AUSTIN, USA: Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) will become the dominant large-area TFT LCD backlight unit light source by 2011 with a 56 percent share, according to the most recent DisplaySearch Quarterly LED & CCFL Backlight Report.
Traditional backlights using fluorescent tubes (CCFL and EEFL) for notebook PC, monitor, and TV displays will drop to 44 percent of the market in 2011. DisplaySearch forecasts that LED penetration will skyrocket to 78 percent in 2015.
With the transition to LEDs already taking place in the notebook PC segment, DisplaySearch forecasts LED penetration in large-area TFT LCD will reach 27.8 percent in 2009 (Fig. 1).
As a result of the LCD TV supply chain’s efforts to promote LED backlit TVs, and the introduction of new LCD monitors with LED backlights, LED penetration in large-area TFT LCD is forecast to reach 44 percent in 2010. Traditional CCFL and EEFL backlights are forecast to fall from 72 percent in 2009 to 55 percent in 2011.
“LEDs have significant advantages over CCFL and EEFL backlights, such as power consumption, slim form factor, enhanced performance and market differentiation,” noted Yoshio Tamura, Senior Vice President of DisplaySearch and leader of the materials and cost research team.
“While there are still some technical and cost premium concerns about LED backlights, this is the first time the LCD TV supply chain (including backlight, display and consumer products) has joined forces to aggressively promote the benefits of LED backlight products.”
“We are seeing a tremendous LED backlight structure improvement, with cost reduction and supply chain revolution efforts, and this will only accelerate over the next five years. LED backlights will continue to drive momentum for continued growth in the TFT LCD industry. As LED backlights gain share in TFT LCD, pressure will be added on emerging display technologies such as PDP and OLED,” Tamura concluded.
Fig. 1: LED Backlight Penetration in Large-Area LCDSource: DisplaySearch Quarterly LED & CCFL Backlight Report
* Excluding Other applications and public display panels
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