Surface Mount Devices Containing a Plurality of Pixels and Sub-Pixels and Providing Off-Axis Color Correction for Video Wall Displays
20230044657 · 2023-02-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
H10K59/351
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Light-emitting surface mount devices comprised of an array of emitters forming multi-color and white pixels wherein the multi-color pixels have at least substantially the same overall pixel height and width as the white pixels in the array and methods of making same are disclosed. Visual uniformity is enhanced thereby. Light-emitting arrays of color pixel groups with adjacent pixel groups arranged relative to one another, such as by using different color orders, color orientations or color alignments, so that the off-axis color skew is more dispersed between many viewing angles and thus reduced or even eliminated when large groups of emitters are simultaneously observed from a specific viewing angle,
Claims
1. A light-emitting surface mount device comprising a micro-array of self-emitting pixels including at least one white emitter with a height and width sized at least substantially equal to a combined height and width of a multi-color set of emitters of a neighboring pixel, wherein the micro-array comprises at least 2 horizontal and 2 vertical pixels.
2. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein at least two said pixels each comprise said one white emitter and at least two said pixels each comprise said multi-color emitters forming a set of sub-pixels.
3. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said emitter surface mounted on the micro-array substrate.
4. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said multi-color emitters directly bonded thereto and a white emitter substrate with the white emitter directly bonded to the white emitter substrate, and wherein the white emitter substrate is directly bonded to the micro-array substrate.
5. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein the white emitters comprise a white LED and the multi-color emitters comprise a combination of red, green and blue LEDs.
6. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein said emitters comprise at least one of LEDs, OLEDs, PLEDs, AMOLEDs, LCDs, or LECs.
7. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein: each multi-color set of emitters comprises the same plural different color light emitters; and the different color light emitters of each multi-color set are arranged in at least one of a different order, different orientation or different alignment relative to the different color light emitters at least two adjacent pixels of the array.
8. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein the device is configured as one of a BGA package, a QFN package or a PLCC package.
9. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein the device is no larger than 5 mm×5 mm.
10. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, further comprising a light transmissive encapsulation layer over emitters on the micro-array substrate.
11. A light-emitting tile comprising an array of light-emitting surface mount devices according to claim 1.
12. A video display wall comprising an array of light-emitting tiles according to claim 11.
13. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 1, wherein the micro-array comprises a 2×2 pixel micro-array with one row consisting of a first pixel formed of one each of a red LED, green LED and blue LED and a second pixel formed of a single white LED and with another row consisting of a first pixel formed of a single white LED and a second pixel formed of one each of a red LED, green LED and blue LED.
14. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 13, wherein each said pixel has at least substantially equal total height and width.
15. The light-emitting surface mount device of claim 13, wherein a total height and width of each pixel varies by not more than about 1%-20% of the total height and width of each other pixel in said micro-array.
16. A method of making a light-emitting micro-array, comprising: configuring plural multi-color pixels, each pixel comprising plural different color emitters and having an overall height and width; surface mounting the multi-color pixels to a micro-array substrate; configuring plural white emitters, each said white emitter having an overall height and width substantially the same as the height and width of each said multi-color pixel; and surface mounting the white emitters to the micro-array substrate adjacent the multi-color pixels to form a micro-array of alternating multi-color pixels and white pixels.
17. The method of making a light-emitting micro-array according to claim 16, wherein said surface mounting the white emitters comprises first surface mounting the white emitters to individual substrates and subsequently surface mounting the individual substrates with the white emitters separately on the micro-array substrate.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein said configuring of plural multi-color pixels further comprises configuring plural multi-color pixels in two different pixel arrangements, each multi-color pixel comprising plural different color emitters, each different pixel arrangement varying from other pixel arrangements by at least one of emitter color order, color emitter orientation or color emitter alignment; and having an overall height and width; and said surface mounting the multi-color pixels comprises surface mounting the multi-color pixels to the micro-array substrate wherein each multi-color pixel has a different pixel arrangement from its horizontally adjacent and vertically adjacent multi-color pixels.
19. A light-emitting device comprising an array of self-emitting pixels, wherein: each pixel of the array comprises the same plural different color light emitters; and the different color light emitters of each pixel of the array are arranged in at least one of a different order, different orientation or different alignment relative to the different color light emitters in an at least two adjacent pixels of the array.
20. The light-emitting device of claim 19, wherein each different color light emitter in each pixel is a non-white emitter.
21. The light-emitting device of claim 19, wherein: the pixel array includes pixels comprising a white emitter and pixels comprising plural non-white color emitters; and each pixel comprising having a white emitter is adjacent to not more than four other pixels in the array having a white emitter.
22. The light-emitting device of claim 19, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different orders in the at least two adjacent pixels.
23. The light-emitting device of claim 19, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different orientations in the at least two adjacent pixels.
24. The light-emitting device of claim 21, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different alignments in the at least two adjacent pixels.
25. The light-emitting device of claim 19, wherein said array comprises a micro-array of self-emitting pixels formed as a surface mount device (SMD).
26. The light-emitting device of claim 21, wherein at least two said pixels each comprise said one white emitter and at least two said pixels each comprise said multi-color emitters forming a set of sub-pixels.
27. A light-emitting tile comprising an array of light-emitting surface mount devices according to claim 19.
28. A light-emitting device configured as a surface mount device providing reduced off-axis color skew from specific viewing angles, said device comprising a 2×2 pixel micro-array with one row consisting of a first pixel formed of an ordered sequence of a red LED, a green LED and a blue LED and a second pixel formed of a single white LED, and with another row consisting of a first pixel formed of a single white LED and a second pixel formed of an ordered sequence of a blue LED, a green LED and a red LED.
29. The light-emitting device of claim 28, wherein each said pixel has at least substantially equal total height and width.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] For the purpose of illustrating the disclosure, the drawings show aspects of one or more embodiments of the disclosure. However, it should be understood that the present disclosure is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown in the drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0035] Embodiments disclosed herein utilize surface mount devices (SMD) configured with micro-arrays of alternatingly arranged RGB(N) (red/green/blue/(other possible color) or RGB(N)+W (red/green/blue/(other possible color)+white) pixels to provide an off-axis color correction solution to the problem described above as well as to provide other SMD features and advantages as described hereinafter. Embodiments of the present disclosure utilize micro-arrays of emitters wherein the emitters are arranged in patterns to minimize or eliminate off-axis color distortions when images presented on a display wall comprised of tiles made up of the micro-arrays are captured with an image-capture device at varying angles. Details of various embodiments of an individual micro-array 102A-F are shown in
[0036] As shown in
[0037] As mentioned above, in conventional LED-based display devices, internal components create non-uniform dispersion of emitted light causing off-axis color skew. Not only is there color skew for this reason, the color skew can be different for each of the red, green and blue emitters, further complicating potential solutions. Thus, in embodiments of the present disclosure, the fact of the off-axis color skew on an emitter-by-emitter basis is accepted and no attempt is made to create perfectly uniform emitters individually. Instead, the present disclosure arranges adjacent pixel groups relative to one another, such as by using different color orders, color orientations or color alignments, so that the off-axis color skew is more dispersed between many viewing angles and thus reduced or even eliminated when large groups of emitters are simultaneously observed from a specific viewing angle (as is the typical viewing modality both for human viewers and image capture devices). While increasing the number of individual emitters at different relative angles to one another would further reduce off-axis color skew, it has been determined that just two or four relative rotations of emitters or small groups of emitters are sufficient to “mix” together the skews of the individual emitters to achieve improved results in the form of reduced or eliminated color skew. For example, by flip-flopping the RGB/BGR in a checkerboard, that arrangement can provide a satisfactory horizontal and vertical appearance, with a pinwheel arrangement on top of that wherein emitters are further rotated 90 degrees and flip-flopped, excellent results are achieved in terms of color skew or distortion elimination at off-axis viewing angles.
[0038] With reference again to
[0039] In some embodiments, each of LEDs 110, 112, 114 are direct bonded to substrate 104. Prepackaging of micro-arrays 102 into a single package as disclosed herein provides further advantages in fabrication by reducing pick-and-place times and simplifying complex printed circuit board (PCB) designs so as to achieve complex pixel arrangements, but with standardly formatted micro-arrays, which may be uniformly placed and connected.
[0040]
[0041] In further alternative embodiments, as shown in
[0042] With respect to embodiments shown in
[0043] In another advantage of embodiments disclosed herein, the micro-arrays 102 may be individually encapsulated with a light transmissive protective encapsulation layer over the LEDs. Examples of materials for the encapsulation layer include silicone or epoxy resin/potting compounds or conformal coatings such as parylene, paraxylene, acrylic, silicone, polyurethane or lacquer. Additionally, lenses, for example epoxy or silicone lenses, may be optionally disposed over the entire micro-array or over individual or groups of emitters.
[0044] Embodiments described herein easily lend themselves to different types of surface-mount packaging as may be best suited to particular applications. For example, embodiments disclosed herein may be provided as ball grid array (BGA) packages, various types of flat no-leads packages such as quad-flat no-leads (QFN) packages, or various chip carrier packages such as plastic-leaded chip carrier (PLCC) packages.
[0045] One feature of embodiments disclosed herein is that the size, i.e. overall profile (height and width) dimensions of white LED 116 are at least substantially the same as the combined size (combined height and width) of RGB LEDs 110, 112 and 114 together so as to provide a smooth and consistent visual appearance in all illumination conditions. This means that in various embodiments the combined height and combined width of the multi-color pixel and the height and width of the white pixel, if not identical, vary from one another by not more than about 1% to about 20%. (Within plus/minus 0% would be identical in size). In some embodiments, the combined height and combined width of the multi-color pixel is within about 5% to about 10% of the height and width of the white pixel.
[0046] Spacing and sizing of micro-arrays 102 can be based on visual acuity of an observer. Typical visual acuity for adults is 1 arc-minute in size, or approximately 2 pixels per degree. In general, a micro-array size should be selected such that a viewer would not perceive the boundaries of the micro-array. Parameters to be considered in sizing micro-arrays 102 include an array size which is large enough to yield improvements in durability and robustness, yet small enough for repairability to the array on a PCB.
[0047] The distance between the viewer and the display will have a direct correlation to an ideal array size, however generally the pixel pitch is also chosen based on this distance. In one example, a 100×100 pixel array may be formed according to the present disclosure using an array of micro-arrays 102 with sub-pixels and pixels in as small as a 2×2 array and large as a 16×16 array such that the micro-array size need not exceed 5 mm×5 mm. In the case of a 2×2 micro-array, the footprint of the SMD is four times more robust than a single RGB SMD pixel, yet it is small enough such that it can be replaced to repair the array without being commercially unreasonable. And it is also small enough to be within visual acuity such that an observer will not be able to see a physical pattern or break-up in a very large array (in other words, the “texture” of the front of a very large display will appear uniform).
[0048] In one example, the dimensions of micro-array 102 may be approximately 5 mm or less by 5 mm or less. With a 5×5 mm micro-array, individual pixel size may be in the range of about 2×2 mm to about 2.4×2.4 mm in some embodiments. As illustrative examples, white LED 116 may comprise a 6504 Kelvin or 2700 Kelvin LED. A further feature of embodiments disclosed herein, is that each micro-array 102 may be individually encapsulated. Thus, when an LED fails on one micro-array, only that specific micro-array need be replaced. The replacement micro-array then provides a more uniform appearance with the existing micro-arrays because any variations in encapsulation layers fall within each of the micro-arrays. Also, a single LED failure only requires replacement of a single micro-array, for example just eight LEDs in one embodiment, thus providing much more efficiency and less waste compared to prior designs.
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[0050]
[0051] Details of an embodiment of an individual SMD micro-array 202 are shown in
[0052] In another advantage of embodiments disclosed herein, the micro-arrays may be individually encapsulated with a light transmissive protective encapsulation layer 228 over the LEDs, as shown in
[0053] Embodiments described herein easily lend themselves to different types of surface-mount packaging as may be best suited to particular applications. For example, embodiments disclosed herein may be provided as ball grid array (BGA) packages, various types of flat no-leads packages such as quad-flat no-leads (QFN) packages, or various chip carrier packages such as plastic-leaded chip carrier (PLCC) packages.
[0054] One feature of embodiments disclosed herein is that the size, i.e. overall profile (height and width) dimensions of white LED 216 are at least substantially the same as the combined size (combined height and width) of RGB LEDs 210, 212 and 214 together so as to provide a smooth and consistent visual appearance in all illumination conditions. This means that in various embodiments the combined height and combined width of the multi-color pixel and the height and width of the white pixel, if not identical, vary from one another by not more than about 1% to about 20%. (Within plus/minus 0% would be identical in size). In some embodiments, the combined height and combined width of the multi-color pixel is within about 5% to about 10% of the height and width of the white pixel.
[0055] Spacing and sizing of micro-arrays 202 can be based on visual acuity of an observer. Typical visual acuity for adults is 1 arc-minute in size, or approximately 2 pixels per degree as illustrated in
[0056] As reflected in
[0057] In one example, the dimensions of micro-array 202 may be approximately 5 mm or less by 5 mm or less. With a 5×5 mm micro-array, individual pixel size may be in the range of about 2×2 mm to about 2.4×2.4 mm in some embodiments. As illustrative examples, white LED 216 may comprise a 6504 Kelvin or 2700 Kelvin LED. A further feature of embodiments disclosed herein, is that each micro-array 202 may be individually encapsulated as shown in
[0058]
[0059] Further to the array size above, as explained above, embodiments disclosed herein do not utilize simple RGB sets for a pixel. White pixel 216 is added in at least one color temperature in place of an RGB set. In other words, instead of adding another sub-pixel color and attempting to decrease the sub-pixel spacing even more, embodiments of the present disclosure replace three sub-pixels with less components but in a different color. This helps achieve efficiency and also can yield a uniform flat-field white point for a video display.
[0060] While RGB and white LED pixels are a common construct and thus used herein for illustration purposes, the principles of the present disclosure are equally applicable to any type of emitter using multi-color pixels, whether RGB LED type emitters, other emitter types (e.g., organic light-emitting diodes (OLED), polymer light-emitting diodes (PLED), active-matrix light-emitting diodes (AMOLED), liquid crystal displays (LCD) or light-emitting electrochemical cells (LEC) as non-limiting examples), or other multi-color pixel combinations (e.g., multi-primary color pixels with four or five colors such as RGBY, RGBM, RGBC or RGBYC as non-limiting examples). The scope of the present disclosure and appended claims is therefore not limited to the illustrative RGB LED examples.
[0061] The following numbered subparagraphs define further alternative embodiments, features and advantages of the present disclosure:
[0062] 1. A light-emitting surface mount device comprising a micro-array of self-emitting pixels including at least one white emitter with a height and width sized at least substantially equal to a combined height and width of a multi-color set of emitters of a neighboring pixel, wherein the micro-array comprises at least 2 horizontal and 2 vertical pixels.
[0063] 2. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in subparagraph 1 above, wherein at least two said pixels each comprise said one white emitter and at least two said pixels each comprise said multi-color emitters forming a set of sub-pixels.
[0064] 3. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in subparagraph 1 or 2 above, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said emitter surface mounted on the micro-array substrate.
[0065] 4. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in subparagraph 1 or 2 above, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said multi-color emitters directly bonded thereto and a white emitter substrate with the white emitter directly bonded to the white emitter substrate, and wherein the white emitter substrate is directly bonded to the micro-array substrate.
[0066] 5. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in any of subparagraphs 1-4 above, wherein the white emitters comprise a white LED and the multi-color emitters comprise a combination of red, green and blue LEDs.
[0067] 6. A light-emitting surface mount device comprising a 2×2 pixel micro-array with one row consisting of a first pixel formed of one each of a red LED, green LED and blue LED and a second pixel formed of a single white LED and with another row consisting of a first pixel formed of a single white LED and a second pixel formed of one each of a red LED, green LED and blue LED.
[0068] 7. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in subparagraph 6 above, wherein each said pixel has at least substantially equal total height and width.
[0069] 8. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in any of subparagraphs 1-5 and 7 above, wherein the total height and width of each pixel varies by not more than about 1%-20% of the total height and width of each other pixel in said micro-array.
[0070] 9. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in subparagraph 8 above, wherein the total height and width of each pixel varies by not more than about 5%-10% of the total height and width of each other pixel in said micro-array.
[0071] 10. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in any of subparagraphs 1-9 above, wherein the device is configured as one of a BGA package, a QFN package or a PLCC package.
[0072] 11. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in any of subparagraphs 1-10 above, wherein the device is no larger than 5 mm×5 mm.
[0073] 12. The light-emitting surface mount device as described in any of subparagraphs 1-11 above, further comprising a light transmissive encapsulation layer over emitters or LEDs on the micro-array substrate.
[0074] 13. A light-emitting tile comprising an array of light-emitting surface mount devices as described in any of subparagraphs 1-12 above.
[0075] 14. A video display wall comprising an array of light-emitting tiles as described in subparagraph 13 above.
[0076] 15. A method of making a light-emitting micro-array, comprising configuring plural multi-color pixels, each pixel comprising plural different color emitters and having an overall height and width; surface mounting the multi-color pixels to a micro-array substrate; configuring plural white emitters, each said white emitter having an overall height and width substantially the same as the height and width of each said multi-color pixel; and surface mounting the white emitters to the micro-array substrate adjacent the multi-color pixels to form a micro-array of alternating multi-color pixels and white pixels.
[0077] 16. The method of making a light-emitting micro-array as described in subparagraph 15 above, wherein said surface mounting the white emitters comprise first surface mounting the white emitters to individual substrates and subsequently surface mounting the individual substrates with the white emitters separately on the micro-array substrate.
[0078] 17. The method of making a light-emitting micro-array as described in either of subparagraphs 15 or 16 above, further comprising encapsulating the emitters in a light transmissive protective layer after surface mounting the emitters to the micro-array substrate.
[0079] 18. The method of making a light-emitting micro-array as described in any of subparagraphs 1-17 above, wherein the emitters are configured such that the micro-array is no larger than 5 mm×5 mm.
[0080] 19. A light-emitting device comprising an array of self-emitting pixels, wherein each pixel of the array comprises the same plural different color light emitters; and the different color light emitters of each pixel of the array are arranged in at least one of a different order, different orientation or different alignment relative to the different color light emitters in an at least two adjacent pixels of the array.
[0081] 20. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 19 above, wherein each different color light emitter in each pixel is a non-white emitter.
[0082] 21. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 19 above, wherein the pixel array includes pixels comprising a white emitter and pixels comprising plural non-white color emitters; and each pixel comprising having a white emitter is adjacent to not more than four other pixels in the array having a white emitter.
[0083] 22. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 19-21 above, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different orders in the at least two adjacent pixels.
[0084] 23. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 19-21 above, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different orientations in the at least two adjacent pixels.
[0085] 24. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 19-21 above, wherein the different color light emitters are arranged in different alignments in the at least two adjacent pixels.
[0086] 25. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 19-24 above, wherein said array comprises a micro-array of self-emitting pixels formed as a surface mount device (SMD).
[0087] 26. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraph 21-25 above, wherein at least two said pixels each comprise said one white emitter and at least two said pixels each comprise said multi-color emitters forming a set of sub-pixels.
[0088] 27. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 25 or 26 above, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said emitter surface mounted on the micro-array substrate.
[0089] 28. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 25 or 26 above, further comprising a micro-array substrate with each said multi-color emitters directly bonded thereto and a white emitter substrate with the white emitter directly bonded to the white emitter substrate, and wherein the white emitter substrate is directly bonded to the micro-array substrate.
[0090] 29. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 25-28 above, wherein the white emitters comprise a white LED and the multi-color emitters comprise a combination of red, green and blue LEDs.
[0091] 30. A light-emitting device configured as a surface mount device providing reduced off-axis color skew from specific viewing angles, said device comprising a 2×2 pixel micro-array with one row consisting of a first pixel formed of an ordered sequence of a red LED, a green LED and a blue LED and a second pixel formed of a single white LED, and with another row consisting of a first pixel formed of a single white LED and a second pixel formed of an ordered sequence of a blue LED, a green LED and a red LED.
[0092] 31. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 30 above, wherein each said pixel has at least substantially equal total height and width.
[0093] 32. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 25-30 above, wherein the total height and width of each pixel varies by not more than about 1%-20% of the total height and width of each other pixel in said array.
[0094] 33. The light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 32 above, wherein the total height and width of each pixel varies by not more than about 5%-10% of the total height and width of each other pixel in said micro-array.
[0095] 34. The light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 19-33 above, further comprising a light transmissive encapsulation layer over emitters or LEDs mounted on an array substrate.
[0096] 35. A light-emitting tile comprising an array of light-emitting surface mount devices as described in any of subparagraphs 25-35.
[0097] 36. A light-emitting array providing off-axis color correction for video wall displays, comprising an SMD having at least four pixel groups arranged in a 2×2 array wherein vertically adjacent pixel groups and horizontally adjacent pixel groups comprise plural individual light emitters positioned relatively differently with respect to one another such that off-axis color skews of the individual light emitters are dispersed between multiple viewing angles to reduce or eliminate cumulative off-axis color skew for said light-emitting display.
[0098] 37. A video display tile having reduced off-axis color skew, comprising a plurality of light-emitting arrays as described in subparagraph 36 above formed in a tile array, said tile array configured to provide reduced or eliminated color skew when said video display tile is viewed at a specific viewing angle.
[0099] 38. A method of making a light-emitting device, comprising configuring plural multi-color pixels in two different pixel arrangements, each multi-color pixel comprising plural different color emitters, each different pixel arrangement varying from other pixel arrangements by at least one of emitter color order, color emitter orientation or color emitter alignment; and having an overall height and width; and surface mounting the multi-color pixels in a micro-array to a micro-array substrate wherein each multi-color pixel has a different pixel arrangement from its horizontally adjacent and vertically adjacent multi-color pixels.
[0100] 39. The method of making a light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 38 above, further comprising configuring plural white emitters; and surface mounting the white emitters to the micro-array substrate adjacent the multi-color pixels to form a micro-array of alternating multi-color pixels and white pixels.
[0101] 40. The method of making a light-emitting device as described in subparagraph 39 above, wherein said surface mounting the white emitters comprises first surface mounting the white emitters to individual substrates and subsequently surface mounting the individual substrates with the white emitters separately on the micro-array substrate.
[0102] 41. The method of making a light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 38-40 above, further comprising encapsulating the emitters in a light transmissive protective layer after surface mounting the emitters to the micro-array substrate.
[0103] 42. The method of making a light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 38-41 above, wherein the emitters are configured such that the micro-array is no larger than 5 mm×5 mm.
[0104] 43. The method of making a light-emitting device as described in any of subparagraphs 38-42 above, wherein each said multi-color pixel has an overall height and width; and each said white emitter has an overall height and width substantially the same as the height and width of each said multi-color pixel.
[0105] 44. The devices or methods as described in any of subparagraphs 1-43 above, wherein said emitters comprise at least one of LEDs, OLEDs, PLEDs, AMOLEDs, LCDs, or LECs.
[0106] The foregoing has been a detailed description of illustrative embodiments of the disclosure. It is noted that in the present specification and claims appended hereto, conjunctive language such as is used in the phrases “at least one of X, Y and Z” and “one or more of X, Y, and Z,” unless specifically stated or indicated otherwise, shall be taken to mean that each item in the conjunctive list can be present in any number exclusive of every other item in the list or in any number in combination with any or all other item(s) in the conjunctive list, each of which may also be present in any number. Applying this general rule, the conjunctive phrases in the foregoing examples in which the conjunctive list consists of X, Y, and Z shall each encompass: one or more of X; one or more of Y; one or more of Z; one or more of X and one or more of Y; one or more of Y and one or more of Z; one or more of X and one or more of Z; and one or more of X, one or more of Y and one or more of Z.
[0107] Various modifications and additions can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure. Features of each of the various embodiments described above may be combined with features of other described embodiments as appropriate in order to provide a multiplicity of feature combinations in associated new embodiments. Furthermore, while the foregoing describes a number of separate embodiments, what has been described herein is merely illustrative of the application of the principles of the present disclosure. Additionally, although particular methods herein may be illustrated and/or described as being performed in a specific order, the ordering is highly variable within ordinary skill to achieve aspects of the present disclosure. Accordingly, this description is meant to be taken only by way of example, and not to otherwise limit the scope of this disclosure.
[0108] Exemplary embodiments have been disclosed above and illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes, omissions and additions may be made to that which is specifically disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.