Manufacturing equipment companies

Author: Ruby

May. 06, 2024

Manufacturing equipment companies

Aixtron AG is a provider of deposition equipment to the semiconductor industry. The company's technology solutions are used by a diverse range of customers worldwide to build advanced components for electronic and opto-electronic applications (such as LEDs, micro-LEDs, and graphene) based on compound, silicon, or organic semiconductor materials.

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Aixtron has introduced Organic Vapor Phase Deposition (OVPD) equipment, which was exclusively licensed to Aixtron by UDC. In October 2014, we posted an interview with AIXTRON's business development director where he explained the company's OLED technology and business.

Aixtron trades on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ Stock Exchange (AIXG). In 2017, Aixtron's OLED activities were spun off to APEVA, which was later shut down.

There's a new OLED panel manufacturer to rival LG

While LG Display isn’t the only manufacturer making OLED panels, it’s essentially the only one that counts regarding the size and quality of OLED panels required for today’s TV sets. However, reports have recently emerged from multiple sources suggesting that another display manufacturer, BoE, is preparing to start producing OLED panels large enough for TV use.

New OLEDs on the block

China-based BoE has been producing vast quantities of small OLED displays since 2017, predominantly for the mobile phone market. It surprised visitors at May’s Display Week Show in San Jose by unveiling an OLED display far from mobile phone-sized: a 95-inch screen with native 8K resolution.

This screen was positioned at Display Week 2022 as a prototype. BoE did not claim that the screen was something TV brands could access immediately. Still, the screen’s presence at Display Week 2022 had to be seen as a sign of intent and proof that its various OLED manufacturing lines could produce something so large and high-end.

The well-connected people at market research company Display Supply Chain Consultants confirmed that BoE seems intent on producing such large panels on a commercial basis. Assuming their information is correct (it usually is), it’s easy to see this move as good news for OLED-loving consumers. More panel suppliers mean more competition, which usually translates to cheaper prices and more innovation.

Before we, and our wallets, get too excited at the thought of a new generation of affordable OLED TVs, it’s worth looking more closely at BoE’s situation.

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For starters, don’t forget that BoE’s 95-inch OLED prototype was a high-end affair. Its combination of a huge screen and native 8K resolution was joined by a native 120Hz refresh rate, around 99% coverage of the DCI-P3 color range, and a peak brightness of 800 nits. Such specifications currently cost tens of thousands of pounds. LG’s latest 88-inch native 8K OLED model, the OLED88Z2, costs around £25,000 / $25,000 / AU$60,000. Even if BoE manages to deliver a large OLED panel cheaply enough for TV brands to sell huge OLED TVs for much less than that, it’s safe to say they will still be luxury items.

What does this mean for affordable OLEDs?

But maybe BoE was showcasing its capabilities with its 95-inch prototype. Perhaps it could use the same production line to make affordable 65- and 55-inch 4K models.

As OLED-info reports, the 'B5 R&D Line' in China that BoE is considering for TV-sized panel production currently has very low capacity by today’s standards. It’s certainly not capable of producing the quantities of large OLED panels that several LG Display lines can. Analysts suggest that BoE likely isn’t contemplating producing screens for the mass market, focusing instead on the high-end niche.

Such a move might catch the interest of anyone reading this article from their super yacht. Unfortunately, it is unlikely to impact the types of OLED TVs most AV fans buy significantly.

Some 'chatter' surrounding the Display Week show suggests that BoE might even struggle to impact the premium OLED TV market in the short term. While the 95-inch RGBW panel impressed in some ways, its overall quality wasn’t sufficient for a full real-world rollout. Specific examples of issues with the BoE panel were not provided.

On a positive note, the yield rates of usable panels at BoE’s B5 production line appear to be high. However, when looking beyond eye-catching headlines about a new manufacturer entering big-screen OLED production, it seems unlikely that a new battle between two makers of TV-sized OLED panels and significant price drops will become a reality soon.

MORE:

The OLED TV to beat: check out our Sony A95K QD-OLED review

Here's the full LG OLED TV lineup for 2022

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