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| United States Patent | 4100579 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4100579.html |
| Inventor(s) | Ernstoff; Michael N. (Los Angeles, CA) |
| Abstract | A flat panel liquid crystal display system formed by sandwiching a thin
layer of liquid crystal material between a front electrode structure,
split into rows or columns, and a back electrode structure formed into
desired patterns and including addressing circuitry is described. Single
polarity operation of a liquid crystal display system in which the
direction of current flow in the liquid crystal material is reversed at
the frame rate is a feature of the invention. Operation is accomplished so
as to permit gray scale rendition as response to an applied video signal.
Addressing circuitry demonstrating the applicability of large scale
integration (LSI) techniques is also an important element of the
invention. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4100579 |
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AC Operated flat panel liquid crystal display |
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| Publication Date |
July 11, 1978 |
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| Filing Date |
November 29, 1976 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 509,376 filed Sept. 24,
1974, now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
Ser. No. 352,397, filed Apr. 18, 1973 describes a fabrication scheme using
the methodology of large scale integration techniques whereby a matrix
array of reflective electrodes, as well as the individual addressing
circuitry and electrical storage circuitry for each liquid crystal cell of
a flat panel liquid crystal display are formed on semiconductor back
plates such that each reflective electrode forms one element or plate of
the storage capacitor for the corresponding liquid crystal cell.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to liquid crystal display systems and particularly
to such systems as are operated so as to periodically reverse the
direction of current flow into a liquid crystal cell thus prolonging cell
operating life many times over.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Liquid crystal substances have been a scientific curiosity since their
peculiar properties first began to be recognized. These substances flow,
pour and assume the shape of their containers as if they were liquids.
However, the molecules comprising these substances, unlike the molecules
of liquids, tend to form loosely ordered arrays rather like the regular
lattices of crystals. When these substances are excited by electric
fields, turbulent activity may be set up within the substance. This
turbulence may cause the material which was originally transparent, to
become white because the turbulent fluid scatters light. This effect has
been called dynamic scattering. The scattering effect can be halted and
the clarity of the material restored simply by turning off the electric
field.
Liquid crystal substances are currently being used to create new families
of devices for display. A liquid crystal display device differs
fundamentaly from an electronic display device such as a cathode ray tube
which generates its own light. A liquid crystal device generates no light
of its own, it scatters ambient light much as does this printed page. It
has been noted that the liquid crystal is normally clear, but when an
electric field is applied some regions in it become turbulent and scatter
light. Images can thus be formed by controlling the shape and size of the
turbulent regions caused by an incident electric field.
Since these liquid crystal devices reflect light instead of generating it,
displays thus created can be viewed under a very wide range of lighting
conditions including those which would wash out the image created on a
light generating devices. Liquid crystal displays can thus be viewed in
direct sunlight or in an ambient light field created, for example, by a
flood light. Since liquid crystal devices do not emit light, they should
require relatively little power and such is determined to be the case.
Liquid crystal display systems have been fabricated by sandwiching a thin
layer of liquid crystal material between a glass plate which has been
coated on one side with a conductive material forming a transparent
electrode and a back plate having a matrix array of reflective electrodes
formed on a semiconductor wafer.
Prior art devices have utilized a direct current in the application of the
electric field. However, it has been shown that the operating life of
liquid crystal materials can be increased many times by employing
alternating current excitation rather than direct current excitation.
It would be of great benefit to the art to provide a display device which
would dissipate much less power than the cathode ray tube and be usable in
the same applications as the cathode ray tube. It would also be of great
benefit to provide a display on which contrast could be maintained and
even enhanced at high levels of ambient illumination. It would be of
further greater value to provide a display exhibiting all the above
advantages and in addition having a resolution uniform over the entire
display area and whose resolution will be dramatically higher than that of
a cathode ray tube.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An AC operated flat panel liquid crystal display device according to the
invention is fabricated by sandwiching a thin layer of liquid crystal
material between a front transparent plate having a transparent electrode
split into rows or columns depending upon how the image is to be written,
and a back plate having a matrix array of reflective electrodes. In the
prior art, a single conductive sheet was used for the rear surface of the
front transparent plate. When the flat panel liquid crystal display is DC
operated, the front electrode is simply a uni-potential transparent
electrode. An electrode structure of this type is unsuitable for AC
operation as will be described in greater detail in this patent
application.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a flat panel
liquid crystal display representing a potential replacement for the
cathode ray tube.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a display on which
contrast can be maintained at high levels of ambient illumination.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a display
whose resolution is uniform over the entire display area and whose
resolution will be dramatically higher than that of a cathode ray tube.
An additional object of the present invention is to provide for a prolonged
operating life for liquid crystal display devices.
Additional objects, advantages and characteristic features of the present
invention will become readily apparent from the following detailed
description of preferred embodiments of the invention when considered in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is an idealized drawing showing construction of a liquid crystal
display device in accordance with the invention.
FIG. 1a is an enlarged side view of a portion of FIG. 1 showing a seal
whereby the liquid crystal material may be retained.
FIG. 2 is an enlargement of a portion of FIG. 1.
FIGS. 3A and 3B are idealized explanatory drawings illustrating the
operating principle of liquid crystal displays.
FIG. 4 illustrates the configuration of the front plate electrode of the
invention.
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating a line-at-a-time addressing
scheme such as might be used with the invention.
FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a method of reversing the direction
of current flow in the liquid crystal cells in accordance with the
invention.
FIG. 7 is a waveform diagram further explaining how current flow is
reversed in the liquid crystal cells each frame.
FIG. 8 is a time signal-sweep diagram further explaining the operation of
the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1 with greater particularity the modular construction
of a flat panel liquid crystal display device is illustrated. The device
of the invention, noted generally as 10, comprises a front transparent
cover plate 12 having transparent electrode strips on its rear surface at
14. A matrix array of reflective electrode 16 is formed on a semiconductor
wafer 18. The flat panel liquid crystal display device is formed by
sandwiching a thin layer of liquid crystal material between the
transparent cover plate 12 and the semiconductor wafer 18. The liquid
crystal material is retained between the cover plate 12 and the wafer 18
by a seal 19 which may be placed around the electrode 16 as illustrated by
the enlarged side view shown in FIG. 1a. Details of the construction of
the liquid crystal device are shown in the enlarged drawing of FIG. 2
where typical electrode 8 is formed by insulating barriers 6 housing
typical row electrode bus 4 and typical column electrode bus and contact
pad 2. The liquid crystal material is normally transparent, but it can be
made to scatter incident light with the application of an electric field.
By using a matrix of electrodes to set up an electric field with a desired
pattern, an image can be formed. In the invention the electrodes are
controlled by multiple layer electronic circuits formed in the
semiconductor wafer using large scale integration (LSI) techniques.
The display may be viewed as shown in FIGS. 3A and 3B. In FIG. 3A the cell
denoted as 20 is in the OFF condition. The liquid crystal material is
clear and no light reaches the observer 26. An illuminating source 24
causes light to be incident upon the surface under the condition that the
electrodes 22 have no current flowing in them. Since no light is scattered
from the reflective electrodes under these conditions all the light is
incident into light trap 28. None of the incident illumination reaches the
viewer. In FIG. 3B a potential is applied to center electrode in device 20
thus a cone of light 21 is scattered from the area of said center
electrode toward viewer 26. Since the cell is in the ON condition, that is
with the potential applied thereto, a light scattering turbulence is
created in the liquid crystal material. Light is thus forward scattered to
observer 26. Referring now to FIG. 4 construction of the front plate
electrodes as strips is shown.
Referring now to FIG. 5 the schematic diagram of a possible line-at-a-time
addressing circuit that may be used with the present invention is shown. A
typical elemental field effect transistor is denoted at 40 with a typical
elemental liquid crystal cell denoted at 42 and a typical elemental video
storage capacitor noted at 44. These typical elements comprise an M by N
matrix with each element containing the aforementioned three basic
elements. By an M by N matrix is meant a matrix with M rows and N columns.
With vertical sweep multiplexer 46 in position 1 video sampling
multiplexer 50 is enabled to apply a video signal to row 1. It will be
noted that with vertical sweep multiplexer in position 1 the gates of all
field effect transistors in row 1 are energized. Video sampling
multiplexer 50 may now apply the video signal to matrix element 11. When
video sampling multiplexer 50 moves to its second position it may now
apply the video signal to matrix element 12 and so on until video sampling
multiplexer applies the video signal to matrix element 1N. Vertical sweep
multiplexer 46 now moves to its second position thus energizing the gates
of the field effect transistors in the second row. Video sampling
multiplexer 50 may now write video intelligence into the second matrix
row, that is matrix elements 21 through 2N. The process thus described
continues until video information has been written into all the matrix
elements, that is through matrix elements M1 through MN.
Referring now to FIG. 6, the convention may be taken for the sake of
explanation, that the front elements will receive the switching signal
indicated as a square wave from -20 to 0 volts, while the back elements
receive the video information that also has a magnitude range from 0 to
-20 volts. When the front element is at a -20 volt potential the video is
supplied to the video multiplexer as an inverted signal. When the front
elements are at 0 volts the video is supplied to the video multiplexer
uninverted. It will be noted that operational amplifier 52 is a unity-gain
amplifier and thus only serves a function of inversion. By operation of
electronic switch 56 video information is supplied to either the negative
or positive terminal of operational amplifier 52 whose output is either
inverted or uninverted according to the position of electronic switch 56
and the magnitude of the switching signal. Video multiplexer 51, which
includes the multiplexers 50 and 46 shown in FIG. 5, receives the output
from operational amplifier 52 and applies it to liquid crystal cell 42.
The switching signal is applied to conductive strips on front transparent
cover plate 12 of FIG. 1 by means of a lead 54. Referring now to FIG. 7
the processing of a video signal may be explained in greater detail. Curve
60 represents the video input from a signal source. Curve 62 represents a
switching signal as applied to the front electrode strips. Curve 64
represents the video output signal as applied to the drain electrode buses
showing how it is inverted at every odd frame. Curve 66 denotes the
current excursions showing the reversal of the direction of current flow
with each frame. It is to be noted from FIG. 6 that the switching signal
is applied both to the front electrodes of the liquid crystal cells and to
the video input signals. Negative potentials from 0 to -20 volts are used
for the video and the electrodes formed on the front panel of the liquid
crystal cell are also driven between 0 and -20 volts. It is important to
note the periodic reversal of the potential on the front panel strips,
that is, the potential alternates between 0 and -20 volts with each
successive frame. When the front plate strip is at 0 volts, the black
level of video is also 0 and the white level is at -20 volts and the
direction of conventional current flow is front electrode to rear
electrode. When the front electrode plate is at -20 volts the black level
of video is also -20 volts, the white level of video is at 0 volts, and
the direction of conventional current flow is from back electrode to front
electrode. Basically then the phase of the video signal is reversed each
time the potential on the front electrode is switched from 0 to the
potential corresponding to the maximum negative signal. As an example for
a display of black with no-inverted video, the front electrode is at 0
volts and the back electrode is at 0 volts, therefore no current flows. If
there were inverted video, the front electrode would be at -20 volts, the
back electrode at -20 volts and again no current would flow. For a diaplay
of white in the non-inverted video case the front electrode is at 0 volts
and the back electrode is at -20 volts, therefore maximum current will
flow from front to back. If the video were inverted, the front electrode
would be at -20 volts and the back electrode would be at 0 volts thus
maximum current would flow from back to front. For a display of
intermediate gray with non-inverted video the front electrode at 0 volts
the back electrode would be at a negative V.sub.x volts where V.sub.x is
between 0 and the maximum negative signal. Current then would flow from
front to back at a level proportional to V.sub.x volts. If the video were
inverted, then the front electrode would be at -20 volts, the back
electrode would be at [(maximum negative signal) -V.sub.x ] volts. Current
would then flow from back to front at a level proportional to V.sub.x
volts. Generalizing, the inverted and non-inverted video signal applied to
the back electrode may be derived from an applied video signal,
Video.sub.(t), according to the relation:
-V.sub.(t) = [Video.sub.(t) (-1).sup.m ] + V.sub.max [1/2 - 1/2(-1).sup.m ]
where m is the frame number and V.sub.max is the constant value of the
potential applied to each of the electrically independent transparent
conductive stripes which comprise the front electrode structure.
Referring now to FIG. 6 and FIG. 7 together, video signal processing in
accordance with the invention for the example of a single cell may be
described in greater detail. During frame one switch 46 FIG. 6 will be in
position B. The front electrode of representative cell 42 will be at -20
volts and therefore video input signal 60 will be inverted. During the
first quarter of frame number one the front electrode voltage minus the
video input voltage is [(-20) - (-20)] = [(-20) +20 = 0 signal volts
applied to the drain electrode buses of the FET (See FIG. 5) and thence to
the representative liquid crystal cell 42. Maximum current flows from the
back electrode to the front electrode of representative cell 42 because of
the maximum applied potential difference, that is 0 at the back electrode
and -20 at the front electrode.
During the second quarter of the first frame, video signal voltage rises to
about -10.5 volts and front electrode voltage minus video input signal
voltage is [(-20) - (-10.5)] = [(-20) +10.5] = -9.5 volts applied to the
drain lines of the FET and thence to the representative liquid crystal
cell 42.
During the third quarter of the first frame, video signal voltage rises to
about -5.5 volts and front electrode voltage minus video signal input
voltage is [(-20) - (-5.5)] = [-20 +5.5] = -14.5 volts applied to the
drain lines of the FET and thence to the representative liquid crystal
cell 42. The current flow during frame one is indicated in curve 62
showing the current decreasing from a maximum to 0. During frame two
switch 46 in FIG. 6 will be in position A. The front electrode of
representative cell 42 will be at 0 volts and therefore video signal 60
will be noninverted. The video output voltage shown in curve 64 will be a
replica of the video input voltage shown in curve 60 since it is not being
inverted. Tthe current flow during frame number 2 is shown in curve 66 as
a decreasing current from 0 to a negative maximum. During frame three the
same conditions will obtain as for frame number one, that is switch 46 in
FIG. 6 will be in position B. The front electrode of representative cell
42 will be at a -20 volts and therefore video signal 60 will be inverted.
Examination of curve 66 will indicate that during the first frame current
will flow from the front electrodes to the back electrodes. During the
second frame current flows from the back electrodes to the front
electrodes. In general then, during all odd numbered frames current will
flow from the front electrodes to the back electrodes of all
representative cells such as 42. While during all even numbered frames,
current will flow from the back electrodes to the front electrodes. Thus
there has been accomplished a reversal of current flow in representative
cells such as 42 without necessitating a change in polarity of applied
voltage.
When the flat panel liquid crystal display is DC operated, the front
electrode may be simply a unipotential transparent electrode and indeed in
the prior art a single conductive sheet was used for the rear surface of
the front transparent plate. However an electrode structure of this type
is unsuitable for AC operation as described in the invention. It is now
known that for uniformity over the surface of the display that the front
electrode must be split into rows or columns depending upon how the image
is written.
The front electrode should be formed as a set of row electrodes if the
display is row-at-a-time addressed or element-at-a-time addressed with the
direction of fast sweep in the horizontal direction. In the preferred
embodiment as described herein it will be assumed that the number of rows
into which the front electrode is split is equal to the number of rows in
the display. In the prior discussion it was pointed out that the front
electrode must be switched between 0 and -20 volts at the frame rate
implying that this transition takes place during the retrace interval.
With a single conductive sheet used for the rear surface of the front
transparent plate, the display operated in this manner will introduce a
non-uniformity because of the time interval between when each element is
written and when the potential of the front electrode changes is not a
constant. If it is assumed for example that the display is written a row
at a time from top to bottom then the time from when the top row is
written until when front electrode switches is almost the period of a full
frame and the time from when the bottom row is written until when the
front electrode switches is a very small fraction of a full frame. This
problem is solved by the present invention by splitting the front
electrode into rows and switching the potential of each row immediately
prior, during or immediately after addressing the corresponding row on the
rear electrode. Thus no matter where an element is located on the display,
whether it be at the top or at the bottom, the time from when it is
written into until the time when the front electrode switches is constant.
The front electrode should be formed as a set of column electrodes if the
display is column-at-a-time addressed or element-at-a-time addressed with
the direction of fast sweep in the vertical direction. The front electrode
strips need not be precisely aligned over the columns or rows of the
display. A position tolerance of approximately 5% of the display width has
been found to be quite tolerable. The field between front electrode strips
will not generate a significant number of scattering centers because of
the short time duration of the field; that is, the strips are switched at
approximately 100 to 1,000 strips per frame, the number of strips being
dependent upon the number of lines in the display. Referring now to FIG.
8, there is illustrated a column addressed liquid crystal display device.
This Figure again shows that for an odd field the direction of
conventional current flow is from the front electrode to the rear
electrode and that half of the display is driven with normal video while
the other half is driven with an inverted video signal. It is further
shown that the direction of conventional current flow for even fields is
from the rear electrode to the front electrode and that one portion of the
display is driven with normal video while another portion is driven with
inverted video.
There has thus been shown a simple means for AC operation of a liquid
crystal cell. It is known that by periodically reversing the direction of
current flow in a liquid crystal cell the lifetime of the cell can be
increased by at least one or two orders of magnitude over DC operation.
Such a liquid crystal display devide represents a potential replacement
for the cathode ray tube and further provides a display on which contrast
can be maintained at high levels of ambient illumination. Such a device
promises to provide a display whose resolution is uniform over the entire
display area and whose resolution will be dramatically higher than that of
a cathode ray tube. The method of operating the device provides for
reversal of the direction of current flow into liquid crystal material at
the frame rate, it permits single polarity operation and it permits gray
scale rendition.
Although the invention has been shown and described with reference to a
particular embodiment, nevertheless, various changes and modifications
obvious to a person skilled in the art to which the invention pertains are
deemed to lie with the purview of the invention.
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Description  |
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