It looks like a 1980s artifact. The wording on the small computer screen wavered and was low-resolution. This may be the future.
The screen used perovskite light-emitting diode (PeLED) technology. It is a major divergence from the LED technology used in smartphone displays and might lead to smaller, cheaper, and longer-lasting gadgets.
Additionally, PeLEDs are rare in that they absorb and emit light. Professor Feng Gao at Linkoping University in Sweden says the same material can be used for touch, fingerprint, and ambient light sensing.
Though difficult, we feel this is achievable.
Today's smartphones use electrical components independent of the screen to do these activities.
Professor Gao and his colleagues released a paper in April describing their touch and ambient light-sensitive prototype.
"This demonstration is impressive..." Fluxim, a technological research business in Switzerland, is young, according to sales and marketing head Daniele Braga. He notes that optimizing all the promised functionalities may make it hard to market this display in a timely manner.
Professor Gao uses a video call to show the latest technology. This time, the pixels per inch (ppi), which measures display sharpness, have nearly doubled to 90 ppi. Another little panel.
A simple animation shows two stick figures fighting. A recent paper provided more details about this prototype.
The crystal structure of perovskite contains calcium, titanium, and oxygen in a precise order. The 1800s saw the discovery of this substance, but it wasn't until much later that people realized they could make perovskites with the same structure but other elements or molecules.
Depending on the material, perovskites can conduct electricity or generate light well.
Dr. Braga says perovskites are easy and cheap to make. "By slightly tuning the chemical composition, you can cover the full visible spectrum," adds. When considering mass production, this is huge.
There are some issues, though.
Because of their instability, PeLEDs fail when exposed to oxygen or moisture. Loreta Muscarella of VU Amsterdam is developing new PeLEDs.
She says if you leave a PeLED sitting around for a few hours or days, its light will fade or shift to a less pure green than you want.
This also brings perovskites' purpose into doubt. They can emit a pure red, green, or blue — the essential colors for full-color digital displays. This contributes to their appeal.
Professor Gao recommends gluing or resining PeLEDs for stability. However, researchers are continuing to ensure the technology will last.
Regular LEDs last at least 50,000 hours, while PeLEDs last hundreds to thousands, according to Dr. Muscarella.
She says it may be years before a commercial product with a PeLED is available.
However, a different light-emitting perovskite may be more easily available.
Photoluminescence is crucial. This is not an LED, but a filter or film that absorbs and re-emits a specified color.
Some TVs utilize a colored filter to supply the red, green, and blue hues required in each pixel.
Combining those colors at different intensities gives you the range of tones needed to construct a picture.
LED backlights illuminate red, green, and blue filters. However, modern filters block a lot of that light.
Instead, photoluminescent perovskites pass practically all light, increasing device brightness and efficiency.
This project is being handled by British company Helio. One of their internet movies shows how a red or green perovskite film can nearly perfectly re-emit blue light as red or green.
The technology Professor Gao and his colleagues are developing differs greatly. LEDs made from perovskites are being employed in light-emitting screen experiments.
These are electroluminescent perovskites. As mentioned, they are unstable and sensitive to electrical fields, making them difficult to work with. However, they may become even better at lighting up red, green, and blue pixels on a smartphone, tablet, or TV screen without color filters.
The biggest benefits of implementing this technology may be lower gadget costs and energy consumption.
According to Dr. Muscarella, laboratory studies show that PeLEDs are already comparable with OLEDs and may one day outperform them in efficiency. No one knows how much less energy a PeLED display will use in the future.
Professor Sir Richard Friend of Cambridge helped establish Helio with Oxford Professor Henry Snaith. He says PeLEDs have trouble directing their light. This matters mainly in displays.
He says to emit light forward to prevent being imprisoned in the other way.
Researchers are trying many methods to solve this problem. Dr. Muscarella and colleagues imprinted a rough nanoscale pattern on PeLEDs to boost light output. This seems effective.
However, Professor Gao, who has worked with Professor Sir Friend on publications and received his doctorate from Cambridge in 2011, is eagerly awaiting PeLED panels that can do more than emit light.
One slab of stacked materials with the light-absorbing perovskite in the middle might be used for fingerprint authentication, heart-rate sensing, and light detection.
"It's really very unique," he shouts, excited. Other LED technologies cannot achieve this.
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https://diendannhansu.com/threads/th...screen.474232/
https://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/dailynew.../202407080000/
https://www.forexagone.com/forum/que...-127069#224923
https://zapp.red/myforum/topic/the-t...n/#postid-9052
https://open.firstory.me/story/clycs...ju01y25plr9l9d
https://www.tadalive.com/forum/threa...on-the-screen/
The screen used perovskite light-emitting diode (PeLED) technology. It is a major divergence from the LED technology used in smartphone displays and might lead to smaller, cheaper, and longer-lasting gadgets.
Additionally, PeLEDs are rare in that they absorb and emit light. Professor Feng Gao at Linkoping University in Sweden says the same material can be used for touch, fingerprint, and ambient light sensing.
Though difficult, we feel this is achievable.
Today's smartphones use electrical components independent of the screen to do these activities.
Professor Gao and his colleagues released a paper in April describing their touch and ambient light-sensitive prototype.
"This demonstration is impressive..." Fluxim, a technological research business in Switzerland, is young, according to sales and marketing head Daniele Braga. He notes that optimizing all the promised functionalities may make it hard to market this display in a timely manner.
Professor Gao uses a video call to show the latest technology. This time, the pixels per inch (ppi), which measures display sharpness, have nearly doubled to 90 ppi. Another little panel.
A simple animation shows two stick figures fighting. A recent paper provided more details about this prototype.
The crystal structure of perovskite contains calcium, titanium, and oxygen in a precise order. The 1800s saw the discovery of this substance, but it wasn't until much later that people realized they could make perovskites with the same structure but other elements or molecules.
Depending on the material, perovskites can conduct electricity or generate light well.
Dr. Braga says perovskites are easy and cheap to make. "By slightly tuning the chemical composition, you can cover the full visible spectrum," adds. When considering mass production, this is huge.
There are some issues, though.
Because of their instability, PeLEDs fail when exposed to oxygen or moisture. Loreta Muscarella of VU Amsterdam is developing new PeLEDs.
She says if you leave a PeLED sitting around for a few hours or days, its light will fade or shift to a less pure green than you want.
This also brings perovskites' purpose into doubt. They can emit a pure red, green, or blue — the essential colors for full-color digital displays. This contributes to their appeal.
Professor Gao recommends gluing or resining PeLEDs for stability. However, researchers are continuing to ensure the technology will last.
Regular LEDs last at least 50,000 hours, while PeLEDs last hundreds to thousands, according to Dr. Muscarella.
She says it may be years before a commercial product with a PeLED is available.
However, a different light-emitting perovskite may be more easily available.
Photoluminescence is crucial. This is not an LED, but a filter or film that absorbs and re-emits a specified color.
Some TVs utilize a colored filter to supply the red, green, and blue hues required in each pixel.
Combining those colors at different intensities gives you the range of tones needed to construct a picture.
LED backlights illuminate red, green, and blue filters. However, modern filters block a lot of that light.
Instead, photoluminescent perovskites pass practically all light, increasing device brightness and efficiency.
This project is being handled by British company Helio. One of their internet movies shows how a red or green perovskite film can nearly perfectly re-emit blue light as red or green.
The technology Professor Gao and his colleagues are developing differs greatly. LEDs made from perovskites are being employed in light-emitting screen experiments.
These are electroluminescent perovskites. As mentioned, they are unstable and sensitive to electrical fields, making them difficult to work with. However, they may become even better at lighting up red, green, and blue pixels on a smartphone, tablet, or TV screen without color filters.
The biggest benefits of implementing this technology may be lower gadget costs and energy consumption.
According to Dr. Muscarella, laboratory studies show that PeLEDs are already comparable with OLEDs and may one day outperform them in efficiency. No one knows how much less energy a PeLED display will use in the future.
Professor Sir Richard Friend of Cambridge helped establish Helio with Oxford Professor Henry Snaith. He says PeLEDs have trouble directing their light. This matters mainly in displays.
He says to emit light forward to prevent being imprisoned in the other way.
Researchers are trying many methods to solve this problem. Dr. Muscarella and colleagues imprinted a rough nanoscale pattern on PeLEDs to boost light output. This seems effective.
However, Professor Gao, who has worked with Professor Sir Friend on publications and received his doctorate from Cambridge in 2011, is eagerly awaiting PeLED panels that can do more than emit light.
One slab of stacked materials with the light-absorbing perovskite in the middle might be used for fingerprint authentication, heart-rate sensing, and light detection.
"It's really very unique," he shouts, excited. Other LED technologies cannot achieve this.
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https://www.artstation.com/ver-del-r...-en-hd/profile
https://www.artstation.com/sledujte-...ine-cz/profile
https://www.artstation.com/sledujte-...online/profile
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https://www.artstation.com/urmareste...titrat/profile
https://www.artstation.com/urmareste...titrat/profile
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https://www.artstation.com/furiosa-a...romana/profile
https://www.artstation.com/guarda-fi...ng-ita/profile
https://www.artstation.com/guarda-in...izione/profile
https://dailybusinesspost.com/unexpe...he-us-in-june/
https://network.propertyweek.com/art...k-on-the-scree
https://writeupcafe.com/the-technolo...on-the-screen/
https://matters.town/a/w3nnycmiov2o
https://dailynewslatest.medium.com/t...n-256f3347759d
https://dailynewslatest.reblog.hu/th...sk-on-the-scre
https://diendannhansu.com/threads/th...screen.474232/
https://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/dailynew.../202407080000/
https://www.forexagone.com/forum/que...-127069#224923
https://zapp.red/myforum/topic/the-t...n/#postid-9052
https://open.firstory.me/story/clycs...ju01y25plr9l9d
https://www.tadalive.com/forum/threa...on-the-screen/
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