World’s First Pure Green Semiconductor Laser from Sumitomo
OLED Display News
- Samsung HD Super-AMOLED vs Apple Retina IPS LCD
- Why Apple can not use large OLED-Tv panels before Q4 2013
- Corning and Samsung Mobile Display team up for AMOLED and Super-Oled-Tv glass partnership
- AUO and Idemitsu team up to develop high-performance OLED displays and related patents
- Pictures of Mitsubishis Mini Geo Cosmos OLED at ISE-2012

Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. has successfully developed the world’s first green laser diode lasing at 531 nm.
Light sources using lasers for display applications, such as laser TV’s and pocket laser projectors, are expected to have superior properties in terms of size, weight and power consumption. For this reason, R&D activities aimed at commercialization of these devices have expanded rapidly over the past several years. Up to now, only red and blue laser diodes were commercially available, while green lasers (*1) were obtained by frequency conversion of infrared lasers. Gallium nitride (GaN) semiconductors, commercially available for blue LEDs, are also expected to be the key material for light-emitting devices in the green region. However, the material has been plagued with a phenomenon where the luminance efficiency shows a rapid decline with increasing wavelength.
At Sumitomo Electric, we have overcome this problem by developing a GaN crystal which inhibits the efficiency drop, resulting in room temperature pulse operation of a laser diode emitting in the pure-green region at 531nm. It is the first green laser diode in the world.
Source
Similar entries
- OSRAM has set a new milestone for mobile laser projection
- LASER-TV the next Ultra-Colorful Television technology?
- Corning Introduces the Green Laser G-1000 at SID Display Week 2008
- What is Laser-TV?
- QPC Lasers to Demonstrate High Power Miniature BrightLase(R) Red-Green-Blue Laser for Portable Consumer Electronics at SID-2008
