Obtained 'i-Safe Certification 2.0'

[Asia Economy Reporter Sunmi Park] Samsung QD-OLED has received international certification not only for its overwhelming picture quality but also for its safety in terms of eye health management. It is the optimal display for consumers who enjoy long hours of gaming and high-definition content.


On the 20th, Samsung Display announced that its 34-inch monitor QD-OLED has obtained the 'Eye-safe Certification 2.0.' 'Eye-safe' is a certification system jointly developed by Germany's testing and certification company T?V Rheinland and the U.S.-based eye safety specialized certification organization Eye-safe. It measures harmful blue light among visible light emitted from the screen and awards certification only to products with a blue light hazard index of 0.085 or less.

Samsung QD-OLED, Overwhelming Picture Quality and Eye Health Certification Achieved View original image

Samsung Display explained, "Typical blue light reduction technologies excessively reduce blue light, causing the screen to appear overall yellowish and resulting in color distortion." They added, "Samsung Display solved this problem by minimizing the harmful blue light range through material research while implementing highly pure colors." The color reproduction of QD-OLED is currently the highest level among OLED displays for monitors on the market.


The latest Eye-safe Certification 2.0 introduced the RPF (Harmful Blue Light Blocking Index) to allow intuitive and detailed verification results. Similar to the ultraviolet protection factor SPF, a higher RPF number is assigned to products with lower harmful blue light emissions. The 34-inch QD-OLED monitor met the 'RPF 40' standard in this certification. This means the blue light hazard index is between 0.079 and 0.083. Samsung Display proactively met a stricter standard than the minimum certification issuance criteria (RPF 35, 0.085 or less).



Meanwhile, QD-OLED also received the 'Eye Care Display' certification from the global certification body SGS last year. At that time, the harmful blue light emission of the 34-inch QD-OLED measured by SGS was the lowest among gaming monitor displays larger than 31.5 inches.


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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