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Subject SONY unveils Super Top Emulsion 56” 4K OLED TV at CES 2013
Name Administrator Date 2013.02.05 Click 1628

During CES 2013, both Sony and Panasonic unveiled 56" 4K OLED TV panel prototypes. Both panels use Sony`s Super Top Emission structure.

Super Top Emission utilizes RGB OLED subpixels, a microcavity structure and color filters. Sony says that this simultaneously enhances color purity, attains higher contrast and achieves lower power consumption.

This is not similar to LG`s OLED TV design which also uses color filters. Sony is using RGB sub pixels and not white OLEDs (WOLED). This means that the light loss from the filter is minimal. It`s not exactly direct-emission, but it`s not a WOLED-CF design.

Sony explains that in normal OLEDs, circular polarizers are used to prevent the reflection of ambient light. This filter reduces the light emitted by the OLED (by more than a half according to Sony). The microcavities combined with the color filters prevent ambient light and enhances color purity - and all this at a higher efficiency than normal designs.

The microcavity structure results in light resonance effects between the two electrodes. As each OLED subpixel (the red, green and blue one) has a different light wavelength, Sony uses a different thickness as to produce the spectral peak wavelength (the optimum light) for each color. Only light that possesses the same wavelength as the distance between the "cathode electrode semitransparent film" and the "anode electrode reflective film" resonates. Light wavelengths that do not match are weakened. As a result, the spectrum of the extracted light is sharpened while brightness and color purity are enhanced. This ensures the strongest light from each color. (Source – OLED Info)

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