Interestingly, the only non-Samsung TV on the list is the Vizio P-series Quantum, which contains a QD film with Nanosys Hyperion QDs. This technology is a hybrid cadmium-containing green QD, and non-Cd red QD, with an overall cadmium content of <100 ppm which makes it RoHS compliant. The green CdSe emission peak width is presumably much narrower than the non-Cd QDs used in Samsung displays, but interestingly, the gamut is not quite as high as the Samsung Q7s on the list which is measured a couple of points higher for both DCI-P3 and Rec2020. There any many other optical components in the display that will also contribute to the gamut, not the least of which are the color filters which have a major impact on both color and brightness, so I’ll chalk up the difference to “other optical components” for now.
So, QDs are great for color (we knew that already) but as we all know, the color gamut is only one small piece of the puzzle, and it may not carry the most weight for many consumers. I’ll admit that price is probably on the top of my list when I buy a new display, and for many others it is features like functionality, resolution, brightness, contrast, form factor (thin). Since people like to compare QLEDs to OLEDs so often, let’s look at the category where OLEDs do quite well – contrast.
Contrast
Since OLEDs can actually turn off each pixel completely, resulting in NO light emission (while LCDs rely on leaky color filters and liquid crystals to determine light throughput), it’s no surprise that OLEDs take the cake and are the top 9 TVs tested for contrast (in fact these are the only OLED TVs tested). We can argue over the infinite contrast ratio listed here, but the fact remains that they are much better than any LCD out there.