PHEBE (2015–2018) directly targeted new paradigms for high-efficiency blue emitters in white OLED systems — a core Novaled commercial domain.
NOVALED GMBH
Dresden-based OLED materials specialist; organic semiconductor doping and blue emitter technology for high-efficiency display and lighting applications.
Their core work
Novaled GmbH is a Dresden-based materials company specializing in organic semiconductor technologies for OLED (Organic Light-Emitting Diode) applications. They are recognized for their expertise in molecular doping of organic thin films, a core enabling technology for high-performance OLED displays and lighting. In H2020, they contributed to projects targeting both the fundamental physics of organic semiconductors and the practical engineering of high-efficiency blue light emitters — the historically weakest color component in white OLED systems. Acquired by Samsung in 2013, Novaled operates at the intersection of advanced materials science and industrial-scale OLED manufacturing.
What they specialise in
EXTMOS (2015–2019) developed extended computational models for organic semiconductors, supporting predictive material design.
Both PHEBE and EXTMOS depend on and advance thin-film deposition and characterization techniques intrinsic to OLED stack fabrication.
As a Samsung subsidiary with commercial OLED dopant products, their PHEBE participation links academic research directly to manufacturing-ready materials.
How they've shifted over time
Both H2020 projects were launched simultaneously in 2015, meaning Novaled's entire documented EU research footprint is from a single cohort — there is no temporal evolution visible in the project timeline. PHEBE addressed device-level performance (blue emitter efficiency), while EXTMOS addressed the computational modeling layer beneath device design, suggesting a deliberate dual-track strategy: improve existing devices while building better predictive tools. No keyword metadata was available for either project, so no further evolution signal can be extracted from this dataset.
With only two co-launched projects and no later H2020 activity, it is not possible to determine a directional trend — Novaled's EU research engagement appears to have been a targeted 2015 push rather than an evolving programme.
How they like to work
Novaled participated exclusively as a consortium partner in both projects, never as coordinator — consistent with an industrial partner bringing proprietary materials expertise and manufacturing know-how rather than project management resources. Their 17 unique partners across 7 countries across just 2 projects suggests active engagement in relatively large, multi-stakeholder consortia. This profile is typical of industry players who join academic-led RIA projects to channel fundamental research toward commercially relevant outcomes.
Novaled has worked with 17 distinct consortium partners across 7 countries through only 2 projects — an unusually broad reach for such a small project portfolio. Their network spans the core European OLED and organic electronics research community, likely including TU Dresden affiliates, Fraunhofer institutes, and other industrial OLED players.
What sets them apart
Novaled is one of very few private companies worldwide with deep proprietary expertise in p- and n-type molecular doping of organic semiconductors, a technology foundational to modern OLED efficiency. As a Samsung subsidiary headquartered in Dresden — a historic centre of German microelectronics — they uniquely bridge European academic organic electronics research and Asian industrial OLED manufacturing scale. For consortium builders, they bring both materials IP and direct access to high-volume OLED production knowledge that pure research institutions cannot offer.
Highlights from their portfolio
- PHEBEThe largest-funded of Novaled's two projects (€1.156M EC contribution), targeting the critical bottleneck of blue emitter efficiency in white OLEDs — directly aligned with their core commercial product line.
- EXTMOSAddresses computational modeling of organic semiconductors, showing Novaled's investment in predictive design tools beyond empirical materials development — a less obvious but strategically important capability.