Korean Electronic Times reported that Samsung is reviewing the roadmap at its display division. And in the process skipping on OLED technology, moving to QLED instead, for TVs in 2019. This means Samsung wil only offer its Quantum Dot enhanced Blue LED backlight LCD TV till then.
According to ET Samsung has chosen QLED as the keyword that will help its VD Business Department to continue to lead in next-generation’s TV markets. Major point of this strategy is that VD Business Department will pass over OLED TVs after Quantum-Dot TVs, which are its current major products, and go straight to QLED TVs. Samsung Electronics has been developing OLED TVs internally and examining them since many years ago. However it has come to a conclusion that it cannot solve problems such as short age, burn-in phenomenon and others due to limitations of organic material. Fact that manufacturing unit cost is high has become another weak point of OLED TVs.
“Although we had been developing and paying careful attention on OLED technologies, there are problems regarding age and production cost with large products since they use organic material.” said a high-ranking official of Samsung Electronics. “VD Business Department is making a new roadmap for next-generation TVs.” This official also added that Samsung Electronics has decided to go straight to QLED TVs after Quantum-Dot TVs since technologies are evolving fast.<\q> an unnamed company official told ET.
Currently Quantum Dots are used to convert blue light into red and green light that are readily filtered into correct primary colors RGB to provide light to an LCD layer that actually creates the image.
In QLED the deposited Quantum Dots are instead to provide both the image and the light, creating an emmisive display, like OLED, but with greater lifetime of the emmisive material, and higher yield due to simpler production methods, as it allows for contact printing of the semiconductor nanocrystals structure.
“When Quantum-Dot replaces color filters, it will become a display that will be superior than all other displays.” said Department Head (President) Kim Hyeon-seok of Samsung Electronics’ VD Business Department at CES that was held in Las Vegas early this year. “Quantum-Dot will become a display that will have strengths of LCD and OLED.”<\q> to Electronic Times.
Another advantage attributed to semiconductor nanocrystals or emmisive Quantum Dots is their potential brightness of upto 40000 nits or cd/m2. and saturation and wide color gamut.
The structure of a QLED is very similiar to the OLED technology. But the difference is that the light emitting centers are cadmium selenide (CdSe) nanocrystals, or quantum dots. A layer of cadmium-selenium quantum dots is sandwiched between layers of electron-transporting and hole-transporting organic materials. An applied electric field causes electrons and holes to move into the quantum dot layer, where they are captured in the quantum dot and recombine, emitting photons. <\q> QLED-Info explains.
As Qled-info shows the Quantum dots in an QLED display are being excited by an electronic cathode, and not by blue light as in current LED backlit LCD Displays.
Sony made its Crystal LED resurface in time for the upcoming Infocomm as a modular videowall,instead of a Tv as demonstarted at CES 2012.
According to ET Samsung has chosen QLED as the keyword that will help its VD Business Department to continue to lead in next-generation’s TV markets. Major point of this strategy is that VD Business Department will pass over OLED TVs after Quantum-Dot TVs, which are its current major products, and go straight to QLED TVs. Samsung Electronics has been developing OLED TVs internally and examining them since many years ago. However it has come to a conclusion that it cannot solve problems such as short age, burn-in phenomenon and others due to limitations of organic material. Fact that manufacturing unit cost is high has become another weak point of OLED TVs.
“Although we had been developing and paying careful attention on OLED technologies, there are problems regarding age and production cost with large products since they use organic material.” said a high-ranking official of Samsung Electronics. “VD Business Department is making a new roadmap for next-generation TVs.” This official also added that Samsung Electronics has decided to go straight to QLED TVs after Quantum-Dot TVs since technologies are evolving fast.<\q> an unnamed company official told ET.
Currently Quantum Dots are used to convert blue light into red and green light that are readily filtered into correct primary colors RGB to provide light to an LCD layer that actually creates the image.
In QLED the deposited Quantum Dots are instead to provide both the image and the light, creating an emmisive display, like OLED, but with greater lifetime of the emmisive material, and higher yield due to simpler production methods, as it allows for contact printing of the semiconductor nanocrystals structure.
“When Quantum-Dot replaces color filters, it will become a display that will be superior than all other displays.” said Department Head (President) Kim Hyeon-seok of Samsung Electronics’ VD Business Department at CES that was held in Las Vegas early this year. “Quantum-Dot will become a display that will have strengths of LCD and OLED.”<\q> to Electronic Times.
Another advantage attributed to semiconductor nanocrystals or emmisive Quantum Dots is their potential brightness of upto 40000 nits or cd/m2. and saturation and wide color gamut.
The structure of a QLED is very similiar to the OLED technology. But the difference is that the light emitting centers are cadmium selenide (CdSe) nanocrystals, or quantum dots. A layer of cadmium-selenium quantum dots is sandwiched between layers of electron-transporting and hole-transporting organic materials. An applied electric field causes electrons and holes to move into the quantum dot layer, where they are captured in the quantum dot and recombine, emitting photons. <\q> QLED-Info explains.
As Qled-info shows the Quantum dots in an QLED display are being excited by an electronic cathode, and not by blue light as in current LED backlit LCD Displays.
Sony made its Crystal LED resurface in time for the upcoming Infocomm as a modular videowall,instead of a Tv as demonstarted at CES 2012.
Comment