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The Clear Solution®

Application of Zirconia Nanocomposites for High Refractive Index Light Extraction

Dr. Sang-Hun Choi

22 Sep. 2017

Agenda

2

I. Company overview

II. Current OLED lighting technology with HRI

III. Future OLED display technology with HRI

IV.Conclusion

Pixelligent Highlights

• The PixClear® Product and Manufacturing Platforms are Disrupting the mature chemical composite industry

• Highest Index, Most Transparent & Solution Processable Materials

• Markets Served: Display, Solid State Lighting, and Optical Components

• Fully Scaled Manufacturing, The PixClearProcess™

• Over $45M Invested in Product Platform

• Global Customer Base with Market Leaders

3

Technology Leader in High Refractive Index Materials

4

Left: 50wt% ZrO2 Nanocrystals | Right: Pure Solvent

• ZrO2 Nanocrystal Dispersions

• Best Dispersions Available

– 5~10nm Spheres

– Fully Uniform

– High Loadings (>80wt%)

– 95% Transmittance

– High RI >1.8

– Broad Compatibility

• Highly Scaled Process with 40 – 50 MT capacity

• Strong IP Position 46+ issued and pending patents

Characteristics of Pixelligent HRI Enabled Material

0102030405060708090

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

%Tr

ansm

issi

on

NC wt% Loading

%T_650nm %T_350nm

5

Ra = 0.472 nmRMS = 0.597 nmRz = 9.25 nm

5 x 5 um scan area

PixClear® Enables High RI, High Transmittance, and Smoother Surface

400 500 600 700

1.56

1.60

1.64

1.68

1.72

1.76

1.80

1.84

1.88

Ref

ract

ive

Inde

x

Wavelength (nm)

90 wt%

80 wt%

50 wt%

Pure Polymer

Pixelligent ZrO2 Nanocrystal Dispersion Properties

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• Monodisperse with 99.99% of particle diameter < 30nm

• Viscosity remains low over 50-80wt% loading range prior to solvent removal and curing

• Tunable refractive index and formulation options derived from suite of capping agents

• Long shelf life = 6+ Months

7

Select Customers & Partners

8

OLED Lighting Challenges

Higher Efficiency Technology and Soluble Processing with the Right Economics is required.

(Source: Solid-State Lighting R&D Plan by Department of Energy (June, 2016) DOE/EE-1418)

OLED Lighting Panel Target Performance in 2020

Lifetime (L70) > 50,000 hrs

LuminousEfficiency

> 125 lm/W

Cost $50/klm

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OLED Light Extraction Problem

• Total Internal Reflection traps most of the light in the device

• Different light extraction schemes vary in how and where light is redirected

• SPM and substrate mode can be reduced by corrugation and surface control, respectively

• Waveguide mode (ITO/substrate interface) is where light should be redirected for maximum benefit

(5~35%) (20~50%)

(20~30%)

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Transparent Anode (n=1.8)

OLED

Glass (n=1.5)

High Index nano composite smoothing Layer (n = 1.75 – 1.85)

Pixelligent Approach for OLED Lighting

Pixelligent IEL with High RI layer shows 100% Higher Light Extraction Efficiency

PixClear® IEL(Internal Extraction Layer)

0 deg 28.1 48.3 1.7X

Integrate 32.3 46.2 1.4X

0 deg 56.5 2.0X 57.3 2.0X

Integrate 67.9 2.1X 61.9 1.9X

Control (No IEL)

With Pixelligent IEL

No EEL EEL

(Source from OLEDWorks)

2.0X

2.4X

2.0X

2.2X

1.1X

(n = 2.0 – 2.2)

Polymer

ZrO2 Nanocrystals

• Distributed Scattering Layer with PixClear® High Refractive Index Layer• More efficient than condensed scattering layer• More functional material and simple manufacturing process

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Pixelligent Approach for OLED Lighting

Transparent Anode (n=1.8)

OLED

Glass (n=1.5)

High Index Smoothing Layer n = 1.75 – 1.85High Index Layer n = 1.75 – 1.85

Transparent Anode (n=1.8)

OLED

Glass (n=1.5)

HRI Smoothing Layer(ZrO2 nanocomposite)

Scattering HRI Extraction Layer(ZrO2 nanocomposite + scatterer)

• Nanocomposite plus scatterer- Tunable viscosity, Uniform thickness, Uniform scatterer loading,

Low defect rate, UV Curable, Low surface roughness,by Slot-die, Spin or Inkjet coating

(n = 2.0 – 2.2)(n = 2.0 – 2.2)

Functional Polymer

ZrO2 Nanocrystals

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Summary of High RI ZrO2 Enabled Smoothing Layer

Performance Criteria Performance Targets Pixelligent IEL

Optical Properties

Refractive Index > 1.75 – 1.85@ 550 nm

% Transmittance > 90% in visible region

Physical Properties

Smoothing Surface Planarize scattering structures on substrate <1 nm Ra

Compatible with CurrentManufacturing Processes

Spin coating, slot die coating, screen printing, vacuum coating process, etc.

Thermal Stability

150 C – 250 C 30 min Maintain High R.I. and High % T

Chemical Properties

Compatible with polymers Maintain uniform, transparent planarizing coatings

Compatible with scatters Maintain uniform, transparent planarizing coatings

Compatible with chemical processingStable to ITO patterning processes, acids, bases, solvents, etc.

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Agenda

I. Company overview

II. Current OLED lighting technology with HRI

III. Future OLED display technology with HRI

IV.Conclusion

• Pixelligent Display Applications: OLED Displays, QD Displays, Reflective Displays

• PixClear® nanocomposites:

– Have Demonstrated 100%+ improvement in Light Extraction

– Can be applied using Inkjet, Slot Die, and Lithography processes

– Can be applied to rigid or flexible substrates

– Have Highest Index, Lowest Haze, and 95%+ Transmittance

• Broad Relationships with Leading Consumer Electronics, Device, and Advanced Materials Companies

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Leveraging PixClear® for OLED Display Applications

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Process Changes Occurring in OLED Display

Forecast for OLED display- The market for plastic and flexible AMOLED

panels will reach $18bn by 2020- This corresponds to 42% of total OLED display

revenues in 2020

Vacuum Soluble

Substrate Glass Soluble PI

OLED Small, Evaporation Polymer, Inkjet etc.

Encapsulation Inorganic, getterPolymer hybrid,

Inkjet etc.

Polarizer - Coated process

Process changes (Vacuum Soluble process)

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Source: http://www.rtings.com/tv/learn/led-oled-power-consumption-and-electricity-cost, LED(S8000) vs OLED (C7), Android Forums at AndroidCentral.com

OLED vs. LCD

OLED displays exhibit excellent picture quality but have sub-par power consumption

OLED LCD

Black level (CR) Winner Loser

Viewing angle Winner Loser

Uniformity Winner Loser

Brightness Loser Winner

Energy consumption Loser Winner

TV

Mobile

OLED

• LCD panel: Blu/Pol/TFT/LC/CF/Pol• OLED panel: OLED/TFT/CF/C.Pol

OLED/Metal/Encap/C.Pol

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Source: Solid-State Lighting R&D Plan by Department of Energy (June, 2016) DOE/EE-1418

• Electrical & spectral Efficiency

- Almost developed

• Internal Quantum Efficiency

- TADF, Phosphorescence for blue

• Extraction Efficiency- Defined by Optical Material &

Structure Design

Improved Light Extraction Significantly Increases

Display Efficiency

Electrical Efficiency

Internal Quantum Efficiency (IQE)

Extraction Efficiency

Spectral Efficiency

OVERALL PANEL Efficiency

80%

65%

35%

91%

4%

25%

35%

9%

18% 35%

OLED Panel Loss channels and Efficiencies

Potential ImprovementLight Extraction Technology is Important to achieve High Panel Efficiency

(The goal corresponds to an LER (Luminous Efficacy of Radiation) of 360 lm/W and a panel efficacy of 190 lm/W.)

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Capping layer approach with soluble HRI layer

Top emission with capping layer

Source: The Optical Outcoupling of Organic Light Emitting Diodes (Duncan Hill, Fraunhofer 2008) & Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 55, 112102(2016)

NPB(n=1.75)/ CaF2(Scattering layer)

1: WG+SPP@Bottom side of cathode2: WG+SPP@Top side of cathode

WO/ CP

W/ CP

• EQE was shown to increased by using capping layer

• Waveguide mode shifted out of metal cathode

• NPB is for index matching and buffer layer

• Damage-free deposition is required for capping layer

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Thin Metal CathodeOLED

Substrate

High Index Layer(w/scatters)

Reflective electrode

HRI layer allow for more escape paths and an increased escape cone.

Capping layer approach with soluble HRI layer

Color Filter

Top emission with soluble HRI layer

• Capping layer with HRI is best wayto increase efficiency in top emission

• Damage-free Solution process- Simple process: Scatterers in solution- No buffer layer

• Before or after encapsulation, soluble HRI layer can be applied to device

• No picture quality issue with design structure (Color filter)

20

Literature Review of Out-Coupling Strategies

Structure Efficiency enhancement

Micro lens array (on back side of the sub.)Opt. Exp. (2011)

100% (in EQE)

Micro lens array (on top of TOLEDs)Small (2012)

120% (in EQE)

Silica sphere (on back side of the sub.)Photon. Rev (2016)

60% (in cd/A)

Periodic gratings inside deviceAdv. Funct. Mater. (2012)

70% (in cd/A)

2-D photonic crystalsJ. Appl. Phys. (2004)

52% (in cd/A)

Random patterns inside deviceNature Photon. (2010)

120% (in cd/A)

Micro cones array (T) + Micro lens array (B) Adv. Mater. (2013)

160% (in EQE)

Bucking + Hemispherical on back sideAdv. Funct. Mater. (2014)

150% (in EQE)

Source:

Micro Lens Array (MLA) shows highest extraction efficiency vs other methods- But, scale and process should be optimized.

Micro cones array (T) + Micro lens array (B) Adv. Mater. 25, 3571–3577 (2013)

Current issues for display with MLA

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• Optical Crosstalk- Reflection angle with material- Mixed color crosstalk

• Picture Quality- Haze & ghost image- Color shift with lens shape

Efficiency improvement and image quality of organic light-emitting display by attaching cylindrical microlens arrays(Jiun-Haw Lee et al., Optics Express, Jan 2009)

t=5um

MLA is best candidate to increase EQE. However the challenges include:

Microlenses approach for OLED Display Light Extraction

22

• Drawbacks of microlenses such as crosstalk or back-scattering can be addressed though optimized lens design and colored lens structures (Lens per pixel) - Distance “t”- Black matrix- Color coated HRI lens (or HRI lens on CF)

• Refractive index modulation and HRI gives greater design freedom through higher focusing power and increased light extraction- Capping layer- Encapsulation

• Scalability and simple fabrication of lenses can be achieved through solution processable HRI material

Concept with soluble HRI material

HRI color coated lens(or color filter)

t

HRI Extraction layer(or in encapsulation)

OLED Display Simulation Using High RI Lenses

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• Greater luminance at all viewing angles

• Reduced color shift from 0 - 60 degrees

• Based on optical modeling 50% - 300%

more light output

0.00

200.00

400.00

600.00

800.00

1000.00

1200.00

1400.00

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Lum

inan

ce (

Cd

/m^2

)

Angle (deg)

3X Luminance Improvement

Control

21

Source : Data from joint development with DuPont

3X

HRI Lens

Enh

ance

men

t

Distance (μm)US Patent 2016/0380238 A1

~

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Creating Lens Structures with HRI Material

Uniform Lenses Created with Pixelligent HRI Formulation by Inkjet Printing

Side Profile: = 45Side Profile: = 54

(On soda lime glass)Side Profile: = 9.4Side Profile: = 26.0

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PixClear® Nanocomposite Flexible Applications

Conclusion

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• The ability to create High Refractive Index structures that extract light and preserve image quality is key to improve efficiency in OLED devices.

• These extraction structures are best made with solution process-able HRI nanocomposite materials include flexible applications.

• Using PixClear® HRI enabled structures has the potential to boost light efficiency anywhere from 50% to 300%, dramatically improving overall OLED device efficiencies!

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• DOE SBIR Phase I and Phase II Award #DE-SC0011295

• DOE SSL Award #DE-EE0006673

• FROST & SULLIVAN Manufacturing Award

Acknowledgements

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For more technical details, please read our white paper:http://www.pixelligent.com/resources/

Thank you

Shree Deshpande (VP Business Development): sdeshpande@pixelligent.comDr. Matthew Healy (VP Product Management): mhealy@pixelligent.com

Dr. Sang-Hun Choi (Senior Scientist): schoi@pixelligent.com