Amoled: (Active-Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode)
Amoled: (Active-Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode)
Amoled: (Active-Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode)
Submitte
d By,
Pratham Kumar
(070
2931075)
EC(4th
year)
Introduction
What is AMOLED?
Active-matrix OLED (Active-matrix
organic light-emitting
diode or AMOLED) is a display
technology for use in mobile devices
and televisions. OLED describes a
specific type of thin display
technology which doesn't require
a backlight, and Active-Matrix refers
to the technology behind the
addressing of pixels.
AMOLED technology continues to
make progress towards low-power and
low-cost large size (e.g. 40-inch) for
applications such as TV.
What is OLED?
An organic light emitting
diode (OLED) is a light-emitting
diode (LED) in which
the emissive electroluminescent layer
is a film of organic compounds that
emits light when an electric current
passes through it. This layer
of organic semiconductor material is
formed between two electrodes.
Generally, at least one of these
electrodes is transparent.
OLEDs are used
in television screens, computer
monitors, small, portable system
screens such as mobile
phones and PDAs, watches,
advertising, information and
indication; they can also be used in
light sources for general space
illumination and in large-area light-
emitting elements.
OLED displays can use
either passive-matrix or active-matrix
addressing schemes.
Difference between AMOLED &
PMOLED
There are two types of OLEDs
used in displays - PMOLED and
AMOLED. The difference is in the
driving electronics - it can be either
Passive Matrix (PM) or Active Matrix
(AM).
With Passive-Matrix OLEDs, the
display is controlled by switching on
rows and columns. When you turn on
row number x and column number y,
the pixel at the intersection is lit - and
emits light. Each time you can choose
just one pixel to light. So you have to
turn these on and off very quickly. You
do so in a certain sequence, and
create the desired image.
PMOLEDs are very easy and cheap to
build, but they are limited to small
sizes. The image displaying is a bit
complicated. Also the power
consumption is not as good as
AMOLEDs.
AMOLEDs have a different driver
electronics - each pixel is controlled
directly. AMOLEDs are more
expensive, and much more difficult to
create, but can be used for larger
displays (current prototypes are up to
40") and are very power efficient.
The first OLED products in the
market used PMOLEDs - these were
MP3 players, sub-displays on
cellphones and radio decks for
automobiles. The displays were small
and usually with just one or two
colors. When AMOLED panels started
to emerge in 2007 and 2008 we have
seen these larger displays in mobile
video players, digital cameras, mobile
phones main displays and even OLED
TVs.
OLED Components
Like an LED, an OLED is a solid-
state semiconductor device that is
100 to 500 nanometers thick or about
200 times smaller than a human hair.
OLEDs can have either two layers or
three layers of organic material; in the
latter design, the third layer helps
transport electrons from the cathode
to the emissive layer. In this article,
we'll be focusing on the two-layer
design.
An OLED consists of the following
parts:
• Substrate (clear plastic, glass,
foil) - The substrate supports
the OLED.
• Anode (transparent) - The
anode removes electrons
when a current flows through
the device.
• Organic layers - These layers
are made of organic
molecules or polymers.
• Conducting layer - This layer
technology
• http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/ole
d1.htm
• http://www.oled-display.net/what-is-
amoled
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_LE
D
• http://www.gadgets-
reviews.com/store/index.html