You spend a great deal of time looking at the
screen on your Smartphone, marvelling at the tight pixels and vibrant colours
that would have been impossible just a few years ago. Smartphone touch panels
seem to be getting bigger all the time, but the other dimension - thickness -
doesn’t get as much attention. Manufacturers have been working to make touch
screens thinner so the devices themselves can be thinner, and LG has just made
a big leap forward. The Korean company has announced the thinnest 1080p LCD
panel ever. It’s only 2.2mm thick and has almost no bezel.
The quest for super-thin touch screen panels in
recent years has led many OEMs to adopt some form of AMOLED technology, usually
manufactured by Samsung. The big advantage here is that the light from an OLED
screen comes from the pixels themselves. Since the display needs no backlight,
it can be incredibly thin. For example, the 5-inch Super AMOLED screen in the
Samsung Galaxy S4 is just shy of 2mm thick.
LG’s panel is an LCD, though, so it needs a
backlight. The big step here is that the company was able to construct a panel
that is 5.2 inches diagonal with a touch sensor and backlight at just 2.2mm
thick. It can even put out more light than almost any other LCD on the market -
535 nits of brightness. Even the much smaller iPhone 5 LCD panel is thicker at
2.4mm with its slim LED backlight.
LG calls its new technology Advanced
One-Glass-Solution (OGS). It involves inserting dual flexible printed circuits
between the panel itself and the touch film layer you interact with. The entire
package is bonded together with a clear resin that won’t block light and
maintains thinness.
But what difference can a few fractions of a
millimeter make? Actually, quite a lot. Modern smart phones are engineered to
within a hair’s breadth of perfection. Every component is packed into as small
a space as possible, leaving no room for error — or for oversized components.
As the trend had continued toward larger phones
with thinner profiles, AMOLED displays have gained traction. Although, Samsung
keeps the best AMOLEDs for us in its own products. The Motorola Droid Razr line
is a prime example of this. While these phones are very thin, thanks in part to
the AMOLED screens, they’ve traditionally had poorer quality panels than the
comparable Samsung phones.
A 2.2mm LCD in this size range could
finally give OEMs an alternative to AMOLED when a phone has to be as thin as
possible. The almost non-existent bezels could also slim down the borders on
the final device. LCDs also tend to have more accurate colour reproduction than
AMOLED, more light output, don’t suffer from burn-in, and are more
battery-efficient when displaying a colour other than pure black.
Making
thinner devices is all well and good, but this LG panel might also give
designers some more leeway to include larger batteries. Even a sliver of a
millimeter gets engineers closer to being able to squeeze in a few more
milliampere-hours of juice.
LG hasn’t said when this screen will be in
devices, but the unannounced LG Optimus G2 has been rumoured to have a 5.2-inch
screen, so perhaps this is it.
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