
A long-standing obstacle for augmented reality (AR) and mixed-reality smartglasses may finally be on the brink of being solved. A team of researchers led by Professor Sanghyeon Kim at the School of Electrical Engineering, in collaboration with Inha University and industry partners, has developed a micro-LED display technology capable of ultra-high resolution on the order of ~1,700 pixels per inch (PPI). That’s roughly three to four times sharper than most flagship smartphone screens today, with a level of detail that could make immersive wearable visuals far more convincing.
For context, Micro-LEDs are a form of self-emissive display technology that holds key advantages over OLEDs, including higher brightness, longer lifespan, and improved power efficiency, all critical for compact, battery-constrained wearables like smartglasses. Until now, engineering ultra-high-resolution micro-LED displays in such small form factors has been a major technical challenge, especially when it comes to creating tiny red pixels that work efficiently without consuming excessive power.
Micro-LED breakthroughs bring near-reality visuals closer
The researchers overcame one of the biggest hurdles by designing red micro-LED elements that are both energy-efficient and capable of extremely fine pixel packing. In prototype demonstrations, these micro-LED displays achieved a remarkable ~1,700 PPI figure. It’s a density that supports crisp, detailed visuals even at very close viewing distances, such as those inside AR glasses or VR headsets. This level of clarity could help eliminate the “screen door” effect that currently makes many near-eye displays look pixelated or low-resolution.

Beyond smartglasses, such high-resolution, low-power micro-LED displays could have a significant impact across wearables and extended reality (XR) devices, where brightness, durability, and efficiency are all crucial. As the broader micro-LED display market continues to grow, innovations like this one could play a central role in helping AR and VR products become more practical, affordable, and mainstream, rather than niche or novelty gadgets. That said, there’s still work before this reaches consumer devices, but the breakthrough brings lighter, sharper smartglasses that look more like real life a step closer.




