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  2. OLED - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLED

    OLED technology is used in commercial applications such as displays for mobile phones and portable digital media players, car radios and digital cameras among others, as well as lighting. [167] Such portable display applications favor the high light output of OLEDs for readability in sunlight and their low power drain.

  3. Flexible organic light-emitting diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_organic_light...

    Flexible OLED displays on foldable smartphones. A flexible organic light-emitting diode (FOLED) is a type of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) incorporating a flexible plastic substrate on which the electroluminescent organic semiconductor is deposited. This enables the device to be bent or rolled while still operating.

  4. Phosphorescent organic light-emitting diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorescent_organic...

    Phosphorescent organic light-emitting diodes (PHOLED) are a type of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) that use the principle of phosphorescence to obtain higher internal efficiencies than fluorescent OLEDs. This technology is currently under development by many industrial and academic research groups.

  5. Solid-state lighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_lighting

    Assessment of Advanced Solid State Lighting.National Academies Press. 2013. doi:10.17226/18279. ISBN 978-0-309-27011-3.; Kho, Mu-Jeong, Javed, T., Mark, R., Maier, E., and David, C. (2008) 'Final Report: OLED Solid State Lighting: Kodak European Research' MOTI (Management of Technology and Innovation) Project, Judge Business School of the University of Cambridge and Kodak European Research ...

  6. Comparison of CRT, LCD, plasma, and OLED displays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_CRT,_LCD...

    OLED displays use 40% of the power of an LCD displaying an image that is primarily black as they lack the need for a backlight, [35] while OLED can use more than three times as much power to display a mostly white image compared to an LCD. [36] Environmental influences

  7. AMOLED - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMOLED

    AMOLED (active-matrix organic light-emitting diode; / ˈ æ m oʊ ˌ l ɛ d /) is a type of OLED display device technology. OLED describes a specific type of thin-film-display technology in which organic compounds form the electroluminescent material, and active matrix refers to the technology behind the addressing of pixels.

  8. Comparison of display technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_display...

    Major technologies are CRT, LCD and its derivatives (Quantum dot display, LED backlit LCD, WLCD, OLCD), Plasma, and OLED and its derivatives (Transparent OLED, PMOLED, AMOLED). An emerging technology is Micro LED. Cancelled and now obsolete technologies are SED and FED.

  9. Flexible display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_display

    The flexible OLED display allows users to interact with the phone by twisting, bending, squeezing and folding in different manners across both the vertical and horizontal planes. [60] The technology journalist website Engadget described interactions such as "[when] bend the screen towards yourself, [the device] acts as a selection function, or ...