Television sets may employ one of several available
display technologies. As of mid-2019,
LCDs overwhelmingly predominate in new merchandise, but
OLED displays are claiming an increasing market share as they become more affordable and
DLP technology continues to offer some advantages in projection systems. The production of plasma and CRT displays has been completely discontinued. There are four primary competing TV technologies: • CRT • LCD (multiple variations of LCD screens are called QLED, quantum dot, LED, LCD TN, LCD IPS, LCD PLS, LCD VA, etc.) • OLED • Plasma
CRT The cathode ray tube (CRT) is a
vacuum tube containing a so-called
electron gun (or three for a color television) and a
fluorescent screen where the television image is displayed. The electron gun accelerates electrons in a beam which is deflected in both the vertical and horizontal directions using varying electric or (usually, in television sets) magnetic fields, in order to scan a
raster image onto the fluorescent screen. The CRT requires an evacuated glass envelope, which is rather deep (well over half of the screen size), fairly heavy, and breakable. As a matter of
radiation safety, both the face (panel) and back (funnel) were made of thick
lead glass in order to reduce human exposure to harmful
ionizing radiation (in the form of
x-rays) produced when electrons accelerated using a high voltage ()
strike the screen. By the early 1970s, most color TVs replaced leaded glass in the face panel with vitrified strontium oxide glass, which also blocked x-ray emissions but allowed better color visibility. This also eliminated the need for cadmium phosphors in earlier color televisions. Leaded glass, which is less expensive, continued to be used in the funnel glass, which is not visible to the consumer. In television sets (and most
computer monitors that use CRTs), the entire screen area is scanned repetitively (completing a full
frame 25 or 30 times a second) in a fixed pattern called a
raster. The image information is received in real time from a
video signal which controls the electric current supplying the electron gun, or in color televisions each of the three electron guns whose beams land on phosphors of the three primary colors (red, green, and blue). Except in the very early days of television,
magnetic deflection has been used to scan the image onto the face of the CRT; this involves a varying current applied to both the vertical and horizontal
deflection coils placed around the neck of the tube just beyond the electron gun(s).
Rear projection Rear-projection televisions (RPTVs) became very popular in the early days of television, when the ability to practically produce tubes with a large display size did not exist. In 1936, for a tube capable of being mounted horizontally in the television cabinet, would have been regarded as the largest convenient size that could be made owing to its required length, due to the low deflection angles of CRTs produced in the era, which meant that CRTs with large front sizes would have also needed to be very deep, which caused such CRTs to be installed at an angle to reduce the cabinet depth of the TV set. tubes and TV sets were available, but the tubes were so long (deep) that they were mounted vertically and viewed via a mirror in the top of the TV set cabinet which was usually mounted under a hinged lid, reducing considerably the depth of the set but making it taller. These mirror lid televisions were large pieces of furniture. As a solution,
Philips introduced a television set in 1937 that relied on back projecting an image from a tube onto a screen. This required the tube to be driven very hard (at unusually high voltages and currents, see ) to produce an extremely bright image on its fluorescent screen. Further, Philips decided to use a green phosphor on the tube face as it was brighter than the white phosphors of the day. In fact these early tubes were not up to the job and by November of that year Philips decided that it was cheaper to buy the sets back than to provide replacement tubes under warranty every couple of weeks or so. Substantial improvements were very quickly made to these small tubes and a more satisfactory tube design was available the following year helped by Philips's decision to use a smaller screen size of . In 1950 a more efficient tube with vastly improved technology and more efficient white phosphor, along with smaller and less demanding screen sizes, was able to provide an acceptable image, though the life of the tubes was still shorter than contemporary direct view tubes. As CRT technology improved during the 1950s, producing larger and larger screen sizes and later on, (more or less) rectangular tubes, the rear projection system was obsolete before the end of the decade. However, in the early to mid 2000s RPTV systems made a comeback as a cheaper alternative to contemporary LCD and plasma TVs. They were larger and lighter than contemporary CRT TVs and had a flat screen just like LCD and Plasma, but unlike LCD and Plasma, RPTVs were often dimmer, had lower contrast ratios and viewing angles, image quality was affected by room lighting and suffered when compared with direct view CRTs, and were still bulky like CRTs. These TVs worked by having a DLP, LCoS or LCD projector at the bottom of the unit, and using a mirror to project the image onto a screen. The screen may be a
Fresnel lens to increase brightness at the cost of viewing angles. Some early units used
CRT projectors and were heavy, weighing up to 500 pounds. Most RPTVs used
Ultra-high-performance lamps as their light source, which required periodic replacement partly because they dimmed with use but mainly because the operating bulb glass became weaker with ageing to the point where the bulb could eventually shatter often damaging the projection system. Those that used CRTs and lasers did not require replacement.
Plasma A
plasma display panel (PDP) is a type of
flat-panel display common to large TV displays or larger. They are called "
plasma" displays because the technology utilizes small cells containing
electrically charged ionized
gases, or what are in essence chambers more commonly known as
fluorescent lamps. Around 2014, television manufacturers were largely phasing out plasma TVs, because a plasma TV became higher cost and more difficult to make in 4k compared to LED or LCD. In 1997,
Philips introduced at CES and CeBIT the first large () commercially available flat-panel TV, using Fujitsu plasma displays.
LCD Liquid-crystal-display televisions (LCD TV) are television sets that use
liquid-crystal displays to produce images.
LCD televisions are much thinner and lighter than CRTs of similar display size and are available in much larger sizes (e.g., diagonal). When manufacturing costs fell, this combination of features made LCDs practical for television receivers. In 2007, LCD televisions surpassed sales of CRT-based televisions globally for the first time, and their sales figures relative to other technologies accelerated. LCD TVs quickly displaced the only major competitors in the large-screen market, the
plasma display panel and
rear-projection television. In the mid-2010s LCDs became, by far, the most widely produced and sold television display type.
OLED An OLED (organic light-emitting diode) is a
light-emitting diode (LED) in which the emissive
electroluminescent layer is a film of
organic compound which emits light in response to an electric current. This layer of
organic semiconductor is situated between two electrodes. Generally, at least one of these electrodes is transparent. OLEDs are used to create
digital displays in devices such as television screens. It is also used for
computer monitors, portable systems such as
mobile phones,
handheld game consoles and
PDAs. There are two main families of OLED: those based on small molecules and those employing
polymers. Adding mobile
ions to an OLED creates a
light-emitting electrochemical cell or LEC, which has a slightly different mode of operation. OLED displays can use either
passive-matrix (PMOLED) or
active-matrix addressing schemes. Active-matrix OLEDs (
AMOLED) require a
thin-film transistor backplane to switch each individual pixel on or off, but allow for higher resolution and larger display sizes. An OLED display works without a
backlight. Thus, it can display deep
black levels and can be thinner and lighter than a
liquid crystal display (LCD). In low ambient light conditions such as a dark room, an OLED screen can achieve a higher
contrast ratio than an LCD, whether the LCD uses
cold cathode fluorescent lamps or
LED backlight. ==Television types==