And it is official, Samsung Display will launch Quantum Dot OLED displays. It said it will invest 13.1 trillion Korean won, approximately $10.9 billion in in the new display technology. Displays are still a year or two away, as the new production line to be build in Asan City, South Chungcheong Province is scheduled to start operating in 2021. With the plant fully completed and operational by 2025.
The first Q1 production line will work with Gen 8.5 glass sizes. Gradually an Gen 8 LCD line will be converted to QD-OLED production. Production capacity is said to be 30,000 sheets per month. Samsung Display intends to make predominantly 65" panels at the facility, as well as larger displays.
QD OLED should be more efficient than current White OLED displays, as they require to block most light filtering Red Green and blue out of the white light, the filters all bloch the largest part of the white light. Quantum Dots can convert blue light (using BLUE OLEDs) to a narrow Red Green and Blue(if required using Blue OLEDs)
Well known to CRT Projector users, Blue Phosphors, and now Blue QD materials are the least efficient and hardest tasked color in the RGB array, but Samsung reportedly thinks it can controll decay by using all blue OLEDs, to evenly control aging. Aswell as using multiple Blues.
The first Q1 production line will work with Gen 8.5 glass sizes. Gradually an Gen 8 LCD line will be converted to QD-OLED production. Production capacity is said to be 30,000 sheets per month. Samsung Display intends to make predominantly 65" panels at the facility, as well as larger displays.
QD OLED should be more efficient than current White OLED displays, as they require to block most light filtering Red Green and blue out of the white light, the filters all bloch the largest part of the white light. Quantum Dots can convert blue light (using BLUE OLEDs) to a narrow Red Green and Blue(if required using Blue OLEDs)
Well known to CRT Projector users, Blue Phosphors, and now Blue QD materials are the least efficient and hardest tasked color in the RGB array, but Samsung reportedly thinks it can controll decay by using all blue OLEDs, to evenly control aging. Aswell as using multiple Blues.