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Flexible display research findings at Display Week

6th August 2020
Alex Lynn
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Royole will present five technical papers during the 2020 Display Week Symposium. Organised by The Society for Information Display (SID) and taking place online from August 3rd to 7th, this virtual event features presentations from those at the cutting edge of display technologies.

SID has proved its importance to the industry numerous times and is influential for those at the forefront of the display field. This year, Display Week 2020 will host its first all-virtual event, bringing together the brightest minds in the display industry to provide insight into the latest advancements, showcasing new technologies and products that will be released in the next few years as well as giving a prominent platform for those making great strides in their respective fields of work.

Royole specialises in the creation of fully flexible displays and sensors and is presenting five separate research papers from the different areas of focus of the company as well as exploring the impact that this research will have on the future of this field of work.

OLED driving has evolved recently due to the demand for new product features. Royole’s first presented paper explores the Complementary Low-temperature Poly-Crystalline Silicon and Oxide (LTPO) technology, pixel circuits and integrated gate drivers for AMOLED displays supporting variable refresh rates.

The second paper discusses the compact modelling of independent dual gate TFTs and OLED for display panel circuit simulations. It presents a universal and comprehensive compact model for three and four-terminal thin-film transistors (TFTs). The DC and AC behaviors of TFTs with independent bottom gate or light shield layer are modelled.

With applications of flexible displays ever expanding, in its third paper, Royole has researched the general advancements in the development of flexible AMOLED displays and the possible innovations of the future, including module materials, power performance trade-offs, etc. Looking more deeply into the new form factors, the fourth technical paper investigates the mechanical effects of flexible displays.

A series of finite element analysis (FEA) models have been established to study the mechanical effects in a flexible AMOLED display module, in scenarios of outward folding, rolling and ball drop, etc. Analysis is conducted to verify the validity of such models. Touch architecture and performance remain to be a challenging topic.

Looking into this, the final paper from Royole focuses on the scalability of on-cell touch (OCT) for flexible AMOLEDs. OCT is an enabling technology for integrating touch sensor on an AMOLED display. The modelling of OCT at a full-panel, end-to-end level is critical as it provides guidelines for process integration, sensor pattern and display panel design, as well as driving system design.

The five papers will be presented at Session 24.3, Session 70.1, Poster Session P.5, Poster Session P.119 and Poster Session P.218, for more information, to register or to visit the Royole Virtual Booth, please click here.

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