1. Field of the Invention
The present disclosure relates to a two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device and a liquid crystal lenticular lens thereof, and more particularly, to a two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device and a liquid crystal lenticular lens thereof with an electric field uniformizing layer, which smoothes the refractive index change of the liquid crystal layer.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Display related technologies have progressed in recent years; stereoscopic display technologies and related applications have also developed flourishingly. The principle of the stereoscopic display technology includes delivering different images respectively to a left eye and a right eye of a viewer to give the viewer a feeling of gradation and depth in the images, thereby generating the stereoscopic effect in the cerebrum of the viewer by analyzing and overlapping the images received separately by the left eye and the right eye.
In general, the stereoscopic display technologies may be substantially divided into two major types, which are the glasses type and the naked eye type (auto stereoscopic type). The stereoscopic display effect of the glasses type stereoscopic display is generally better than the display quality of the naked eye type stereoscopic display. However, the special glasses may still cause inconvenience when wearing the glasses type stereoscopic display device. On the other hand, the naked eye type stereoscopic display device can work without special glasses. In the general naked eye type stereoscopic display technologies, such as the lenticular lens type stereoscopic display technologies, the irradiating directions of different display images are changed by lenses and the different display images are respectively guided toward the left eye or the right eye of the viewer. In the lenticular lens type stereoscopic display technologies, a liquid crystal lens, which produces the lens effect, can be formed with the refractive index change of the liquid crystal molecules. However, the refractive index change of the conventional liquid crystal lens is not smooth enough to achieve the desired optical performance as a real lens. Moreover, because the stripe electrodes of the conventional liquid crystal lens are arranged in one direction, the lens effect only occurs either when the orientation of the stereoscopic display device is landscape (i.e. along the horizontal direction) or when the orientation of the stereoscopic display device is portrait (i.e. along the vertical direction). In view of this, the effect and the application of the stereoscopic display device are restricted.
It is one of the objectives of the disclosure to provide a liquid crystal lenticular lens with the optimized lens effect and a two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device for both portrait and landscape orientation.
An embodiment of the disclosure provides a liquid crystal lenticular lens. The liquid crystal lenticular lens includes a first transparent substrate, a second transparent substrate, a first transparent electrode, a second transparent electrode, a liquid crystal layer, a first alignment layer, a second alignment layer and a first electric field uniformizing layer. The first transparent substrate has a plurality of edges. The second transparent substrate is disposed opposite to the first transparent substrate. The first transparent electrode is disposed on an inner surface of the first transparent substrate. The first transparent electrode includes a plurality of first electrode bars. The first electrode bars are parallel to each other and arranged along a first direction. The first direction is non-parallel and non-perpendicular to the edges of the first transparent substrate. The second transparent electrode is disposed on an inner surface of the second transparent substrate. The liquid crystal layer is disposed between the first transparent electrode and the second transparent electrode. The first alignment layer is disposed between the first transparent electrode and the liquid crystal layer. The first alignment layer has a first alignment direction. The first alignment direction is parallel to the first direction. The second alignment layer is disposed between the second transparent electrode and the liquid crystal layer. The second alignment layer has a second alignment direction. The first electric field uniformizing layer is disposed between the first alignment layer and the first transparent electrode or between the second alignment layer and the second transparent electrode.
Another embodiment of the disclosure provides a two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device. The two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device includes a display panel and the aforementioned liquid crystal lenticular lens. The display panel has a display surface. The aforementioned liquid crystal lenticular lens is disposed on the display surface of the display panel.
With the electric field uniformizing layer, the refractive index change of the liquid crystal layer can be smoothed under the three-dimensional display mode, thereby optimizing the lens effect to achieve that of a real lens.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
To provide a better understanding of the present disclosure, features of the embodiments will be made in detail. The embodiments of the present disclosure are illustrated in the accompanying drawings with numbered elements. In addition, the terms such as “first” and “second” described in the present disclosure are used to distinguish different components or processes, which do not limit the sequence of the components or processes.
Please refer to
In this embodiment, the second transparent electrode 22 includes a planar electrode, which fully overlaps the second transparent substrate 12. In addition, the first transparent electrode 21 is disposed on the inner surface of the first transparent substrate 11. The second transparent electrode 22 is disposed on the inner surface of the second transparent substrate 12.
The liquid crystal lenticular lens 1 may be enabled with the following method. A first voltage is applied to a portion of the first electrode bars 21A. A second voltage is applied to another portion of the first electrode bars 21A. A common voltage is applied to the second transparent electrode 22. For example, the first voltage, such as 5 volts, is applied to odd-numbered bars of the first electrode bars 21A. The second voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to even-numbered bars of the first electrode bars 21A. The common voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to the second transparent electrode 22. In this condition, the electric field distribution with gradient change is formed along the direction perpendicular to the first direction D1 and between the first transparent electrode 21 and the second transparent electrode 22 so that the refractive index of the liquid crystal layer LC in the direction perpendicular to the first direction D1 varies and produces the lens effect. Furthermore, the first electric field uniformizing layer 41 with high impedance evens out the electric field distribution and thus smoothes the refractive index change of the liquid crystal layer LC, thereby optimizing the lens effect to achieve that of a real lens. Because the first direction D1, along which the first electrode bars 21A are arranged, is non-parallel and non-perpendicular to both the edges 11A and 11B of the first transparent substrate 11, the first direction D1 is non-parallel to the gate line or the data line of the display panel when the liquid crystal lenticular lens 1 is applied to the display panel, thereby avoiding optical issues, such as Moiré phenomenon.
Liquid crystal lenticular lenses are not restricted to the preceding embodiments in the present invention. Other embodiments or modifications of liquid crystal lenticular lenses and two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display devices will be detailed in the following description. In order to simplify and show the differences or modifications between the following embodiments and the above-mentioned embodiment, the same numerals denote the same components in the following description, and the similar parts are not detailed redundantly.
Please refer to
The liquid crystal lenticular lens 2 may be enabled with the two following methods. The first method is illustrated as follows. A first voltage is applied to a portion of the first electrode bars 21A. A second voltage is applied to another portion of the first electrode bars 21A. A common voltage is applied to the second transparent electrode 22. For example, the first voltage, such as 5 volts, is applied to odd-numbered bars of the first electrode bars 21A. The second voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to even-numbered bars of the first electrode bars 21A. The common voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to the second transparent electrode 22. In this condition, the electric field distribution with gradient change is formed along the direction perpendicular to the first direction D1 and between the first transparent electrode 21 and the second transparent electrode 22 so that the refractive index of the liquid crystal layer LC in the direction perpendicular to the first direction D1 varies and produces the lens effect. The second method is illustrated as follows. A first voltage is applied to a portion of the second electrode bars 22A. A second voltage is applied to another portion of the second electrode bars 22A. A common voltage is applied to the first transparent electrode 21. For example, the first voltage, such as 5 volts, is applied to odd-numbered bars of the second electrode bars 22A. The second voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to even-numbered bars of the second electrode bars 22A. The common voltage, such as 0 volts, is applied to the first transparent electrode 21. In this condition, the electric field distribution with gradient change is formed along the direction perpendicular to the second direction D2 and between the first transparent electrode 21 and the second transparent electrode 22 so that the refractive index of the liquid crystal layer LC in the direction perpendicular to the second direction D2 varies and produces the lens effect.
Please refer to
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In the two-dimensional and three-dimensional switchable display device 50 of this embodiment, the second transparent substrate 12 of the liquid crystal lenticular lens 70 faces the display surface 60S of the display panel 60, but not limited thereto. In other variant embodiments, the first transparent substrate 11 of the liquid crystal lenticular lens 70 may be disposed to face the display surface 60S of the display panel 60.
To sum up, with electric field uniformizing layers, the refractive index change of the liquid crystal layer can be smoothed under the three-dimensional display mode, thereby optimizing the lens effect to achieve that of a real lens. Moreover, both the direction along which the first electrode bars are arranged and the direction along which the second electrode bars are arranged are non-parallel to the direction of the long axes or the short axes of the sub-pixels, and thus optical issues, such as Moiré phenomenon, may be avoided. Furthermore, the appropriate operating condition of the liquid crystal lenticular lens can be determined according to the relative position between the display panel and the viewer to optimize the lens effect and enhance the stereoscopic effect.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101146683 | Dec 2012 | TW | national |