The illumination of the future will be shining bright, luminous
and flexible - and will consume little energy: lighting plastics,
Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs for short), will make this
happen. In the presence of the German Federal Research Minister, Annette
Schavan, and the Prime Minister of Saxony, Stanislaw Tillich, the
Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Micro-Systems - IPMS in Dresden,
officially opened the "Center for Organic Materials and Electronic
Devices Dresden (COMEDD)" on 30 October 2008.
The Federal Government, the State of Saxony and the European Union have
invested EUR 25 million in the Center. COMEDD's key assignment is to
develop cost-effective and production-suitable processes for organic
semi-conductor devices. These include Organic Light Emitting Diodes
(OLEDs) and organic solar cells. OLEDs are considered the future
technology for displays and lighting.
The Federal Ministry of Education and Research has already been
promoting this innovative technology for several years (OLLA Project).
A further boost to support in the area of "Organic Light Emitting
Diodes - Phase II" is currently being provided by the promotional
programs "Optical Technologies" and "Werkstoffinnovationen für
Industrie und Gesellschaft - WING" (material innovations for industry
and society).
OLEDs are components made from ultra-thin organic layers on a glass or
plastic base, which emit light when a voltage is applied. Nature
provides an example in this respect - "the firefly", which can turn its
yellowish light on and off. OLEDs can be laid on large surfaces in
ultra-thin layers; they provide a perfect image from every viewing
angle, have a luminous color saturation, and require little energy.
OLEDs can already be produced, and the first organic illuminated
displays are already on the market.
In order, however, for OLEDs to establish themselves on the mass market
against the Asian competition, they will have to be produced
cost-effectively. "The industry for organic illumination will only grow
if we in Europe both develop and design, and produce here," explains
Prof. Karl Leo, Head of the Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic
Micro-Systems IPMS, COMEDD's governing body. The Fraunhofer IPMS is
setting up three pilot production lines. Organic displays can be
produced with two different procedures. The OLED pioneer, Kodak, for
example, has developed "Small Molecule OLEDs", whereby small molecules
are vacuum-metalized. Cambridge Display Technology has developed the
other technology, which uses big, long-chain molecules. These can be
dissolved in liquid and cost-effectively centrifugally coated, or
applied with a printer on to the electrode.
Fraunhofer researchers are working in COMEDD on organic light-emitting
diodes based on small molecules. The Center's main focus is on several
vacuum coating systems, on which innovation process concepts are
evaluated. A 300 mm wide roll-to-roll coating system is being set up in
COMEDD in cooperation with the Fraunhofer Institute for Electron Beam
and Plasma Technology (FEP) to develop and produce OLED lighting
modules on flexible substrata.
Lighting wallpaper or rollout screens are therefore getting closer all
the time! OSRAM Opto Semiconductors has developed a large transparent
white OLED, which is transparent when both turned on and off, and under
lab conditions has more than 20 lm/W at 1000 cd/m² brightness. By
way of comparison: A 100 watt bulb only generates 15 lm/W. In the
future lighting surfaces that aren't even seen during the day, but in
the evening give off a pleasant, diffuse light, are now conceivable.
Over ten years ago researchers discovered the first plastic that lights
when a power is applied to it. Since then numerous companies and
research groups all over the world have been working on the lighting
plastics of tomorrow. Plastic displays are forecast to have enormous
market potential. Both German and European companies now have the
opportunity to capture some of this market.
OLED light
Photo: Fraunhofer IPMS.The Atlantic Hotel's globe shines across the rooftops of Hamburg
with the LINEARlight-DRAGON Colormix from OSRAM in its new and colorful
brilliance. Earlier fluorescent bulbs consumed more than 400 watts for
this - but now the globe gleams just as brightly with 100 watts, and
its colors can be controlled via software.
Photo: OSRAM