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A Quantum Dot is a human-made nanoparticle that has semiconductor properties.

They’re tiny, ranging


in size from two to 10 nanometers, with the size of the particle dictating the wavelength of light it emits,
and therefore the color.

Quantum Dots are usually applied to a sheet of film that sits as a layer in that “sandwich” in front of the
LED backlight that’s used to illuminate an LCD. The light passes through the LCD display stack, with the
Quantum Dot color filter layer enhancing and enabling the LCD to reveal a wider and more saturated
range of colors than would otherwise be possible.

Quantum dots have optical and electronic properties that differ from those of larger particles as a result
of quantum mechanics. When the quantum dots are illuminated by UV light, an electron in the quantum
dot can be excited to a state of higher energy. The excited electron can drop back into the valence band
releasing its energy as light.

Technical issues

QLED

One of the notable drawbacks of QLEDs is that it still cannot achieve a


contrast ratio similar or superior to OLED displays. The use of backlighting
prevents deep blacks and washes out darker tones of colors.

•  Poorer viewing angle, when compared to OLED displays, is another


disadvantage of QLED displays. In most IPS LCDs, image quality as
determined by color and contrast diminishes when a viewer moves away
from the center of the screen.

QLED

displays have a slower response time than OLED displays in general. Take note that
in-plane switching LCD technology is known for slower response rates that make
them unsuitable for video gaming and other applications that require high frame
rates.

Biggest advantage of QLED 1billion colour


Quantum Dot technology, which brings more than a billion shades of color into your home every
time you turn the TV on!, with excellent contrast, vivid scenes and great color reproduction
allows you to clearly see every detail.
 Luminance refers to how bright a screen looks and that brightness is an important factor
affecting other elements of image quality.
OLED

 Lifetime - While red and green OLED films have longer lifetimes (46,000 to
230,000 hours), blue organics currently have much shorter lifetimes (up to
around 14,000 hours[source: OLED-Info.com]).
 Manufacturing - Manufacturing processes are expensive right now.
 Water - Water can easily damage OLEDs.

Superior viewing angle and faster response time tinner and lighter and well suited battery driven apps.

Conclution

Our conclusion is based on risk and quality.

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