‘World’s smallest LEDs’ could lead to accurately lit screens with 127,000 pixels per inch and much more immersive VR

A woman wearing a VR headset with dramatic, colourful lighting across the background

Sometimes small is actually big—at least when it comes to advancements in LED technology. For a bright, clear picture, OLED screens are where it’s at; they easily outperform traditional LED displays and have breathtaking Micro-LED displays beat when it comes to price—though that’s not hard to do when a reasonably sized Micro-LED screen can easily cost thousands of dollars still. We all love a screen that boasts accurate backlighting, but not that much.

Researchers at Zhejiang University and Cambridge University have unveiled LED display technology that’s even smaller and potentially a darn sight more efficient. In a blog post, it was announced the team had created not just micro-LEDs but nano-LEDs featuring “pixel lengths of 90 nanometers” (via Tom’s Hardware). These make them not only the smallest LEDs in the world but also mean screens of the future leveraging this tech could potentially cram in an astonishing 127,000 pixels per inch.



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