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Samsung Produces 16M-color DDI for Mobile Application AMOLEDs

Samsung Electronics is mass-producing a 16M-color display driver IC (DDI) for active matrix-based organic light-emitting diode (AMOLED) displays used in mobile phones and other handheld devices. With outstanding image quality, AMOLEDs are attracting attention from device designers as the next generation display technology of choice.

The global mobile communications market is transitioning rapidly from 2.5G products to 3G technology platforms that support a wider range of multimedia functions and services, including digital media broadcasting and video telephony. Samsung's new mobile DDI for AMOLED displays support qVGA (quarter Video Graphics Array) resolutions (240 RGB by 320 dots) and is capable of producing a range of over sixteen million colors. It is well in step with the recent expansion of multimedia functions and services offered in mobile devices.

The AMOLED display is a self-luminous device that works by having electrical current flow between two thin films made of organic material. This allows for designs that are lighter and thinner than other display types. Images are shown at the speed of light, so they look natural without the ghosting effects seen in such fast-paced video sequences as sporting events. These characteristics have proven the AMOLED display to be ideal for video applications.

Samsung's new 16M-color DDI self-adjusts the screen brightness, illuminating only those areas that need light. As a result, power consumption is minimized and battery life extended. The read-only memory is built in separately, enabling red, blue and green gamma compensation to reproduce more lifelike images.

The new 16M-color AMOLED DDI is currently in mass production and has been introduced in Samsung SDI's AMOLED panels. Samsung's broad line up of DDIs for LCDs, PDPs and AMOLED displays addresses the diverse needs of its customer base.

According to market research firm Display Search, the global AMOLED market is expected to reach 7.82 million units in 2007 and increase to 127.71 million units by 2011, for a compound annual growth of 101 percent.



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