LCD displays could soon be obsolete

Breakthrough paves way for field emission displays

Written by Robert Jaques

Liquid crystal display (LCD) televisions could soon become obsolete thanks to a new scientific breakthrough by US boffins.

Professors Vincent Donnelly, Demetre Economou and Paul Ruchhoeft, of the Cullen College of Engineering at the University of Houston, have developed a technique that allows certain nanotech devices to be mass-produced.

Advertisement

They believe that this could move the television industry away from the LCD display to the superior field emission display.

Field emission displays use a large array of carbon nanotubes, the most efficient emitters known, to create a higher resolution picture than an LCD.

The breakthrough 'nanopantography' fabrication technique can mass-produce an ordered array of carbon nanotubes and make field emission display fabrication viable.

The method uses standard photolithography to selectively remove parts of a thin film, and etching to create arrays of ion-focusing micro-lenses (small round holes through a metal structure) on a substrate such as a silicon wafer.

"These lenses focus the 'beamlets' to fabricate a hole 100 times smaller than the lens size," Professor Donnelly explained.

A beam of ions is then directed at the substrate. When the wafer is tilted, the desired pattern is replicated simultaneously in billions of many closely spaced holes over an area limited only by the size of the ion beam.

"The nanostructures that you can form out of that focusing can be written simultaneously over the whole wafer in predetermined positions," said Professor Economou.

"Without our technique, nanotech devices can be made with electron-beam writing or with a scanning tunnelling microscope.

"However, the throughput, or fabrication speed, is extremely slow and is not suitable for mass production or for producing nanostructures of any desired shape and material.

"We expect nanopantography to become a viable method for rapid, large-scale fabrication."

Tags:

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Do you agree?

IT white papers

Search vnunet IThound

Top categories

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Watch

Podcast image

28 Nov 2008

12.57 MBComputing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT More...

Shaun Nichols and Iain Thomson

28 Nov 2008

7.11 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Shaun Nichols and Iain Thomson

21 Nov 2008

9.11 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Poll

Microsoft

Unified Communications: Collaboration

Unified Communications: Collaboration

What is the main advantage of using collaboration technologies?

Previous poll results

Spotlight

Businessman

CIOs failing to safeguard valuable IT skills

Only 13 per cent hire staff who understand IT business...  More...

UK Oracle User Group Conference and Exhibition

Oracle scores highly with users

UK user group survey shows positive feedback   More...

O2 Mobile Broadband USB modem

O2 offers pay-as-you-go mobile broadband

3G USB modem costs £29.99 and tariffs start at £2...  More...

BlackBerry Storm

Top 10 vnunet.com articles, 28 Nov 08

This week, BlackBerry Storm review, Apple iPhone update and the...  More...

Primary Navigation