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Featured researches published by Bokke Johannes Feenstra.


Nature | 2003

Video-speed electronic paper based on electrowetting

Robert A. Hayes; Bokke Johannes Feenstra

In recent years, a number of different technologies have been proposed for use in reflective displays. One of the most appealing applications of a reflective display is electronic paper, which combines the desirable viewing characteristics of conventional printed paper with the ability to manipulate the displayed information electronically. Electronic paper based on the electrophoretic motion of particles inside small capsules has been demonstrated and commercialized; but the response speed of such a system is rather slow, limited by the velocity of the particles. Recently, we have demonstrated that electrowetting is an attractive technology for the rapid manipulation of liquids on a micrometre scale. Here we show that electrowetting can also be used to form the basis of a reflective display that is significantly faster than electrophoretic displays, so that video content can be displayed. Our display principle utilizes the voltage-controlled movement of a coloured oil film adjacent to a white substrate. The reflectivity and contrast of our system approach those of paper. In addition, we demonstrate a colour concept, which is intrinsically four times brighter than reflective liquid-crystal displays and twice as bright as other emerging technologies. The principle of microfluidic motion at low voltages is applicable in a wide range of electro-optic devices.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2004

Liquid behavior inside a reflective display pixel based on electrowetting

Thibault Roques-Carmes; Robert A. Hayes; Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Lucas Josef Maria Schlangen

This article deals with the behavior of fluids inside a reflective display based on electrowetting. The advantage of using electrowetting as a principle for a reflective display has been demonstrated [R. A. Hayes and B. J. Feenstra, Nature (London) 425, 383 (2003)]. The principle is based on the controlled two-dimensional movement of an oil/water interface across a hydrophobic fluoropolymer insulator. The main objective of this article is to show experimentally the influence of the oil film curvature on the kinetics of the optical switch. For this we explore the electrowetting behavior and the fluidic motion as a function of several parameters, including addressing voltage, colored oil film thickness, oil type, and device size. The electro-optic characteristics and the switching dynamics of a single electrowetting pixel are studied. The results indicate that the competition between capillary forces and electrostatic forces governs the voltage driven oil contraction while capillary forces only drive the oil relaxation upon voltage removal. Consequently, a major parameter that controls the electrowetting behavior is the curvature of the oil/water interface. When increasing the oil film thickness or decreasing the device size, the oil film curvature increases. Hence, the capillary forces become stronger and the voltage required to achieve a particular oil contraction increases. With increasing curvature of the spherical oil cap, oil film relaxation, which is only capillary driven, is more rapid. The oil viscosity also plays a role in the speed of the oil movement. The reduction of the oil viscosity leads to an increase in the extent and speed of the oil/water interface movement. A linear relationship between the pixel capacitance and the resulting pixel white area percentage is found experimentally and is reconciled with an electrical model.


international display research conference | 2004

A video-speed reflective display based on electrowetting: principle and properties

Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Robert A. Hayes; I. G. J. Camps; L. M. Hage; Mark Thomas Johnson; T. Roques-Carmes; Luc J. M. Schlangen; A. R. Franklin; A. F. Valdes; R. A. Ford

Electrowetting is presented as a novel principle for a reflective display. By contracting a colored oil film electrically, an optical switch is obtained with many attractive properties that make it very suitable for use as a reflective display, for instance, as electronic paper. Firstly, it has the high reflectivity (>40%) and contrast ratio (15) required for a paper-like optical appearance. In addition, the principle shows a video-rate response time (<10 msec) and has a clear route toward a high-brightness color display. 1 Finally, the electro-optical response is independent of cell-gap thickness, which will be very beneficial when moving toward a flexible display.


SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers | 2004

52.1: A High Brightness Colour 160 PPI Reflective Display Technology Based on Electrowetting

Robert A. Hayes; Bokke Johannes Feenstra; I. G. J. Camps; L. M. Hage; T. Roques-Carmes; Luc J. M. Schlangen; A. R. Franklin; A. F. Valdes

Electrowetting can be used to provide the pixel engine for a reflective display. By contracting a colored oil film electrically, an optical switch with a high reflectivity (>40%) and contrast (<15) is obtained. In addition to the attractive optical properties, the principle exhibits a video-rate response speed (∼10 ms) and has a clear route toward a high-brightness color display [1]. Here we additionally show that the display principle is readily scalable to a pixel size of 160 μm.


international conference on micro electro mechanical systems | 2006

Electrowetting-Based Displays: Bringing Microfluidics Alive On-Screen

Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Robert A. Hayes; R. van Dijk; Robert Gerardus Hendrik Boom; M.M.H. Wagemans; I.Gj. Camps; Andrea Giraldo; B.v.d. Heijden

We present the use of electrowetting as a technology for very bright and energy-efficient displays. The intrinsic nature of the system as an optical switch provides an excellent starting point upon which a wide variety of display configurations can be based. Here we focus our discussion on reflective displays, in which the main advantages of the technology are best utilized. The properties of the reflective display will be discussed, illustrating the combination of a paper-like optical performance and video-speed switching.


on Optical information systems | 2005

Electrowetting-based optics

Stein Kuiper; Robert A. Hayes; Bokke Johannes Feenstra; J. M. E. Baken

Electrowetting is electrostatic manipulation of liquids. It can be used to displace and deform volumes of polar liquids. A very promising application area is optics. The surface of a volume of liquid can be used as a tunable lens and displacement of the liquid can change the refraction, diffraction or transmission of light when passing through the liquid. In this paper we describe a selection of various tunable optical components that make use of electrowetting, ranging from refractive and diffractive lenses to diaphragms and displays.


Archive | 2005

Variable focus lens

Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Stein Kuiper; Sjoerd Stallinga; Rudolph Maria Snoeren


Archive | 2003

Switchable optical element

Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Robert A. Hayes; Rudolph Maria Snoeren; Stein Kuiper; Anton Petrus Maria Van Arendonk


Archive | 2003

Apparatus for forming variable fluid meniscus configurations

Stein Kuiper; Gerjan F. A. Van De Walle; Edwin Maria Wolterink; Mark Jozef Willem Mertens; Bokke Johannes Feenstra


Archive | 2007

Transflective electrowetting display device

Bokke Johannes Feenstra; Roy Van Dijk; Andrea Giraldo; Robert A. Hayes

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