Osram believes that OLEDs will be used in production vehicles by 2016 in rear-facing applications such as brake and tail lighting.
Osram publicly demonstrated its automotive OLED technology in the fall of 2012 at the Electronica trade event. The company has progressed with the technology significantly in the last year. For a 2016 vehicle to use the technology, the light source must essentially be ready now given the long design cycles of the auto industry.
"We have essentially achieved road suitability for our OLEDs this year and will be offering initial special equipment based on OLEDs next year," said Ulrich Eisele, who is responsible for the OLED sector at Osram. "In 2016 at the latest, we expect to see OLEDs used in series production of new vehicles."
Osram believes that the inherently-diffuse, surface-emission characteristics of OLEDs make the technology especially suitable for the rear-facing lights. A main obstacle to such usage has been temperature stability of the light source — especially at extreme temperatures. But Osram said it has now achieved stability at 85°C over several hundred hours of operation.
(Source: LEDs Magazine) |