Microsoft expecting most Windows Phone 7 devices to use AMOLEDs

Pocketnow reports that Microsoft's engineers chose black backgrounds in Windows Phone 7 because it will be very useful with AMOLEDs (it'll save a lot of energy because OLEDs do not use any power on black pixels). There's also the option for a white background, used to enhance readability.

It's great to hear that Microsoft expects most devices to have AMOLED displays, although this is not really a surprise - back in January we ran a story that Microsoft will advice device makers to use AMOLEDs...

Read the full story Posted: Mar 10,2010

Nanometer Graphene can be used to make better and cheaper large-area OLEDs

Researchers at Stanford University have successfully developed a brand new concept of OLEDs with a few nanometer of graphene as transparent conductor. This paved the way for inexpensive mass production of OLEDs on large-area low-cost flexible plastic substrate, which could be rolled up like wallpaper and virtually applied to anywhere you want. The researchers say that Graphene has the potential to be transparent, high-performance, highly conductive and cheaper by several orders of magnitude than current ITO based solutions. Interestingly just a few weeks ago we reported that Graphene can be used to make organic lighting devices, too.

Graphene OLED photoGraphene OLED

Traditionally, indium tin oxide (ITO) is used in OLEDs, but indium is rare, expensive and difficult to recycle. Scientists have been actively searching for an alternative candidate.

The next generation of optoelectronic devices requires transparent conductive electrodes to be lightweight, flexible, cheap, environmental attractive, and compatible with large-scale manufacturing methods. Graphene (a single layer of graphite) is becoming a very promising candidate due to its unique electrical and optical properties. Very recently, Junbo Wu et al., researchers at Stanford University, successfully demonstrated the application of graphene in OLEDs for the first time.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 09,2010

Samsung shows new transparent AMOLED "Digital Window"

Samsung are showing a new transparent AMOLED called "Digital Window" at CeBIT:

We don't have any information on this yet. It seems to be about the same size as the 14" transparent OLED laptop they had at CES. We know that Samsung are seriously into transparent AMOLEDs so it's always good to see more such displays...
Read the full story Posted: Mar 08,2010

Bundesdruckerei shows ePassport with Samsung's flexible AMOLED


Remember Samsung's flexible OLED for ID cards or passports? Bundesdruckerei is showing their e-passport that uses that AMOLED display at CeBIT. It still says "future product", but it seems to get getting closer to production every time we see it.

Bundesdruckerei ePassport with AMOLED photo

 

The display is a flexible 2" QVGA (240x320), 260K color OLED with a 10,000:1 contrast ratio. It is very low on power, and actually uses the RF power from the contactless reader - there's no battery at all here.

Bundesdruckerei ePassport with AMOLED closeup photo


Read the full story Posted: Mar 08,2010

OLEDNet published their OLED market forecast for 2010-2016

OLEDNet has published an OLED market forecast for 2010-2016. Basically the say that during 2010, Samsung will introduce 5" and 7" AMOLEDs, and LG Display will produce 2.7" AMOLED for digital cameras, 3.5" WVGA for mobile phones and 4.3" OLEDs for portable TVS. Toshiba Mobile Displays (TMD) will begin AMOLED small panel production during 2010 as well.

Toshiba, Matsushita and Hitachi are all expected to introduce 20"-40" OLED TV panels as early as 2011. AUO will begin mass production in 2011, too.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 04,2010

Samsung: Full-size OLED TVs are on the horizon

Samsung Mobile Display's president of engineering Brian Berkeley said yesterday that Samsung is accelerating its development of OLED displays, including increasing the size and volume to enable rollout of OLED TVs. Samsung has been critical of OLED TVs in the past years, but things are changing: there's high volume AMOLED production, with millions of OLED displays for mobile devices shipping each month.

Samsung 30-inch 3D OLED TV prototype

Samsung are now making huge investments in OLEDs, including development of medium to large sized panels. They are actually working on how to scale a Gen 4 sized plants (like they have today) to a Gen 7 or even a Gen 8, which will be able to make TV panels economically. This will require either much more powerful lasers working much more quickly than today's process for creating the backplane on which they deposit the OLEDs, or some alternative technology. There are also issues in color patterning, for which Samsung thinks it has a new unique solution, and OLED printing.

Berkeley predicts that a 40" OLED TV will use only 10 watts in about five years (compared to 40 watts today for a 40" LCD). He also said that the technology will be great for 3D TVs (image switching is quicker and so left and right images are completely separated).

Read the full story Posted: Mar 03,2010

Merck: within 9 months we'll have a solution-processable Green OLED ready

Merck are working toward solution-processable OLED materials, and are now saying that they expect to have a green material that is comparable to vacuum processable green within 9 months. Merck's materials will be suited for large-area panels such as OLED TV panels.  

Merck's OLED material development started in 2005 when they bought Covion. They say that the NEMO project (started in 2009) was a real boost to the performance of their materials.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 02,2010

OLED100.eu Wins EU's ICT Best Energy Efficiency Project


The OLED100.eu project has won the Best Energy Efficient project award in Europe's ICT (International Telecommunication Union) competition. They actually won it together with Beywatch (tools for environmental management and energy efficiency). Both project will get €10,000 (there were 39 candidates altogether). OLED100.eu have also send us a new photo of a large-area OLED panel (by Philips Research):



Large Area OLED LightingLarge Area OLED Lighting


OLED100.eu is an integrated European research project to accelerate the development of OLED Lighting technologies. It received €12.5 million funding and focuses on five main goals:




  • High power efficacy (100 lm/W)


  • Long lifetime (100.000 h)


  • Large area (100x100 cm2)


  • Low-cost (100 Euro/m2)


  • Measurement standardization / application research


Read the full story Posted: Mar 02,2010

The OLED-Association responds to DisplayMate's Nexus-One tests

A few days ago we posted about DisplayMate's Nexus-One display tests. Basically they are very unhappy with the OLED's performance, especially when compared to the iPhone's LCD.

Now Barry Young from the OLED-Association has sent us his response to these tests:

Last week, there was an incredible amount of Internet chatter, generated by one well-regarded tester (DisplayMate) and one blogger (DisplayBlog) comparing the AMOLED display in the Nexus I with the LTPS LCD in the iPhone. In short, according to the tester, the AMOLED didn’t measure up. The evaluation was, to my knowledge, the first in-depth scientific comparison of the two displays. Did they help or just confuse the situation? There was a time when display architectures and the measurements of performance were relatively simple:

Read the full story Posted: Mar 02,2010