It has come and gone again. Display Week 2021 is in the books, although I continue to pick up a few talks here and there since they are all online for another few months. What follows is only a sampling of the innovations and news that I took away from SID. There is just so much I cannot possibly cover it all here! Here are the talking points you can use as water cooler talk as you get back to normal office work soon.
Nanosys continues to innovate (and acquire)
Nanosys (as usual) saved some of their best press for SID Display Week. They continued to promote a “new green” QD that has higher absorption, and impressive optical characteristics with no heavy metals. This could be helpful in situations where there is limited thickness to work with and one wants to convert as much blue light as possible to green with minimal bleed through. We have heard about this new material before, and to be honest I was hoping to hear more about its composition. But alas, no word from Nanosys on that front.
They also promoted their new “aerobically stable” QDs in an extruded film called X-QDEF. In theory these films could be used as diffuser plates instead of an additional film. I have my reservations about the cost of the QDs that go into this design, and if it will actually have a material benefit over the existing QD film implementation. Only time will tell.
Finally, the big announcement from Nanosys this year was their acquisition of microLED company, glo. The move comes at a time when microLED technology is still in it’s infancy, with massive market potential if it pans out. Nanosys is gabling (hoping) that uLED+QD will be one of the first uLED products to market, and by acquiring glo, they have laid out a clear path ahead for doing so. There may be other reasons, such as IP portfolio, that a company like Nanosys would want to acquire glo. One only needs to look at how successful UDC has been in the OLED space with a model of licensing + material sales. If Nanosys can lock down IP related to uLED+QD color conversion, it puts them in a strong position for future license revenue.
MicroLED with QD color conversion
There was no shortage of information on microLEDs this year. I’ll highlight two topics that really stuck out to me as unique in the world of uLED + QD. As you may know, a down-conversion approach would simplify the manufacturing and driving of a uLED display where only one color LED is required instead of three.
First, Applied Materials presented a new concept for using a UV microLED with R/G/B QD down-converters. This is a major shift from the traditional idea of using blue uLEDs with only R/G QDs. Included in the design are a UV blocking layer to prevent UV transmission, and a DBR (Distributed Bragg Reflector) covering the tapered walls of each pixel instead of black matrix that most designs use. This will presumably help reflect the photons hitting the walls of the device upwards, improving efficiency. There will be a significant penalty in stokes loss from UV to red (almost 40%), but since current red uLEDs are quite low, perhaps this approach is still viable.