
I am doing a school project on the workings of OLED devices and was not too long ago given the privilege of going down to Massey University, in Palmerston North, to use some of their equipment to make a handful of of my very own OLEDs. As the title suggests this strategy is named screen printing as it is becoming printed onto the substrate utilizing a screen printer. I would not have been capable to do this with out the generosity of the people at the University and all of their help in displaying me how everything operates. So a huge thank you to everyone who made my pay a visit to so great.
Tags: massey university, palmerston north, screen printer, screen printing
This video also has the benefit of showing the importance of assembly lines.
ok yes you have
theres alot of sky. nm rocket
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someone else has already done it.
About 10kg seems to be the answer. I think your stomach might burst before you could actually eat that much though.]]>
white school glue can be used, it won't be permanent like the mod podge will.
The awkward moment – When your print professor has you give a screen printing demo because you’re the only…
sure you can do more than one although I'd recommend some sort of flash dryer or even heat gun.
Great job for education! I suppose you use commercial EL polymers, and thickness for screen printing must be around micro-meter range. But the di-electric layers are ETL?