• Researchers develop approach that can en

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Jul 13 22:30:28 2023
    Researchers develop approach that can enable inexpensive mass
    manufacturing of micro-LED displays
    A continuous roller printing approach can precisely transfer thousands of microscopic semiconductor devices in a single shot

    Date:
    July 13, 2023
    Source:
    Optica
    Summary:
    New research describes a continuous roller printing approach that
    can precisely transfer thousands of microscopic semiconductor
    devices in a single shot. This method paves the way to creating
    large-scale arrays of optical components and could be used to
    rapidly manufacture micro-LED displays.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Researchers have demonstrated a continuous roller printing process that
    can pick up and transfer over 75,000 micrometer-scale semiconductor
    devices in a single roll with very high accuracy. The new method paves
    the way to creating large-scale arrays of optical components and could
    be used to rapidly manufacture micro-LED displays.

    Micro-LED display technology is of great interest because it can
    accomplish highly accurate color rendering with high speed and resolution
    while using little power. These displays can be applied in a wide range
    of formats including smartphone screens, virtual and augmented reality
    devices and large displays several meters across. For larger micro-LED displays, in particular, the challenges of integrating millions of tiny
    LEDs -- which are sometimes smaller than a grain of fine sand -- onto
    an electronic control backplane are enormous.

    "Transferring micrometer-scale semiconductor devices from their native substrate to a variety of receiving platforms is a challenge being tackled internationally by both academic research groups and industries," said
    research team leader Eleni Margariti from the University of Strathclyde
    in the UK. "Our roller-based printing process offers a way to achieve
    this in a scalable manner while meeting the demanding accuracy necessary
    for this application." In the journal Optical Materials Express,
    the researchers report that their new roller technology can match the
    designed device layout with an accuracy of less than 1 micron. The setup
    is also inexpensive and simple enough to be constructed in locations
    with limited resources.

    "This printing process could also be used for other types of devices
    including silicon and printed electronics such as transistors, sensors
    and antennas for flexible and wearable electronics, smart packaging and radio-frequency identification tags," said Margariti, who developed the
    new printing process.

    "It could also be useful for making photovoltaics and for biomedical applications such as drug delivery systems, biosensors and tissue
    engineering." Large-scale device transfer Today's semiconductor
    devices are typically manufactured on wafers using growth techniques
    that deposit exquisitely detailed, multi-layer semiconductor thin films
    onto semiconductor substrates. Compatibility issues between these thin
    film structures and the types of substrates suitable for this deposition constrain the ways in which the devices can be used.

    "We wanted to improve the transfer of large numbers of semiconductor
    devices from one substrate to another to improve the performance and
    scaling of electronic systems used in applications such as displays and
    on-chip photonics, where the aim is to combine various materials that manipulate light on a very small scale," said Margariti. "To be used for large-scale manufacturing, it is crucial to use methods that can transfer
    these devices efficiently, accurately and with minimal errors." The new approach starts with an array of tiny devices that are loosely attached to their growth substrate. The surface of a cylinder containing a slightly
    sticky silicone polymer film is then rolled over the suspended array of devices, allowing adhesive forces between the silicone and semiconductor
    to detach the devices from their growth substrate and array them on
    the cylinder drum. Because the printing process is continuous it can
    be used to simultaneously print numerous devices, which makes it highly efficient for large-scale production.

    Highly accurate printing "By carefully selecting the properties of the
    silicone and receiving substrate surface and the speed and mechanics
    of the rolling process, the devices can be successfully rolled
    over and released onto the receiver substrate while preserving the
    spatially arrayed format they had on the original substrate," explained Margariti. "We also developed a custom analysis method that scans the
    printed sample for defects and provides the printing yield and positioning accuracy in just minutes." The researchers tested the new approach
    with gallium nitride on silicon (GaN/ Si) semiconductor structures. GaN
    is the dominant semiconductor technology used for micro-LED displays,
    and using silicon substrates facilitated the preparation of the devices
    as suspended structures that could be picked up by the roller. They
    were able to transfer more than 99% of the devices in an array of over
    76,000 individual elements with a spatial precision below a micron with
    no significant rotational errors.

    Next, the researchers are working to further improve the accuracy of
    the printing process while also scaling up the number of devices that
    can be transferred at once. They also plan to test the method's ability
    to combine different types of devices onto the same receiving platform
    and determine if it can be used to print to specific locations of the
    receiving platform.

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    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Eleni Margariti, Gemma Quinn, Dimitars Jevtics, Benoit Guilhabert,
    Martin
    D. Dawson, Michael J. Strain. Continuous roller transfer-printing
    and automated metrology of >75,000 micro-LED pixels in a
    single shot. Optical Materials Express, 2023; 13 (8): 2236 DOI:
    10.1364/OME.483657 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230713142011.htm

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