This invention relates to light emitting diode (LED) displays and, in particular, to a 3-dimensional LED display using stacked, transparent LED light sheets forming pixel layers.
The present assignee has previously invented a flat light sheet formed by printing microscopic vertical LED dice over a conductor layer on a flexible substrate to electrically contact the LED's bottom electrodes, then printing a thin dielectric layer over the conductor layer which exposes the LED's top electrodes, then printing another conductor layer to contact the LED's top electrodes.
The LEDs may be printed to have a large percentage of the LEDs with the same orientation so the light sheet may be driven with a DC voltage, or the LEDs may be printed so that approximately one-half of the LEDs have one orientation and the other half has the opposite orientation so an AC signal can drive all the LEDs. In either case, a large number of the LED dice are connected in parallel.
By using a transparent film as the substrate and making either or both of the conductor layers transparent, light may exit through either surface or both surfaces simultaneously. If the LEDs are GaN-based and emit blue light, a phosphor layer may be deposited over the LEDs to cause the emission to be any color. The light sheets may be formed to have a thickness less than 100 microns. Since the printed LEDs are microscopic and dispersed, and the conductors and substrate are transparent, the resulting light sheets are substantially transparent.
Further detail of forming a light source by printing microscopic vertical LEDs, and controlling their orientation on a substrate, can be found in US application publication US 2012/0164796, titled, Method of Manufacturing a Printable Composition of Liquid or Gel Suspension of Diodes, assigned to the present assignee and incorporated herein by reference.
The assignee's light sheet is ideally suited for providing general illumination or backlighting. However, it is also desirable to adapt the assignee's light sheet technology to create addressable or static displays, including a display that can display 3-dimensional images.
A 3-D display is formed of stacked, transparent LED pixel layers with index-matched spacer layers between the pixel layers. The structure may form a cube or other shape. The LEDs are printed in addressable pixel locations on each 2-D pixel layer. Opaque cells may optically separate each pixel area to reduce lateral diffusion of light. Each pixel may have a diameter of, for example, 10-40 microns.
By controlling the brightness of each pixel area in each of the pixel layers, a 3-D image may be generated. In one embodiment, the viewing window of the display is above the top light sheet, and the side walls of the structure are light absorbing. Image processing may be used to dynamically rotate the displayed image to allow viewing the image from all angles.
The 3-D display may be used for a variety of purposes including as a tool to better understand actual or simulated structures. Any other 3-D scene or image may also be displayed. Line images generated by CAD systems are especially suitable for display.
The 3-D display may be monochrome or full color.
Elements that are similar or identical in the various figures are labeled with the same numeral.
In
A transparent conductor layer 22 is then deposited over the substrate 20, such as by printing. A suitable transparent conductor layer 22 may be ITO or a sintered silver nano-wire layer.
A monolayer of microscopic inorganic LEDs 12 is then printed over the conductor layer 22. The LEDs 12 are vertical LEDs and include standard semiconductor GaN layers, including an n-layer, and active layer, and a p-layer. GaN LEDs typically emit blue light. The LEDs 12, however, may be any type of LED emitting red, green, yellow, or other color light. The LEDs 12 are printed in a matrix of pixel locations. Such selective printing may be by screen printing (using a mask pattern), flexography, or other type of printing.
If each pixel is to be surrounded by an opaque wall, such walls (cells) may be printed prior to the LEDs 12. The walls may instead be provided by a laminated layer or using other methods such as trenching and filling in the trenches with an opaque material. The cells may be square, hexagonal, circular, or any other shape.
The GaN-based micro-LEDs used in embodiments of the present invention are less than a third the diameter of a human hair and less than a tenth as high, rendering them essentially invisible to the naked eye when the LEDs are sparsely spread across the substrate 20. This attribute permits construction of a nearly or partially transparent light-generating layer made with micro-LEDs. In one embodiment, the LEDs 12 have a diameter less than 25 microns and a height less than 10 microns. The number of micro-LED devices per unit area may be freely adjusted when applying the micro-LEDs to the substrate 20. Further detail of forming a light source by printing microscopic vertical LEDs, and controlling their orientation on a substrate, can be found in US application publication US 2012/0164796, entitled, Method of Manufacturing a Printable Composition of Liquid or Gel Suspension of Diodes, assigned to the present assignee and incorporated herein by reference.
In one embodiment, an LED wafer, containing many thousands of vertical LEDs, is fabricated so that the top metal electrode 24 for each LED 12 is small to allow light to exit the top surface of the LEDs. The bottom metal electrode 26 is reflective (a mirror) and should have a reflectivity of over 90% for visible light. There is some side light, depending on the thickness of the LED. In the example, the anode electrode is on top and the cathode electrode is on the bottom. In other embodiments, the top electrode may cover the entire surface of the LED and is reflective, and light exits the bottom of the LED through the transparent conductor layer 22 and the transparent substrate 20. In another embodiment, the electrodes are formed so that light is emitted bi-directionally.
The LEDs are completely formed on the wafer, including the anode and cathode metallizations, by using one or more carrier wafers during the processing and removing the growth substrate to gain access to both LED surfaces for metallization. The LED wafer is bonded to the carrier wafer using a dissolvable bonding adhesive. After the LEDs are formed on the wafer, trenches are photolithographically defined and etched in the front surface of the wafer around each LED, to a depth equal to the bottom electrode, so that each LED has a diameter of less than 25 microns and a thickness of about 4-8 microns, making them essentially invisible to the naked eye. A preferred shape of each LED is hexagonal. The trench etch exposes the underlying wafer bonding adhesive. The bonding adhesive is then dissolved in a solution to release the LEDs from the carrier wafer. Singulation may instead be performed by thinning the back surface of the wafer until the LEDs are singulated. The LEDs 12 of
The LEDs 12 may instead be formed using many other techniques and may be much larger or smaller. The lamps described herein may be constructed by techniques other than printing.
The LED ink is then printed over the conductor layer 22. The orientation of the LEDs 12 can be controlled by providing a relatively tall top electrode 24 (e.g., the anode electrode), so that the top electrode 24 orients upward by taking the fluid path of least resistance through the solvent after printing. The anode and cathode surfaces may be opposite to those shown. The LED ink is heated (cured) to evaporate the solvent. After curing, the LEDs 12 remain attached to the underlying conductor layer 22 with a small amount of residual resin that was dissolved in the LED ink as a viscosity modifier. The adhesive properties of the resin and the decrease in volume of resin underneath the LEDs 12 during curing press the bottom cathode electrode 26 against the underlying conductor layer 22, creating a good electrical connection. Over 90% like orientation has been achieved, although satisfactory performance may be achieved with over 75% of the LEDs being in the same orientation.
A dielectric layer 27 is then selectively printed over the conductor layer 22 to encapsulate the sides of the LEDs 12 and further secure them in position. The ink used in the dielectric layer 27 pulls back from the upper surface of the LEDs 12, or de-wets from the top of the LEDs 12, during curing to expose the top electrodes 24. If any dielectric remains over the LEDs 12, a blanket etch step may be performed to expose the top electrodes 24.
Another transparent conductor layer 28 is then printed to contact the top electrodes 24. The conductor layer 28 may be ITO or may include silver nano-wires. The conductor layer 28 is cured, for example, by lamps to create good electrical contact to the electrodes 24.
The LEDs 12 in the monolayer, within a defined pixel area, are connected in parallel by the conductor layers 22/28 since the LEDs 12 have the same orientation. Since the LEDs 12 are connected in parallel, the driving voltage must approximately equal the voltage drop of a single LED 12.
Many other ways can be used to form the LEDs 12, and the LEDs 12 do not need to be microscopic or printed for the present invention to apply.
A flexible, protective layer (not shown) may be printed over the transparent conductor layer 28. If wavelength conversion is desired, a phosphor layer may be printed over selected pixel areas.
The pixel layer 10 may be any size and have any number of pixels, where the electrodes 14 and 16 form row and column conductors to address the pixel at the intersection of an energized row and column.
The pixel layer 10 may even be a continuous sheet formed during a roll-to-roll process that is later stamped out.
Although the pixel layers are described as transparent, they are actually semi-transparent or substantially transparent due to some inherent light absorption of the various layers and the LEDs. Therefore, there is a practical limit to the number of pixel layers that can be stacked. The light absorption may be compensated for by operating the rear pixels to be progressively slightly brighter such that a target brightness is achieved at the front viewing window of the 3-D display.
If the current supplied to multiple pixels is the same, each energized pixel provides the same brightness whether the pixel contains one LED or five LEDs. Therefore, such current-controlled driving of pixels is ideally suited for a non-deterministic LED printing process.
The red, green, and blue sub-pixels may be laterally displaced, as shown in
In one embodiment, the bottom transparent conductor layer for the LEDs is a continuous layer. A dielectric pattern is then printed over the conductor layer, such as with black ink, so that any LEDs printed on the dielectric pattern do not conduct. This dielectric pattern may be the grid shown in
The XY conductors may be formed by a transparent conductor. The pixels may be monochromatic, or RGB, or other colors.
Each pixel layer 66-68 may be about 1 mil thick, so transparent spacer layers may be needed between the pixel layers 66-68 to cause the XY pixel pitch to be about the same as the Z pixel pitch. The spacer material should have the same index of refraction as the pixel layers 66-68 to minimize internal reflection.
A controller 70 supplies different X and Y address signals to each pixel layer 66-68 in the stack to create a desired 3-D arrangement of illuminated pixels. The current for each pixel is precisely controlled to correspond to the target brightness of each pixel. A digital code corresponding to a brightness level of a particular pixel may be provided to the controller 70, which then supplies the target current to the appropriate pixel. The pixels in the transparent pixel layers 66-68 may emit light in a single direction or bidirectionally. The 3-D display 64 may be formed as a cube, with a viewing window over the top pixel layer 66.
In one embodiment, the cube is about 4-6 inches per side, and non-portable displays may be made much larger. All sides except the viewing window may be covered with an opaque layer to prevent internal reflection.
The 3-D image may be programmed by a user I/O interface 72. In one embodiment, the 3-D image is an object that has been created using a CAD application, and the 3-D image produced enables the user to better grasp the 3-D design. The 3-D image may also be from a 3-D camera or any other source. The 3-D image may be static or be animated. In one simple embodiment, each pixel layer 66-68 has about 10,000 addressable pixels (100×100), and there are 100 stacked pixel layers so there are 100 pixels in each of the X, Y, and Z directions. Any other size and resolution can be made using a printing process.
In another embodiment, the controller 70 simply energizes a fixed group of the pixels for a permanent static display. In such an embodiment, the controller 70 may be a simple programmed interconnection of the pixels to a power source, where the connections to the power source are permanent.
In one embodiment, the pixels in different pixel layers are slightly offset from each other in the X and Y directions to minimize the blockage of light and to reduce cross-talk between different pixel layers in the Z-direction.
In another embodiment, concentric spheres of the light sheets may form pixel layers in a spherical 3-D display. In such a case, the 3-D image may be viewable from any angle. Concentric shells of the LED layers and other layers may printed or sprayed over a starting sphere substrate. All conductors may be terminated at one area of the sphere for the XYZ signals. Cylindrical 3-D displays are also practical, using circular pixel layers.
In another example, a topological map is displayed, and the different views are achieved by tilting the cube and/or controlling a processor to tilt the image.
Monochromatic line images are particularly suitable for display, such as for CAD outlines of objects to be fabricated, or molecular structures for education, etc. The images generated may be dynamic, requiring dynamic addressing, or the images may be static, requiring no addressing after the initial programming of the pixels.
In the example, the foreground pixel layer (the top pixel layer) has LED pixels energized to display four rectangles 110-113. The remaining pixels in the foreground pixel layer are off, so the underlying pixel layers are visible through the transparent substrate.
The midground pixel layer (the middle pixel layer) has LED pixels energized to display four rectangles 114-117, where rectangles 114-117 have a central “obscured” zone corresponding to the area that would be covered by the rectangles 110-113 if a viewer viewed the display normal to the display surface. Since the LEDs are off in those obscured areas, the midground pixel layer does not distort the images in the foreground pixel layer. The remaining pixels in the midground pixel layer are off, so the underlying pixel layers are visible through the transparent substrate. Many more midground pixel layers for different depths can be employed.
Similarly, the background pixel layer (the bottom pixel layer) has LED pixels energized to produce the displayed pattern 118 of four background rectangles, where obscured zones 120 (LEDs are off) correspond to the areas that would be covered by the images in the foreground and midground pixel layers if a viewer viewed the display normal to the display surface.
Accordingly, the display provides physical depth for an image. The image itself may be processed to convey more depth.
In all embodiments, the display may be hand held. Accelerometers (or other suitable sensors) in the display, and/or a camera in the display, may convey the orientation of a viewer's eyes relative to the display screen and adjust the displayed images accordingly to achieve a realistic 3-D effect. In the case of
The 3-D images represented by
Instead of stacking layers of the transparent LED pixel sheets to form a 3-D display, one or more LED sheets can be folded to produce a 3-D stereoscopic image, as depicted in
It is known to provide a flat image formed of interdigitated vertical segments of left eye and right eye images and then direct the left eye image to the viewer's left eye and direct the right eye image to the viewer's right eye. This has been traditionally done with lenticular lenses or opaque barriers. The technique is sometimes referred to as autostereoscopy. Other techniques use two separated images, and the viewer views the images through a stereoscopic lens system.
The LED sheet 150 shown
Although the folded LED sheet 150 presents 3-D image by its physical shape, the 3-D image can be further displayed by detecting the particular angle of the display with respect to the viewer and using an image processor to change the image accordingly to create a realistic 3-D image. This allows the displayed image to be dynamically changed as the viewer tilts the display left, right, up, or down. Accelerometers or a camera in the display may be used to detect the angle of the display.
A support member may be used to retain the folds, such as a semi-rigid material deposited on the back of the LED sheet 150 after it is folded. The image may be a dynamic scene or be static. The segments 152/156 can be any width and height.
Other shapes of the cells 162 may be used instead of pyramids, such as rectangles, hexagons, etc.
In another embodiment, rather than the cells 162 being concave portions of the LED sheet 160, the cells are convex to form positive pyramid shapes or other suitable shapes.
In any of the embodiments, multiple transparent LED sheets, each emitting a different primary color, may be laminated together to effectively form a single full-color LED sheet.
In another embodiment, the flat sections 171, 173, 175, 179, and 181 are not active (e.g., transparent or opaque) so only the angled segments contribute to the displayed image.
In one embodiment, the folded LED sheet(s) can be stretched so as to change the angles of the folds to be optimized for any viewing distance.
Accordingly, various 3-D display techniques have been described that do not need any special lenses or glasses to achieve the 3-D effect. Such displays may be used for games, various effects, displaying CAD images for conceptualizing designs, advertising, or any other purpose. The display can be any size. For large size displays, the angles of the folds may be varied to account for the left and right eye viewing angles and viewing distance. Any aspects of the various embodiments may be combined.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention in its broader aspects and, therefore, the appended claims are to encompass within their scope all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of this invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/115,508, filed Feb. 12, 2015, and 62/197,997, filed Jul. 28, 2015, assigned to the present assignee and incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62197997 | Jul 2015 | US | |
62115508 | Feb 2015 | US |