May 24, 2023

Which control room video wall technology consumes least energy?

CONTROL ROOM - SUSTAINABILITY 2 min read

sustainability nomowmay blog 3 video wall technologies

Electricity costs account for an increasing part of a company’s monthly expenses and should therefore be minimized as much as possible. Furthermore, as power generation produces a lot of CO2, it is also better for the environment to restrict power consumption. In this blog, we will compare different display technologies - rear-projection, LCD and LED - and evaluate their energy efficiency in control room settings. 

The three technologies are very different from each other. An RPC (rear-projection cube) consists of a projector (facing upwards). The light of the lighting source (LED or LASER) is cast onto a DLP chip, that lets the light pass or not. For more information on DLP chip technology, refer to this article. The image is then reflected by a mirror and cast onto the rear-projection screen. These cubes are then stacked together to form a video wall. 

lcd panel technical image stock nomowmay

An LCD screen has one (or multiple, depending on the technology) backlight(s), that illuminate(s) an LCD matrix. This matrix determines if light passes or not. 

In direct-view LED, there is no single lighting source. Instead, every pixel is an individual LED (or rather, multiple LEDs because these are needed to give color). The current on these LEDs determines how bright they shine.

Comparing power consumption

The graph below shows the typical power consumption of the different technologies, with the brightness set to 400 nit – a medium value commonly used in control rooms and broadcast environments. 

Energy consumption graphic graph lcd led rpc video wall technologies

The results pretty much speak for themselves. RPC consumes the least energy. The RGB laser sources we used in the test provide a high level of illumination for a minimal amount of power. LCD follows rather closely. LED, with its many tiny lighting sources, is the most gluttonous technology today. Note however that the energy-consumption of LED has dropped significantly over the years, and the industry (including Barco) is working hard to get this further down. Innovation can be expected on that front!

It is interesting to see on the graph that for RPC and LCD video walls, the power consumption remains the same whatever the content. So, a test with full white content and typical SCADA-image consumes exactly the same amount of energy. For LED, this is very different. 

Why LED energy use depends on content

The reason behind this difference, is that for both RPC and LCD, there is a single lighting source that produces the same amount of light. This light is either transferred to the display or blocked. So, the power consumption is continuous. LED on the other hand, has all lighting sources visible (that’s why these types of displays are also called direct-view LED). The LEDs light up if necessary, but stay dimmed when dark content is displayed. That is why predominantly black content consumes a lot less energy on LED displays – but still more than its RPC and LCD counterparts.

stock image of led lights nomowmay

In short

  • RPC scores the best when it comes to power consumption. 
  • LCD requires more power (about 40% more), independent of the content shown.
  • Direct-view LED depends on the image displayed to determine its power consumption: full white is maximum consumption.
rgb laser video wall technical image odl odl-721 inside view mirrors

NOTE: In this article, we only evaluate power consumption. Other sustainability parameters, such as use of materials, packaging, end-of-life-management, etc., are not considered. So, an LED video wall can still be considered sustainable when it scores well on these points, even though it consumes more energy than other technologies. Most research and innovation is currently faced towards LED technology, so we can expect a drop in energy consumption in the near future!

LCD led rpc rear projection triple play visual