[ QD-OLED is set to bring incredible colour, contrast and response times to the world of gaming monitors.]
[Image credit: Samsung]
QD-OLED, or Quantum Dot organic light-emitting diodes if you're feeling fancy, sounds to me like something Spielberg invented for his latest sci-fi instalment. But after some delving, it's actually looking to be one of the most interesting innovations we've seen in the gaming monitor space of recent, bendable screens aside of course.
[Image credit: Samsung]
Samsung just rolled up at CES 2022 with the Odyssey G8QNB gaming monitor, with its 175Hz refresh, vivid colours, and ultrawide 4K, curved design. But what I'm most excited about is the fact it works on QD-OLED display technology.
It's touting the same panel tech behind the new Alienware AW3423DW, also unveiled during the chaos of CES. For that reason, both technically hold the title of the world's first Quantum Dot OLED gaming monitor. But, I guess it depends on which one comes to market first.
Either way, we've been exploring what makes the science behind this innovative panel so exciting.
Now, the Quantum Dot concept has been around for a while, being used in QLED TVs and the like, but it's the combination of Quantum Dot and OLED tech that makes this design interesting.
OLED tech is impressive by itself, offering better contrast with darker blacks, thanks to its ability to switch LEDs off completely in the dark spaces of your image without any blooming. QD-OLED, however, takes things to another level, combining the contrast levels of OLED with bright and vibrant Quantum Dot tech.
[Image credit: Samsung]
For Quantum Dot panels, engineers make use of something affectionately dubbed 'the sandwich.'
Samsung explains that its manufacturers add nanoparticles to layers of film, glass and filters within the panel. It's like sprinkling sesame seeds in between all the layers of your sandwich, except they're only visible under a microscope, and they emit different colours when you shine certain light frequencies through them.
Also, they're not seeds at all, they're particles with "semiconductor properties," which vary in size depending on the colour they're meant to emit. "Larger dots emit light that is skewed toward red, and progressively smaller dots emit light that is skewed more toward green," the insights post elaborates.
In combining the supreme colour gamuts of the QD tech, with organic, self-emitting, blue lighting beneath it, you get something truly exciting. And apparently, it's better for your eyes thanks to its optimised blue light exposure. Samsung has even boiled down the once convoluted structure of the LCD Quantum Dot tech to include fewer layers too, meaning the panels can be much thinner than before.
For gaming, this tech even promises faster response times, at true 0.1ms G-t-G, and better HDR. But I suppose we'll discover all this first hand when we get a chance to test one.
Well, now I'm feeling both excited for the future of gaming monitors, and a little bit hungry for sammiches. Cheers Samsung.