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What is LTPO? All the facts on the iPhone 13’s rumoured secret weapon

In This Article

In This Article

Looking at buying a new smartphone or Apple Watch but confused by what the LTPO part of its screen specs means?

You’re not alone, the tech is a pretty hard concept to understand that relates to key things like the panels refresh rate, power efficiency and durability.

On top of that, big name companies have started adopting, and even creating variants of it for their wares, even Apple’s expected to use the tech on itsiPhone 13Pro. This has made the situation fairly tricky to keep on top of, even if you’re a fairly tech savvy buyer.

Here to help we’ve created this handy guide detailing how it works, what benefits it brings to the table and what devices currently use it.

What are the benefits of LTPO?

What are the benefits of LTPO?

LTPO screen technology aims to let displays offer variable refresh rates (VRR), which brings with it a variety of benefits.

Refresh rates are a metric to measure how many images per second a screen renders. A higher refresh rate offers a variety of benefits including a more fluid user experience and faster response time for gaming, with there being less of a pause between each image on a high refresh rate panel. The latter is a key reason most gamers view 60fps (frames per second) as the minimum you need for online or reaction-based gaming. This is why most of thebest gaming monitorsandbest gaming TVs we test have 120Hz-plus refresh rates.

The issue is, a higher refresh rate puts a bigger drain on the battery, which is why early high refresh rate phones such as theRazer Phonehad sub-par battery life when we tested them.

Variable refresh ratesfix this by letting the screen dynamically adjust its refresh rate depending on what the device is doing. This lets it offer high refresh rates when there’s a benefit, and drop to lower settings when it’s not.

The tech is however hard to implement on traditionalOLEDscreens as the panels’ switches aren’t fast enough to easily deal with rapidly changing refresh rates. This is whyLG initially reportedsuffering flickering issues implementing the tech on its OLED TVs and many firms needed to add extra custom hardware to achieve the switch when VRR was initially being rolled out to phones and tablets.

It’s also why theOnePlus 8 ProandGalaxy S20weren’t variable and required you to lock the refresh rate, even though their panels could go higher than the traditional 60Hz.

LTPO aims to overcome this issue. Apple developed and debuted it to the mainstream consumer market in with theApple Watch 4. The tech let the screen dynamically go from 1-60Hz depending on what the device was doing. This was a key factor that let it last a full day off a single charge, despite having an always on display, when we reviewed it.

How does LTPO work?

At its heart LTPO (Low-Temperature Polycrystalline Oxid) is a recent backplane technology that’s currently combined with high end OLED screens – though in theory it doesn’t need to be limited to that specific screen technology.

It effectively changes how a screen charges specific pixels to emit light. Specifically, it tweaks how the two TFT (thin-film-transistors) switches that turn on and instruct specific pixels to emit light work usinga combination of faster LTPS switches and more efficient IGZO materials. The switches in theory are more reactive than the basic LTPS switches used in most OLED and AMOLED panels while improving power efficiency.

When implemented correctly this lets the switches activate and manage specific pixels faster than regular OLED screens, which in turn lets any screen using the tech change their refresh rate without the need for additional hardware.

The tech lets the screen in theory offer the improved contrast and picture quality of an OLED, without the traditional issues around VRR.

For non-techies’ OLED screens work slightly differently to most LED/LCD/IPS panels. They create images by activating specific pixels once per second to create images. This is different to IPS panels which activate every pixel in the panel to create images.

The fact OLED screens render blacks by leaving certain pixels uncharged is a key reason they look darker than their IPS rivals, which can take on a greyish tone by comparison. You can get a more detailed breakdown of how the two screen technologies are different in ourOLED vs LED LCDguide.

What devices have LTPO screens?

The below devices currently feature LTPO screens:

Though other iPads have 120Hz Promotion screens, the LCD panels used don’t use LTPO tech. You can get a breakdown of the specifics in ourbest iPadguide, which details the top Apple tablets we’ve reviewed that are still on sale. Make sure to jump over to ourwhat is Promotionexplainer for more details on that specific technology.

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Alastair is in charge of Trusted Reviews Limited’s editorial strategy and output across all its sites. He has over a decade’s experience as a journalist working in both B2C and B2B press. During this …

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Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.