Samsung develops a slim-panel holographic video display

Samsung develops a slim-panel holographic video display
Credit: Samsung

A team of researchers at Samsung has developed a slim-panel holographic video display that allows for viewing from a variety of angles. In their paper published in the journal Nature Communications, the group describes their new display device and their plans for making it suitable for use with a smartphone.

Despite predictions in science-fiction books and movies over the past several decades, 3-D holographic video players are still not available to consumers. Existing players are too bulky and display video from limited viewing angles. In this new effort, the researchers at Samsung claim to have overcome these difficulties and built a demo device to prove it.

To build their demo device, which was approximately 25 cm tall, the team at Samsung added a steering-backlight unit with a beam deflector for increasing viewing angles. The demo had a viewing angle of 15 degrees at distances up to one meter. The beam deflector was made by sandwiching liquid crystals between sheets of glass. The end result was a device that could bend the light that came through it very much like a prism. Testing showed the beam deflector combined with a tilting mechanism increased viewing angles by 30 times compared to conventional designs. The new design also allows for a slim form at just 1 cm thick. It also has a light modulator, geometric lens and a holographic video processor capable of carrying out 140 billion operations per second. The researchers used a new algorithm that uses lookup tables rather than math operations to process the video data. The demo device was capable of displaying 4K resolution holographic video running at 30 frames per second.

A real-time interactive slim-panel holographic video. Movie clip is experimentally recorded for a real-time interactive slim-panel holographic video. It is corresponding to Fig. 6 in the main article. The movie is taken 1 m in front of the LCD panel. The movie shows images of the holographic video with real objects such as water plants. The user can interact with the turtle in real-time by using a keypad. Credit: An et al.

The team has posted a demonstration video on YouTube. They acknowledge that more work is required before their device can be commercialized—they need to make it thinner, for starters. They also plan to change the configuration for use with a smartphone. They believe their device will have commercial applications soon.

More information: Jungkwuen An et al. Slim-panel holographic video display, Nature Communications (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19298-4

[Interview] Samsung Researchers Open a New Chapter for Holographic Displays: news.samsung.com/global/interv … holographic-displays

Journal information: Nature Communications

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