- QD-EL / NanoLED TVs promise exceptional brightness and color
- It uses self-emissive quantum dots – like OLED, but better
- Quantum dot maker Nanosys says the tech could be ready in 2029
It’s always wise to take tech predictions with a big pinch of salt. But when the predictions are about TV technology and come from the firm that invented quantum dots, we’re all ears. Nanosys has described multiple advances coming to TVs in the next few years, and some of them are pretty exciting.
The firm was talking to Insight Media in the video below, and explained that the first big development we’ll see is the introduction of brighter QD-OLED TVs this year. That’s thanks (in part, at least) to a new version of the Quantum Dot Color Converters (QDCC) that enables panels to deliver that higher brightness. We’ve likely already seen the first TV with that upgraded technology in the form of Samsung’s S95H (pictured at the top of this article), which we got our first information about at CES, which promises to be 35% brighter than the Samsung S95F that it replaces.
Those brighter TVs may just be the beginning. According to Nanosys’s Jeff Yurek, “By 2030, we want to ship what we consider truly ‘high flux’. Now we are talking about not just QD-OLED but maybe microLED for something like an AR application, which would require hundreds of thousands or maybe a millions or more nits”.
So that’s less TV, and more ‘a headset so bright it can mimic looking at the sun’, if you’re into that sort of thing.
But Nanosys also mentioned a long-awaited technology waiting in the wings that could potentially overtake OLED as the best tech for high-end TVs: QD-EL, aka NanoLED.
Nanosys Shows QD Roadmap at CES 2026 – YouTube
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QD-EL NanoLED TVs are coming by the end of the decade
We’ve written about QD-EL – also known as QD-LED, EL-QD, EL-QLED and NanoLED – before: Samsung was investing significantly in the technology last year with the goal of commercializing it “within a few years”. And according to Nanosys’s Yurek, “We think 2029 is a reasonable target for when we’ll start to see those in the market.”
The EL in QD-EL stands for electroluminescent, and like OLED it is a self-emissive technology, meaning each pixel would generate its own light. That means there’s no need for a backlight, as you have in current QLED TVs – and it promises to be very bright and very energy efficient.
As we reported last year, the QD-EL prototypes shown at trade shows have been relatively small – under 20 inches – and reports suggest that there are still obstacles to overcome regarding QD-EL’s stability and energy efficiency.
QD-EL isn’t the only tech on the way that promises to steal the crown of current OLED tech among the best TVs.
We heard from an insider at CES 2026 that inkjet-printed OLED could start being used in TV-sized panels in 2-3 years, following recent breakthroughs in the tech from TCL.
My colleague Matt Bolton was also told at CES by Sonny Ming, Hisense’s General Manager of Product Marketing and Scenario Product Operation Department, that microLED TVs could finally be ready at mainstream sizes and more realistic sizes within 5-8 years.
Assuming that these aren’t predictions of the Elon-Musk’s-flying-roadster kind, that means before the end of the decade we could have multiple new kinds of TV tech – on top of the new RGB TV tech arriving in 2026 – delivering exceptionally bright, energy efficient and immersive displays.
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