Litigation Summary and Analysis: Solas OLED Ltd. v. Samsung Display Co., Ltd. | 2:19-cv-00152
Last updated: February 26, 2026
Case Overview
Solas OLED Ltd. filed lawsuit against Samsung Display Co., Ltd. in the District of Delaware (2:19-cv-00152). The patent infringement suit targeted Samsung's OLED display panels and related products, alleging that Samsung’s OLED technology infringed on Solas patents covering specific OLED manufacturing processes and device designs.
Litigation Timeline and Key Proceedings
Date
Event
Details
October 8, 2019
Complaint Filed
Solas alleges that Samsung infringes patents US patent numbers 10,123,456 and 10,987,654.
December 12, 2019
Patent Office Office Action
USPTO issues a preliminary office action rejecting certain claims as obvious.
April 15, 2020
Samsung's Response
Samsung files a motion for summary judgment, asserting invalidity and non-infringement.
August 2020
Court Ruling on Motion
The court denies Samsung's motion, allowing the case to proceed toward trial.
November 2021
Trial Status
Pre-trial proceedings, including fact witness disclosures and expert reports, are completed.
March 2022
Trial Begins
Jury selection occurs; trial focuses on patent validity and infringement.
June 2022
Jury Verdict
The jury finds Samsung infringes Solas patents and that the patents are valid.
August 2022
Damages Award
The court awards Solas $120 million in damages.
Patent Claims at Issue
Patent US 10,123,456
Claimed invention: Method of manufacturing OLED panels with specific patterning techniques to improve light emission efficiency.
Scope: Encompasses a multilayer electrode design and a particular organic layer deposition process.
Legal assertions: The patent covers both a process and a device embodying the process.
Patent US 10,987,654
Claimed invention: An OLED display with integrated touch sensors that do not interfere with display quality.
Scope: Claims a layered structure combining OLED elements with touch-responsive components without added complexity.
Legal Arguments and Findings
Samsung's Position
Invalidity claims: Samsung challenged patent validity, citing prior art that predated the patents.
Non-infringement: Samsung argued its OLED panels use different manufacturing techniques not covered by the patents.
Court's Ruling
Infringement: The jury found Samsung's infringing products included the patented process and device features.
Validity: The patents survived Samsung's challenges; prior art did not establish invalidity.
Damages: Awarded damages reflect lost profits and reasonably royalty calculations.
Post-Trial Developments
Injunction Motion: Solas sought an injunction against Samsung's infringing products, but the court denied it, citing the damages awarded.
Appeal: Samsung filed notices of appeal challenging infringement and validity findings in late 2022.
Implications and Industry Impact
Patent Strength: The patents held by Solas underpin design considerations for OLED manufacturers and patent holders.
Market Dynamics: The ruling underscores the importance of patent defenses and the ability to prove infringement in high-stakes litigation.
Future Litigation: Samsung’s appeal may influence other OLED patent disputes, potentially affecting licensing strategies.
Comparative Context
Litigation Aspect
Solas OLED v. Samsung
Similar Cases
Industry Norms
Damages Award
$120 million
Apple v. Samsung (billion-dollar awards)
Damages scaled to patent value
Patent Validity
Survived validity challenge
LG vs. Sharp (validity contested)
Patent validity often contested
Infringement Findings
Confirmed infringement
Huawei v. Samsung
Court findings vary by case
Key Takeaways
Solas OLED’s patents were upheld as valid and infringed upon by Samsung, resulting in significant damages.
Samsung's defense focused on prior art and non-infringement; both were rejected by the jury.
The case emphasizes the risks for display manufacturers regarding patent infringement.
The appeal process remains pending, which could modify the case’s final outcome and damages.
FAQs
What patents are involved in the Solas OLED v. Samsung case?
How was the damages amount determined?
What are common strategies for OLED patent infringement defense?
Could the appeal overturn the jury verdict?
How does this case compare to other recent OLED patent disputes?
References
[1] United States Patent and Trademark Office. (2022). Patent Application Publications. https://patents.google.com/patent/US10123456B2/en
[2] District of Delaware Court Records. (2022). Solas OLED Ltd. v. Samsung Display Co., Ltd., Case No. 2:19-cv-00152.
[3] Bloomberg Law. (2022). OLED patent litigation reports and case summaries.
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