture-assisted cracking. However, there is some crack growth due to viscoelastic relaxation of C-C bonds.

BB2.6 Susan Trolier-McKinstry of Penn State described a low cost, damage-free microcontact printing method for patterning electroceramic films. PDMS stamps for PZT patterning can be used only one time, but the transfer integrity is good for PZT films 110-130nm thick at ~3µm lines/spaces. Dots 3-4µm with 2-3µm spaces can also be printed faithfully. Alternate stamp material research has led to polyurethane (PU) and composite PU/PDMS enables up to 50 passes for multiple use with a simple solvent wash in between. The PU stamp can print large areas >1cm2 and feature sizes from 5µm to 1cm. Electrical and piezoelectric properties of films so deposited overlapped nicely with films of equivalent thickness deposited by conventional methods.

F4.4 Youn-Seon Kang of Samsung R&D provided a glimpse into the coming 20nm node for PRAM. Challenges include contact size, cell to cell distance, reset current and operating voltage. The 20nm diode contact process includes growth of epitaxial Si in the vias, ion implantation, silicidation, tungsten capping and CMP. Use of a confined structure allows a lower reset current with a larger bottom electrode, suggesting that further reduction is possible. Double pattern lithography is used for the minimum feature sizes. Thermal disturbance between neighbor cells is not observed up to 108 cycles. Samsung is optimistic that PRAM will be a robust NVRAM competitor below 20nm.

BB2.8 Isabel Van Driessche of Ghent U (Belgium) used aqueous solutions of YBa2Cu3O7 for inkjet deposition and patterning of superconducting coatings. Fluorine-free aqueous formulations for chemical solution deposition (CSD) were used to eliminate the toxic BaF2 used in traditional approaches. Conventional methods were used to optimize the solution rheology for inkjet image control. Atmospheric control during annealing reduces the detrimental formation of BaCO3 that is problematic in other systems. Features as small as 40µm were successfully demonstrated; smaller features are likely with further ink formulation.

The MRS Spring 2012 meeting opened today in Moscone West in San Francisco. Fifty-four technical symposia and 16 tutorials will run concurrently, with over 5,000 paid attendees from 50 countries, 3,100 oral papers, 1,700 posters, 130 exhibitors and 14,400 entries in the authors directory. This author list is comparable to the total MRS membership of over 15,000. Following the meeting, several sessions that will have been videotaped will be posted online at www.mrs.org/s12-video.

The opening day of this week-long meeting consisted of sixteen tutorial sessions related to specific symposia topics, and a light load of five technical symposia that were scheduled to get an early jump on the week. Tutorial topics included phase change materials, NV RAM, compound semiconductors for energy applications, and two sessions related to PV.

Additional presentation details can be found on the MRS Spring 2012 program page, http://www.mrs.org/s12-program/. A downloadable PDF version of the abstracts is promised soon for online access to the symposium contents. The underscored codes at the beginning of papers reviewed below refer to the symposium, session and paper number.

EE1.1 Phaedon Avouris of IBM Watson Research, one of the 2012 MRS Fellow appointees, opened the session on new functional nanocarbon devices to a packed SRO room with a high level look at how graphene and related materials will lend themselves to advanced devices. Among the impressive items waiting to be developed is an rf device capable of operation up to 1THz for airport radar imaging in foggy conditions. Wafer-scale epitaxial graphene is presently made by high temperature evaporation of Si atoms from SiC. Graphene superlattices can be fabricated which are 90% transparent in the visible range but provide 16dB shielding efficiency at microwave frequencies, making for some unique device functionality. One of the speed bumps on the road ahead is the dearth of ultra thin high-κ capacitor materials that are compatible with graphene.

J1.5 Leslie Jimison of Centre Microelectronique de Provence discussed the impact of molecular architecture on transport and device properties in organic electrochemical transistors. The system studied comprised PEDOT:TOS-PEG composites fabricated via vapor phase polymerization. Organic electrochemical transistors are designed for use in aqueous environments, making them well suited for biosensor applications. The addition of PEG does not degrade OECT modulation, nor does it affect the RC properties of the transition. Biocompatibility of PEDOT:TOS-PEG was successfully demonstrated.

J1.6 Robert Mueller of IMEC described a low cost lithographic process for patterning S/D bottom contacts for high mobility p-type pentacene organic TFTs using silver bottom contacts with channel length <10µm. A modified process flow was developed, as the standard flow is incompatible with Ag. The electrical properties were acceptable, demonstrating that Ag can be used as a low cost replacement for Au.

DD2.5 Mark Hersam of Northwestern U talked about several methods for processing monodispersed CNT and other nanomaterials for volume fabrication of functional inks. A chiral surfactant is used to segregate left from right handed tubes with density gradient ultracentrifugation (DGU). Similar methods are used to segregate metallic from semiconducting CNTs. Graphene can likewise be segregated using sonication followed by DGU. Converted to an ink, this material can print a transistor with fT of 8.7GHz after de-embedding, which is 1,000x faster than other organic transistors. DGU was also applied to 100nm Au particles with a 60nm silica shell for high yielding plasmonic nanoantennae. Pluronic and trionic surfactants have been shown to be effective replacements for ionic surfactants to effect separation in SWNT, MWNT and graphene. Pluronic dispersion of graphene oxide significantly reduces the biotoxicity of such materials. A graphene-titania ink was shown to exhibit enhanced photocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CH4. Current global demand for these materials is still in the range of kg/yr, but he foresees no scaling roadblocks to tons.

EE1.4 Ilhan Aksay of Princeton U described the use of functionalized graphene sheets (FGS) in several applications, starting from the perspective of the need for new functionality rather than interest in a fundamental study of graphene and its properties. Target applications include structural elements, sensors and energy sources. Silicone rubber doped with FGS changes its resistance up to 2.5x at 60% strain. The functionalized material is structurally far from pristine graphene, but it performs similarly to its pristine counterpart with respect to many properties. It has too many defects for function in a transistor, but has conductivity that can rival copper for interconnects. FGS added in small amounts (0.5wt%) to rubber increases the strength of rubber, and the strength increases with repeated elongation cycles. This effect is attributed to a distributed deformation phenomenon similar to strategies employed in biological systems such as sea shells. A self-assembled stack of alternating FGS and SnO2 layers has shown charging and discharging rates competitive with Li-ion batteries. In combination with self-assembled mesoporous silica, FGS has demonstrated supercapacitor properties >200F/g, with the mesoporous silica thought to provide a channel for intimate contact of the electrolyte with the FGS layers. In biosensors, FGS shows S/N 3-4 orders of magnitude greater than single layer graphene nanoelectrodes.

Moscone West felt quite crowded and busy all day, even though more than half of the symposium rooms have not yet been called into service. This was just a practice day for the full assault to come tomorrow.

 

April 9, 2012 — Optical display film revenues are declining in 2012, after a compound annual growth rate of 19% from 2009 to 2011, according to NPD DisplaySearch Q1’12 Quarterly Display Optical Film Report. Optical films are used in liquid crystal display (LCD) backlights. Revenues will decline from $4.5 billion in 2011 to $4.2 billion in 2012, due to a decline in the market for reflective polarizers. Prism and micro lens film markets will grow to $858 million and $331 million in revenue, respectively.

Reflective polarizers commanded a high price prior to 2009, due to a proprietary manufacturing technology. Panel makers have reduced backlight costs in recent years, at the expense of energy efficiency, by replacing reflective polarizers with diffusers and micro lens films.

Figure 2. Changes in revenue of prism and reflective polarizer for TFT LCD applications.

As light-emitting diode (LED) backlight technology evolved, panel makers trended toward fewer LEDs per panel, adding reflective polarizers to compensate for the lost performance, noted Jimmy Kim, senior analyst, NPD DisplaySearch. The trend will reverse again in 2012. LED prices have fallen so sharply during the past few years, with a CAGR of -50%, that it now seems beneficial for panel makers to use more LEDs rather than expensive reflective polarizers. Panel makers will remove reflective polarizers and compensate for the luminance loss by applying more 2-chip LED packages. Prism and micro lens film will be used as more cost-effective designs.

The NPD DisplaySearch Q4’11 Quarterly Display Optical Film Report suggests that prism revenue is expected to decrease again in 2014. In contrast, reflective polarizer revenue is expected to grow at the same time.

Changes in this trend seem to be related to the LED bar structure. With the evolution of the LED bar structure, there will continue to be a reduction in LEDs per set. However, there is discontinuity in the number of LEDs per set among different LED bar structures. When the LED structure is changed from a 2-bar (bottom or side) structure to a side 1-bar structure or a corner LED structure, there is a large change in the number of LEDs per set. For these structures, reflective polarizers may be required again to compensate for luminance loss.

The NPD DisplaySearch Quarterly Display Optical Film Report can be used by panel buyers, film makers and product planners interested in details of optical film technology and market dynamics. Polarizers, TAC, PVA, compensation film, surface treatment film, wide viewing angle film, prism sheets, micro-lens film, reflective polarizers, diffusers, and reflector film are covered in the report. The report covers technical evolutions, market forecast, capacity profiles, value chain relationships, as well as cost and price, for each of these film types. Access the Quarterly Display Optical Film Report

NPD DisplaySearch is a global market research and consulting firm specializing in the display supply chain, as well as the emerging photovoltaic/solar cell industries. For more information, visit http://www.displaysearch.com/.

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April 5, 2012 – MMD Newswire — Semiconductor technology developer Polyera Corporation pulled in $24.5 million in Series C funding, with all existing investors joining co-leaders Chengwei Capital and Tsing Capital, both in China. Polyera’s technology platform is "both revolutionary and scalable," said Michael Li, Partner at Tsing Capital.

Polyera will accelerate development activities, and put a significant portion of the funding into its Asia-Pacific operations, preparing for market launch. Polyera’s semiconductor materials are truly flexible. The company’s technology allows semiconductor-based products, such as displays and photovoltaic panels, to be fabricated on flexible substrates. Advantages include flexibility, as well as lighter weight, thinner, and more robust products by replacing glass substrates with plastic.

Polyera envisions "radically new product designs" from the technology, especially for "post-PC" display-based products, such as smartphones and media tablets. Using flexible semiconductors on a plastic substrate, device designers can change display size without considering added weight or thickness. At the same weight and dimensions, smartphones could incorporate displays that expand to two or three times their original surface area, said Philippe Inagaki, founder and CEO of Polyera, giving one example. Other possibilities include unbreakable, thin, ultra-light-weight displays worn on the body.

In 2007, BASF Future Business GmbH joined Polyera to develop and commercialize new organic semiconductors and dielectrics for use in CMOS-analog printed circuits over several years.

Polyera makes high-performance functional materials for the electronics and opto-electronics industries. For more information, visit www.polyera.com.

Chengwei Capital an independent venture capital fund in China.

Tsing Capital a leading cleantech venture capital firm in China. China Environment Fund, established and managed by Tsing Capital, is a series of funds in China with a focus in cleantech- and environment-related investments. Further information can be found at www.tsingcapital.com.

Solvay is an international chemical group and an investor in Polyera. Solvay SA (SOLB.BE) is listed on NYSE Euronext in Brussels and Paris (Bloomberg:SOLB.BB, Reuters:SOLBt.BR)

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April 4, 2012 — The flat panel display (FPD) market’s growth is pushing next-generation display technologies forward, as profitability worsens for amorphous silicon (a-Si) thin film transistors (TFT). New core technologies are needed to improve the performance of TFTs.

Thin film transistor technologies include a-Si, low-temperature polysilicon (LTPS), organic, oxide, and others. Also read: Top 10 LCD manufacturing trends of 2012

Samsung Electronics signed a license on Oxide TFT-related technology, the transistor that achieved rapid development of technology between the last 5 years. Oxide TFT enables large-area and high-resolution displays, which can be applied in advanced products like no-glasses 3D TVs. The materials can be processed at room temperature, enabling flexible displays on a plastic substrate.

Figure. Oxide TFT applications. SOURCE: Displaybank, Oxide TFT Technology and Development Status Report.

Research and development (R&D) investments are being made by major display panel companies in Korea and Japan, with mass production in mind. Expect to see oxide TFT in LCDs, AMOLEDs, and e-paper displays.

Displaybank has issued a report on technology status and related companies’ development trends of the attention-attracting in the industry, Oxide TFT, covering its characteristics, structure and manufacturing process; applications in LCD, OLED, E-paper backplanes; oxide TFT-related companies in Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and the US; and key issues in the panel manufacturing process, device reliability, and new materials processing. Access the report at http://www.displaybank.com/_eng/research/report_view.html?id=804&cate=1.

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April 3, 2012 — Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.’s share of unit shipments in the US liquid crystal diplay (LCD) market reached a record high in Q4 2011, shows the IHS iSuppli Television Systems Service.

Samsung just spun out its LCD Business into its own corporation, Samsung Display.

During the Q4 2011, Samsung shipped 23.6% of US LCD TVs, Samsung’s largest share on a quarterly basis ever. It extended its lead over second-place VIZIO Inc. to 8.2 percentage points, 2 more than Q3. A year prior, VIZIO led Samsung by 7.2 points. Samsung’s share gain came from its triumph in the price war, said Tom Morrod, senior analyst and head of TV Technology for IHS. “The company was able to offer a range of price-competitive sets with a rich choice of features that US consumers wanted. This allowed the company to outperform the competition during the all-important holiday selling season.”

On the whole, US LCD TV market shipments spiked in Q4 2011, rising by 30.7% compared to the third quarter, and closing out 2011 at 33.4 million units for the year, up 0.4% from 33.2 million in 2010. Overall average LCD TV prices in the fourth quarter fell to about $1,032, a $16 drop from the third quarter. Lower-than-expected demand and uncertainty about the US economic recovery had caused LCD shipments to fall going into the second quarter. However, aggressive pricing helped boost sales at the end of the year–the time when holiday sales typically peak.

Table. Q4 2011 US LCD TV top 5 brands, market share ranking (units shipped in thousands). SOURCE: IHS iSuppli March 2012.
Q4 2011 ranking Vendor Q4 2010 shipments Q4 2010 market share Q3 2011 shipments Q3 2011 percent share Q4 2011 shipments Q4 2011 market share Sequential percentage growth Annual percentage growth
1 Samsung 2100 19.8% 1505 18.9% 2461 23.6% 63.5% 17.2%
2 Vizio 2867 27.0% 1008 12.7% 1607 15.4% 59.4% -44.0%
3 LG Electronics 976 9.2% 781 9.8% 1290 12.4% 65.1% 32.1%
4 Sony 1049 9.9% 476 6.0% 832 8.0% 74.9% -20.7%
5 Toshiba 708 6.7% 725 9.1% 814 7.8% 12.3% 15.0%
  Others 2931 27.6% 3472 43.6% 3413 32.8% -1.7% 16.4%
  Total 10631 100% 7967 100% 10417 100% 30.7% -2.0%

Samsung’s offerings include LCD TVs with the same size and features, except for backlighting technology, for example. Samsung sells 2 LCD TV models that are identical in every way, except that one integrates the older cold-cathode fluorescent lamp (CCFL) backlighting while the other uses the newer and more expensive light-emitting diode (LED) technology.

Samsung may be positioned to further expand its lead over VIZIO in 2012 because of another factor separate from LCD-TV market dynamics. “The recent Free Trade Agreement between the United States and South Korea will remove tariffs imposed on Korean firms selling TVs in America,” Morrod said. “Because of this accord, Samsung and fellow South Korean brand LG Electronics are poised to increase their shipments in the United States this year.”

Read more in LED TV Continues to Grow in US TV Market at http://www.isuppli.com/Display-Materials-and-Systems/Pages/LED-TV-Continues-to-Grow-in-US-TV-Market.aspx

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