Rodion Kutsaev, Unsplash
Rodion Kutsaev, Unsplash

A step closer to holographic phone screens

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

A thin, interactive holographic display which can be viewed from a wide range of angles has been developed by South Korean and Russian researchers. Current thin-panel holographic displays are limited by computational power and the amount of pixels that can be controlled, and only look good when viewed from directly in front of the display.  The new technology introduces a holographic video processor and a special backlight and light-tilting mechanism, and increases the viewing angle for 3D videos by 30 times. This could make it easier to incorporate holographic video displays into mobile devices and household electronics.

Journal/conference: Nature Communications

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41467-020-19298-4

Organisation/s: Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, South Korea.

Funder: Several of the authors are based at the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

A thin, interactive holographic display that allows high-resolution 3D videos to be viewed from a wide range of angles is reported in Nature Communications. The technology could make it easier to incorporate holographic video displays into mobile devices in the future.

Holographic displays create a 3D image in space, which can be viewed alongside real objects without causing eye strain. However, compared to flat images, holographic images, and especially videos, are more difficult to produce and require a device with many more pixels. Existing holographic technologies used in thin panels can only produce high-resolution images when viewed from directly in front of the display because they don’t control enough pixels for more angled viewing.

Hong-Seok Lee and colleagues developed a thin display that means the viewing angle for 3D videos can be increased by 30 times. The addition of a special backlight and light-tilting mechanism to existing compact hologram technology makes this possible in a very slim form, which is less than 1 cm thick. Combined with a single-chip, custom processor, the authors successfully display a full-screen, 4K interactive video of a 3D swimming turtle that can be viewed from a wide range of angles.

Technologies that can produce realistic holograms in slim panels like this one could make 3D displays a more realistic option for use in mobile devices and household electronics.

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  • 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.

    Attribution: An et al.

    Permission Category: © - Only use with this story

    Last Modified: 10 Nov 2020 11:43am

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