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UDC Honored by U.S. Department of Energy
Ewing, New Jersey; February 16, 2010. Technology developer Universal Display Corporation was recently honored by the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for its advances in white OLED lighting performance.
The company was recognized during 'Transformations in Lighting', the DOE's annual
Solid-State Lighting (SSL) Workshop, held February 2-4 in Raleigh, NC.
Dr. James Brodrick, Lighting Program Manager, U.S. Department of Energy, recognized
Universal Display for achieving significant advances in 2009 in its white OLED power
efficiency through its UniversalPHOLED technology and materials. Universal Display
has been focusing on further increasing the efficiency and lifetime of its white
PHOLEDs, as well as scaling its research-scale PHOLED results
(typically reported on pixels approximately 2 mm x 2 mm in size) to commercial-sized,
15 cm x 15cm panels. Toward this goal, the company demonstrated a 68 lm/W white
OLED lighting device, 5 cm x 5 cm in size, in 2009.
"The Department of Energy is pleased to recognize the Universal Display research team
for their breakthrough achievements in 2009," noted James Brodrick, Lighting Program
Manager, U.S. Department of Energy. "Universal Display is driving advances in OLED
technology and manufacturing processes that will make OLED lighting a cost-effective,
energy-saving alternative for general lighting applications. Their efforts and those of
many other lighting research partners will support the United States as a global leader
in this rapidly evolving technology."
The DOE supports solid-state lighting research and development to accelerate market
introduction of high-efficiency, high-performance SSL products. Through the use of
Universal Display's PHOLED technology, power-efficient white OLEDs have the
potential to reduce energy consumption dramatically and to lower the amount of byproduct
heat, which creates additional energy and environmental burdens. The DOE has
stated that white OLEDs could save well over 3.48 quads of energy (NCI, 2006), or $26.6
billion in electric costs (EIA, 2007) and approximately 103 million metric tons of carbon
in the U.S. in 2027.
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