Source: http://www.google.com/patents/US20070172972?ie=ISO-8859-1
Timestamp: 2015-03-01 04:58:29
Document Index: 700452592

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 49', 'art 49', 'art 2003', 'art 2004', 'art 2203', 'art 2203', 'art 2405', 'art 2407']

Patent US20070172972 - Manufacture method of display device - Google PatentsSearch Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »Sign inAdvanced Patent SearchPatentsIt is an object of the present invention to reduce the consumption of materials for manufacturing a display device, simplify the manufacturing process and the apparatus used for it, and lower the manufacturing costs. The present invention provides a technique to manufacture a display device, applying...http://www.google.com/patents/US20070172972?utm_source=gb-gplus-sharePatent US20070172972 - Manufacture method of display deviceAdvanced Patent SearchPublication numberUS20070172972 A1Publication typeApplicationApplication numberUS 11/650,565Publication dateJul 26, 2007Filing dateJan 8, 2007Priority dateFeb 5, 2003Also published asCN1745462A, CN100459060C, EP1592049A1, US7176069, US7736955, US20040224433, WO2004070810A1Publication number11650565, 650565, US 2007/0172972 A1, US 2007/172972 A1, US 20070172972 A1, US 20070172972A1, US 2007172972 A1, US 2007172972A1, US-A1-20070172972, US-A1-2007172972, US2007/0172972A1, US2007/172972A1, US20070172972 A1, US20070172972A1, US2007172972 A1, US2007172972A1InventorsShunpei Yamazaki, Yasuyuki AraiOriginal AssigneeShunpei Yamazaki, Yasuyuki AraiExport CitationBiBTeX, EndNote, RefManReferenced by (5), Classifications (18), Legal Events (2) External Links: USPTO, USPTO Assignment, EspacenetManufacture method of display device
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION An embodiment mode of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to drawings. The present invention, especially, uses a method in which a substrate having flexibility is sent from one side to the other side continuously and predetermined processing treatments are conducted therebetween. That is, a substrate having flexibility is winded off from a roll in one side and sent to a roll in the other side to be reeled, which means the so-called roll-to-roll method process is performed. An aspect of a pattern drawing means of the present invention will be described using FIG. 4A and FIG. 4B. A droplet discharging means 403 is provided to discharge a composition on a flexible substrate 400 while the flexible substrate 400 is sent from one roll 401 to the other roll 402 to be reeled. This droplet discharging means 403 uses a plurality of heads 405 respectively having a discharge outlet 406, arranged in a uniaxial direction (in a direction parallel to the width of the flexible substrate 400). An imaging means 404 is provided to detect a marker position on the flexible substrate 400 or to observe a pattern. FIG. 4A is a schematic diagram viewed from the side, and FIG. 4B is a schematic diagram viewed from the top. The droplet discharging means 403 where discharge outlets 406 are arranged in a uniaxial direction is placed so as to intersect with the direction in which the flexible substrate 400 is delivered. The angle formed by the droplet discharging means 403 and the direction in which the substrate is delivered is not necessarily perpendicular. The droplet discharging means 403 and the direction in which the substrate is delivered may intersect each other at an angle of 45 to 90 degrees. The resolution of a pattern formed by this droplet discharging means 403 depends on the pitch of the discharge outlets 406. By setting the angle formed by the droplet discharging means 403 and the direction in which the flexible substrate 400 is delivered 90 degrees or smaller, the pitch of the discharge outlets can be narrowed substantially, which is preferable for forming a microscopic pattern. The head 405 of the droplet discharging means 403 can preferably control the amount and the timing of a composition which is discharged or dropped, and it may have a structure in which the composition is discharged using piezoelectric elements as is the case with ink-jet, or a structure in which the dropping amount is controlled by setting a needle valve in a discharge outlet. It is not necessary for the heads 405 which constitute the droplet discharging means 403 to perform their discharge operation at the same timing. By controlling the timing of each head 405 discharging a composition in accordance with the movement of the flexible substrate 400, a pattern by the objected composition can be formed. That is, as shown in FIG. 5, each head 405 of the droplet discharging means 403 is connected to a controlling means 407, and that is controlled by a computer 410 so that a preprogrammed pattern can be drawn. The timing of drawing may be based on a marker 411 that is formed on the flexible substrate 400, for example. That is detected by an imaging 404, and changed into a digital signal at an image treatment means 409. Then the digital signal is recognized by the computer 410 that generates a control signal, and the control signal is sent to the controlling means 407. Of course, information of the pattern to be formed on the flexible substrate 400 is stored in a storage medium 408, and a control signal is sent to the controlling means 407, based on the information, so that each head 405 of the droplet discharging means 403 can be controlled separately. FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B are diagrams to show an aspect of a film removing means that comprises a nozzle body where a plurality of discharging ports for a gas in a plasma state or a gas including reactive radicals or ion species is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film. A nozzle body 603 that comprises a plurality of discharging ports 605 that spout the above-mentioned reactive gas while a flexible substrate 600 is sent from a roll 601 in one side to a roll 602 in the other side to be reeled is provided. A plasma generating means 606, a gas supplying means 607 and a gas evacuation means 608 are connected to each exhaust-nozzle 605 in the nozzle body 603. In this case, as is the case with the example shown in FIG. 5, each nozzle body 603 can be controlled independently by a computer, and can perform a predetermined treatment spouting a reactive gas selectively for a predetermined region in the flexible substrate 600, based on the image information (positional information) by an imaging 604. That is, as for removal of a film, as is the case with a dry etching technique, a film can be removed selectively, by blowing active radicals or a reactive gas so that reaction proceeds at that portion of the film. When the film is a polymer composition as typified by a photoresist material, the so-called ashing treatment to remove the composition can be performed by using a gas that includes oxygen. Furthermore, when a siliconized gas as typified by silane or the like is selected, deposition of a film is possible, and it can be applied as a film forming means. For example, a siliconized gas typified by silane may be used for forming a non-single crystal silicon film. When a siliconized gas is mixed with an oxygenated gas such as nitrous oxide or a nitride gas, a silicon oxide film or a silicon nitride film can be formed. FIG. 7 shows a structure of a nozzle body that is especially suitable for performing a surface treatment such as etching and ashing (removal of a resist film) by using a gas in a plasma state, reactive radicals or ion species. A gas supplying means 703 that supplies a gas for performing a surface treatment such as etching and ashing, a gas evacuation means 706 for that gas, an inert gas supplying means 707 and an evacuation means 710 for that gas are connected to a nozzle body 701. The gas supplied from the gas supplying means 703 is changed into plasma or generates reactive radicals or ion species in an inner circumference gas supplying tube 700, then is blown from a gas exhaust-nozzle 704 to an object to be treated. After that, the gas is evacuated from an outer circumference gas evacuation tube 705 by the gas evacuation means 706. In the outer side of that, an inert gas supplying port 708 is provided, and an evacuation port 709 is provided in the outermost part so that a gas curtain is made, which forms a structure in which a treatment space is blocked from the circumferential atmosphere. Furthermore, a structure in which a gas is circulated may be incorporated by providing a gas purification means 712 between the gas supplying means 703 and the gas evacuation means 706. By incorporating such a structure, the consumption of a gas can be reduced. In addition, the gas evacuated by the gas evacuation means 706 may be recovered and purified so as to be used in the gas supplying means 703 again. In order to maintain a stable discharge under an atmospheric pressure or a pressure around an atmospheric pressure, a space between the nozzle body 701 and an object to be treated may be 50 mm or less, preferably 10 mm or less, and more preferably, 5 mm or less. It is the most preferable that the shape of the nozzle body is an coaxial cylinder having an electrode 702, which is placed inside the inner circumference gas supplying tube 700, as the center, but as long as it has a structure in which a treatment gas in a plasma state can be supplied locally in a similar way, it is not limited to this. As the electrode 702, stainless-steel, brass, or other alloy, and aluminum, nickel, or other metal of elemental substances may be used, and it may be formed in the shape of a stick, a sphere, a flat plate, a tube or the like. As for a power supply 711 that supplies electric power to the electrode 702, a direct-current power source or a high frequency power source can be applied. In the case of using a direct-current power source, it is preferable to supply an electric power intermittently to stabilize the discharge, and it is preferable to set the frequency from 50 Hz to 100 kHz, and the pulse duration time 1 to 1000 μsec. As for a selection of a treatment gas, oxygen may be used for the purpose of removing a resist. For the purpose of etching of a semiconductor film such as silicon, nitrogen trifluoride (NF3), sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), or other fluoride gas may be used, and for the purpose of etching metals such as aluminum, titanium and tungsten, carbon tetrafluoride (CF4), sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), or other fluoride gas may be used properly combined with chloride (Cl2), boron trichloride (BCl3), or other chloride gas. Furthermore, in order to maintain the discharge stably, these fluoride gases and chloride gases may be used diluted by a rare gas such as helium, argon, krypton, and xenon. As for a gas used for forming a gas curtain, a rare gas such as helium, argon, krypton and xenon, or an inert gas such as nitrogen is used. Due to the gas curtain function, a reaction space where a treatment gas in a plasma state reacts with an object to be treated is surrounded by the foregoing inert gas and blocked from the circumferential atmosphere. An atmospheric pressure or a pressure around an atmospheric pressure may be 1.3�101 to 1.06�105 Pa. Within this, in order to keep the reaction space under a pressure lower than the atmospheric pressure, the nozzle body 701 and the substrate to be treated may be hold in a reaction chamber where a closed space is made, with a structure in which reduced pressure is kept by an evacuation means. In this case, too, setting a gas curtain function is effective to perform a selective treatment. In the case where especially selective processing is needed for etching, a nozzle body 801 may have a structure in which a gas exhaust-nozzle 704 of an inner circumference gas supplying tube 800 is narrowed and an electrode 802 is in the shape of a stick or a needle so that plasma is prevented from spreading, as shown in FIG. 8. Furthermore, a tip of the electrode 802 may protrude from the gas exhaust-nozzle 704 so that high-density plasma is formed between an object to be treated 811 and the gas exhaust-nozzle 704. The other structure is similar to FIG. 7, and the detailed description is skipped here. Next, a method of manufacturing a display device from a long sheet of flexible substrate by combining the foregoing pattern drawing means, film removing means and film forming means will be described, with reference to FIG. 9 to FIG. 12. The display device shown here as an example is a display device of an active matrix type in which TFT is provided for each pixel. FIG. 9A is a process to form a conductive film to form a gate electrode and a wiring. A conductive film 11 comprising aluminum, titanium, tantalum, molybdenum or the like is formed on a substrate 10 by a film forming means 12 comprising a nozzle body where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction. It is not necessary to form the conductive film 11 on the entire surface of the substrate 10, and the film may be selectively formed around a region where a gate electrode and a wiring are to be formed. After that, as shown in FIG. 9B, a mask pattern 14 to form a gate electrode is formed on the conductive film 11 by selectively discharging a resist composition using a droplet discharging means 13 where a plurality of discharge outlets for a composition is arranged in a uniaxial direction. In this case, since the droplet discharging means has discharge outlets arranged only in a uniaxial direction, heads only in a needed part may be operated (head 13A). In order to treat the entire surface of the substrate, either one of the substrate 10 and the droplet discharging means 13, or both of the two may be moved. Such a treatment can be applied as well in the processes below. FIG. 9C is a process to form a gate electrode and a wiring 16 by performing etching, using the mask pattern 14. The etching is performed by using a film removing means where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film. Although a fluoride gas or a chloride gas is used for the etching of the conductive film 11, in a nozzle body 15, it is not necessary that the reactive gas is sprayed to the entire surface of the substrate 10. A nozzle body 15 a of the nozzle body 15, which faces a region where the conductive film 11 is formed, may be operated so that only the region where the conductive film 11 is formed is treated. FIG. 9D is a process to remove the mask pattern 14, and a film removing means where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film is used. In a nozzle body 17, an oxygen plasma treatment is performed to perform ashing, but it is not necessary that the treatment is performed on the entire surface of the substrate. A nozzle body 17 a only around a region where the mask pattern is formed may be operated so that the treatment is performed selectively. In FIG. 10A, a gate insulating film 19, a non-single crystal silicon film 20 and a protective film 21 are formed. To form a laminate product of these, a plurality of nozzle bodies 18 that handle formation of each film may be prepared so that the film is formed continuously, or the lamination may be formed sequentially by changing gas species every time the nozzle body 18 is scanned. Since the region where a film is to be formed is not the entire surface of a substrate 10, a reactive gas in a plasma state may be supplied from the whole area of the nozzle body 18 only to the region where TFT is to be formed, for example, so that a film is formed. In the case of forming a silicon oxide film, an oxide gas of silane and oxygen or the like may be used, or there is also an option of using TEOS. A gate insulating film 19 may be formed on the entire surface of the substrate, or formed selectively around a region where TFT is to be formed, of course. FIG. 10B is a process to form a mask pattern 23. The mask pattern 23 for forming a protective film of a channel part is formed by discharging a resist composition selectively by a selected head 22 a of a droplet discharging means 22 where a plurality of discharge outlets for a composition is arranged in a uniaxial direction. FIG. 10C is a process to form a protective film 25 of a channel part by performing etching of the protective film 21 by a nozzle body 24, using the mask pattern 23. The channel protective film formed of a silicon nitride film may be performed by using a fluoride gas such as SF6. After that, the mask pattern 23 is removed in the same way as the case of FIG. 9D by the film removing means. FIG. 10D is a process to form a non-single crystal silicon film 27 of one conductivity type for forming a source and a drain of TFT. Typically it is formed of n-type non-single crystal silicon, and the reactive gas supplied from a nozzle body 26 may be a siliconized gas such as silane combined with a gas that includes a periodic law 15th family element typified by phosphine. FIG. 11A is a process to form source and drain wirings 29 and 30 by coating a conductive paste. A droplet discharging means 28 may use a structure in which droplets are discharged by using piezoelectric elements, or may use a dispenser method. In both cases, a conductive composition that includes metal microparticles whose size is approximately 1 μm is selectively dropped by a selected head 28 a of the droplet discharging means 28, so that a pattern of the source and drain wirings 29 and 30 is formed directly. Or, a conductive polymer composition in which metal microparticles whose size is approximately 1 μm and ultrafine particles of nanosize are dispersed may be used. By using this, there is a significant effect that contact resistance with the non-single crystal silicon film 27 of one conductivity type can be reduced. After that, in order to harden the wiring pattern by volatilizing a solvent of the composition, for heating, a heated inert gas may be blown from a nozzle body in the same way, or a halogen lamp heater may be used to heat. In FIG. 11B, using the formed source and drain wirings 29 and 30 as masks, etching of the non-single crystal silicon film 27 of one conductivity type and the non-single crystal silicon film 20 that are placed in the under side of the source and drain wirings 29 and 30 is performed. The etching is performed by emitting a fluoride gas in a plasma state from a nozzle body 31. In this case, in the amount of a reactive gas blown, the amount of spraying is different between a region around a place the wiring is formed and the other region. By spraying the gas in large quantity for a region where the non-single crystal silicon film is exposed, the balance of etching can be kept, and the consumption of the reactive gas can be controlled. FIG. 11C is a process to form a protective film on the entire surface. By spouting a reactive gas in a plasma state from a nozzle body 32, typically, a silicon nitride film 33 is formed. FIG. 11D is a process to form a contact hole. By spouting a reactive gas in a plasma state selectively on a place where a contact hole is to be formed, using a nozzle body 34, a contact hole 35 can be formed without a mask. After that, as shown in FIG. 12, a pixel electrode 37 is formed by a printing method. This is formed by making a predetermined pattern of a composition including conductive fine particles of indium tin oxide, tin oxide, zinc oxide or the like on a substrate directly, using a droplet discharging means 36. By using a composition of conductive polymer with particles of indium tin oxide dispersed, as the composition above, especially, resistance in the contact part with the non-single crystal silicon film 27 of one conductivity type can be reduced. In this process, the pixel electrode is formed. By the following process, an element substrate that is one of the substrates to form a display device of active matrix type where a switching element of TFT is placed for each pixel can be manufactured, without using a conventional photolithography process. As the other embodiment mode of the present invention, TFT and a display device using TFT can be manufactured without using a mask pattern for which a resist composition is used, by using the pattern drawing means, the film forming means, the film removing means that are structured as described in FIG. 4 to FIG. 8. In FIG. 13A, a bank 51 comprising an insulating resin material is formed on a substrate 10 by using a droplet discharging means 50. As shown in FIG. 13B, the bank 51 having an opening part 49 is used for forming a gate electrode 53 by a droplet discharging means 52. That is, the bank 51 works as a bulkhead that prevents a composition from spreading peripherally when the conductive composition is discharged on the opening part 49, so that a predetermined pattern is formed. FIG. 13C is a process to form a gate insulating film, and a gate insulating film 55 is formed on the gate electrode 53, using a nozzle body 54. After that, a semiconductor film 57 is formed by atmospheric pressure plasma using a nozzle body 56, as shown in FIG. 13D. FIG. 14A is a process to form a protective film 59 on the semiconductor film 57 by atmospheric pressure plasma using a nozzle body 58, and an insulating film comprising silicon oxide, silicon nitride or the like is formed selectively. This process is unnecessary for the case of a channel etching type. FIG. 14B is a process to form a semiconductor film 61 of one conductivity type for forming a source and a drain of TFT. By atmospheric pressure plasma CVD using a nozzle body 60, the film is formed selectively. In FIG. 14C, a source and drain wiring 63 is formed by coating a conductive paste. A droplet discharging means 62 may use a structure in which droplets are discharged by using piezoelectric elements, or may use a dispenser method. In both cases, a conductive composition that includes metal microparticles whose size is approximately 1 μm is selectively dropped, so that a pattern of the source and drain wiring is formed directly. After that, in order to harden the wiring pattern by volatilizing a solvent of the composition, a heated inert gas may be blown from a nozzle body in the same way, or a halogen lamp heater may be used to heat. In FIG. 14D, using the formed source and drain wiring 63 as a mask, etching of the semiconductor film 61 of one conductivity type that is placed in the under side of the source and drain wiring 63 is performed. The etching is performed by emitting a fluoride gas in a plasma state from a nozzle body 64. In this case, the amount of a reactive gas blown is different between a region around a place the wiring is formed and the other region. By spraying the gas in large quantity for a region where the non-single crystal silicon film is exposed, the balance of etching can be kept, and the consumption of the reactive gas can be controlled. FIG. 15A is a process to form a protective film. By spouting a reactive gas in a plasma state from a nozzle body 65, a silicon nitride film 66 is formed. FIG. 15B is a process to form a contact hole. By spouting a reactive gas in a plasma state selectively on a place where a contact hole is to be formed, using a nozzle body 67, a contact hole 68 can be formed without a mask. After that, as shown in FIG. 15C, a pixel electrode 70 is formed by a printing method. This is formed by making a predetermined pattern of a composition including conductive fine particles of indium tin oxide, tin oxide, zinc oxide or the like on a substrate directly, using a nozzle body 69, by a droplet discharging method. In this process, the pixel electrode can be formed. By the following process, an element substrate that is one of the substrates to form a display device of active matrix type where a switching element of TFT is placed for each pixel can be manufactured, without using a conventional photolithography process. FIG. 1 to FIG. 4 are drawings to describe one of embodiments of the case where the invention is applied to a roll-to-roll method in which the processes above are performed continuously. Here, the one aspect will be described, corresponding to the processes shown in FIG. 9 to FIG. 12. As shown in FIG. 1, a long sheet of flexible substrate 100 is sent from a roll in a wind-off side 101 sequentially, and after that, a metal film is formed by a droplet discharging means 102 and a heating means 103. For the heating means 103, a lamp heater and a heater of gas-heating type can be used. After that, a mask pattern is formed by a droplet discharging means 104 and a heating means 105. After the mask pattern is formed, etching is performed by using a nozzle body 106 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film, in order to form a gate electrode/wiring. A fluoride gas or a chloride gas is used for etching of a metal film. With the nozzle body, it is not necessary to spray the reactive gas on the entire surface of the substrate, and the treatment may be performed actively around the place where the metal film is removed. For removing the mask pattern, a nozzle body 107 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film is used. Formation of a gate insulating film, a non-single crystal silicon film, a protective film is performed continuously by using nozzle bodies 108, 109 and 110 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged respectively in a uniaxial direction to form a film. Since the region where the film is to be formed is not the entire surface of the long sheet of flexible substrate 100, the film formation may be performed by supplying a reactive gas in a plasma state from the whole area of the nozzle body only on a region where TFT is to be formed, for example. In FIG. 2, by discharging a resist composition selectively by using a droplet discharging means 111 where a plurality of discharge outlets for a composition is arranged in a uniaxial direction and a heating means 112, a mask pattern to form a channel protective film is formed. Etching by a nozzle body 113 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film and ashing by a nozzle body 114 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to remove a film are similar to the foregoing case. After that, a non-single crystal semiconductor film of n-type is formed by a nozzle body 115 where a plurality of discharging ports for plasma is arranged in a uniaxial direction to form a film. Then, a source and drain wiring is formed by coating a conductive paste, using a droplet discharging means 116. In any case, the source and drain wiring pattern is directly formed by dropping a conductive composition including metal microparticles whose size is approximately 1 μm selectively. After that, in order to harden the wiring pattern by volatilizing a solvent of the composition, a heating means 117 is used. Using the source and drain wiring as a mask, etching of the non-single crystal silicon film of n-type and a non-single crystal silicon film that are placed in the under side of the source and drain wiring is performed. The etching is performed by emitting a fluoride gas in a plasma state from a nozzle body 118. In this case, the amount of a reactive gas blown is different between a region around a place the wiring is formed and the other region. By spraying the gas in large quantity for a region where the non-single crystal silicon film is exposed, the balance of etching can be kept, and the consumption of the reactive gas can be controlled. As a process to form a protective film on the entire surface, a reactive gas in a plasma state is spouted from a nozzle body 119 so that a silicon nitride film is formed. After that, in FIG. 3, by spouting a reactive gas in a plasma state selectively on the place where a contact hole is to be formed, using a nozzle body 120, a contact hole can be formed without a mask. After that, using a droplet discharging means 121 and a heating means 122, a transparent electrode is formed. This is formed by making a predetermined pattern of a composition including conductive fine particles of indium tin oxide, tin oxide, zinc oxide or the like on a substrate directly, using the droplet discharging means. In this process, the pixel electrode can be formed. The following process is a process needed in the case of manufacturing a liquid crystal display device. In the process, an orientation film is formed by a droplet discharging means 123, and a rubbing treatment is performed by a rubbing means 124. In addition, a sealing material is drawn by a droplet discharging means 126 and spacers are dispersed by a dispersing means 127, then liquid crystal is dropped on a long sheet of flexible substrate 100 by a droplet discharging means 128. For the opposite side, a substrate is supplied from the other wind-off roller 129, and attached. By hardening the sealing material by a hardening means 130, the two substrates are bonded together. In addition, by a dividing means131, the substrate is cut into a panel size accordingly, so that a liquid crystal panel 132 can be manufactured. Using a display device manufactured by such a structure, a television receiver, a computer, a picture reproducer shown in FIG. 16 as examples, or other electronic devices can be completed. FIG. 16A is an example of completing a television receiver, applying the present invention, and it is structured by a housing 2001, a support 2002, a display part 2003, a speaker part 2004, a video input terminal 2005 and the like. By using the present invention, especially a television receiver whose screen size is 30 inches or larger can be manufactured at low cost. Furthermore, by using a display device of the present invention, a television receiver can be completed. This is an effect of using a flexible substrate that is thinner and whose specific gravity is smaller than glass, as a substrate. FIG. 16B is an example of completing a notebook personal computer, applying the present invention, and it is structured by a main body 2201, a housing 2202, a display part 2203, a keyboard 2204, an external connection port 2205, a pointing mouse 2206 and the like. By using the present invention, a personal computer having the display part 2203 that is 15 to 17 inches class can be manufactured at low cost. FIG. 16C is an example of completing a image reproducer, applying the present invention, and it is structured by a main body 2401, a housing 2402, a display part A 2403, a display part B 2404, a recording media reading part 2405, an operation key 2406, a speaker part 2407 and the like. By using the present invention, a image reproducer having the display part A 2403 that is 15 to 17 inches class and also being light can be manufactured at low cost. In order to form a microscopic pattern by the embodiment modes above, a composition with metal microparticles whose average size is 1 to 50 nm, preferably 3 to 7 nm, dispersed in an organic solvent may be used. Typically, particles of silver or gold are used, and the surface is coated with a dispersing agent such as amine, alcohol and thiol. The organic solvent is phenol resin, epoxy resin or the like, and thermosetting or photo-curing one is applied. In order to modify the viscosity of the composition, a thixotropic agent or a diluting solvent may be added. As for the composition discharged on the surface in proper quantity by a droplet discharging means, the organic solvent is hardened by a heating treatment or a light irradiation treatment. Due to the contraction in volume that accompanies the hardening of the organic solvent, the metal microparticles contact each other, and fusion, welding or aggregation is facilitated. That is, a wiring with metal microparticles whose average size is 1 to 50 nm, preferably 3 to 7 nm, fused, welded or aggregated is formed. In this way, by forming a condition where metal microparticles contact each other on their surfaces due to fusion, welding or aggregation, lower resistance of the wiring can be realized. The present invention makes it easy to form a wiring pattern whose line width is approximately 1 to 10 μm, by forming a conductive pattern using such a composition. In addition, even when a contact hole is approximately 1 to 10 μm in diameter, the composition can fill the inside of the hole. That is, a multilayer wiring structure can be formed by a microscopic wiring pattern. When particles of an insulating material are used instead of metal microparticles, an insulating pattern can be formed in the same way. semiconductor film and a metal film on a predetermined region. Referenced byCiting PatentFiling datePublication dateApplicantTitleUS7625493Feb 6, 2004Dec 1, 2009Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method for manufacturing display deviceUS7858453Feb 6, 2004Dec 28, 2010Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method of manufacturing semiconductor device and display device utilizing solution ejectorUS7968453Oct 11, 2007Jun 28, 2011Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method for manufacturing display device, and etching apparatusUS8129288 *Apr 30, 2009Mar 6, 2012Intermolecular, Inc.Combinatorial plasma enhanced deposition techniquesUS8569119Dec 8, 2010Oct 29, 2013Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Co., Ltd.Method for producing semiconductor device and display device* Cited by examinerClassifications U.S. Classification438/26, 438/151, 438/30International ClassificationH01L21/84, H01L51/56, H01L27/32, H01L51/40Cooperative ClassificationH01L51/56, H01L51/0022, H01L27/3244, H01L51/0019, H01L51/0017, H01L51/0004European ClassificationH01L51/00A4F4, H01L51/00A4F, H01L51/00A2B2, H01L51/00A8B, H01L51/56Legal EventsDateCodeEventDescriptionNov 13, 2013FPAYFee paymentYear of fee payment: 4Jan 11, 2011CCCertificate of correctionRotateOriginal ImageGoogle Home - Sitemap - USPTO Bulk Downloads - Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - About Google Patents - Send FeedbackData provided by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services