Like razors and hamburgers, the important thing to raised OLED appears to be extra stacks. Layers of OLED stacked on different layers of OLED can lead to brighter and brighter shows. OLED screens on TVs, displays, laptops and telephones already ship the very best picture high quality of any show tech, and with two new applied sciences, they’re poised to get even higher.
LG’s newest high-end OLED TV, the G5, contains a four-stack design that ends in the brightest OLED image CNET has examined thus far — greater than 30% brighter than another OLED TV we have examined. That is fairly a leap in efficiency for what are already a few of the best TVs ever.
New advances in phosphorescent supplies to complement OLED’s sometimes luminescent materials are probably simply as attention-grabbing. This new tech will doubtless enhance brightness much more or make for extra environment friendly shows for moveable gadgets. Are these advances simply hype? In all probability not. This looks as if a critical leap in OLED efficiency. Here is why.
Stacks on stacks
LG’s third-gen OLEDs, like earlier generations, used blue OLED materials with yellow or yellow-green OLED, plus coloration filters, to create purple, inexperienced and blue gentle. The brand new design makes use of separate purple and inexperienced OLED supplies, a rarity in TV OLED designs.
To know why this new design is noteworthy, first let’s take a second to speak about earlier generations of OLED and the way they labored. Previous to common opinion, fashionable OLED TVs should not have purple, inexperienced and blue OLED supplies creating gentle. Samsung experimented with RGB OLED in the early days however could not get it to work cost-effectively. LG, as a substitute, has lengthy finished some model of blue OLED plus a yellow, or yellow-green OLED materials. This “white” gentle would cross by means of coloration filters to create the purple, inexperienced and blue that make up a picture. They’d throw in a further white sub-pixel to enhance brightness.
We have talked about this before, and whereas it appeared bizarre at first, it appeared nice on the time, and it is only been improved over the years. Samsung took a unique strategy when it lastly re-entered the OLED market with its QD-OLED design. This used solely a blue OLED materials and added purple and inexperienced quantum dots to create the rainbow of fruit flavors.
The issue, from a tech aspect, is which you can push OLED solely so laborious. There are a selection of causes for this, not least of which is longevity. The candle that burns twice as shiny burns half as lengthy, basically. What engineers discovered is that, when you stack OLED layers on high of one another, collectively they will create a brighter picture whereas not working any particular person layer significantly laborious. As in, “33+33+33=~100” has benefits over “100=100.” There’s extra to it than all that, however that is how we acquired right here.
Not simply extra stacks, however completely different stacks
So with that in thoughts, I am certain you see the way it’s logical to simply add one other layer (“33+33+33+33=Revenue!”). Whereas principally true, there’s one other change right here that, as somebody who has written about OLED from its early days, I discover significantly fascinating: LG has gone RGB.
LG calls its new fourth-gen tech “Main RGB Tandem.” It has two stacks of blue OLED, and swaps out the yellow-green layer for separate inexperienced and purple layers. (RGB OLED returns!) The largest benefit right here is healthier coloration efficiency at greater brightness ranges. There are apparent effectivity benefits to not utilizing yellow-green supplies to create inexperienced and purple. Blue, lengthy the issue youngster for OLED, continues to be doubled up within the new design for brightness and longevity causes.
In CNET’s tests of the G5 OLED, we measured round 2,800 nits, which is 31% brighter than the opposite OLED TV we have reviewed, the Samsung S95D, and a leap of round 40% in brightness over the previous-gen LG G4. Regardless that our checks did not match LG Show’s claims of 4,000 nits, that is nonetheless a major leap in efficiency after a few years of comparatively modest enhancements.
Phosphorescence
A blue phosphor in a Common Show Corp lab.
LG additionally just lately announced a different OLED breakthrough that is not fairly prepared for TV “prime time” however is not any much less attention-grabbing, at the least when you’re a nerd like me. The blue OLED supplies utilized in TVs have up to now been luminescent. This implies, principally, that once you give them vitality, they gentle up, and once you flip it off, they go darkish. Phosphorescence works a little differently. Provide vitality to phosphorescent supplies, and so they glow. How lengthy they glow varies, however what makes it attention-grabbing is that phosphorescent supplies are usually way more environment friendly than luminescent ones. They “maintain onto” the vitality for a second, releasing extra of it as gentle than the “instantaneous” conversion of luminescent supplies.
Phosphorescent blue OLED has been a little bit of a white whale in OLED design, and LG, along with Common Show Corp, has lastly cracked it (having been engaged on it for a long time). They’re combining a fluorescent blue layer with a phosphorescent blue layer, at the moment paired with a yellow-green layer. LG says this combines “the steadiness of fluorescent supplies with the facility effectivity of phosphorescent supplies, leading to roughly 15% decrease energy consumption.”
Proper now, LG intends to make use of this tech in shows that require excessive brightness and effectivity, specifically smartphone and pill screens. May the four-stack design in LG’s new TVs be modified to make use of a phosphorescent layer for much more brightness and vitality effectivity? I might assume so, at the least ultimately.
The brand new king, for now?
The subsequent-gen TV tech with many names: QD-EL, EL-QD, NanoLED, QED; aka direct-view, electroluminescent quantum dots.
It would be logical for one’s eyes to float towards Samsung to see what its response will likely be. Nevertheless, I am unsure in the event that they want one. At the very least, not proper now. Its QD-OLED tech is sort of new and superb. Quantum dots are fairly exceptional and are practically 100% environment friendly in turning one coloration of sunshine into one other. QD-OLED would not have the identical potential limitations with coloration saturation at excessive brightness ranges as LG’s older designs. So if Samsung provides much more stacks (someplace between attainable and sure), it might theoretically get even higher brightness whereas sustaining coloration saturation. If the corporate switches to a phosphorescent blue materials, it might see brightness and effectivity enhancements, similar to what LG is claiming. We will see.
What we are able to additionally think about, on the horizon, is one thing which may probably exchange OLED. QD-EL, aka NanoLED, aka direct-view quantum dots, makes use of electroluminescent quantum dots to create a picture, no OLED or LEDs wanted. After a number of years of restricted-access tech demos, TCL had a prototype simply sitting in its sales space at CES 2025 for everybody (at the least, all who observed) to see. On the Society for Data Show’s Display Week, Samsung confirmed off a 400-nit QD-EL prototype. So far as this tech goes, that is massive and shiny. (We like massive and shiny.) It will be an attention-grabbing few years for show tech, that is for certain.
Along with masking cameras and show tech, Geoff does photo tours of cool museums and areas all over the world, together with nuclear submarines, aircraft carriers, medieval castles, epic 10,000-mile road trips and extra.
Additionally, try Budget Travel for Dummies, his journey e-book, and his bestselling sci-fi novel about city-sized submarines. You may comply with him on Instagram and YouTube.

