Samsung has recently taken center stage thanks to its new QD-OLED panels that are revolutionizing the industry. Using both the Samsung S95BA and the same Samsung panel, the Sony A95K MASTER was pleasantly surprised. Again the cost of these televisions exceeds even OLEDstill inaccessible to the vast majority of people.
Fortunately, Samsung seems to have found the solution to cut costs in the production of QD-OLED panels and therefore offer a more competitive price to the public. And the Korean firm seems to be working on it a new panel technology a technique for increasing the brightness of green pixels and reducing blue light emission Samsung can save on costs to produce cheaper QD-OLED panels.
The secret is in the blue pixels
Currently, QD-OLED technology uses self-emitting blue pixels to provide maximum brightness to the panel, get rid of the existing white pixels in W-OLEDs and deliver more vibrant and saturated colors. This technology eliminates the RGB filtermaking use of quantum dots to create the three primary colors (red, green, blue) with striking light.
QD-OLED panel technology currently utilizes three layers of emitting blue, green and red light. Blue pixels are only about 25% as efficient as green and red pixels, so more blue layers are required to provide greater brightness and color fidelity. In this way, Samsung’s strategy of reducing costs will be realized. reduce the blue layers to only one and increase the brightness of the green layer.
This move will bring the price of QD-OLEDs dangerously close to OLEDs and allow Samsung to gain a lot of ground in this space. According to The Elec, the technology will go down over the next yearso we’ll have to wait to find out about the effectiveness of these panels.
Samsung is so deep in producing QD-OLED panels that it will even stop making LCD panels, so it relies on Chinese and Taiwanese manufacturers such as AUO, TCL’s CSoT and BOE for the production of QLED and LED panels.