| Literature DB >> 33093108 |
Won-Jae Joo1, Jisoo Kyoung2, Majid Esfandyarpour3, Sung-Hoon Lee2, Hyun Koo2, Sunjin Song2, Young-Nam Kwon2, Seok Ho Song4, Jun Cheol Bae2, Ara Jo2, Myong-Jong Kwon2, Sung Hyun Han2, Sung-Han Kim2, Sungwoo Hwang2, Mark L Brongersma5.
Abstract
Optical metasurfaces are starting to find their way into integrated devices, where they can enhance and control the emission, modulation, dynamic shaping, and detection of light waves. In this study, we show that the architecture of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays can be completely reenvisioned through the introduction of nanopatterned metasurface mirrors. In the resulting meta-OLED displays, different metasurface patterns define red, green, and blue pixels and ensure optimized extraction of these colors from organic, white light emitters. This new architecture facilitates the creation of devices at the ultrahigh pixel densities (>10,000 pixels per inch) required in emerging display applications (for instance, augmented reality) that use scalable nanoimprint lithography. The fabricated pixels also offer twice the luminescence efficiency and superior color purity relative to standard color-filtered white OLEDs.Year: 2020 PMID: 33093108 DOI: 10.1126/science.abc8530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728