lg transparent lcd panel factory

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lg transparent lcd panel factory

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lg transparent lcd panel factory

LG Electronics is focused on developing new innovations across Digital Signage. We are committed to providing commercial electronic products that help businesses perform better. To support this, we have developed unique OLED Signage. We offer a wide range of products, including information displays, digital signage for advertising, commercial system air conditioners, VRF systems & tailored solutions for different vertical markets. Find out more about our OLED Signage today. Contact your local LG representative for more information.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

Nothing screams future technology like transparent OLED screens, and LG Display has just revealed its latest concepts and prototypes for CES 2022, The Verge reported. All the concepts were created by LG Display (an independent sister company to LG Electronics) from 55-inch 1080p OLED panels with 40 percent transparency using its 8th-generation manufacturing process.

The most visually arresting model is the OLED Shelf that"s built from two 55-inch transparent OLED displays mounted one above the other and topped by a shelf. The idea is that you could display artwork on one screen and a description of the art below, for example. It also has a sheet of opaque material that can roll down like a shade to make the display more like a standard, non-transparent OLED. At the same time, if the screens are turned off and the opaque material rolled up, you"d be able to see objects behind the screen like actual paintings.

The other displays are designed more for signage and commercial clients. The Shopping Managing Showcase can be placed in front of physical products, adding graphics or effects like VFX smoke to enhance them. The Show Window, meanwhile, can display decal-like graphics in front of clothing or other products to make a showcase more attractive. LG Display said that versions of the latter are already being used at a fashion store in Seoul and even at the Smithsonian in Washington, DC.

LG Display already showed off a variety of curved displays, including a continuous screen that wraps around a stationary bike and a curved Media Chair concept. The new transparent displays are only concepts and prototypes, but it told The Verge that it could help customers develop them into products and that the OLED Shelf is ready for production.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

In order to better cater the market demands, Fyezon have introduced international leading display technology with large-screen splicing as the center. In addition, it has introduced new OLED display product technology and created a site for LCD splicing screens, LED splicing screens, OLED splicing screens, OLED machines, all-in-one machine, advertising displayer, and a one-stop service platform

lg transparent lcd panel factory

LG Display has come up with more uses for transparent screens with its innovative new concepts that will be on display at CES 2022: the OLED Shelf, Shopping Managing Showcase, Show Window, and Smart Window. The company is not to be confused with LG Electronics, as LG Display simply creates concepts that other companies can adopt and introduce to the market.

Its OLED Shelf, visible at the top of this story, consists of two 55-inch transparent OLED displays mounted on top of one another, with a shelf at the very top. LG Display says it’s ideal for the living room, where it can display art, a TV show, or one on each of the two screens simultaneously. Always on Display Mode ensures that the screen can stay on all the time. If there was a piece of art on display, that image could stay put just like a painting, all while blending into the wall behind it.

There’s actually room for you to put an actualpainting behind the screens, too, which you’d be able to see when they’re off. LG’s also devised a motorized sheet of opaque material which rolls down like a projector screen to make their images more vibrant and less ethereal. (Images viewed on transparent screens can sometimes look ghostly.) The pedestal you see in the image above houses some of the electronics, and the screens take standard HDMI input.

While the OLED Shelf is built for the home, LG Display says its Shopping Managing Showcase is meant for “luxurious” department stores. A transparent OLED display is attached to a sleek wooden stand, and when placed in front of physical products, it looks like it could create a futuristic shopping experience. It adds an overlay to the items behind it, which means storeowners could add graphics that highlight certain parts of their products, or even use the display to provide funky visual effects. We saw a video where flowy graphics drew our eye to one of the perfume bottles in the display above, giving it a lustrous halo effect.

LG Display also gave us a glimpse of its Show Window, another business-focused model that consists of four 55-inch transparent OLED displays that could be used to play up products in window displays — instead of window decals, stores could add digital text, which can easily be changed at any time. The company says versions of it are already on display at the new Musinsa fashion store in Seoul, as well as art exhibitions at The Smithsonian and at 180 The Strand in London, inside some subway car windows in China and Japan, and a Bulgari fashion show.

The company also showed off its Smart Window, another transparent OLED screen that can be for video calls or presentations in the office, however, it didn’t provide any images of that display.

Since these transparent displays are just concepts, we probably won’t see many of them in the real world, but that doesn’t change the fact that they’re still pretty darn cool to look at — and LG Display says it’s ready to help customers produce some of them if they want. “If any of our customers want, we can provide [the OLED Shelf],” LG Display spokesperson Jean Lee tells The Verge, saying it’s ready for production. All of these displays consist of the same 55-inch 1080p transparent OLED panels with 40 percent transparency, which Lee says is on the company’s 8th generation display manufacturing process.

LG Display has been in the transparent display game for a while now, revealing its first flexible and see-through screen in 2014, and more recently, it showed off a transparent TV screen mounted to the foot of a bed. But it doesn’t just dabble in transparent screens — the company is also showcasing its half-moon-shaped chair with a built-in OLED screen at CES this year.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

The veteran engineer-turned-sales executive is promoting the South Korean company"s transparent organic light-emitting diode, or T-OLED, a panel that serves as a window but also a screen for projecting advertisements and other information.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

By Alex Jensen –When Transparent OLED emerged back in 2014, LG Display viewed the technology as part of its strategy to lead the future display market. Since then, the company has achieved a rate of 40% transparency and established itself as the world’s only manufacturer of large-size Transparent OLED displays – commercializing its 55-inch full HD Transparent OLED in 2019.

And what we are now seeing is an ever-growing glimpse of the future as Transparent OLEDs are already showing how they could transform the spaces we live in. What might have been thought only possible in sci-fi movies has entered our lives in a very real way – not just with one or two applications but in various situations.

Trains and other forms of public transport are a perfect application for Transparent OLED panels because they are lined with windows that could function as displays showing information about routes, the weather, news, tourist attractions, adverts, and any other entertainment. Transparent OLED’s 40% transmittance seems like a slightly-tinted window, and allows passengers to view whatever is on the screen while also still being able to still enjoy outdoor scenery. Last summer, LG Display announced Transparent OLEDs were being used on subways for the first time ever, as they were successfully applied to underground trains in the Chinese cities of Beijing and Shenzhen. More recently, they broke new ground by emerging on overground trains in Japan – leading to the East Japan Railway Company being awarded by the Digital Signage Consortium for outstanding performance. Its use of Transparent OLEDs on a tourist train route between Akita and Aomori prefectures was evaluated as a “future-oriented example showing new possibilities for mobile signage.” And now, this Korean report also states that train and bus companies in Europe and North America are looking into using Transparent OLED panels. Where there’s a window, there’s a way!

The exterior windows of airplanes might be significantly different to trains and buses, but Transparent OLEDs still have a role to play in the air. I think it’s been obvious for a long time that airlines have struggled to offer even premium passengers a feeling of freedom and openness. However, those cramped cabins can start to open up if some of the partitions become 55-inch Transparent OLEDs – offering not only a sense of space, but also more room for clean and clear information. Transparent OLED panels are also thin and light in their design because they are self-emissive, which means they do not need a backlight unit. This advantage is also the reason they can reach 40% transparency, compared to conventional LCDs that can only reach 10%. This airplane application was unveiled by LG Display at CES 2020, with the company explaining that passengers can turn off the transparency if and when they want privacy.

I recently wrote about the growing market for automotive displays. LG Display’s P-OLED technology has already made a leap towards offering superior image quality and clarity in premium vehicles, and we have seen how augmented reality can be used on windshield displays to offer more vivid and convenient information to drivers. As we move towards autonomous vehicles, the opportunities for automotive displays will only continue to accelerate because we will be able to get even more creative with what is shown – even if the car is driving itself, Transparent OLED would offer the comfort of still being able to see outside. As I pointed out in the article linked above, automotive OLED displays are especially favorable for electric vehicles too because they use less energy than LCDs. And this Korean report mentions cars as an example cited by industry experts of how transparent displays will become more diversified in the future.

Transparent OLEDs are also now seen as a legitimate commercial proposition in the retail space. We saw this potential back in 2019, when LG Display partnered with Harrods to showcase large-size transparent displays in the London store’s legendary show windows. In the image above, they vertically combined two 55-inch Transparent OLEDs, maintaining a certain elegance while showing what cutting-edge technology can do. This really gave the European market a taste of how Transparent OLED can help stores grab attention by demonstrating a luxurious interior. There is something magical and artistic about store windows like this, and they can also be versatile – as demonstrated by the appearance of Transparent OLEDs instead of plain glass at the entrance of a Shinhan Bank branch in Seoul in 2021.

If Harrods has that classic appeal, Transparent OLED burst into the trendy world of the MZ Generation (a Korean term combining millennials and Generation Z) this year when Musinsa Standard in Seoul was filled with this futuristic technology. The first offline store of Korea’s biggest online fashion mall features various configurations of Transparent OLEDs, adding an extravagant atmosphere while also opening up the interior space because the displays do not feel like they are taking up any room. They are also proving themselves to be very practical. For instance, by placing Transparent OLEDs alongside mannequins, they have created a kind of fashion show that is much more innovative than just watching a regular screen. The images are also really vivid because remember this is full HD we’re talking about, despite being on a transparent display. And if it works in a hip neighborhood like Hongdae, it is easy to see how this technology might travel to similar stores worldwide.

A different side of Transparent OLED’s diverse applications is on show in another of Seoul’s trendy neighborhoods. Anthracite’s Hannam café is one of the highly regarded locations in the city’s coffee scene. Its industrial atmosphere has been offset by the bright colors and patterns portrayed by seven 55-inch Transparent OLED displays, which connect to form a digital wall stretching 9 meters in front of a rugged counter that greets visitors as they enter the café. This counter display was also a first when it was introduced last year, as Transparent OLED displays had never before been used to exhibit digital art.

Visiting art galleries might never be the same again if Transparent OLEDs become more widespread as the canvas for creative minds. This summer, Italian luxury brand Bulgari joined LG Display to co-host Bulgari Colors: A Journey Between Jewels and Art. Being held at Seoul Arts Center until September 15, the exhibition is an explosion of color, as its title suggests, featuring jewels and digital art that really pop on OLED panels. As you can see in the image above, I had the chance to visit and check out the amazing Stairs of Bulgari exhibit. Using a combination of Transparent and Curved OLEDs, you step into a reinterpretation of Rome’s famous Spanish Steps, with the added magic of moving fireworks, petals, and gems.

This list wouldn’t be complete without also mentioning two more major innovations that were unveiled at CES 2021. The first of these shown above was showcased in LG Display’s Smart Home Zone – a 55-inch Transparent OLED display that can rise from its frame at the foot of a bed (or wherever the user wants to put it). I have been able to use this display in person, and it is a great option for people who don’t want a screen taking up too much space. It can show information or TV contents in various screen ratios, so you can use it as a high-end alarm and music system with a transparent screen, catch some quick headlines, or watch a full movie and forget that it’s even a transparent display. This application is seen as a real breakthrough because it is the first time for Transparent OLED to be suggested for home use. Such displays could inspire a break from the traditional living room layout, offering much more design flexibility in modern smart homes – whether positioned as space dividers or against windows, where they would look like glass when not in use.

LG Display’s timing for this Transparent OLED application couldn’t have been much better! With the pandemic forcing restaurants worldwide to put up partitions, here is an option that offers some serious value to diners. At CES 2021, they set up a sushi bar to show how people would be able to use this 55-inch Transparent OLED display to find information with clear image quality, order food, and watch a movie or TV program while waiting. In settings like a sushi bar, you could also watch the chef preparing your food on the other side of the display – proving that contactless does not mean losing a connection. And this all begs the question: what is the next Transparent OLED application for the future? The short answer, I guess, is that it only depends on our imagination.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

The 55-inch transparent Full HD LCD display has a resolution of 1920 x 1080 and 17 percent transparency (compared to last year’s model which had only 10 percent transparency). The display is touch sensitive and designed for a variety of digital signage and retail applications.

Along with the transparent LCD, LG Display also showed us their Plastic OLED screens. These screens are used in the curved LG G Flex 2 smartphone, announced at CES 2015. The AM-OLED screen offers Full HD resolution (1080×1920) at 403 PPI. The actual display is super thin only .5mm thick (without the glass cover or touchscreen).

Although the LG G Flex 2 only has a 23 degree arc, LG Display’s Plastic OLED screens can bend much further. In fact, it’s not the display that’s keeping your phone and other screen-laden gadgets from bending like a piece of paper; it’s the other components, such as the circuit boards and batteries.

Although LG Display panels are most often found in products from LG Electronics, which owns 38 percent of LG Display, their displays are also used in products from a variety of other companies such as Sony and Apple.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

The online showroom will demonstrate the following scenarios, each with a 55-inch transparent OLED screen.Smart bed: Push a button and the transparent OLED screen rises from a frame at the foot of the bed to display TV shows or other information. The screen itself acts as a speaker -- a feature found on some current OLED TVs -- and LG says the frame and its transparent screen can be moved to other areas of the house.

LG says demand for transparent screens is increasing in smart homes and buildings as well as driverless cars, aircraft and subways. Among the three scenarios in the 2021 virtual showroom the "smart bed" seems the least useful to me, but it"s easy to imagine a future where such displays are so cheap and ubiquitous that video or information can appear on any normally transparent surface, from windows to glass coffee tables to eyeglasses. It"s not as mind-blowing as a roll-up TV, but it"s arguably more practical.

One great thing about virtual CES is that, for the first time, booths that were private in person can be made more widely available. LG says its online showroom is open to all general visitors during CES 2021.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

LCD Transparent Displays, transparent screens, transparent monitors, see through screens, transparent touch screen technology, and kits from CDS as we have our own range of transparent screens / displays and transparent video screens manufactured for us, and as we control the manufacturing, we can not only offer more sizes than anyone else in the world, but also guarantee stable supply, long term availability LCDs with amazing quality.  We have replaced the Samsung Transparent Displays / see through Displays and LG Transparent OLEDs that are no longer available!

CDS has increased the use of these see through screens / see through displays / see through computer screens / clear monitors across the world including touchscreen computer screens combined with the transparent LCD touch screens and Transparent OLED displays.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

That shift represents a move away from displays that use shuttered, transmissive light with color filters, such as liquid-crystal displays (LCDs), to emissive displays that produce colors of light via high-intensity emissions of photons, such as organic and inorganic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs and iLEDS), along with enhancements like quantum dots (QDs).

LCDs have been with us for over a quarter-century in consumer televisions and commercial displays, and long before that as simpler, alphanumeric indicators in products like calculators. But R&D on the underlying technology has essentially plateaued: You can now purchase a 70-inch LCD Ultra HDTV with “smart” Internet functionality for less than $600, compared to the $15,000 price tag on a 28-inch VGA LCD TV 20+ years ago.

Prices for finished LCD panels have dropped so low that they are basically consumable and disposable items. The handful of companies that manufacture LCD panels (mostly in China) are cautious about investing substantial sums of money in the technology. And two of the largest players, Samsung Display Company (SDC) and LG Display (LGD), are now winding down LCD panel production in favor of next-generation emissive displays.

Going forward, LGD has placed its bets on large OLED panels(opens in new tab). These panels use underlying IP licensed from Kodak (of all people), based on patents from the mid-1980s. An array of white OLED emitters (made up of blue and yellow compounds) generates bright light that then passes through red, green, and blue color filters. Additional white pixels provide a luminance boost.

The advantages of such a display are many. Emissive displays have much wider viewing angles than transmissive displays. Unlike LCDs, color saturation and contrast is consistent for any viewer at any angle. While OLEDs can’t quite achieve the peak brightness of a full-backlight-array LCD, they can smoothly reproduce very low levels of luminance right down to a deep black. And OLED pixels have faster on-off cycles than LCD pixels, making for sharper rendering of motion images. Plus, they can reproduce over 20 f-stops of light, more than enough for high dynamic range imaging.

The manufacturing process for white OLEDs (WOLEDs—the display industry does love its acronyms) took many years to perfect and reach acceptable manufacturing yields. An equally difficult challenge was to manufacture the tiny indium-gallium-zinc oxide (IGZO) transistors that switch individual OLED pixels on and off. But WOLED is now considered a mature, affordable, and practical display architecture for everything from computer monitors to digital signs. The fact that they can be fabricated onto flexible, bendable, and even transparent substrates makes them attractive for custom installations, with individual screen sizes from 42 inches up to 97 inches available.

We’re also seeing some interesting hybrid emissive display designs, such as Samsung Displays’ new quantum dot OLED hybrid (QD-OLED), which made its debut at CES 2022. SDC was looking for a new product to replace its sunsetting LCD panel fabrication business, and the QD-OLED fits the bill nicely. It combines a blue OLED emitter (manufactured by sister company Samsung Mobile Display) with a layer of red and green quantum dots.

On paper, the QD-OLED could be a real game changer. It has only four layers in its “stack,” compared to five in a WOLED panel and typically 10 in an LCD panel. This design (in theory) should simplify manufacturing complexity and costs, and (again, in theory) get production and manufacturing yields up to usable levels in less time. As of this writing, however, reports from some Asian electronics industry sites cite very low yields on both the QD-OLED layer and the oxide (presumably IGZO) transistor pixel switching layer.

Indicators are that the next generation of direct-view displays will all feature emissive architectures, and for now, it appears they’ll use OLEDs and/or iLEDs to generate light, with or without quantum dots. To be sure, LCD displays aren’t going away any time soon—but their days do appear to be numbered.

lg transparent lcd panel factory

Passengers can obtain information on travel, weather, tourist areas, and other various content while enjoying the view out the window. Additional profit by way of advertisements is also possible by utilizing Transparent OLED.

By utilizing the augmented reality (AR) function, Transparent OLED provides the site location and status information needed for construction work as well as enabling the function to control various heavy equipment via touch screen.

Self-driving boats with Transparent OLED installed on the front window provides information needed for navigation, such as real-time travel routes and locations of buoys or reefs, without obstructing the view.

Transparent OLED is optimized for the subway as it is designed to withstand wind pressure, vibration, and humidity that occurs under subway operation. Any potential accidents during screen door maintenance are prevented as technicians can be seen beyond the screen while advertisements are showing.