-- OLED --

LG Chem gets DuPont’s soluble OLED tech


LG Chem has acquired technology to produce soluble organic light emitting diodes from U.S. chemical firm DuPont, announced the company on Tuesday.

The deal includes more than 540 patents DuPont holds on soluble OLED technology as well as research and manufacturing equipment.

Under a mutual agreement, the size of the deal was not disclosed but industry watchers estimate it to have been worth around 200 billion won ($175.9 million) to 300 billion won.

According to LG, the conventional method of producing an OLED screen is to spread material on the panel and evaporate it under a high heat. Soluble OLED screens, however, involve printing material on to the panel using inkjet printing technology. The company explained that this minimizes material loss because it prints the material instead of spreading and evaporating it. This also allows for the screen to show more vivid visuals.

“Due to such benefits, soluble OLEDs are expected to start mass production across many display makers worldwide,” said LG. “With the core technology acquired through the deal we plan to take a lead in the market by organizing a stable supply chain of soluble OLED materials.”

LG also started its own research on soluble OLEDs in 2015 and has expertise in injecting and spreading material on panels.

The company said that it plans to further expand collaborations with DuPont in the future


http://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=3061370
 
Samsung Display and LGD continue to invest in OLED...https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ko&tl=en&u=http://newstomato.com/ReadNews.aspx?no=885736

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Samsung Display to launch new QD-OLED...https://translate.google.com/transl...w.mk.co.kr/news/business/view/2019/03/172861/


LCD vs QDEF LCD (aka QLED) vs QD-OLED
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source photo:[mk.co.kr] via [forum.setcombg.com]
 
Bang and Olufsen’s new OLED TV has unfolding speakers


Its parts are made up of a 77-inch OLED panel, with the sound system residing in two oak and aluminium panels that sit in front of the screen.

Turn the TV on and the two panels spread out to the side and the screen rises to viewing height. Turn the TV off and the sequence replays itself in reverse.

The front housing that holds the speaker system is made out crafted oak and aluminium, and has been tuned by ear and hand to reveal as much detail in music and sound as it can. The grading pattern seen on the front panels has been designed to maximise the performance of the three-channel, fully active DSP-based sound centre.

The 77-inch OLED screen is in fact LG’s OLED C9 panel optimised for B&O and comes with all the characteristics of the screen technology including deep blacks, excellent contrast and vivid colours.


The Beovision Harmony does not skimp on features either. Tune-In and Deezer music streaming services are integrated into the TV and there’s support for AirPlay 2, Chromecast and Bluetooth streaming. The smart platform is LG’s webOS 4.5 platform that caters for access to Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and YouTube.

Multiroom is possible thanks to a built-in 7.1 decoder that allows up to eight B&O Beolab speakers to be connected. All of this can be controlled through the sleek, ergonomically styled BeoRemote One.

The Beovision Harmony is due out October 2019 in B&O stores for €18,500. If you afford that, there are two versions to choose from: a combined oak wood/aluminium front or a combined Grey Melange two-tone fabric/aluminium front. It also comes with two placement options in a floor stand and wall bracket.

If you want to see the Beovision Harmony in person, you’ll have to jet over to Italy as it is on display throughout Milan Design Week


https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/bang-olufsen-beovision-harmony-oled-tv-3690905



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Η LG θα ξεκινήσει τη παραγωγή 48 ιντσών 4K OLED το 2020


Σύμφωνα με τον αντιπρόεδρο της LG η παραγωγή 48" OLED τηλεοράσεων θα βοηθήσει την εταιρεία να ισχυροποιήσει τη θέση της στη premium κατηγορία.

Για το 2019 η LG αναμένει να πουλήσει 4 εκ OLED τηλεοράσεις ενώ για το επόμενο έτος οι πωλήσεις αναμένεται να φτάσουν τα 7 εκ.


http://en.thelec.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=345
 
OLED screens on the way to being printed in a single layer

German scientists have developed a prototype of an organic LED with only an organic-semiconductor layer. The new method can push development towards printable OLED screens


Are you looking for a new OLED screen, either for your TV in the living room or your smartphone, then you have several different brands and brands to choose from. But they are virtually all produced in either South Korea or China by the electronics giants LG and Samsung.

Today, for example, only South Korean LG Display can mass-produce OLED TV panels from its two factories, one in South Korea and a new one in China, which has just opened and has cost dizzying $ 25 billion.

This is due, among other things, to the fact that the manufacturing process behind OLED is enormously complex, where up to seven different layers of organic semiconductors must be placed on top of each other, which in turn must be connected in a giant network of millions of pixels on a flat screen.

But now German polymer scientists from the Max-Planck Institutions für Polymerforschung (MPI-P) in Mainz have presented a new, active principle that can reduce the number of organic semiconductor layers from seven to just one layer that gets current supplied via two electrodes.

The first prototype can already compete with existing products in terms of power and brightness. So says Dr. Gert-Jan Wetzelaer, who, together with his colleagues in German Mainz, has published his findings in a scientific article in Nature Photonics.


Can be printed in one piece

OLED stands for organic light-emitting diodes, ie organic LEDs, and consists of organic components, primarily of carbon, as opposed to conventional LED diodes that also contain gallium. This means that OLED components will often have a lower brightness and lifetime, limiting the spread of OLED in both large flat screens and mobile phones, because components are significantly more difficult to handle.

The German scientists have succeeded in reducing the complexity with a light layer based on the physical principle of Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence (TADF). The principle has been known for decades and has been investigated for OLED over the past ten years because it can be used to effectively convert electrical energy into light. In this way, the German polymer scientists believe they can do without the costly rare earths currently used to manufacture existing OLED screens to compensate for the lower brightness and lifetime


2.000 hours of life

In the Nature Photonics article, researchers describe how in an experiment they have succeeded in emitting light with a strength of 10.000 candela / m2 (the SI unit for brightness, ed.), which is 100 times stronger than existing OLED screens and is considered as a world record, partly because they could simultaneously measure an external efficiency of 19%, which is the percentage of electric energy converted to light.

Subsequently, the researchers have tested the lifetime of the OLED prototype, which they have been able to use for 2.000 hours, with a brightness of 10 times the existing screens. Over 2.000 hours, the brightness decreased by 50 percent.

"We hope that we can further improve the concept and achieve even longer lifetimes. This will enable the concept to be used for industrial purposes", says Jan Wetzelaer.

By producing organic LEDs with a TADF-based method, the German researchers expect that they can print OLED components directly in one piece from an inkjet printer because the diode becomes one-dimensional. Thus, it may be possible to produce small OLED screens placed in, for example, clothes or on other flexible surfaces at a reasonable price.

https://ing.dk/artikel/oled-skaerme-paa-vej-at-blive-printet-enkelt-lag-227270
 
Η μαζική παραγωγή inkjet OLED θα ξεκινήσει το 2020.

Printed OLEDs have the opportunity to significantly reduce manufacturing costs, making OLEDs more cost-competitive in TVs and IT products. Taking TV panels as an example, in the production of 65吋4K TV panels in 10th generation, the production cost of inkjet OLEDs is estimated to be 15% to 25% lower than that of traditional white OLEDs (WOLED). Inkjet OLEDs also have the opportunity to extend to the small and medium size panel market. Compared with the 13.3 inch panel produced by the current 6th generation of the evaporation process, the production cost of the printed OLED can be reduced by about 20%. Compared with white OLEDs and vapor-deposited process OLEDs, printed OLED devices have lower investment and higher material usage rates

https://translate.google.com/transl...es.com/newspapers/20190719000331-260204?chdtv
 
LG Display announces $2,54 billion investment in production of large OLED panels


In an effort to consolidate its global leadership in organic light-emitting diode technology, LG Display, a top flat panel maker in South Korea, announced an investment of three trillion won ($2,54 billion) in production facilities for large OLED panels.

The company said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that the investment is aimed at Increasing its competitive edge and leading position in the ultra-large OLED market. LG Display has expanded production facilities for large OLED panels in its plant in Paju north of Seoul.

LG Display has aggressively expanded production infrastructure with a total investment of 15 trillion won by 2020 to build facilities for large OLED and mid-sized plastic OLED (POLED) panels for smartphones and cars. POLED is an OLED built on polyimide circuit boards and could be bent or rolled up. POLED is considered the next generation of display technology.

In 2017, LG Display’s board approved a 1.8 trillion won investment to set up a joint venture plant for 8.5-generation OLED TV panels at its LCD plant in Guangzhou. Separately, the company has announced the commercial production of 8K ultra high definition OLED displays this year.

https://www.nna.jp/english_contents/news/show/20190723_0001