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New paper-thin LCD is tough, flexible, and cheap

Optoelectronic engineers in China and Hong Kong have manufactured a special type of liquid crystal display (LCD) that is paper thin, flexible, light, and tough. With this product, a daily newspaper could be uploaded onto a flexible, paper-like display that could be updated as fast as the news cycles.

It sounds like something from the future, but scientists estimate it will be cheap to produce, perhaps only costing $5 for a 5-in. screen. The new optically rewritable LCD design was reported at the end of March in Applied Physics Letters from AIP Publishing.

Combined flexible blue optically rewritable LCD. [Credit: Zhang et al.]

 

 

The team focused on two key innovations for achieving highly flexible designs.

The first is the recent development of optically rewritable LCDs. Like conventional LCD displays, the display is structured like a sandwich, with a liquid crystal filling between two plates. Unlike conventional liquid crystals where electrical connections on the plates create the fields required to switch individual pixels from light to dark, optically rewritable LCDs coat the plates with special molecules that realign in the presence of polarized light and switch the pixels. This removes the need for traditional electrodes, reduces the structure's bulk, and allows more choices in the type and thickness of plates. Consequently, optically rewritable LCDs are thinner than traditional LCDs (at less than half a millimeter thick), can be made from flexible plastic, and weigh only a few grams. "It's only a little thicker than paper," said Jiatong Sun, a co-author from Donghua University in China.

Optically rewritable LCDs are durable and cheap to manufacture because of their simple structure. Moreover, like an electronic paper screen in an e-book, energy is only required to switch display images or text. Therefore, running costs are low, because these new LCDs don't need power to sustain an image once it is written on the screen.

The second innovation involves the spacers that create the separation of the plastic or glass plates. "We put spacers between glass layers to keep the liquid crystal layer uniform," Sun said. Spacers are used in all LCDs to determine the thickness of the liquid crystal. A constant thickness is necessary for good contrast ratio, response time, and viewing angle. However, when plates bend, it forces the liquid crystal away from the impact site and leaves sections of the screen blank, and so alterations in spacer design are critical to prevent liquid crystal in flexible LCDs from moving excessively. Developing a flexible design that overcomes this barrier has proven challenging.

The researchers tried three different spacer designs and found that a mesh-like spacer prevented liquid crystal from flowing when the LCD was bent or hit. This innovation enabled them to create the first flexible optically rewritable LCD.

An additional innovation involved improved color rendering. The scientists report that, until this study, optically rewritable LCDs had only been able to display two colors at a time. Now, their optically rewritable LCD simultaneously displays the three primary colors. They achieved this by placing a special type of liquid crystal behind the LCD that reflected red, blue, and green. To make this into a commercial product, Sun wants to improve the resolution of the flexible optically rewritable LCD.

"Now we have three colors, but for full color we need to make the pixels too small for human eyes to see," Sun said.

Source: Applied Physics Letters

Published April 2018

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