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08/24/06 | 92 views | #20060186794 | Prev - Next | USPTO Class 313 | About this Page  313 rss/xml feed  monitor keywords

Electroluminescent devices with electrode protection

USPTO Application #: 20060186794
Title: Electroluminescent devices with electrode protection
Abstract: A method of manufacturing an electroluminescent device which has an anode and a cathode and arranged between the anode and the cathode a light emissive layer, also includes an anode protection layer which protects the anode against the effects of converting a precursor polymer to a semiconductive conjugated polymer which constitutes the light emissive layer. This has been found to increase the brightness and half-life of devices.
(end of abstract)
Agent: Kudirka & Jobse, LLP - Boston, MA, US
Inventors: Karl Pichler, Carl Towns
USPTO Applicaton #: 20060186794 - Class: 313503000 (USPTO)

The Patent Description & Claims data below is from USPTO Patent Application 20060186794.
Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims  monitor keywords



FIELD OF THE INVENTION

[0001] This invention relates to the construction of organic electroluminescent (EL) devices.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0002] Organic electroluminescent devices are made from materials that emit light when a suitable voltage is applied across electrodes deposited on either side of the material. One class of such materials is semiconductive conjugated polymers which have been described in our earlier U.S. Pat. No. 5,247,190, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference. Poly (p-phenylene vinylene) [PPV], for instance, will emit light when positive and negative charge carriers are passed through the material by applying a voltage between two suitable electrodes. The electroluminescent efficiency of these devices depends on the balancing of the electrons and holes that are injected into the device and meet to form electron/hole pairs, as well as on the efficiency with which these electron/hole pairs combine to radiate light, i.e. the photoluminescence efficiency (for example, see N. C. Greenham and R. H. Friend, Solid State Physics, 49, 1, 1995). Therefore it is of importance for an efficient device to have sufficiently high photoluminescence efficiency.

[0003] There are several approaches used for the processing of conjugated polymers. One approach uses a precursor polymer which is soluble and can therefore be easily coated by standard solution-based processing techniques (for example, spin-coating and blade-coating). The precursor is then converted in situ by suitable heat treatment to give the conjugated and insoluble polymer. Another approach uses directly soluble conjugated polymers which do not require a subsequent conversion stage. Depending on the specific application, one or other of the approaches might be relevant. The precursor polymers approach can be especially important where subsequent processing might lead to damage of the polymer film if it were directly soluble such processing may be, for instance, coating with further polymer layers (for example, transport layers or emitting layers of different colour), or patterning of the top electrode. Converted precursor films also have better thermal stability which is of importance both during fabrication but also for the storage and operation of devices at high temperatures.

[0004] Where the precursor polymer is converted to the final form by elimination or modification of a solubilising group it is generally important that these by-products of the conversion process are removed from the film. It may also be important that they do not interact with the substrate during this process, for example if this causes harmful impurities to move into the film from the substrate thus affecting the performance (including luminescence efficiency and lifetime) of the electroluminescent device. We have observed, for instance, a quenching of the photoluminescence when precursor PPV polymers are converted on conductive oxide substrates such as indium tin oxide. This, we believe, may be caused by indium compounds being released into the PPV due to the reaction of one of the conversion by-products (for example, hydrogen halide) with the indium tin oxide.

[0005] In addition to the observation of quenching via the presence of impurities from the interaction of by-products with indium tin oxide during conversion, we have also observed detrimental effects due to the enhanced conversion of certain PPV copolymers. Such copolymers normally have limited conjugation lengths as compared to the homopolymer case. This normally leads to exciton confinement and therefore high photoluminescence and electroluminescence efficiencies. In this case, we believe that the indium compounds present in certain PPV copolymers films when converted on indium tin oxide can catalyse the elimination of groups designed to survive the conversion process.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0006] The invention provides a device structure and a method of manufacture for an electroluminescent device that overcomes this problem.

[0007] According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a method of manufacturing an electroluminescent device comprising the steps of: [0008] forming an anode of a positive charge carrier injecting material; [0009] forming an anode protection layer on the anode of a protection material selected from the group comprising: polypyrroles and their derivatives; polythiophenes and their derivatives; polyvinylcarbazole (PVK); polystyrene; poly (vinyl pyridine); dielectric materials; carbon; amorphous silicon; non-indium containing conductive oxides including tin oxide, zinc oxide, vanadium oxide, molybdenum oxide and nickel oxide; and sublimed organic semiconductors; [0010] forming a light emissive layer by converting a precursor to a polymer being a semiconductive conjugated polymer; and [0011] forming a cathode of a negative charge carrier injecting material.

[0012] The anode protection layer has been found to be particularly valuable when the light emissive layer is a polymer which releases acidic by products (e.g. hydrogen halides) during the conversion from the precursor to the conjugated polymer.

[0013] Another aspect of the invention provides an electroluminescent device comprising: [0014] an anode formed of a positive charge carrier injecting material; [0015] an anode protection layer on the anode formed of a protection material selected from the group comprising: polypyrroles and their derivatives; polythiophenes and their derivatives; polyvinylcarbazole (PVK); polystyrene; poly (vinyl pyridine); dielectric materials; carbon; amorphous silicon; non-indium containing conductive oxides including tin oxide, zinc oxide, vanadium oxide, molybdenum oxide, and nickel oxide; and sublimed organic semiconductors; [0016] a light emissive layer formed of a semiconductive conjugated polymer; and [0017] a cathode formed of a negative charge carrier injecting material.

[0018] The invention is particularly useful when the anode is formed of indium tin oxide (ITO). However other materials are suitable, such as tin oxide.

[0019] In one embodiment a layer of transparent conducting material deposited on glass or plastic forms the anode of the device. Examples of suitable anodes include tin oxide and indium tin oxide. Typical layer thicknesses are 500-2000 .ANG. and sheet resistances are 10-100 Ohm/square, and preferably <30 Ohm/square. The converted precursor polymer can be, for instance, poly (p-phenylene vinylene) [PPV] or a homopolymer or copolymer derivative of PPV. The thickness of this layer can be in the range 100-3000 .ANG., preferably 500-2000 .ANG. and more preferably 1000-2000 .ANG.. The thickness of the precursor layer prior to conversion can be in the range 100-6000 .ANG. for spin-coated layers and up to 200 .mu.m for blade coating. The anode protection layer is chosen to act as a barrier against the conversion by-products of the precursor polymer, but also should not act as a barrier to the injection of holes from the anode into the emitting layer, where they combine with electrons injected from the cathode to radiate light. Conducting polymers are a general class of materials that can combine ease of processing, protection of the underlying electrode, and suitable hole transporting and injecting properties and are therefore good candidates. Thin layers of between 10-2000 .ANG. and preferably 10-500 .ANG. may be used and therefore the transparency of the layer can be high. Typical sheet resistances of these layers are 100-1000 Ohm/square, but can be as high as in excess of 10.sup.10 .OMEGA./squ. Examples include conjugated polymers that have been doped including polythiophenes, polyanilines, polypyrroles, and derivatives thereof. The cathode electrode is placed on the other side of the converted precursor material and completes the device structure. Furthermore, undoped conjugated polymers, as listed above, may also be used where the doping occurs in situ, by interaction with the conversion by-products during device manufacture.

[0020] The invention also provides use of an electrode protection layer in the manufacture of an organic light emitting device to protect an electrode of the organic light emitting device from the effects of conversion of a precursor into a light emitting semiconductive conjugated polymer, wherein the organic light emitting device comprises first and second electrodes with the light emitting polymer being located between them.

[0021] Thus, in another embodiment the electrode protection layer and the precursor polymer is deposited on the cathode, typically a material such as aluminium or an alloy of aluminium with a low work function element or any low work function element or alloy. In this case the protection layer will need to transport electrons, but may or may not need to be transparent. Again conducting polymers are suitable candidates as cathode protection layers. The anode electrode is placed on the other side of the converted precursor material and completes the device structure.

[0022] In yet another embodiment a protection layer to either the anode or cathode as described above is provided but where the protection layer is an undoped conjugated polymer but which has sufficient injection properties and transport mobilities for either holes or electrons depending on whether it is protecting the anode or cathode respectively. An example of such a protection layer would be a soluble PPV derivative or alternatively a precursor PPV or PPV derivative material. In the latter case, if the protection layer is much thinner than the electroluminescence layer, the by-products of the conversion process are more easily removed and therefore any interaction with the electrode during conversion is reduced.

[0023] In yet another embodiment a protection layer to either the anode or cathode as described above is provided, but where the protection layer is an evaporated, sputtered, or reactively sputtered thin film which has sufficient injection properties and transport mobilities for either holes or electrons depending on whether it is protecting the anode or cathode respectively. An example of such a protection layer would be a thin layer of sputtered or evaporated carbon, a sputtered layer of amorphous silicon or non-indium containing conductive oxides including tin oxide, zinc oxide, vanadium oxide, molybdenum oxide, and nickel oxide, or a sublimed organic semiconductor layer.

[0024] In yet another embodiment a protection layer to either the cathode or anode as described above is provided, but where the protection layer is an undoped and non-conjugated polymer but which has sufficient injection properties and transport mobilities for either holes or electrons depending on whether it is protecting the anode or cathode respectively. An example would be polyvinyl carbazole which is a good hole transporting material but is not a conjugated polymer. Alternatively very thin layers of polymer materials which have relatively poor hole and electron mobilities may function as good electrode protectors without compromising the balance of electron and hole charge carriers. Examples would be polystyrene and poly (vinyl pyridine).

[0025] In yet another embodiment a protection layer to either the cathode or anode as described above is provided, but where the protection layer is a very thin inorganic dielectric which provides a barrier to the precursor conversion by-products, but which is thin enough that holes can tunnel through it when it is in contact and protecting the anode or electrons can tunnel through it when it is in contact and protecting the cathode.

[0026] The invention also provides a method of manufacturing an electroluminescent device comprising the steps of: [0027] forming an anode of a positive charge injecting material; [0028] forming a sacrificial anode protection layer over the anode; [0029] depositing a precursor to a semiconductive conjugated polymer on the sacrificial layer; [0030] converting the precursor to a semiconductive conjugated polymer to form a light emitting layer, during which conversion step the anode protection layer protects the anode from the effects of the conversion and is itself consumed; and [0031] forming a cathode of a negative charge injecting material.

[0032] Thus, in another embodiment a protection layer for either the anode or the cathode as described above is provided, but where the protection layer is a sacrificial layer. During the conversion process the sacrificial layer is etched away by the conversion by-products, the subsequence products of this interaction are chosen such that they do not interfere with the photoluminescence or electroluminescence efficiencies of the converted precursor conjugated polymers. Examples of such protection layers would include non-stoichiometric oxide films, such as silicon and aluminium oxides, the layer thickness being determined by the degree of interaction during the conversion process.

[0033] The invention also provides an organic light-emitting device, comprising: [0034] an electrode; [0035] an organic light-emissive layer formed from converted organic precursor; and [0036] an electrode protection layer formed between the electrode and the light-emissive layer so as to protect the electrode during conversion of the organic precursor.

[0037] The invention also provides a method of manufacturing an organic light-emitting device, comprising the steps of: [0038] depositing an electrode; [0039] depositing an electrode protection layer over the electrode; depositing a layer of an organic precursor for a light-emissive material; and [0040] converting the organic precursor into the light-emissive material; [0041] wherein the electrode protection layer protects the electrode during conversion of the organic precursor.

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