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Technology

Colour e-paper screen offers high-res video with low energy use

Future smartphones and other devices could have colour e-paper displays, thanks to a new technique that lets such screens display video while minimising energy usage

By Chris Stokel-Walker

22 October 2025

Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss displayed on an iPhone (left), on which a small e-paper display with the same image (right) is placed

Kingston Frameworks; Kunli Xiong et al. (2025)

A new kind of colour e-paper can present bright, high-resolution and full-colour images and video while using minimal energy, pointing to a possible future for display devices.

While traditional LED screens emit red, green and blue light to produce colour, e-paper screens use tiny molecules to create images. Until recently, these devices were limited to black and white, but colour screens are now available. Still, they struggle to refresh fast enough to display video.

To address this, at the University of Uppsala, Sweden, and his colleagues have developed e-paper with pixels made from tungsten oxide nanodiscs. Each pixel is around 560 nanometres, giving the paper a resolution of 25,000 pixels per inch (PPI). By contrast, smartphones typically have a PPI in the hundreds.

The tungsten-oxide nanodiscs are made with slightly different sizes and spacings so each grouping reflects a particular band of light. By placing them together, it is possible to present a range of colours, and the brightness can be varied by a brief electrical pulse that places ions inside the disc. Once a colour is set, the ions stay put and the colour holds without continuous power.

The researchers created an e-paper display measuring just 1.9 millimetres by 1.4 millimetres, which is around 1/4000th the area of a normal smartphone display, and used it to display a 4300-by-700 pixel crop of Gustav Klimt’s – an extremely high resolution for such a small device. It can also refresh roughly every 40 milliseconds, which is fast enough to display video.

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Another benefit of the new e-paper is its incredibly low energy use, says Xiong. The display uses around 1.7 milliwatts per square centimetre when displaying video, and around 0.5 milliwatts per square centimetre for still images.

“What I like about this work is it is both fast enough to support video, while keeping energy use to a minimum. That’s because once elements are switched, they stay switched without having to refresh them,” says at the University of Cambridge.

Journal reference

Nature

Article amended on 4 November 2025

We clarified how the nanodiscs in the e-paper reflect light and how their brightness is varied.

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