Flexible Barriers and Encapsulations: Is Flexible Glass the Ultimate Solution?
February 19, 2019 | IDTechExEstimated reading time: 5 minutes
Glass is an excellent barrier. It offers processing temperatures as well as high dimensional stability. It is also smoother and more transparent thin plastic films. It is however, in its traditional form, rigid.
This limitation has created space and need for flexible alternatives. Indeed, for well more than a decade, companies and research institutes have been developing flexible, transparent and high-performance barriers, as outlined in the IDTechEx Research report Barrier Films and Thin Film Encapsulation for Flexible and/or Organic Electronics 2019-2029.
These approaches are mainly based on some variation of the multi-dyad principle where multiple alternative pairs of organic-inorganic layers are deposited. These approaches decouple the position of defects and pinholes, thus enhancing barrier properties. The inorganic is thin. Its deposition process has evolved from evaporation and sputtering to PECVD. Work is ongoing on spatial atomic layer deposition (s-ALD) too. The organic layer is often thicker. It planarizes surfaces, plugs pin-holes, and acts as stress-release layers to achieve repeated bendability.
Some approaches are film based. Here, the barrier film is produced separately then laminated onto the device substrate. This approach has the advantage of decoupling the barrier and device production yields. In theory, it could also allow the process to run at faster web speeds. However, often, in practise the web speed is limited by the necessity of growing high-quality films under highly-controlled growth conditions. This approach however adds extra substrate layers as well as extra adhesives. These both contribute to thickness whilst the latter can also adversely affects impermeability.
An emerging trend will be to combine barrier films with other functionalities such as ITO or polarizers to create all-in-one super thin films. This approach will require extensive know-how and faces a high technical barrier. The winner will however be able to capture the market for multiple films which in the past were supplied separately.
Some evolved the technology over many years to develop direct conformal TFE. Here, the multilayer structure is deposited directly on top of the device using PECVD (inorganic ) and inkjet printing (organic layer). This process has significantly evolved. In production, the number of required layers has been reduced whilst maintaining sufficient quality. This has reduced the TACT time and equipment/process counts. The challenge of this process however was always the high cost of yield since a production defect would waste the entire device including the OLED stack, TFT, etc.
The technology has been commercial since 2014 indicating good yield on rigid small-sized samples. This technology will also form the basis of multiple emerging flexible OLED phones, also suggesting that producers have good confidence in its reliability under repeated bending.
The work on TFEs has not stopped. There is always a need to reduce thickness and deposition time. Crucially, there will be a need to scale up the process to larger displaces such as tablets. In some cases, the touch layer will also need to be integrated first atop then into the TFE structure. The bottom barrier layer may also go TFE for ultra-low bending radius.
To learn more about flexible barriers layer and thin film encapsulation technologies please see the IDTechEx Research report Barrier Films and Thin Film Encapsulation for Flexible and/or Organic Electronics 2019-2029. This report offers a detailed technology analysis assessing R2R multilayer barrier (MLB) film technologies, various inline thin film encapsulation (TFE) techniques, R2R spatial atomic layer deposition (s-ALD), flexible glass and more. It also provides ten-year market forecasts, in sqm and value, segmented by technology as well as by application.
Flexible Glass
We started this article by saying that glass is great, but it is rigid. Well, that is not always true. In fact, flexible glass has been demonstrated for many years. The first flexible glass targeting the display industry was demonstrated about a decade ago.
Flexible glass is essentially thin glass, often thinner than 100um. This thinness introduces flexibility. This potentially gives thin glass flexibility and all the other excellent attributes of rigid glass.
There were however numerous significant challenges. First, glass was not very flexible, especially compared to plastic-based solutions. The probability of failure would increase with even moderate bending radius. Furthermore, glass was difficult to handle because a crack on the sides could easily propagate through the glass, causing shattering. This was a major issue in vacuum systems since they would need to be shutdown, flushed and cleaned.
Progress has been very steady. The bendability has significantly improved. This is largely thanks to a combination of embedding ions and chemically cleaning the edges and surfaces. The former builds in a compressive stress near the surfaces that impedes the propagation of edge cracks. The latter removes, as much as possible, sites or microcracks that could act as crack initiation sites. Today, highly bendable phones are demonstrated at shows around the world with flexible glass.
The handling too has also improved. This is mainly thanks to handling tricks. In particular, edge tapes are added to flexible glass rolls to prevent them from coming into direct contact with the equipment. This way we have seen demonstrated high-speed complex conveyance systems able to handle R2R glass. There are also nowadays good laser cutting processes that allow singulating devices without inducing stress or cracks.
All these mean that flexible glass, after a decade or so of development, is edging towards commercialization. Suppliers are now also contemplating offering wide format glass. Users have also started some limited adoption. The most notable example is flexible S2S-made flexible lighting panels.
There is still however much work to do to open up major markets such as big volume flexible display uptake. The market uncertainty lingers for many suppliers, complicating the decisions as to whether and how much to commit to glass R&D and production efforts. Pricing questions also remain. The time from near technology readiness to full commercialization will also be almost inevitably long. Many however now dare ask whether in the long term this technology will replace other flexible barrier solutions by offering the ultimate all-in-one performance?
To learn more about flexible barriers layer and thin film encapsulation technologies please see Barrier Films and Thin Film Encapsulation for Flexible and/or Organic Electronics 2019-2029 (www.IDTechEx.com/Barrier). This IDTechEx Research report offers a detailed technology analysis assessing R2R multilayer barrier (MLB) film technologies, various inline thin film encapsulation (TFE) techniques, R2R spatial atomic layer deposition (s-ALD), flexible glass and more. Also provided are ten-year market forecasts, in sqm and value, segmented by technology as well as by application. IDTechEx Research also covers flexible displays, OLED lighting, quantum dots, organic photovoltaics, etc.
Suggested Items
2025 ASEAN IT Spending Growth Slows to 5.9% as AI-Powered IT Expansion Encounters Post-Boom Normalization
06/26/2025 | IDCAccording to the IDC Worldwide Black Book: Live Edition, IT spending across ASEAN is projected to grow by 5.9% in 2025 — down from a robust 15.0% in 2024.
DownStream Acquisition Fits Siemens’ ‘Left-Shift’ Model
06/26/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, I-Connect007I recently spoke to DownStream Technologies founder Joe Clark about the company’s acquisition by Siemens. We were later joined by A.J. Incorvaia, Siemens’ senior VP of electronic board systems. Joe discussed how he, Rick Almeida, and Ken Tepper launched the company in the months after 9/11 and how the acquisition came about. A.J. provides some background on the acquisition and explains why the companies’ tools are complementary.
United Electronics Corporation Advances Manufacturing Capabilities with Schmoll MDI-ST Imaging Equipment
06/24/2025 | United Electronics CorporationUnited Electronics Corporation has successfully installed the advanced Schmoll MDI-ST (XL) imaging equipment at their advanced printed circuit board facility. This significant technology investment represents a continued commitment to delivering superior products and maintaining their position as an industry leader in precision PCB manufacturing.
Insulectro & Dupont Host Technology Symposium at Silicon Valley Technology Center June 25
06/22/2025 | InsulectroInsulectro, the largest distributor of materials for use in the manufacture of PCBs and printed electronics, and DuPont, a major manufacturer of flex laminates and chemistry, invite fabricators, OEMS, designers, and engineers to attend an Innovation Symposium – Unlock the Power - this Wednesday, June 25, at DuPont’s Silicon Valley Technology Center in Sunnyvale, CA.
OKI, NTT Innovative Devices Establish Mass Production Technology for High-Power Terahertz Devices by Heterogeneous Material Bonding
06/21/2025 | BUSINESS WIREOKI, in collaboration with NTT Innovative Devices Corporation, has established mass production technology for high-power terahertz devices using crystal film bonding (CFB) technology for heterogeneous material bonding to bond indium phosphide (InP)-based uni-traveling carrier photodiodes (UTC-PD) onto silicon carbide (SiC) with excellent heat dissipation characteristics for improved bonding yields.