LCD Displays Vs Plasma Displays
LCD TVs have a florescent backlight that sends
light through a polarizing substrate and liquid
crystal molecules. LCD TVs work with green, red and
blue pixels. When electric current is applied to the
pixels, they darken and stop the backlight from
coming through. LCD displays can serve as computer
displays with a conventional analog VGA input; it is
a good way to save budget and space. LCD displays
are thin and lightweight and have excellent
longevity. Plasma screens are a network of green,
red and blue phosphors placed between two slender
layers of glass. Natural gases neon, xenon and argon
are used to produce the information, light and
color. These gases fade over time. Unlike LCDs,
Plasma screens have no backlight or projection; the
phosphors give a bright, rich-in-color display along
with a broad viewing angle. When plasma screens
first entered the market, they gained instant
attention for their large screen sizes and flat
presentation. Presently, there are some screens over
80", and big plasma televisions generally gives a
sharp picture. The drawback is that plasma displays
are power hungry, and, its fragile makes means that
it needs to be professionally installed, especially
when it has to be mounted on a wall. Though thin,
Plasma displays are quite heavy. LCD screens are
starting to catch up with plasma technology in the
market, with companies coming up with bigger (55"
and more) and cheaper models. LCDs are usually
inferior to plasma technology when it comes to
viewing angles (particularly older versions which
have narrow angles) and contrast ratios, though they
have worked on the "blur" effect, or the slow
refreshing of pictures in the latest models.
However, LCDs are developing at a distinctly quicker
pace compared to their competition. Plasma
technology could be completely overtaken by LCDs in
the near future. It would take a massive effort for
plasma displays to keep up with the ever-improving
LCDs in terms of longevity, contrast ratio,
brightness, etc. |