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ComputingLGTech

This LG laptop screen drops to 1Hz to save serious power

The new panel leans on oxide TFT tech and custom algorithms so it can hold static images at ultra‑low power while still snapping back to 120Hz when motion kicks in.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 24, 2026, 12:41 AM EDT
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Open laptop on a wooden desk showing spreadsheets and bar charts on screen, with LG Display branding and text reading “Battery Life Improvement with Oxide 1Hz – Over 48%” against a bright home office background.
Image: LG Display
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LG Display has just pulled off something laptop makers have been trying to crack for years: a mainstream notebook screen that can swing all the way from 1Hz to 120Hz, and do it intelligently, in mass production. In plain terms, it is promising a lot more battery life when you are working, without taking away the buttery-smooth feel when you are watching or playing.

The new panel is built around what LG calls Oxide 1Hz technology, an LCD laptop display that can dynamically drop its refresh rate to just 1Hz when the screen is basically frozen, and ramp it back up to as high as 120Hz the moment things start moving. Think of writing a long email, reading research papers, or scrolling through a static dashboard — the content barely changes, so constantly redrawing the same frame at 60Hz or 120Hz is just wasted power. In those moments, the panel slows right down to one refresh per second, cutting the work the display electronics have to do. As soon as you hit play on a YouTube clip, jump into a game, or scrub along a 4K timeline, it shoots back up to high refresh so motion still looks crisp and responsive.

Refresh rate has been one of the big check-box specs on modern laptops, but it has also quietly become one of the biggest drains on battery life. A 120Hz panel does make scrolling feel smoother, reduces perceived blur, and helps games feel more responsive, yet running at that speed all the time means the panel’s driving electronics never get to rest. LG’s answer is to treat the laptop display more like a modern flagship phone screen: variable refresh that actually uses the full span of the range, not just 60–120Hz, but all the way down to 1Hz. That ultra‑low end is where the real gains come from, because you can hold a static frame almost “for free” instead of burning energy to redraw what the user cannot visually tell is changing.

Under the hood, this is not just a firmware tweak. LG Display is using oxide thin-film transistors (TFTs) that have particularly low leakage current when they are driven at low refresh rates, which is critical when you are trying to hold an image on screen without constantly pumping in more power. On top of that, the company has built its own circuit algorithms and panel design specifically to manage this wide variable refresh window, making sure the panel can shift between 1Hz and 120Hz quickly and without obvious artifacts. The result, according to LG’s numbers, is up to 48 percent more usage time on a single charge compared to “existing solutions” — essentially, today’s conventional laptop LCDs that stay locked at a higher refresh rate. That is the kind of jump you normally only see when a device gets a bigger battery or drops to a much more efficient processor node.

This matters more in 2026 than it would have a few years ago because laptops are increasingly being pushed as AI machines, and local AI workloads are hungry. Between background inference tasks, on-device copilots, and heavier integrated GPUs, power budgets are tight; there is not much low-hanging fruit left. The display, however, is one of the few components that is still “always on,” and trimming its appetite without cutting brightness or quality is a very attractive proposition, especially for thin-and-light devices that cannot simply throw in a larger battery. LG is explicitly framing Oxide 1Hz around this AI-heavy era, pitching it as a way to claw back battery life while users lean on more demanding software.

In day-to-day use, the experience should feel almost invisible when the system is tuned well, and that is the goal. When you are typing in Word or staring at a static spreadsheet, the display quietly parks itself at 1Hz; when you grab the trackpad, the very act of moving the cursor is enough to kick it into a higher mode, so you do not see choppy motion. Start a video, and you are back at 120Hz or at least at a multiple that matches the content’s frame rate, minimizing judder. It is the same general idea behind LTPO smartphone panels that can drop to 1Hz on an always‑on lock screen, just now scaled up to the laptop world and implemented on LCD instead of the more common OLED approach in phones.

The first big name to bet on this is Dell. LG Display says its Oxide 1Hz laptop panel is heading straight into Dell’s flagship XPS lineup, the top-tier premium machines that tend to showcase the latest display technology first. Dell actually showed off new XPS models with this screen at CES 2026 in January, positioning them as high-end workhorses that do not need to live tethered to the charger. That is an important signal to the rest of the PC ecosystem: XPS is not a niche experiment; it is one of the halo lines that other OEMs often watch for cues on where to go next. If the panels deliver the claimed gains in real‑world reviews, it would be surprising if rivals like HP, Lenovo, or even gaming brands do not start lobbying for similar parts.

What is interesting is that LG is not stopping at LCD. The company has already said it plans to bring the same Oxide 1Hz concept to OLED laptop panels, with mass production currently targeted for 2027. OLED already has a reputation for power efficiency when showing darker UIs, thanks to the way individual pixels emit their own light, but holding a static bright image can still be costly over hours. A 1Hz-capable OLED panel could marry the deep blacks and contrast of OLED with the same extreme variable refresh benefits, which would be particularly tempting for creators, gamers, and premium ultraportables that currently compromise between HDR image quality and battery life.

There is also a sustainability angle that goes beyond marketing fluff. LG ties Oxide 1Hz into a broader “Carbon Emission Reduction Project,” aiming to cut carbon emissions generated during the product usage phase by up to 10 percent. That might not sound huge on a per-device basis, but multiplied across millions of laptops over a typical lifespan, trimming the display’s power draw can add up in actual energy savings. With regulators and big enterprise customers increasingly looking at power efficiency and lifecycle emissions when they choose hardware, a panel that can document measurable reductions becomes another selling point for PC makers.

Zooming out, this move from LG Display fits neatly into a trend that is already visible on phones, tablets, and even some monitors: smarter displays instead of simply faster ones. The spec race used to be about pushing refresh rates higher and higher — 144Hz, 240Hz, and beyond — but for mainstream laptops, the story is shifting toward using high refresh only when it actually improves the experience. For most people, the killer feature is not “120Hz all the time,” it is “my laptop lasts through a full day of work and still feels smooth when it matters.” If LG’s 1–120Hz Oxide panel lives up to its promise, that is exactly what it is trying to deliver.


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