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Re: question on LED-backlit displays
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Re: question on LED-backlit displays


  • Subject: Re: question on LED-backlit displays
  • From: Robin Myers <email@hidden>
  • Date: Sat, 16 Jun 2007 17:55:30 -0700


On Jun 16, 2007, at 17:22 , Marco Ugolini wrote:

In a message dated 6/16/07 3:36 PM, Steve Upton wrote:

At 11:18 PM -0700 6/15/07, Marco Ugolini wrote:

The way I understand it, LED backlighting allows for control over the actual
color temperature of the light source itself, whereas the current crop of
LCDs uses a fluorescent backlight whose color temperature cannot be altered.

this is only if the LED backlighting is supplied using a combination of red,
green, blue (and perhaps other) LEDs


So, there is a possibility that the LEDs are single-source, not triplets of
R, G and B light sources?


Marco Ugolini


Most high-brightness LEDs used for backlighting are "white" LEDs. The actual LED chip is a blue LED coated with a blue light excited yellow emitting phosphor. The phosphor allows some of the blue light to pass through so the result is blue plus yellow light, thus "white".

Although single LED devices containing red, green and blue individual dies have been around for many years, they are not as bright as the white LEDs, so they are not usually used for backlights. High brightness LEDs are needed because the LCD they are backlighting greatly cuts the backlight intensity down before it gets out for us to view.

Backlights using individual high brightness red, green and blue LEDs are possible, but they present a very challenging task to the optical designer to get the light to mix evenly in the narrow confines of a display.

One technology that shows great promise for high brightness LED displays is Organic Light Emitting Diode displays, known as OLED displays. These are LEDs that can be created in large area patterns on glass and plastic substrates making large self-luminous displays. The main drawback to this technology is the lower lifetime of blue OLEDs, about 5000 hours right now. This would be about 2 years of 24/7 operation. Most people think that a 10000 hour lifetime is necessary for a viable full color OLED display. There are many companies working on this technology so we should be seeing some OLED displays in the near future.

Robin Myers
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  • Follow-Ups:
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      • From: Marco Ugolini <email@hidden>
References: 
 >Re: question on LED-backlit displays (From: Marco Ugolini <email@hidden>)

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