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P-OLED vs AMOLED Display

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P-OLED display – Plastic Organic Light-Emitting Diode

A P-OLED display stands for Plastic Organic Light-Emitting Diode. It’s a type of OLED (Organic LED) technology that uses a flexible plastic substrate instead of the traditional rigid glass.

Key Features of P-OLED:

Feature Description
Plastic Substrate Uses plastic (usually polyimide) instead of glass, making it flexible
High Contrast Like all OLEDs, P-OLED can display true blacks and vibrant colors
Power Efficient Only lights up pixels needed (black pixels use no power)
Used In Foldable phones, curved displays, wearables (smartwatches), high-end smartphones
Thin & Lightweight Ideal for slim, modern device designs

Examples of Devices with P-OLED

  • LG smartphones (LG V series, G Flex series)
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
  • Moto Razr (foldable)
  • Smartwatches like LG Watch Sport

Downsides

  • Early P-OLED screens (like on Pixel 2 XL) suffered from:
  • Blue shift (color tint at angles)
  • Burn-in (image retention)
  • These issues have improved in newer versions

AMOLED Display = Active Matrix Organic Light Emitting Diode

It’s a type of OLED display technology used widely in smartphones, smartwatches, and TVs. AMOLED improves upon standard OLED by using an active matrix (a thin-film transistor (TFT) array) to control each pixel more precisely.

How It Works:

  • OLED: Each pixel emits its own light (no backlight needed).

  • AMOLED: Adds an active matrix for faster switching and better control of individual pixels — ideal for high-resolution and fast-moving displays like in phones.

Key Features of AMOLED:

Feature Description
True Blacks Each pixel turns off completely = infinite contrast ratio
Vibrant Colors Rich saturation, especially reds and greens
Energy Efficient Black pixels consume no power — saves battery in dark mode
Thin & Flexible Can be curved, folded, or embedded under glass (like in foldables)
Fast Response Time Great for gaming and video playback
Always-On Display Only selected pixels light up, good for clocks/notifications

AMOLED Weaknesses

  • Burn-in risk (image retention with static content)
  • Color shift at extreme angles (less common now)
  • Slightly higher cost than LCD

AMOLED vs Other Display Types

Feature AMOLED LCD/IPS P-OLED
Black Levels Perfect black Dark gray Perfect black
Color Very vibrant More natural Vibrant
Power Use Lower on dark screens Constant Lower on dark screens
Flexibility Moderate to high Rigid only Very flexible

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