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Home»News»New OLED breakthrough could make the next see-through screen actually worth using
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New OLED breakthrough could make the next see-through screen actually worth using

News RoomBy News Room13 June 20262 Mins Read
New OLED breakthrough could make the next see-through screen actually worth using
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Every transparent OLED demo I’ve seen so far looks amazing for about ten seconds, right before I notice how dim or smudgy it actually looks. A big part of the problem is the role that electrodes play in the design. 

A transparent display requires a see-through electrode that sits on top of incredibly delicate organic light-emitting layers. However, most of the usual options either conduct electricity poorly or risk damaging those layers during manufacturing. 

So how exactly does this new electrode get made?

A team at Seoul National University, led by professor Yongtaek Hong, just found a way around that, and a clever one no less. 

Instead of using harsh chemicals or etching to add a metal layer onto a finished OLED, which can damage the organic materials underneath, the team first stamps down a pattern of a special coating.

Instead of etching a metal layer onto a finished OLED, which can damage the organic materials underneath, the team first stamps down a pattern of a special coating (an elastomer). When metal vapor is added next, it sticks everywhere except on top of that coating, which repels it.

Without any rinsing or lift-off, we get a self-aligned metal mesh electrode that is 93.6% to 99% transparent with sheet resistance as low as 1.1 Ohm per square, which is extremely low for a transparent electrode, results in better electrical conductivity, according to the study published in Materials Horizons (via EurekAlert).

Chart, Plot, Electronics

Why should you care about an electrode, of all things?

Because this lesser-known component is what has been holding back transparent displays. The team’s electrode scored a figure of merit above 10,000, which they call one of the best results ever reported for something as thin.  

Hong says the technique could become a go-to method for transparent and flexible displays, AR devices, car screens, smart windows, and even under-display facial recognition panels. 

This doesn’t mean that a transparent iPhone or Samsung Galaxy S-series ships next year. But fixing the boring manufacturing problem is exactly how these screens go from demos to something you would actually want to use.

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