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For Your Family

PART TIME GREEN - LCD vs. Plasma
LCD vs. Plasma
Energy Use - which is better?

Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) models, which typically uses less energy than comparable plasma sets. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), a 28-inch conventional cathode-ray tube (CRT) set uses about 100 watts of electricity. A 42-inch LCD set might consume twice that amount, while plasma could use five times as much, depending on the model and the programming.

The plasmas use more energy and generate a considerable amount of heat compared to the LCD.

How they work:

Plasma TVs work with inert gases like xenon or neon, which are excited by electric pulses from specialized cells called pixels. This makes the gases glow. These glowing gases, in turn, produce the correct blend of red, blue and green light on the pixels. The pixels are illuminated by a fluorescent light bulb, which is driven by semiconductor software on the motherboard.

LCDs are actually thin film transistors (TFT), which contain liquid filled crystals between two plates of glass. LCDs work by blocking out unwanted light. When the signal hits the TFTs, they contort to a required angle, thus allowing only the requisite amount of light to pass through. A lamp behind the screen or a thin LCD bulb provides illumination to the TFT.

 

January 11, 2009 1:46 pm
Posted by Catherine Sams
The Wall Street Journal reported in December that a 42-inch plasma set can consume more electricity than a full-size refrigerator – even when that TV is used only a few hours a day.










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