Sharp Attempts Rescue of HDTV with New Blue Lasers
By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published December 19, 2006, 4:21 PM
In an effort to end the industry-wide shortage of blue laser diodes that occurred as a result of staggering underproduction by Sony and Nichia, the world's first two suppliers, Sharp Electronics today said it's ready to step up the mass production of diodes it's been making on a trial basis since just last month.
The move could relieve a beleaguered consumer electronics industry that saw Sony, the champion of the Blu-ray Disc format, allocate nearly all its capacity to its PlayStation 3, and yet still have only enough diodes on hand for perhaps a quarter-million units at the time the console launched last month.
Other manufacturers of both Blu-ray and HD DVD components have had to wait along with Sony as it works with technology partner Nichia to find a way to improve yields.
Meanwhile, Sharp had been busy in the laboratories for over a decade, and in its production facilities since at least 2002, to create an entirely new methodology for developing blue lasers that were more reliable and that had higher yields. That concept, called molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), promises to yield higher quantities of components with lower power consumption and longer lifespan than blue lasers produced using the more conventional metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) technique developed by Nichia.
Prior to the shortages, some observers wondered whether Sony would combat Sharp on intellectual property grounds, in Japanese and US courts, even though MBE and MOCVD are entirely different techniques.
With an entire segment of a burgeoning industry hanging on a key component which simply isn't available, it appears now that Sony and Nichia may graciously avoid a showdown, and let Sharp attempt its daring market rescue.
Sharp's move could mean that Sony's freshly re-supplied competitors could drop prices of high-def equipment next year in order to resuscitate consumer interest in high-def discs.
Up to now, Sharp spokesperson Hiroshi Takenami told the Nikkei financial press agency, its manufacturing arm has managed to ramp up blue laser production to 150,000 units per month. It's ready to accelerate that figure to 500,000 units monthly by next September, through the addition of a new dedicated manufacturing line at its Hiroshima plant.
Making blue lasers is a process of growing the right kind of crystal in a little climate-controlled garden. The MOCVD technique that Nichia perfected involves the use of a heated gallium nitride substrate. A warm nitrogen or hydrogen gas blows decomposing metal oxide molecules over the substrate, distributing them evenly. The decomposition irritates the substrate, which begins growing the crystals in response. This breaks up the metal oxide in turn, which then gets carried away by a mean crosswind blowing in a perpendicular direction.
As the process was first being developed, Nichia scientists had been working to reduce the dislocation density of the grown crystals - essentially, the number of ingrown fractures, which were several orders of magnitude greater than Nichia thought they needed to be: 10
But that decision was made in 2000, and since that time, manufacturing lines have looked for reasons why the yields are so low. The MBE process is about as different as hunting is from fishing. With Sharp's MBE, purified beams of molecules that emerge from an evaporation process are shot at a cleaned substrate using particle guns. As the molecules "splat," to use a phrase the scientists have avoided, onto the substrate, they form an epitaxial film from which the crystal grows, the direction and magnitude of growth having been "seeded" into the film through the gun as if through programming.
Though this is a far more complex process, dislocation density has been observed to be orders of magnitude lower. In fact, in what could have been an accidental discovery, the dislocation characteristics of the overgrowth of the substance - the stuff that grows so much that it spills over the substrate - has been found to have lower dislocation than the stuff attached directly to the substrate. As a result, scientists have developed intentional overgrowth processes in which the substrate is less bonded in places, like a flaky biscuit, enabling bigger pockets of overgrowth.
If the Sharp process works as anticipated, an industry that had been transfixed upon Nichia's achievements in growing epitaxial materials could change its focus to a new company entirely, shifting the balance of power just a bit, and in the process, perhaps diminishing Sony's exclusivity in the realm of Blu-ray.
I like blue.
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|blah blah blah. Does it equate to cheaper and better flat panel products for us? They've been saying things like this for years and yet the prices never seem to drop as rapidly as they promise.
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|Hoolywood is gay. He's just spamming.
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|I am? Why didn't anyone tell me?
And yes, I am the king of trolling.
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*the mark of a true Hollywood post.
All of the shadow Hollywoods will now have to put these links on every post if they want to be me.
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|Pitty Toshiba were not smart enough to make their Blu HD-DVD diodes inhouse, and had to rely on external sources. This is reason for delayed HD-DVD player launches from Toshiba/..
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|They're plenty smart.
Blue lasers had nothing to do with the delay. The HD-DVD uses a red laser. The delay was announced on November 15th and ended on December 8th when the new shipment of players hit the shelves.
HD-DVD players and movies are outselling Blu-Ray at a staggering rate. So..
Yeah.
They're plenty smart.
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|"The HD-DVD uses a red laser."
People's ignorance still stuns me, both Blu-Ray and HD-DVD use blue lasersm slightly different wavelength (this gives Blu-Ray the higher capacity).
Considering the fact you know nothing about the technical aspects of HD-DVD, I don't really consider you in a position to decide that HD-DVD players and movies are outselling Blu-Ray..
As it is, There are now MORE Blu-Ray players and recorders out there, than HD-DVD (thanks to PS3), and in the last 2 months, there have been more Blu-Ray players sold, than Toshiba have sold in the last 12 months...
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|Blu-Ray and HD-DVD use the same laser wavelength (405nm). The difference in capacity has to do with where the reflective information layer is placed. In Blu-Ray, the reflective layer is essentially on the surface of the disc, whereas in HD-DVD, it is sandwiched in the middle. This allows for a smaller spot size for Blu-Ray.
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|So, basically he knows nothing more than the guy before him ...ROFLOL
Truth is, the HD-DVD addon for the 360 has been a hot seller, and based on number sold, price, and other factors, there ARE MORE HD DVD players sold. Man, these Sony people have no senses at all. Sony hasn't produced enough PS3s right now to take the lead. I was at Best Buy, they had 5 - yes 5 BluRay players and NOT ONE HD-DVD or addon for the 360. What does that say? Oh, I guess it says everyone want's BluRay?
Also, Superman Returns is sold out everywhere for HD DVD, but that doesn't matter, that doesn't say people are buying HD DVD, no way, cause that just doesnt make sense to a loyal Sony FANBOY!
Get your facts straight, Sony may yet take the lead (good for them if they do), but right now, they are watching from the sideline as their team is losing.
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|"there ARE MORE HD DVD players sold"
Wrong, HD-DVD standalones number about 50,000 and there have been reported 80,000 XBox360 addons sold.
PS3 shipments along dwarf these numbers, before we even start adding the standalone BD players
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|Leave it to Sony to screw up the entire HDTV industry.
www.thedvdwars.com
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www.thelookandsoundofperfect.com
www.gamesytemwars.com
*the mark of a true Hollywood post.
All of the shadow Hollywoods will now have to put these links on every post if they want to be me.
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|HEY! Did you just bad mouth Sony? Thats simply outrageous behavior. Please be nice.
www.thedvdwars.com
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Mark Gillespie.
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|Hmm, is this evidence that the all this fake posting is coming from one single person, the original (but lame) Hollywood_ ??
Twat
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|No, just proof that someone can copy and paste another person's post. And did Hollywood always have two trailing underscores?
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|At least I have one friend.
p.s. The real Mark has left to go where people agree with him, the Blu_Ray and PS3 forums.
What a jackass.
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|No Kieth,
There are a couple shadow Marks out there and at least three shadow Dave's. I've also spotted two more Hollywoods.
All my posts are incoherent garbage with links.
www.thedvdwars.com
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www.thelookandsoundofperfect.com
www.gamesytemwars.com
I do answer to the name Twat however.
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|Yeah, but the L's are actually capital I's or combinations of both.
Same with the fake Gillespies.
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|Looks like I started a bit of a craze....
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|