DISPLAY DEVICE HAVING A WATERMARK FORMED BY HALFTONE IMAGES
20230161216 · 2023-05-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/1677
PHYSICS
G02F1/1681
PHYSICS
B42D25/351
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02F1/133377
PHYSICS
G02F1/1679
PHYSICS
International classification
G02F1/133
PHYSICS
Abstract
The present invention is directed to display devices comprising a plurality of microcells. The plurality of microcells comprises different types of microcells having different Fill Factors. The devices have a watermark being formed by halftone images from the different types of microcells. The watermark aims to protect against counterfeiting or to be used for decoration purposes.
Claims
1. An electro-optic display device comprising an electro-optic material layer, the electro-optic material layer comprising a plurality of microcells, the plurality of microcells being separated from each other by partition walls, the partition walls of each microcell having a surface area, each microcell of the plurality of microcells having a microcell opening, the microcell opening having a surface area and a Fill Factor, each microcell of the plurality of microcells including electrophoretic medium, the electrophoretic medium comprising charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid, the electro-optic display device having a viewing side, a side opposite to the viewing side, and a watermark being formed by halftone images from the plurality of microcells, the plurality of microcells comprising more than five types of microcells, each microcell of a type of microcells having a Fill Factor that is different from the Fill Factors of all microcells of other types of microcells, the Fill Factor of a microcell being determined by Equation 1,
Fill Factor=A.sub.1/ (A.sub.1+A.sub.2) Equation 1, A.sub.1 being the surface area of the microcell opening, and A.sub.2 being the surface area of the partition walls that surround the microcell.
2. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of microcells comprises more than six types of microcells, each microcell of a type of microcells having a Fill Factor that is different from the Fill Factors of all microcells of other types of microcells.
3. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the electro-optic display device comprises microcells having the same Fill Factor, but different partition wall height.
4. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the electro-optic display device comprises microcells having the same Fill Factor, but different microcell shape.
5. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the partition walls are transparent.
6. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the partition walls are opaque.
7. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the electro-optic display device comprises at least two types of partition walls, a first type and a second type of partition walls, wherein the first type and the second type of partition walls have different colors.
8. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, further comprising a first light-transmissive electrode layer and a second electrode layer, wherein the electro-optic material layer is disposed between the first light-transmissive electrode layer and the second electrode layer.
9. The electro-optic display device of claim 8, wherein the second electrode layer is light-transmissive.
10. The electro-optic display device of claim 8, wherein the second electrode layer is colored.
11. The electro-optic display device of claim 8, further comprising a sealing layer, the sealing layer spanning the opening of each microcell of the plurality of microcells, the sealing layer being disposed between the electro-optic material layer and the second electrode layer.
12. The electro-optic display device of claim 11, wherein the sealing layer is transparent.
13. The electro-optic display device of claim 11, wherein the sealing layer is colored.
14. The electro-optic display device of claim 11, wherein the electro-optic display device further comprises an adhesive layer disposed between the sealing layer and the second electrode layer.
15. The electro-optic display device of claim 14, wherein the adhesive layer is transparent.
16. The electro-optic display device of claim 14, wherein the adhesive layer is colored.
17. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, further comprising a piezoelectric layer comprising piezoelectric material.
18. The electro-optic display device of claim 17, wherein the piezoelectric layer is located adjacent to the electro-optic material layer.
19. The electro-optic display device of claim 7, further comprising a photovoltaic layer.
20. The electro-optic display device of claim 1, wherein the electro-optic display device is used as part of a product, a document, or a currency bill for anti-counterfeiting purpose.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0041] The present inventors have found that a watermark may be added to a display device, which watermark is useful to protect against counterfeiting when a security measure is required for the display device. In addition, the watermark may also be used for ornamental design/decoration purposes.
[0042] Watermark is a fixed image that may be present on a paper, a document, an electronic display or other image substrates that is typically used for authentication, identification, or aesthetic reasons. Watermark is sometimes designed to be visible at specific viewing angles or by transmitted light or by reflected light under certain conditions such as a dark background etc.
[0043] Halftone image is a technique used in the publication industry to produce an image by using dots of varying size and spacing. It enables the production of very high quality images. The term “dot” is not specific to any particular shape. When halftone dots are very small, the human eye sees a continuous, smooth tone, although under a microscope individual dots are distinguishable.
[0044] The term “light-transmissive” and “transparent” referring to a layer A are synonymous and used herein to mean that the layer thus designated transmits sufficient light to enable an observer, looking, through that layer, to observe the image or color that is present in layer B, wherein layer A is between the observer and layer B. Specifically, a light-transmissive or transparent layer transmits 60 percent or more of the incident visible light. If the layer transmits less than 60 of the incident visible light, the layer is opaque.
[0045] “Adhesive layer” of the electro-optic display device is a layer that establishes an adhesive connection between two other layers of the device. An adhesive layer may have thickness of from 200 nm to 5 mm, or from 1 μm to 100 μm.
[0046] The term “microcell shape” refers to the two dimensional shape of the microcell opening as viewed from an observer looking from above the opening.
[0047] The term “partition wall height” refers to the distance between the floor of the microcell cavity at the partition wall and the top partition wall. It defines the microcell depth and it is shown in
[0048] The electro-optic display device of the present invention has a viewing side and a side opposite to the viewing side as shown in
[0049] The microcells of the electro-optic display device contain electrophoretic medium comprising charged pigment particles. In the example of the electro-optic device illustrated in
[0050]
[0051] The electro-optic display device may comprise a sealing layer, the sealing layer spanning the microcell openings of the electro-optic material layer. The sealing layer seals the electrophoretic medium inside the microcells. The electro-optic material layer may be disposed between a first electrode layer and a second electrode layer. In electro-optic display devices that comprise a sealing layer spanning the openings of each of the plurality of microcells, the electro-optic display device may comprise an adhesive layer disposed between the sealing layer and the second electrode layer or between the sealing layer and the first electrode layer. The sealing layer may be transparent. The adhesive layer may also be transparent.
[0052] The second electrode layer may comprise a plurality of electrodes (pixel electrodes) that can be addressed independently to each other. Thus, a variable image is enabled throughout the display device.
[0053] The electro-optic display device may comprise an electro-optic material layer having six types of microcells. Each type comprises microcells having the same Fill Factor. Each type of microcells has Fill Factor that is different from the Fill Factor of the microcells of all the other types of microcells. The electro-optic display device comprises an electro-optic material layer having more than six types of microcells, or more than seven types of microcells, or more than eight types of microcells, or more than nine types of microcells, or more than ten types of microcells, or more than twelve types of microcells, or more than fifteen types of microcells, or more than twenty types of microcells, or more than thirty types of microcells.
[0054] The surface area of a partition wall of a microcell refers to the area of the surface of the partition wall, which is on the same plane of the microcell opening, or on a plane that is parallel to the plane of the microcell opening. That is, assuming that an observer can observe the microcell openings and the upper surface of the partition walls of a microcell vertically from the side of the device that is closer to the microcell opening (versus the side opposite to the microcell floor), the surface area of the partition walls that surround the microcell can be determined as shown in
[0055] Each microcell of the electro-optic display device has a Fill Factor. The Fill factor of a microcell provides a measure of the surface of the electro-optic material layer that is electro-optically active. Electrically active means that the image displayed on the surface can be variable. The Fill Factor of a microcell is determined by Equation 1.
Fill Factor=A.sub.1/ (A.sub.1+A.sub.2) (Equation 1),
A.sub.1 is the surface area of the microcell opening, and A.sub.2 is the surface area of the partition walls that surround the microcell as viewed from the side of the electro-optic display device that is closer to the microcell opening (versus from the side that is closer to the microcell floor). Surface area A.sub.2 of the partition wall of microcell M (or any microcell) is determined by the method described below.
[0056] One scenario, illustrated in
d1=[A.sub.1/(A.sub.1+A.sub.n1)]×d (Equation 2),
d being the distance between the point of the opening perimeter of microcell M from the closest point at the opening perimeter of microcell N. That is, microcell N is the microcell whose opening perimeter is closest to the specific point of the opening perimeter of microcell M.
[0057] The process of defining the borderline to the partition wall that separates microcell M and all the other microcells that are adjacent to microcell M (other than N) is repeated, until the borderline that surrounds microcell N is defined and completed as a closed line. A microcell is considered to be adjacent to microcell N, if any point in the opening perimeter of microcell N is closer in distance to any point in the opening perimeter of microcell M than any point in the opening perimeter of any other microcell of the device.
[0058] In another scenario of the same display device, also shown in
[0059] Having defined the borderline that surrounds a microcell, the surface area of the partition wall A.sub.2 can be geometrically calculated or graphically measured for the corresponding microcell. After the determination of surface area A.sub.2 and given surface area A.sub.1, which is the readily geometrically calculated or graphically determined surface area of the microcell opening, the Fill Factor for the specific microcell can be calculated from Equation 1. It is assumed that every unit area of a partition wall that separates two microcells M and N from each other is either part of the surface area of the partition walls that surround microcell M (A.sub.2) or part of the surface area of the partition walls that surround microcell M (A.sub.n2), and not part of any other microcell of the plurality of microcells.
[0060] A piezoelectric material is a material that can generate an electric charge in response to applied mechanical stress. When mechanical stress is applied on a piezoelectric material, positive and negative charge centers in the material shift, which results in the generation of an electric field that can be used to operate devices without the need of a battery or an external power supply. For example, by bending or introducing mechanical stress to a device that comprises piezoelectric material, a voltage may be generated. This voltage can be utilized to operate the device. Non-limiting examples of piezoelectric materials include polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), quartz (SiO.sub.2), berlinite (AlPO.sub.4), gallium orthophosphate (GaPO.sub.4), tourmaline, barium titanate (BaTiO.sub.3), lead zirconate titanate (PZT), zinc oxide (ZnO), aluminum nitride (AlN), lithium tantalite, lanthanum gallium silicate, and potassium sodium tartrate. Examples of piezoelectric electrophoretic displays are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/415,022, published as US 2019/0352973, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. In the present invention, a layer comprising piezoelectric material may be used to operate the electro-optic display device, such as driving the charged pigment particles of the electrophoretic material layer to change the color state of the electrophoretic display device.
[0061] The electro-optic display device of the present invention may also be a light-harvesting device. That is, it can gather energy for its operation by converting incident light energy into electrical energy. This can be achieved by including a photovoltaic cell layer at a surface of the electro-optic display device or at or near a surface of a substrate to which the electro-optic display device is attached. Examples of light-harvesting electrophoretic display devices are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/815,269, published as US 2020/0295222, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. The electric energy that is generated by incident light energy can drive the charged pigment particles of the electrophoretic material layer to change the color state of the electrophoretic display device.
[0062] The watermark feature is achieved by designing an electro-optic material layer that has a plurality of microcells of various types. The various types of microcells have different Fill Factors. The combination of microcells having different Fill Factors parallels the “dots” of halftone images, which is a technique that is used in the printing industry to generate high quality images.
[0063]
[0064]
[0065]
[0066] The improved the aesthetics and authentication capabilities of the electro-optic display device of the present invention also depends on the fact that the devices are able to display variable images. The electro-optic display device comprises an electro-optic material layer having a plurality of microcells. Each microcell of the plurality of microcells comprises charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid that can move towards the viewing side or towards the side opposite to the viewing side of the device, depending on the applied electric filed across the electro-optic material layer. The electric field may be applied via a first electrode layer and a second electrode layer, wherein the electro-optic material layer is located between the first and the second electrode layers. Thus, each microcell can have variable color and the device can display the desired image, in addition to the fixed watermark image formed by the different types of microcells having different Fill Factors.
[0067] Specifically, in one example, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprising one type of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid. The non-polar fluid maybe dyed by a soluble dye or it may be not colored. When a voltage potential is applied between the first and second electrode layers on a microcell, the charged pigment particles migrate via the electrophoretic medium towards one side of the microcell causing either the color of the pigment particles or the color of the solvent being seen from the viewing side.
[0068] In another example, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprises two types of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid, such as white pigment particles and black pigment particles. The first type of pigment particles have a first charge polarity and the second type of pigment particles have a second charge polarity. The second charge polarity is opposite to the first charge polarity. In this case, when a voltage difference is imposed between the first and second electrode layers across a microcell, the two types of the charged pigment particles move via the electrophoretic medium to opposite ends of the microcell. Thus, one of the colors of the two types of the charged pigment particles would be seen at the viewing side of the microcell.
[0069] In another example, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprising three types of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid, a first type of charged pigment particles, a second type of charged pigment particles, and a third type of charged pigment particles. The first and second types of charged pigment particles have first charged polarity and the third type of charged pigment particles have second charge polarity, the second charge polarity being opposite to the first charge polarity.
[0070] In another example, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprising four types of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid, a first type of charged pigment particles, a second type of charged pigment particles, a third type of charged pigment particles, and a fourth type of charged pigment particles. The first and second types of charged pigment particles have first charged polarity and the third and fourth type of charged pigment particles have second charge polarity, the second charge polarity being opposite to the first charge polarity. The first type of charged pigment particles may have higher charge than the second charged pigment particles and the third type of charged pigment particles may have higher charge than the fourth type of charged pigment particles.
[0071] In another example, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprising four types of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid, a first type of charged pigment particles, a second type of charged pigment particles, a third type of charged pigment particles, and a fourth type of charged pigment particles. The first, second and third types of charged pigment particles have first charged polarity and the fourth type of charged pigment particles has second charge polarity, the second charge polarity being opposite to the first charge polarity. The first type of charged pigment particles may have higher charge than the second charged pigment particles and the third type of charged pigment particles may have higher charge than the second type of charged pigment particles.
[0072] In other examples, the plurality of microcells include an electrophoretic medium comprising five or six types of charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid.
[0073] The charged pigment particles in the electrophoretic medium may comprise charged pigment particles having colors selected from the group consisting of white, black, cyan, magenta, yellow, red, blue, and green.
[0074] The microcell openings may have different shapes, for example, triangular, square, round, oval or polygonal, such as hexagonal (honeycomb) structure. The same electro-optic material layer may have various microcell shapes.
[0075] Each microcell opening of the plurality of microcells may have microcell width that is smaller than 300 μm. Width of a microcell opening is defined as the longest straight distance between two points of the perimeter of the microcell opening. The microcell width may be different in each type of microcells. Even microcells of the same type may have different widths. The width of a microcell opening may be in a range between 300 μm to 1 μm, or from 250 μm to 5 μm, or from 200 μm to 10 μm, or from 2 mm to 2 μm, or from 1 mm to 4 μm, or from 800 μm to 8 μm, or from 500 μm to 10 μm, or from 400 μm to 12 μm, or from 300 μm to 15 μm. The partition wall width (or, synonymously, the microcell wall thickness; represented by d in
[0076] The electro-optic display device of the present invention may comprise microcells of a microcell type, that is, microcells having the same Fill Factor, but different partition wall heights or different shapes. Different wall heights may be achieved by varying the bottom thickness of the microcell. That is, the floor of the microcells may be positioned in different heights inside the microcells.
[0077] The electro-optic display device of the present invention may comprise microcells of a microcell type, that is, microcells having the same Fill Factor, but different partition wall color. In addition, the electro-optic display device of the present invention may comprise different types of microcells (having different Fill Factors), wherein there are two types of microcells that have partition walls with different colors.
[0078] The watermark created according to the present invention may be visible at certain viewing angles and/or under certain lighting conditions. The watermark would not interfere with the desired regular images displayed (based on movement of charged pigment particles in a fluid of the electrophoretic medium).
[0079] An example of an electrophoretic display device of the present invention is provide in
[0080] In a first embodiment of the present invention, the partition walls are opaque. The opaque partition walls of the device may all have a single color or various partition walls throughout the device may have different colors.
[0081] In a second embodiment of the present invention, the partition walls may be transparent. In this second embodiment, the device may comprise a layer that is colored, which may enhance the appearance of the watermark. The sealing layer may also be opaque or transparent. In the example illustrated in
[0082] Given that the first electrode layer and the partition walls are transparent, the color of the opaque sealing layer will be visible for an observer looking from the viewing side of the device. That is, the watermark will appear to have the color of the sealing layer. The watermark will be visible to the observer, if the optical states of the electrophoretic medium of the relevant microcells are distinguishable from that of the sealing layer.
[0083] In another example of the second embodiment of the electro-optic display device, the sealing layer is transparent. In this example, the device comprises an adhesive layer that is located between the sealing layer and the second electrode layer. The adhesive layer may be opaque. This example, where the sealing layer is transparent and the adhesive layer is opaque, is illustrated in
[0084] In yet another example of the second embodiment of the electro-optic display device, both the sealing and adhesive layers are transparent. The second electrode layer may be opaque. This example, where the sealing and adhesive layers are transparent and the second electrode layer is opaque, is illustrated in
[0085] In the case where the sealing layer is located closer to the viewing side of the device in relation to the microcell cavity comprising the electrophoretic medium, the sealing layer is transparent. In this case, analogous analysis would show that layers that are located on the other side of the electro-optic material layer in relation to the sealing layer could be colored.
[0086] In another example, the electro-optic display device of present invention may comprise a first light-transmissive electrode layer, an electro-optic material comprising a plurality of microcells, an optional sealing layer, an optional adhesive layer, and a second light-transmissive electrode layer. The plurality of microcells are separated from each other by transparent partition walls, each microcell of the plurality of microcells having an opening and including electrophoretic medium, the electrophoretic medium comprising charged pigment particles in a non-polar fluid. A watermark that is formed by halftone images from the plurality of microcells, wherein the plurality of microcells comprising more than five types of microcells, each type of microcells having different Fill Factor from all the other types. In this example, the partition walls has the color of the substrate onto which the device is attached. The substrate may be a printed image, making the watermark appearance very complex and potentially enhancing its aesthetic and authenticating value of the device. Furthermore, two or more similar or dissimilar such devices may be stacked onto a substrate, enhancing the complexity and the watermark value even further.
[0087] In the case that the electro-optic display device comprises a layer that is colored, the color may have a color selected from the group consisting of white, black, gray, magenta, cyan, yellow, blue, green, red, orange, violet, and combinations thereof. The layer may also have a metallic shade.
[0088] Techniques for constructing microcells. Microcells may be formed either in a batchwise process or in a continuous roll-to-roll process as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,933,098. The latter offers a continuous, low cost, high throughput manufacturing technology for production of compartments for use in a variety of applications including electro-optic display devices. Microcell arrays suitable for use with the invention can be created with microembossing, as illustrated in
[0089] The thermoplastic or thermoset precursor for the preparation of the microcells may be multifunctional acrylate or methacrylate, vinyl ether, epoxide and oligomers or polymers thereof, and the like. A combination of multifunctional epoxide and multifunctional acrylate is also very useful to achieve desirable physico-mechanical properties. A crosslinkable oligomer imparting flexibility, such as urethane acrylate or polyester acrylate, may be added to improve the flexure resistance of the embossed microcells. The composition may contain polymer, oligomer, monomer and additives or only oligomer, monomer and additives. The glass transition temperatures (or T.sub.g) for this class of materials usually range from about −70° C. to about 150° C., preferably from about −20° C. to about 50° C. The microembossing process is typically carried out at a temperature higher than the T.sub.g. A heated male mold or a heated housing substrate against which the mold presses may be used to control the microembossing temperature and pressure.
[0090] As shown in
[0091] Prior to applying a UV curable resin composition, the mold may be treated with a mold release to aid in the demolding process. The UV curable resin may be degassed prior to dispensing and may optionally contain a solvent. The solvent, if present, readily evaporates. The UV curable resin is dispensed by any appropriate means such as, coating, dipping, pouring or the like, over the male mold. The dispenser may be moving or stationary. A conductor film is overlaid the UV curable resin. Pressure may be applied, if necessary, to ensure proper bonding between the resin and the plastic and to control the thickness of the floor of the microcells. The pressure may be applied using a laminating roller, vacuum molding, press device or any other like means. If the male mold is metallic and opaque, the plastic substrate is typically transparent to the actinic radiation used to cure the resin. Conversely, the male mold can be transparent and the plastic substrate can be opaque to the actinic radiation. To obtain good transfer of the molded features onto the transfer sheet, the conductor film needs to have good adhesion to the UV curable resin that should have a good release property against the mold surface.
[0092] Photolithography. Microcells can also be produced using photolithography. Photolithographic processes for fabricating a microcell array are illustrated in
[0093] In the photomask 1346 in
[0094] As shown in
[0095] Imagewise Exposure. Still another alternative method for the preparation of the microcell array of the invention by imagewise exposure is illustrated in
[0096] The microcells may be constructed from thermoplastic elastomers, which have good compatibility with the microcells and do not interact with the electrophoretic media. Examples of useful thermoplastic elastomers include ABA, and (AB)n type of di-block, tri-block, and multi-block copolymers wherein A is styrene, α-methylstyrene, ethylene, propylene or norbonene; B is butadiene, isoprene, ethylene, propylene, butylene, dimethylsiloxane or propylene sulfide; and A and B cannot be the same in the formula. The number, n, is ≥1 preferably 1-10. Particularly useful are di-block or tri-block copolymers of styrene or ox-methylstyrene such as SB (poly(styrene-b-butadiene)), SBS (poly(styrene-b-butadiene-b-styrene)), SIS (poly(styrene-b-isoprene-b-styrene)), SEBS (poly(styrene-b-ethylene/butylenes-b-stylene)) poly(styrene-b-dimethylsiloxane-b-styrene), poly((α-methylstyrene-b-isoprene), poly(α-methylstyrene-b-isoprene-b-α-methylstyrene), poly(α-methylstyrene-b-propylene sulfide-b-α-methylstyrene), poly(α-methylstyrene-b-dimethylsiloxane-b-α-methylstyrene). Commercially available styrene block copolymers such as Kraton D and G series (from Kraton Polymer, Houston, Tex.) are particularly useful. Crystalline rubbers such as poly(ethylene-co-propylene-co-5-methylene-2-norbomene) or EPDM (ethylene-propylene-diene terpolymer) rubbers such as Vistalon 6505 (from Exxon Mobil, Houston, Tex.) and their grafted copolymers have also been found very useful.
[0097] The thermoplastic elastomers may be dissolved in a solvent or solvent mixture that is immiscible with the display fluid in the microcells and exhibits a specific gravity less than that of the display fluid. Low surface tension solvents are preferred for the overcoating composition because of their better wetting properties over the microcell partition walls and the electrophoretic fluid. Solvents or solvent mixtures having a surface tension lower than 35 dyne/cm are preferred. A surface tension of lower than 30 dyne/cm is more preferred. Suitable solvents include alkanes (preferably C.sub.6-12 alkanes such as heptane, octane or Isopar solvents from Exxon Chemical Company, nonane, decane and their isomers), cycloalkanes (preferably C.sub.6-12 cycloalkanes such as cyclohexane and decalin and the like), alkylbezenes (preferably mono- or di-C.sub.1-6 alkyl benzenes such as toluene, xylene and the like), alkyl esters (preferably C.sub.2-5 alkyl esters such as ethyl acetate, isobutyl acetate and the like) and C.sub.3-5 alkyl alcohols (such as isopropanol and the like and their isomers). Mixtures of alkylbenzene and alkane are particularly useful.
[0098] In addition to polymer additives, the polymer mixtures may also include wetting agents (surfactants). Wetting agents (such as the FC surfactants from 3M Company, Zonyl fluorosurfactants from DuPont, fluoroacrylates, fluoromethacrylates, fluoro-substituted long chain alcohols, perfluoro-substituted long chain carboxylic acids and their derivatives, and Silwet silicone surfactants from OSi, Greenwich, Conn.) may also be included in the composition to improve the adhesion of the sealant to the microcells and provide a more flexible coating process. Other ingredients including crosslinking agents (e.g., bisazides such as 4,4′-diazidodiphenylmethane and 2,6-di-(4′-azidobenzal)-4-methylcyclohexanone), vulcanizers (e.g., 2-benzothiazolyl disulfide and tetramethylthiuram disulfide), multifunctional monomers or oligomers (e.g., hexanediol, diacrylates, trimethylolpropane, triacrylate, divinylbenzene, diallylphthalene), thermal initiators (e.g., dilauroryl peroxide, benzoyl peroxide) and photoinitiators (e.g., isopropyl thioxanthene (ITX), Irgacure 651 and Irgacure 369 from Ciba-Geigy) are also highly useful to enhance the physico-mechanical properties of the sealing layer by crosslinking or polymerization reactions during or after the overcoating process.
[0099] After the microcells are produced, they are filled with appropriate electrophoretic media. The microcell array 1460 may be prepared by any of the methods described above. As shown in cross-section in
[0100] The microcells are next filled with an electrophoretic medium 1464 comprising charged pigment particles 1465 in a non-polar fluid. The microcells may be filled using a variety of techniques. In sonic examples, blade coating may be used to fill the microcells to the depth of the microcell partition walls 1461. In other examples, inkjet-type microinjection can be used to fill the microcells. In yet other examples, microneedle arrays may be used to fill an array of microcells.
[0101] As shown in
[0102] A variety of individual microcells may be filled with the desired electrophoretic medium by using iterative photolithography. The process typically includes coating an array of empty microcells with a layer of positively working photoresist, selectively opening a certain number of the microcells by imagewise exposing the positive photoresist, followed by developing the photoresist, filling the opened microcells with the desired mixture, and sealing the filled microcells by a sealing process.
[0103] After the microcells 1460 are filled, the sealed array may be laminated with a finishing layer 1468, preferably by pre-coating the finishing layer 1468 with an adhesive layer that may be a pressure sensitive adhesive, a hot melt adhesive, or a heat, moisture, or radiation curable adhesive. The laminate adhesive may be post-cured by radiation such as UV through the top conductor film if the latter is transparent to the radiation.
[0104] The electro-optic display device of the present device may comprise a piezoelectric layer, enabling the operation of the device with the need of external energy supply.
[0105] Another example of electro-optic display device that comprises a piezoelectric is provided in the electro-optic display 1501 of
[0106] While the present invention has been described with reference to the specific examples thereof, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation, materials, compositions, processes, process step or steps, to the objective and scope of the present invention. All such modifications are intended to be within the scope of the claims appended hereto.