Kateeva has formally introduced a suite of YIELDjet inkjet equipment for red, green and blue (RGB) pixel deposition to enable the development and pilot production of large-size OLED displays, including televisions (TVs).
The new YIELDjet family, which consists of the EXPLORE and EXPLORE PRO systems, provides display manufacturers with an industry-proven inkjet deposition platform to help bring the next generation of OLED TVs and other large-size displays to market.
According to the company they have shipped four systems from the EXPLORE family this year., and plans to ship three additional systems by the second quarter of 2018.
The YIELDjet EXPLORE and EXPLORE PRO tools contain the same demonstrated core technologies found in the YIELDjet platform, with system designs that are optimized for rapid development of RGB pixel printing. Both tools feature nitrogen printing capability, which provides an oxygen- and- moisture-free enclosure for inkjet deposition. This capability is known to greatly increase OLED device lifetime.
The new products aim to help customers compress their in-house development- to- pilot-production cycle for printed RGB OLED displays, including TVs. To achieve this, the systems are designed for flexibility and scalability.
The EXPLORE processes small panels (up to 200 mm square) for initial development, while the EXPLORE PRO targets mid-size panels (up to 55-in. display) for development through pilot production.
As many as nine inks can be loaded into each tool at the same time. This enables accelerated evaluation of multiple materials during critical phases of process development.
These products aims to address panel manufacturers' interest in using inkjet printing to overcome the scalability limitations of VTE with FMM.
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The products offer an alternative to the traditional RGB pixel deposition approach of vacuum thermal evaporation (VTE) with a fine metal mask (FMM).
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Instead, printing is used to form the active layers within the pixels that generate the red, green and blue light emitted from the OLED device.
VTE with FMM is currently used for small displays to fabricate patterned RGB active layers. However, the approach has not been successfully scaled to enable production of large displays such as those required for premium TVs.
White OLED (WOLED) TV works around the issue by using VTE to form an un-patterned white OLED layer. This eliminates the need for FMM and creates the red, green, and blue light using three separate colour filters (similar to the structure of a liquid crystal display). Although WOLED TVs are considered the best on the market, RGB OLED TVs fabricated using inkjet deposition can potentially offer superior performance.
Moreover, manufacturing costs could be 20 percent lower, according to a recent analysis*.
The potential of inkjet-fabricated RGB OLED TVs, coupled with the enabling capabilities of the YIELDjet EXPLORE products, have generated excitement among OLED display manufacturers, according to
"There is increasing enthusiasm among our customers to develop RGB OLED TVs and we believe our new systems will help them accelerate their initiatives."
"These companies are innovating rapidly and pioneering novel processes to mass-produce differentiated displays. Our products let them utilize Kateeva's unique technologies as part of their inkjet RGB pixel printing programs. We are excited to work with them to move this approach closer to mass production."
Dr. Conor Madigan, President and COO, Kateeva