Operation is now underway at Sharp Display Products’ new Japanese LCD panel plant, capable of producing panels of 40in and larger. A further complex for thin-film solar cells is expected to open in 2010. This LCD panel plant is marking a new era in large displays: it is the first facility in the world to adopt 10th-generation glass substrates. Using Sharps proprietary UV2A*2 photo-alignment technology, the plant is capable of producing high-contrast, energy-efficient panels of 40 inches and larger.
At the new manufacturing complex the unique concentration of specialists, know-how and leading-edge production facilities in one place will enable us to take vertically integrated production to a new level. Apart from significant time and cost benefits, this bears an enormous potential for innovation since significant improvements of LCD technology effects the whole process chain. The outcome is for example our new state-of-the-art LCD TVs, explains Maximilian Huber, President of Sharp Microelectronics Europe.
The new manufacturing complex will bring the world two environmentally friendly product lines: energy-saving LCD panels and energy-creating solar panels, when the thin-film solar cell plant picks up operation in March 2010. In addition the new manufacturing complex stets benchmarks in resource saving production. Besides implementing similar waste management and water recycling systems like the ones that have proven successful at the Kameyama plant, all factory roofs will be equipped with solar panel to generate 18 WM of electricity for the manufacturing complex. Furthermore approximately 100,000 LED lights for both indoors and outdoors will substantially cut down power consumption for illumination to the entire the complex.