




Organic Light-Emitting Diodes
Tutorial
A pioneering technology for novel lighting, display and sensor applications
Topics and objectives
Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) are getting more and more into the focus of industrial product development. The technology of organic electroluminescence is on the cusp of commercialization. Leading market research institutions are expecting a billion Euro market for thin lighting products, which are operating extremely engery-saving. In the field of microdisplays, analysts reckon with a market volume of 215 M€ even in 2012. OLEDs as the only real area light source on glass or flexible foils are opening up entirely new possibilities of design. Furthermore the manufacturing processes of OLEDs based on small molecules and polymers allow the integration of OLEDs in silicon chips (OLED-on-CMOS): On the one hand tiny OLED microdisplays with an integrated camera in data eyeglasses offer new functions. On the other hand it is now possible to manufacture integrated optoelectronic sensor applications, which combine light source, detector and electronic system on one CMOS chip.
The seminars (in English) will give an introduction in OLED technology, the integration in rigid and flexible substrates as well as on CMOS chips and an overview on possible components and applications. The focus of the seminar will be on the manufacturing processes, applications and products in the Center for Organic Materials and Electronic Devices Dresden COMEDD. The participants of the seminar will be able to identify chances of the novel technology and specify possible products.
Group of participants
Engineers, product designers, developing engineers, project managers, who build OLED lighting systems, integrate OLED microdisplays or – sensors into their systems or people who are generally interested in a comprehensive overview about the OLED technology.
Costs
1050 € (both days)
Location
Dresden
Fraunhofer IPMS, Maria-Reiche-Str. 2
Date
Mar 14, 2012 - Mar 15, 2012
Download registration flyer [ PDF 0.28MB ]
Dargestellt an der InnoProfile-Forschungsgruppe für organische Photovoltaik-Bauelemente des IAPP Dresden
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