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| United States Patent | 4864290 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4864290.html |
| Inventor(s) | Waters; Colin M. (Frodsham, GB2) |
| Abstract | The liquid crystal display unit 1, has a video signal receiver 2 and a
store 3. Time-modulation grey-scale addressing of the ferroelectric liquid
crystal pixels in a display panel 4 is provided to a store 10 which
records the number of changes of state for each pixel during one
picture-signal. Once the most-significant bit has been processed and is
being displayed on the panel 4, the change-of-state store 10 has the net
number of changes which the pixel has undergone in that picture.
Controller 11 causes store 10 to output the value appropriate to that
pixel and pass it to driver unit 9 to produce a compensating pulse
(whether positive, negative or zero) necessary to ensure that there is no
net electrical potential over the entire picture interval. The display
produced by the compensating pulse is cleared immediately the first data
of the next picture is input to the pixel. Assuming that the LSB of the
data for a pixel already on display in panel 4, then in the next scan
extractor 6 passes the next LSB to comparator 7 whose other input is
connected to a pixel-state store 8. Accordingly, the new bit-value is
compared with the existing state of the pixel, and comparator 7 passes on
an instructing signal to pixel driver unit 9 only if the state of the
pixel requires changing; in such an eventuality, the driver unit 9 issues
an appropriate monopulse select voltage. Comparator 7 also passes such an
instructing signal. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4864290 |
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Display device |
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| Publication Date |
September 5, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
September 18, 1987 |
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| Priority Data |
Sep 26, 1986[GB]8623240 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A display device comprising:
a lattice of pixels; means to receive a signal representing a picture for
display, the signal comprising one or more portions for each pixel;
means to address each pixel a number of times for each picture-signal, the
addressing means including means to apply a uni-polar signal to the pixel
in accordance with a respective said one or more portion;
means to address each pixel a number of times for each picture-signal, the
addressing means including means to apply a uni-polar signal to the pixel
in accordance with a respective said one or more portion;
means to determine any net electrical potential value resultant from the
addressing of a pixel for one picture;
and means to apply a correction signal to a pixel in accordance with the
output from the determining means.
2. A display device according to claim 1, wherein the addressing means
comprises means to apply a uni-polar signal to a pixel only when there is
a change in the state of the pixel, and the determining means comprises
means to count the number of changes in state for a pixel during its
addressing for one picture-signal.
3. A display device according to claim 1, wherein the correction means
applied a correction signal to a pixel in respect of its addressing for
one picture-signal prior to the initiation of the subsequent address for
the next picture.
4. A display device according to claim 1, wherein the display device
comprises means to store the output of the determining means as stored
information for each of a number of pixels, and means to pass the stored
information to the correction means to apply a correction signal.
5. A display device according to claim 1, wherein liquid crystal cells form
the lattice of pixels.
6. A method of operating a display device having a lattice of pixels, the
method comprising the steps of:
receiving a signal representing a picture for display, the signal
comprising one or more portions for each signal;
addressing each pixel a number of times for each picture-signal, including
applying a uni-polar signal to the pixel in accordance with a respective
said one or more portions;
determining any net electrical potential value resultant from the
addressing of a pixel for one picture;
and applying a correction signal to a pixel in accordance with the result
of the determining step.
7. A method according to claim 6, comprising applying a uni-polar signal to
a pixel only when there is a change in the state of the pixel, and
counting the number of changes in state for a pixel during its addressing
for one picture-signal.
8. A method according to claim 6, comprising applying a correction signal
to a pixel in respect of its addressing for one picture-signal prior to
the initiation of the subsequent address for the next picture.
9. A method according to claim 6, comprising storing the result of the
determining step as stored information for each of a number of pixels, and
applying a correction signal, in response to the stored information.
10. A method according to claim 6 wherein liquid crystal cells form the
lattice of pixels. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The prsent invention relates to a display device, and particularly but not
solely to a liquid crystal display.
It is generally known that the subjection of ferro-electric liquid crystal
displays to long-term electrical potential can cause degradation of the
liquid crystal material (e.g. by ion migration from the glass substrate)
and hence result in significant deterioration of operation of the display
and reduction in lifetime. Thus, conventionally the data drive is a
bi-polar pulse in phase or in anti-phase with the bi-polar row select
drive. The leading pulse of a bi-polar signal serves as an electric
potential compensator while the succeeding pulse switches the pixel to the
desired state.
G.B. Patent Specification Publication No. 2079509 describes an arrangement
which attempts to cancel the electrical potential by inverting both the
drive voltage and the common electrode voltage in alternate frames.
However complete cancellation throughout the display would occur only if
the two frames were identical, and therefore there can be haphazard
patterns of potential in existence for indeterminate time lengths, causing
random deterioration of the liquid crystal material.
The present invention provides a display device comprising:
means to receive signals representing a plurality of pictures for display;
a lattice of pixels;
means to address each pixel a number of times for each picture-signal, the
addressing means including means to apply an uni-polar signal to the pixel
in accordance with a portion of a picture-signal appropriate to that
pixel;
means to determine any net electrical potential value resultant from the
addressing of a pixel for one picture;
means to apply a correction signal to a pixel in accordance with the output
from the determining means.
In this way, the device can operate with a uni-polar pulse which reduces
the time for addressing by one half as compared to that with a bi-polar
pulse, while ensuring that there is no detrimental effect due to
electrical potential. This can be achieved by ensuring that any potential
caused by the uni-polar pulses are cancelled at the end of each set of
addresses corresponding to a picture-signal for one pixel.
Preferably, the addressing means comprises means to apply an uni-polar
signal to a pixel only when there is a change in the state of the pixel,
and the determining means comprises means to count the number of changes
in state for a pixel during its addressing for one picture-signal. As an
electrical potential is only produced when a change in state of the pixel
occurs, monitoring of the number of changes of state gives an indication
of the net potential existing.
Furthermore, if a pixel is addressed N times during a picture-signal, where
N is the number of bits in each grey level byte, the difference between
the number of 1-to-0 changes and the number of 0-to-1 changes can only be
1 or 0, and the net electrical potential only +1, -1 or 0 units.
Preferably, the correction means applies, in use, a correction signal in
respect of one address prior to the initiation of the subsequent address
for the next picture.
Preferably, the display device comprises means to store the output of the
determining means appropriate to each of a number of pixels, and means to
pass the stored information to the correction means to apply a correction
signal, advantageously intermediate that address and the subsequent
address.
The present invention also provides a method of operating a display device
having a lattice of pixels the method comprising:
addressing each pixel a number of times for each picture-signal, including
applying uni-polar signal to the pixel in accordance with a portion of a
picture-signal appropriate to that pixel;
determining any net electrical potential value resultant from the
addressing of a pixel for one picture;
to applying a correction signal to a pixel in accordance with the output
from the determining stage.
Preferably, the method comprises applying an uni-polar signal to a pixel
only when there is a change in the state of the pixel, and counting the
number of changes in state for a pixel during its addressing for one
picture-signal.
Preferably, the method comprises applying a correction signal in respect of
one address prior to the initiation of the subsequent address for the next
picture.
Preferably, the method comprises storing the output of the determining
stage appropriate to each of a number of pixels, and passing the stored
information to the correction stage to apply a correction signal,
advantageously intermediate that address and the subsequent address.
Preferably, a pixel comprises one or more liquid crystal cells.
The present invention is applicable to colour displays and to monochrome
displays.
The present invention also embodies equipment for the generation, and/or
transmission, and/or reception, and/or processing, of signals suited
and/or designed for a display device as herein defined.
In order that the invention may more readily be understood, a description
is now given, by way of example only, reference being made to the
accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a block circuit diagram of a liquid crystal display embodying the
present invention;
FIG. 2 is a representation of the addressing waveforms for use in the
display of FIG. 1; and
FIG. 3 is a representation of the signal input to the display of FIG. 1.
In FIG. 1, the liquid crystal display unit, generally designated as 1, has
a video signal receiver 2 and a store 3 with a capacity to hold an
adequate amount of the video signals to enable the display of a complete
image, i.e. one picture of the video signal. The format of the video
signal is such as to provide time-modulation grey-scale addressing of the
pixels in a display panel 4 consisting of a lattice of 600 rows each of 50
bi-stable surface-stabilised ferroelectric liquid crystal pixel-elements;
for one picture, the video signal has four data bits for each pixel. In
this addressing scheme, the lattice is scanned four times each picture,
the setting for each pixel being in accordance with the appropriate bit,
and the time duration of the pixel in that setting being dependent on the
significence of that bit.
There are four row-output devices (only one, 5, being shown), each of which
enables the video information for a row of pixels to be taken out of
picture store 3; each row-output device 5 has a bit extractor 6 to
separate out one bit of the information for each pixel of the respective
row. The extractors of the different row-output devices are arranged to
operate on bits of differing significence.
Consider now how the display device 1 operates in relation to the data bits
in one picture signal for a single pixel of panel 4. Assuming that the
least-significent data bit is already on display at the relevant pixel in
panel 4, then in the next scan extractor 6 passes the next least
significant bit to a comparator 7 whose other input is connected to a
pixel-state store 8. Accordingly, the new bit-value is compared with the
existing state of the pixel, and comparator 7 passes on an instructing
signal to pixel driver unit 9 only if the state of the pixel requires
changing; in such an eventuality, the driver unit 9 issues an appropriate
monopulse select voltage of the format shown in FIG. 2. Comparator 7 also
passes such an instructing signal not only to pixel-state store 8 in order
to updata its record of the display state of the respective pixel, but
also to a store 10 which records the number of changes of state for each
pixel during one picture-signal.
If comparator 7 determines that this next bit corresponds to the present
state of the pixel, the comparator 7 does not output an instructing signal
to driver unit 9, but only sends a signal to controller 11 to indicate the
equivalence result of the comparison test.
This sequence of events is repeated for each of the remaining bits
corresponding to that pixel in the same picture-signal; thus, once the
most-significent bit has been processed and is being displayed on the
panel 4, the change-of-state store 10 has the net number of changes which
the pixel has undergone in that picture. As the difference between the
number of 1-to-0 changes and the number of 0-to-1 changes can only be 1 or
0 and the net electrical potential on that pixel only +1, -1 or 0 units,
then the value held in store 10 for that pixel corresponds to the net
electrical potential. Accordingly, controller 11 causes store 10 to output
the value appropriate to that pixel and pass it to driver unit 9 to
produce a compensating pulse (whether positive, negative or zero)
necessary to ensure that there is no net electrical potential over the
entire picture interval. The display produced by the compensating pulse is
cleared immediately the first data of the next picture is input to the
pixel (see Figure 3), and therefore it remains for a period of time which
has an insignifant detrimental effect on the image. FIG. 3 illustrates the
position of the compensating pulse C in relation to adjacent
picture-signals wherein, for each display line, blocks 1, 2, 3, 4 relate
to addressing for the least-significent bit upwards in relation to the
first picture-signal, and blocks 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A relate to addressing for
the least-significent bit upwards in relation to the next picture-signal.
In display unit 1, the available switching pulse time is increased by a
factor of 1.6 over conventional arrangements. In addition, since the
capacitance of non-selected lines is not charged when the data on selected
rows remains unchanged (this being approximately 50% of the time) and the
frequency of the charging a.c. is almost halved, the total power
requirement will be reduced by about a factor of 4.
While the invention has been specifically described in relation to liquid
crystal displays, it is applicable to any form of display in which it is
desired to avoid the long-term build-up of electrical potential.
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Description  |
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