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Certificate Acknowledgement Preface Table of Content List of Figures List of Tables Abstract

Chapter 1 Past of OLED


1.1 History

Chapter 2 Introduction 2.1 What is OLED


2.2 Working Principle 2.3 Material Technologies 2.3.1 Small molecules 2.3.2 Polymers Light emitting diode 2.4 Phosphorescent Material

Chapter 3 Limitation of LCD- Evolution of OLED 3.1 Organic Led and Liquid Crystal Display Comparison
3.2 OLED Components

Chapter 4 Construction of OLED


4.1 Vacuum Deposition or Vacuum Thermal Evaporation (VTE) 4.2 Organic Vapour Phase Deposition 4.2.1 Higher deposition rates 4.2.2 Higher materials utilization 4.2.3 Better device performance 4.2.4 Shadow mask patterning 4.2.5 Larger substrate sizes

4.3 Operation 4.4 Types of OLEDs


4.4.1 Passive-Matrix OLED (PMOLED) 4.4.2 Active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) 4.4.3 Transparent OLED 4.4.4 Top-emitting OLED 4.4.5 Foldable OLED 4.4.6 White OLED

Chapter 5 Advantages and Disadvantages 5.1 Advantages 5.2 Disadvantages 5.3 Current and Future OLED Applications 5.4 Efficiency Of OLED 5.5 The Organic Future 5.6 Samsung applications Conclusion

Reference

Figure 2.1 Figure 2.2 Figure 2.3 Figure 2.4 Figure 3.1 Figure 3.2 Figure 4.1 Figure 4.2 Figure 4.3 Figure 4.4 Figure 4.5 Figure 4.6 Figure 4.7 Figure 5.1 Figure 5.2 Figure 5.3

Schematic of a bi layer OLED Alq3, commonly used in small molecule OLEDs Poly (p- phenylene vinylene), used in the first PLED. Ir (mppy)3, a phosphorescent dopant which emits green light. LCD layers OLED Structure Organic Vapour Phase Deposition OLED Construction OLED Passive Matrix OLED Active Matrix OLED Transparent OLED Top Emitting Structure Foldable OLED OLED display for Sony Clie Kodak LS633 EasyShare with OLED display The Sony 11-inch XEL-1 OLED TV

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