E Ink Vizplex is the first generation of the E Ink displays. Vizplex was announced in May 2007.
E Ink Pearl, announced in July 2010, is the second generation of E Ink displays. The updated
Amazon Kindle DX was the first device announced to use the screen. Amazon used this display technology in new Kindle models until the Paperwhite 2 refresh in 2013. The basic Kindle with touch continued to use Pearl until 2022 when the Kindle 11 was upgraded past 167 dpi. Sony also included this technology into its 2010 models of the
Sony Reader PRS series. This display is also used in the
Nook Simple Touch,
Kobo eReader Touch,
Kobo Glo,
Onyx Boox M90, X61S and Pocketbook Touch.
E Ink Mobius is an E Ink display using a flexible plastic backplane, so it can resist small impacts and some flexing. Products using this include
Sony Digital Paper DPT-S1, Pocketbook CAD Reader Flex, Dasung Paperlike HD and Onyx Boox MAX 3.
E Ink Triton, announced in November 2010, is a color display that is easy to read in high light. The Triton is able to display 16 shades of gray, and 4,096 colors. E Ink Triton is used in commercially available products such as the
Hanvon color e-reader,
JetBook Color made by
ectaco and PocketBook Color Lux made by
PocketBook.
E Ink Triton 2 is the last generation of E Ink Triton color displays. The e-readers featuring it appeared in 2013. They include
Ectaco Jetbook Color 2 and
Pocketbook Color Lux.
E Ink Carta, announced in January 2013 at
International CES, features 768 by 1024 resolution on 6-inch displays, with 212 ppi
pixel density. Named Carta, it is used in the Kindle Paperwhite 2 (2013), the
Pocketbook Touch Lux 3 (2015), and the Kobo Nia (2020).
E Ink Carta HD features a 1080 by 1440 resolution on a 6" screen with 300 ppi. It is used in many eReaders including all new Kindle model lines since 2014 (Voyage, Oasis, Scribe) as well as the Paperwhite 3 (2015) and newer,
Tolino Vision 2 (2014), Kobo Glo HD (2015), Nook Glowlight Plus (2015), Cybook Muse Frontlight,
PocketBook Touch HD (2016), PocketBook Touch HD 2 (2017), and the Kobo Clara HD (2018). The original E Ink Carta display was renamed to Carta 1000, and refinements in Carta 1100 and Carta 1200 improved response times and display contrast. A later refinement in Carta 1250 improved response times and contrast again. E Ink Carta and Carta HD displays support Regal waveform technology, which reduces the need for page refreshes. The overall contrast in a product depends on the entire panel stack, including touch sensor and front light (when provided).
E Ink Spectra is a three pigment display. The display uses microcups, each of which contains three pigments. It is available for retail and electronic shelf tag labels. It is currently produced with black, white and red or black, white and yellow pigments.
Advanced Color ePaper (ACeP) was announced at SID Display Week in May 2016. The display contains four pigments in each microcapsule or microcup thereby eliminating the need for a color filter overlay. The pigments used are cyan, magenta, yellow and white, enabling display of a full color gamut and up to 32,000 colors. it began shipping for signage purposes in late 2018. It is also being commercially manufactured for e-readers under the name
E Ink Gallery 3. The first readers started shipping in 2023, however some planned e-readers were later postponed due to supply issues.
E Ink Kaleido, originally announced in December 2019 as "Print Color", is the first of a new generation of color displays based on one of E Ink's greyscale displays with a color filter layer. E Ink Kaleido uses a plastic color filter layer, unlike the glass filter layer used in the E Ink Triton family of displays. Kaleido Plus and Kaleido 3 were released in 2021 and 2023 respectively, further improving performance and pixel density. ==See also==