Most of us are already familiar with standard LEDs, or light-emitting diodes - the small lights you often find included as components on printed circuit boards (PCBs) and electronic instrument panels. They’re also very widely used today in countless forms of modern household illumination, high-end screen technologies, and much more besides.
OLEDs are mechanically comparable to any other standard LED, insofar as:
- A diode is set up to emit light by being sandwiched between two electrodes with a voltage attached.
- When power is sent through this component in the form of electricity, it illuminates with a bright, clear light that doesn’t generate any significant heat (or guzzle anything like the power that traditional incandescent lamps do).
- The key difference with an OLED specifically is that the light it gives off is created through the interaction of organic molecules undercurrent.
- 'Organic’ in this context means carbon-based molecules, which are deposited across a thin film to which the requisite anode and cathode are connected.