Dave Savastano05.19.11
Universal Display Corporation announced that the company will present new findings on the use of energy efficient, environmentally-friendly UniversalPHOLED technology and materials in OLED television applications.
These findings were reported in a paper delivered at the 2011 Society for Information Display (SID) International Symposium, Seminar, and Exhibition,which was held May 15-20, 2011.
In an invited paper titled “High Efficiency Phosphorescent AMOLEDs: The Path to Long Lifetime TVs,” Dr. Mike Hack, Universal Display’s vice president and general manager, OLED Lighting & Custom Displays, presented an analysis demonstrating that OLED TV’s using phosphorescent OLEDs can be environmentally “green” and consume less power than comparable AMLCDs.
In addition, the use of phosphorescent OLEDs reduces operating temperature rise to extend display lifetime and reduce cost. In a comparison of various display architectures, Dr. Hack highlights added power consumption and lifetime advantages through the use of the company’s novel four sub-pixel architecture for OLED TV’s. The new architecture adds a light blue sub-pixel to the conventional red-green-blue (RGB) configuration. The performance of this RGB1B2 architecture has recently been improved through use of the company’s enhanced light blue materials system.
“Our team has developed yet another solution for improving OLED display performance using our highly-efficient, proprietary OLED technologies. The findings presented in Dr. Hack’s paper further demonstrate the importance of UniversalPHOLED technology and materials for the development of energy-efficient OLED televisions and other large-area displays,” said Steven V. Abramson, president and CEO of Universal Display. “The continued enhancements in our UniversalPHOLED materials systems, including recent advances in our light blue system, as well as the further development of our novel RGB1B2 display architecture, can provide our customers with new opportunities for product differentiation and advantage.”
These findings were reported in a paper delivered at the 2011 Society for Information Display (SID) International Symposium, Seminar, and Exhibition,which was held May 15-20, 2011.
In an invited paper titled “High Efficiency Phosphorescent AMOLEDs: The Path to Long Lifetime TVs,” Dr. Mike Hack, Universal Display’s vice president and general manager, OLED Lighting & Custom Displays, presented an analysis demonstrating that OLED TV’s using phosphorescent OLEDs can be environmentally “green” and consume less power than comparable AMLCDs.
In addition, the use of phosphorescent OLEDs reduces operating temperature rise to extend display lifetime and reduce cost. In a comparison of various display architectures, Dr. Hack highlights added power consumption and lifetime advantages through the use of the company’s novel four sub-pixel architecture for OLED TV’s. The new architecture adds a light blue sub-pixel to the conventional red-green-blue (RGB) configuration. The performance of this RGB1B2 architecture has recently been improved through use of the company’s enhanced light blue materials system.
“Our team has developed yet another solution for improving OLED display performance using our highly-efficient, proprietary OLED technologies. The findings presented in Dr. Hack’s paper further demonstrate the importance of UniversalPHOLED technology and materials for the development of energy-efficient OLED televisions and other large-area displays,” said Steven V. Abramson, president and CEO of Universal Display. “The continued enhancements in our UniversalPHOLED materials systems, including recent advances in our light blue system, as well as the further development of our novel RGB1B2 display architecture, can provide our customers with new opportunities for product differentiation and advantage.”