AMOLED
AMOLED (active-matrix organic light-emitting diode, /ˈæmoʊˌlɛd/) is a display technology used in smartwatches, mobile devices, laptops, and televisions. 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.
As of 2008[update], AMOLED technology was used in mobile phones, media players and digital cameras,[1] and continued to make progress toward low-power, low-cost and large-size (for example, 40-inch) applications.[2][3][4][neutrality is disputed]
Design
An AMOLED display consists of an active matrix of OLED pixels generating light (luminescence) upon electrical activation that have been deposited or integrated onto a thin-film transistor (TFT) array, which functions as a series of switches to control the current flowing to each individual pixel.[5]
Typically, this continuous current flow is controlled by at least two TFTs at each pixel (to trigger the luminescence), with one TFT to start and stop the charging of a storage capacitor and the second to provide a voltage source at the level needed to create a constant current to the pixel, thereby eliminating the need for the very high currents required for passive-matrix OLED operation.[6]
TFT backplane technology is crucial in the fabrication of AMOLED displays. In AMOLEDs, the two primary TFT backplane technologies, polycrystalline silicon (poly-Si) and amorphous silicon (a-Si), are currently used offering the potential for directly fabricating the active-matrix backplanes at low temperatures (below 150 °C) onto flexible plastic substrates for producing flexible AMOLED displays.[7]
Future development
Manufacturers have developed in-cell touch panels, integrating the production of capacitive sensor arrays in the AMOLED module fabrication process. In-cell sensor AMOLED fabricators include AU Optronics and Samsung. Samsung has marketed its version of this technology as "Super AMOLED". Researchers at DuPont used computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software to optimize coating processes for a new solution-coated AMOLED display technology that is competitive in cost and performance with existing chemical vapor deposition (CVD) technology. Using custom modeling and analytic approaches, Samsung has developed short and long-range film-thickness control and uniformity that is commercially viable at large glass sizes.[8]
Comparison to other technologies
AMOLED displays provide higher refresh rates than passive-matrix,[not specific enough to verify] often reducing the response time to less than a millisecond, and they consume significantly less power.[9] This advantage makes active-matrix OLEDs well-suited for portable electronics, where power consumption is critical to battery life.
The amount of power the display consumes varies significantly depending on the color and brightness shown. As an example, one commercial QVGA OLED display consumes 0.3 watts while showing white text on a black background, but more than 0.7 watts showing black text on a white background, while an LCD may consume only a constant 0.35 watts regardless of what is being shown on screen.[10] Because the black pixels actually turn off, AMOLED also has contrast ratios that are significantly better than LCD. [citation needed]
AMOLED displays may be difficult to view in direct sunlight compared with LCDs because of their reduced maximum brightness.[11] Samsung's Super AMOLED technology addresses this issue by reducing the size of gaps between layers of the screen.[12][13] Additionally, PenTile technology is often used for a higher resolution display while requiring fewer subpixels than needed otherwise, sometimes resulting in a display less sharp and more grainy than a non-pentile display with the same resolution.
The organic materials used in AMOLED displays are very prone to degradation over a relatively short period of time, resulting in color shifts as one color fades faster than another, image persistence, or burn-in.[14][15]
As of 2010, demand for AMOLED screens was high, and, due to supply shortages of the Samsung-produced displays, certain models of HTC smartphones were changed to use next-generation LCD displays from the Samsung-Sony joint-venture SLCD in the future.[16]
Flagship smartphones sold as of December 2011 used either Super AMOLED or IPS panel premium LCD. Super AMOLED displays, such as the one on the Galaxy Nexus and Samsung Galaxy S III have often been compared to IPS panel premium LCDs, found in the iPhone 4S, HTC One X, and Nexus 4.[17][18][19] For example, according to ABI Research the AMOLED display found in the Motorola Moto X draws just 92 mA during bright conditions and 68 mA while dim.[20] On the other hand, compared with the IPS, the yield rate of AMOLED is low, the cost is also higher.
Marketing terms
Super AMOLED
Super AMOLED is a term for an AMOLED display with an integrated digitizer: the layer that detects touch is integrated into the screen, rather than overlaid on top of it. According to Samsung, Super AMOLED reflects one-fifth as much sunlight compared to the first generation AMOLED.[21][22] The display technology itself is not changed. Super AMOLED is part of the Pentile matrix family, sometimes abbreviated as SAMOLED.
For the Samsung Galaxy S III, which reverted to Super AMOLED instead of the pixelation-free conventional RGB (non-PenTile) Super AMOLED Plus of its predecessor Samsung Galaxy S II, the S III's larger screen size encourages users to hold the phone further from their face to obscure the PenTile effect.[23]
Super AMOLED Advanced
Super AMOLED advanced is a term marketed by Motorola to describe a brighter display than Super AMOLED screens, but also a higher resolution — qHD or 960 × 540 for Super AMOLED Advanced than WVGA or 800 × 480 for Super AMOLED and 25% more energy efficient. Super AMOLED Advanced features PenTile, which sharpens subpixels in between pixels to make a higher resolution display, but by doing this, some picture quality is lost.[24] This display type is used on the Motorola Droid RAZR and HTC One S.[25]
Super AMOLED Plus
Super AMOLED Plus, first introduced with the Samsung Galaxy S II and Samsung Droid Charge smartphones, is a branding from Samsung where the PenTile RGBG pixel matrix (2 subpixels) used in Super AMOLED displays has been replaced with a traditional RGB RGB (3 subpixels) arrangement typically used in LCD displays. This variant of AMOLED is brighter and therefore more energy efficient than Super AMOLED displays[26] and produces a sharper, less grainy image because of the increased number of subpixels. In comparison to AMOLED and Super AMOLED displays, they are even more energy efficient and brighter. However, Samsung cited screen life and costs by not using Plus on the Galaxy S II's successor, the Samsung Galaxy S III.[18]
HD Super AMOLED
HD Super AMOLED is a branding from Samsung for an HD-resolution (>1280×720) Super AMOLED display. The first device to use it was the Samsung Galaxy Note. The Galaxy Nexus and the Galaxy S III both implement the HD Super AMOLED with a PenTile RGBG-matrix (2 subpixels/pixel), while the Galaxy Note II uses an RBG matrix (3 subpixels/pixel) but not in the standard 3 stripe arrangement.[27]
HD Super AMOLED Plus
A variant of the Samsung Galaxy S3 using Tizen OS 1 was benchmarked using a non-pentile HD Super AMOLED Plus screen in 2012.[29]
Full HD Super AMOLED
As featured on the Samsung Galaxy S4[30] and Samsung Galaxy Note 3, this display has a 1920x1080 resolution that is better known as 1080p. It has the broadest color gamut of any mobile display of up to 97% of the Adobe RGB color space, hence making it a wide-gamut display.[31][32]
Quad HD Super AMOLED
Quad HD Super AMOLED technology was first used by AU Optronics in April 2014.[33] After AU Optronics released their phone which used a Quad HD Super AMOLED screen, other companies such as Samsung released phones utilizing the technology such as the Samsung Galaxy Note 5 Broadband LTE-A and Samsung Galaxy S6.
Future
Future displays exhibited from 2011 to 2013 by Samsung have shown flexible, 3D, unbreakable, transparent Super AMOLED Plus displays using very high resolutions and in varying sizes for phones. These unreleased prototypes use a polymer as a substrate removing the need for glass cover, a metal backing, and touch matrix, combining them into one integrated layer.[34]
So far, Samsung plans on branding the newer displays as Youm.[35]
Also planned for the future are 3D stereoscopic displays that use eye tracking (via stereoscopic front-facing cameras) to provide full resolution 3D visuals.
Comparison
Below is a mapping table of marketing terms versus resolutions and sub-pixel types. Note how the pixel density relates to choices of sub-pixel type.
Term | Resolution | Size (inches) | PPI | Pixel Layout | Used in |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AMOLED | 240×320 | 2.6 | 154 | RGBG PenTile | Nokia N85 |
AMOLED Capacitive Touchscreen | 640×360 | 3.2 | 229 | RGBG PenTile | Nokia C6-01 |
Super AMOLED | 3.5 | 210 | RGB S-Strip | Nokia N8 | |
4.0 | 184 | RGB S-Stripe | Nokia 808 PureView | ||
854×480 | 3.9 | 251 | RGBG PenTile | Nokia N9 | |
800×480 | 4.0 | 233 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy S | |
960×540 | 4.3 | 256 | RGB S-Stripe | Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini | |
1280×768 | 4.5 | 332 | RGBG PenTile | Nokia Lumia 1020 | |
Super AMOLED Plus | 800×480 | 4.3 (4.27) | 218 | RGB stripe | Samsung Galaxy S II |
Super AMOLED Advanced | 960×540 | 4.3 | 256 | RGBG PenTile | Motorola Droid RAZR |
HD Super AMOLED | 1280×800 | 5.3 (5.29) | 285 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy Note |
1280×720 | 5.0 | 295 | RGB S-Stripe | BlackBerry Z30 | |
4.7 (4.65) | 316 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy Nexus | ||
4.7 (4.65) | 316 | RGB S-Stripe | Moto X (1st generation) | ||
4.8 | 306 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy S III | ||
5.6 (5.55) | 267 | RGB S-Stripe | Samsung Galaxy Note II | ||
5.6 (5.55) | 267 | RGB S-Stripe | Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo | ||
HD Super AMOLED Plus | 1280×800 | 7.7 | 197 | RGB stripe | Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 |
Full HD Super AMOLED | 1920×1080 | 5.5 | 400 | RGBG PenTile | Meizu MX5 |
5.0 (4.99) | 441 | Samsung Galaxy S4 | |||
5.2 | 423 | Motorola Moto X (2nd gen) | |||
5.1 | 432 | Samsung Galaxy S5 | |||
5.7 | 388 | Samsung Galaxy Note 3 | |||
WQHD Super AMOLED | 2560×1440 | 5.1 | 577 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy S6
Samsung Galaxy S6 edge |
5.7 | 515 | Samsung Galaxy Note 4 | |||
WQXGA Super AMOLED | 2560×1600 | 8.4 | 359 | RGBG PenTile | Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4 |
10.5 | 287 | RGB S-Stripe | Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 |
Uses
Commercial devices using AMOLED include:[citation needed]
- Phones
- Alcatel One Touch Idol Ultra (HD Super AMOLED)
- BlackBerry Q10
- BlackBerry Z30
- BlackBerry Priv (WQHD Plastic AMOLED)
- Cherry Mobile Cosmos X (HD Super AMOLED)
- Micromax a90s
- Micromax a90
- Micromax a315
- Micromax Canvas Hue
- BenQ-Siemens S88
- Dell Venue 8 7000
- Gionee GN858 (Super AMOLED PLUS)
- Gionee GN868 (Super AMOLED plus)
- GIONEE GN878 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Gionee Elife E5 (HD Super AMOLED)
- GIONEE ELIFE S5.1 (HD Super AMOLED)
- GIONEE ELIFE S5.5 (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- HTC Desire (early models)
- HTC Droid Incredible
- HTC Legend
- HTC One S (Super AMOLED Advanced)
- HTC J (Super AMOLED Advanced)
- Lenovo S90 Sisley (HD Super AMOLED)
- LG Franklin Phone
- LG E-730
- LG G Flex (HD Plastic-OLED)
- LG G Flex 2 (Full HD Plastic-OLED)
- Micromax Superfone Pixel A90
- Motorola Moto X (HD Super AMOLED)
- Motorola Droid Ultra (HD Super AMOLED)
- Motorola Droid Maxx (HD Super AMOLED)
- Motorola Droid RAZR HD and RAZR Maxx HD
- Motorola Droid RAZR (Super AMOLED Advanced)
- Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx (Super AMOLED Advanced)
- Motorola Droid Turbo (Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Moto X (2nd Generation) (1080p Super AMOLED)
- Motorola Moto X Pro (QHD Super AMOLED)
- Google Nexus One (Early models)
- Google Nexus S (Super AMOLED)
- Google Galaxy Nexus (HD Super AMOLED)
- Google Nexus 6 (Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Google Nexus 6P (WQHD Super AMOLED)
- MP-809T (Full HD Super Amoled)
- Nokia 700 (CBD)
- Nokia 808 Pureview (CBD)
- Nokia C7-00
- Nokia C6-01 (CBD)
- Nokia E7-00 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 800 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 810 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 820 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 822 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 900 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 925 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 928 (CBD)
- Nokia Lumia 930
- Nokia Lumia 1020 (CBD)
- Nokia N8
- Nokia N85
- Nokia N86 8MP
- Nokia N9 (CBD)
- Nokia X7
- OnePlus X
- Pantech Burst
- QMobile Noir Z3
- Samsung ATIV S (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung ATIV SE (Full HD Super AMOLED®)
- Samsung AMOLED Beam SPH-W9600
- Samsung i7500 Galaxy
- Samsung Haptic Beam SPH-W7900
- Samsung SPH-m900 Moment
- Samsung i8910
- Samsung Jet
- Samsung Omnia 2
- Samsung Impression
- Samsung Rogue
- Samsung Transform
- Samsung Galaxy Note (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note II (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note 3 (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Round (Full HD Flexible Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note 4 (Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note Edge (Flexible Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Note 5 (Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S Advance (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Express (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Galaxy S II (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Galaxy S II Plus (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Galaxy S III (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S III neo (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S III Mini (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S4 (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini (qHD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S4 zoom (qHD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S Plus (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S5 (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S6 (Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge (Flexible Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge+ (Flexible Quad HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy K Zoom (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Ace Style LTE (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Alpha (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy A3 (qHD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy A5 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy A7 (FULL HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy A8 (FULL HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy E5 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy E7 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy J (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy J5 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy J7 (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Nexus (HD Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Galaxy Gear (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Gear 2 (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Gear 2 Neo (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Gear Fit (Curved Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Gear S (Curved Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Gear Live (Curved Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Droid Charge (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Wave S8500 (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung S8600 Wave III (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Focus (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Focus S (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Focus 2 (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Omnia 7 (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Omnia W (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Omnia M (Super AMOLED)
- Samsung Infuse 4G (SGH-i997) (Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Z (HD Super AMOLED)
- YotaPhone 2 (Full HD Super AMOLED)
- ZTE Blade (Initial Models)
- Tablets
- docomo ARROWS Tab F-03G
- Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 (HD Super AMOLED Plus)
- Toshiba Excite 7.7 (HD Super AMOLED Plus)
- TOSHIBA REGZA AT570 7.7 (HD Super AMOLED Plus)
- Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4
- Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5
- BungBungame KALOS 2 10.5
- Portable music players
- Sony Walkman NWZ-X1000
- Sony Walkman NW-A855,A856,A857
- Cowon Z2
- Cowon S9
- Cowon J3
- Iriver Clix
- Iriver Spinn
- Samsung YP-M1
- Zune HD
- Games consoles
- GP2X Wiz
- PlayStation Vita (original model)
- Music production hardware
- Digital cameras
- Olympus XZ-1
- Samsung EX1
- Samsung EX2F
- Samsung NX10
- Samsung NX11
- Samsung NX20
- Samsung NX100
- Samsung NX200
- Samsung NX210
- Samsung NX300
- Samsung NX1000
- Samsung NX1100
- Samsung NX2000
- Samsung WB2000
- Samsung WB650
References
- ^ Lee, Hyunkoo; Park, Insun; Kwak, Jeonghun; Yoon, Do Y.; Kallmann, Changhee Lee (2010). "Improvement of electron injection in inverted bottom-emission blue phosphorescent organic light emitting diodes using zinc oxide nanoparticles". Applied Physics Letters. 96: 153306. doi:10.1063/1.3400224.
- ^ Kim, Yang Wan; Kwak, Won Kyu; Lee, Jae Yong; Choi, Wong Sik; Lee, Ki Yong; Kim, Sung Chul; Yoo, Eui Jin (2009). "40 Inch FHD AM-OLED Display with IR Drop Compensation Pixel Circuit". SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers. 40: 85. doi:10.1889/1.3256930.
- ^ Lee, Myung Ho; Seop, Song Myoung; Kim, Jong Soo; Hwang, Jung Ho; Shin, Hye Jin; Cho, Sang Kyun; Min, Kyoung Wook; Kwak, Won Kyu; Jung, Sun I; Kim, Chang Soo; Choi, Woong Sik; Kim, Sung Cheol; Yoo, Eu Jin (2009). "Development of 31-Inch Full-HD AMOLED TV Using LTPS-TFT and RGB FMM". SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers. 40: 802. doi:10.1889/1.3256911.
- ^ Hamer, John W.; Arnold, Andrew D.; Boroson, Michael L.; Itoh, Masahiro; Hatwar, Tukaram K.; Helber, Margaret J.; Miwa, Koichi; Levey, Charles I.; Long, Michael; Ludwicki, John E.; Scheirer, David C.; Spindler, Jeffrey P.; Van Slyke, Steven A. (2008). "System design for a wide-color-gamut TV-sized AMOLED display". Journal of the Society for Information Display. 16: 3. doi:10.1889/1.2835033.
- ^ "Introduction to OLED Displays – Design Guide for Active Matrix OLED (AMOLED) Displays" (PDF). 4D Systems. 2008-05-22. Retrieved 2010-09-06.
- ^ Lin, Chih-Lung; Chen, Yung-Chih. "A Novel LTPS-TFT Pixel Circuit Compensating for TFT Threshold-Voltage Shift and OLED Degradation for AMOLED". IEEE Electron Device Letters. 28: 129. doi:10.1109/LED.2006.889523.
- ^ Sarma, Kalluri R.; Chanley, Charles; Dodd, Sonia R.; Roush, Jared; Schmidt, John; Srdanov, Gordana; Stevenson, Matthew; Wessel, Ralf; Innocenzo, Jeffrey; Yu, Gang; O'Regan, Marie B.; MacDonald, W. A.; Eveson, R.; Long, Ke; Gleskova, Helena; Wagner, Sigurd; Sturm, James C. (2003). "Active-matrix OLED using 150°C a-Si TFT backplane built on flexible plastic substrate (Proceedings Paper)". SPIE Proceedings. 5080: 180. doi:10.1117/12.497638. [1]
- ^ Reid Chesterfield, Andrew Johnson, Charlie Lang, Matthew Stainer, and Jonathan Ziebarth, "Solution-Coating Technology for AMOLED Displays", Information Display Magazine, January 2011.
- ^ Suyko, Alan. "Oleds Ready For The Mainstream." Electronics News (2009): 20. Associates Programs Source Plus. Web. 9 Dec. 2011.
- ^ Mian Dong; Choi, Y.-S.K; Lin Zhong (July 2009). "Power modeling of graphical user interfaces on OLED displays". Design Automation Conference, 2009. DAC '09. 46th ACM/IEEE. IEEE: 652–657.
- ^ Tim CarmodyEmail Author. "How Super AMOLED displays work". Wired.com. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
{{cite web}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ "What Are The Benefits Of Using The Super AMOLED Display In My SGH-t959 (Vibrant) Phone?". Samsung. 2010-07-15. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
- ^ "Big is beautiful". The Age. 2010-08-12. Archived from the original on 29 August 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Ashtiani, Shahin J.; Reza Chaji, G.; Nathan, Arokia. "AMOLED Pixel Circuit With Electronic Compensation of Luminance Degradation". Journal of Display Technology. 38: 36. doi:10.1109/JDT.2006.890711.
- ^ US 7352345, Chun-huai Li, "Driving apparatus and method for light emitting diode display", issued 2008-04-01
- ^ [2] Construction of new production facilities in 2011 was expected to increase the production of AMOLED screens to cope with demand.
- ^ http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/amoled-vs-lcd-which-screen-is-best-for-your-phone/
- ^ a b http://www.androidpit.com/super-amoled-vs-retina-display
- ^ http://techcrunch.com/2012/11/02/nexus-4-review-not-exactly-perfect-but-close-enough-for-me/
- ^ Google/Motorola Mobility Display a Bright Efficient Future, ABI Research
- ^ "Samsung Smartphones | Technology". Samsung.com. 2012-01-06. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
- ^ "Super AMOLED". Oled-info.com. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
- ^ Sakr, Sharif (25 March 2012). "Samsung Galaxy S III review". Engadget. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
- ^ "Super AMOLED Advanced". Retrieved March 24, 2014.
- ^ "DROID RAZR – Thinnest 4G LTE Android Smartphone – Motorola Mobility LLC. USA". Retrieved 27 November 2012.
- ^ "http://www.oled-info.com/super-amoled-plus". OLED-Info. Retrieved 23 August 2011.
{{cite web}}
: External link in
(help)|title=
- ^ a b "Galaxy Note 2: Display hat keine PenTile-Matrix | BestBoyZ". Bestboyz.de. 2012-08-30. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
- ^ "Galaxy Nexus – Android 4. 0 Smartphone – SAMSUNG UK – OVERVIEW" (in Ukrainian). Samsung.com. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
- ^ http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/22/wifi-alliance-certificate-teases-tizen-flavored-galaxy-s3/
- ^ http://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/galaxys4/lifetask.html#
- ^ http://sammyhub.com/2013/06/10/ul-certifies-samsungs-full-hd-amoled-display/
- ^ http://www.displaymate.com/Galaxy_S4_ShootOut_1.htm
- ^ http://www.androidauthority.com/quad-hd-amoled-au-optronics-367542/
- ^ http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/samsung-teases-flexible-transparent-display-in-concept-video/
- ^ http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/09/samsung-names-flexible-oled-display-series-youm-shows-prototype/
External links
- Craig Freudenrich. Types of OLEDs: Passive and Active Matrix at HowStuffWorks