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Glow in the dark star wallpaper
Glow in the dark star wallpaper










glow in the dark star wallpaper
  1. GLOW IN THE DARK STAR WALLPAPER SKIN
  2. GLOW IN THE DARK STAR WALLPAPER FULL

  • Slither Thames! 'Mudlark' discovers an enormous SNAKE SKIN on the shore of London's famous river that may.
  • OLED screens have also been used on a Sony Walkman music player, while Apple are rumoured to be planning an OLED screen for the next generation of iPods and iPhones. The first OLED screen, unveiled by Sony earlier this year, is the thickness of a £1 coin and uses up to 40 per cent less energy than a similar sized LCD or plasma TV. It also has brighter whites and darker blacks, giving a far sharper picture. Unlike a flat screen LCD televisions, an OLED screen does not need to be backlit and can be just a few millimetres thin. OLEDs are already revolutionising televisions. 'It's a great example of the kind of innovation that makes the UK a hotbed of clean technology development.' This technology has the potential to produce ultra efficient lighting for a wide range of applications, tapping into a huge global market. Mark Williamson, director of innovations at the Carbon Trust, said: 'Lighting is a major producer of carbon emissions. Glow in the dark wallpaper is expected to be between two and three times more efficient that the current energy-saving lightbulbs.

    GLOW IN THE DARK STAR WALLPAPER FULL

    'The light is a very natural, sunlight-type of lighting with the full colour range.' 'It gives you all kinds of potential for how you do lighting,' he added. The technology could be used to make flexible screens that could be rolled up after use, or carried into a presentation, while it would also provide an effective alternative to outside lighting with traditional lights, he said. You can paint it on a wall or wallpaper,' he said. Mr Lacey said his company was developing new types of OLEDs that were cheaper and longer lasting. They are difficult to use in large displays, and still have a short lifetime. OLEDs have been around for several years - but remain expensive. Ken Lacey, chief executive of LOMOX Ltd, which is attempting to bring the technology to the market, said the company planned to make OLED lights within two years. Wallpaper that glows in the dark could replace lightbulbs within a decade Because they needs a very low operating voltage - just three to five volts - they can be powered by solar panels or batteries.Īnd because they exist as a thin layer of film, they can be rolled up, bent or fixed to a wall. OLEDs are made of thin films of organic molecules that light up when electricity passes through them. It's the latest use for "organic light emitting diodes or OLEDs" - the technology that is expected to revolutionise flat screen televisions, computer monitors and mobile phone screens in the next few years. If glow in the dark wallpaper catches on, it could pave the way for other devices around the home - including light-emitting curtains, colour changing clothes and even luminous pet accessories.

    glow in the dark star wallpaper

    These could one day be used for light-emitting wallpaperĪlthough the idea may sound ludicrous, the Government's Carbon Trust is so excited by the prospect it has awarded a Welsh company £454,000 to develop flexible films that could replace traditional lights. Lomox Ltd has received a £454,000 grant to create OLEDs.












    Glow in the dark star wallpaper