This application is a National Stage of International patent application PCT/EP2014/068036, filed on Aug. 26, 2014, which claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1302015, filed on Aug. 30, 2013, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The invention relates to active-matrix screens with field-effect transistors in thin films. It applies notably to the liquid crystal screens (LCD screens) and to the organic light-emitting diode screens (OLED or AMOLED screens).
An active-matrix screen should be understood to be a screen in which a circuit with transistors and storage capacitor(s) is associated with each pixel of the matrix, enabling a display control circuit, also transistor-based, to individually drive each pixel. This display control circuit which in reality comprises a plurality of circuits for addressing the rows, columns and common electrode of the matrix, is a circuit that is generally integrated on the same substrate at the periphery of the active-matrix zone.
The transistors employed in these screens are field-effect transistors, in so-called thin-film technology, based on amorphous silicon. The conduction characteristics of these transistors can change significantly according to the working operating conditions.
In particular, the mobility of the charge carriers in the amorphous silicon varies with the temperature: with current technologies, it thus changes from 0.1 cm2/V/s at −40° C. to 0.75 cm2/V/s at 70° C. Also, the leakage current of the transistors tends to increase with the light received by these transistors. Such is notably the case in the liquid crystal screens, according to the level of the lighting supplied by the liquid crystal backlighting source: this intensity indeed varies according to the ambient brightness conditions (day or night ambience).
For some applications, notably in the transport field (avionics, motor vehicles, maritime), the screens need to be able to work in highly variable conditions, without notable degradation of the display quality. In particular, they have to be operational over a wide temperature range, which can extend from minus 40 to plus 70 degrees Celsius for example for applications in the avionics field.
These variable and severe operating conditions are reflected in variations of the conduction parameters of the transistors. For example, after a long period of operation at high temperature, a few hundreds of hours, the threshold voltage of the transistors is temporarily increased. If it is assumed that the temperature then drops, the mobility of the carriers drops also, but the threshold voltage of the transistors at that moment is still high because of the previous high-temperature episode.
Also, to be able to control these transistors reliably, in the on state and in the off state, regardless of the immediate conduction conditions of the transistors, transistors are used which are defined with a geometry (ratio of the width to the length of the transistor channel) greater than that normally necessary. The transistors are said to be overdimensioned.
This overdimensioning of the transistors necessitates the use of equally greater values for the associated coupling and compensation capacitors and of higher power supply voltages for controlling these elements. Thus, in the avionics field, the power supply voltage is of the order of +33 volts and the maximum voltage amplitude for controlling the pixel capacitor is of the same order.
This overdimensioning of the components presents a number of drawbacks.
With respect to the aspects affecting manufacture, the overdimensioning is reflected in an increased surface area; hence a greater bulk of the driver circuits at the periphery of the panel; also, there is a greater risk of manufacturing defect commensurate with this increased surface area.
With respect to working operation, there is a true difficulty in stabilizing the output state of these driver circuits throughout the temperature range. In practice, these outputs oscillate when temperature rises. This is explained by the greater leakage currents; high current demands necessary to charge the higher capacitors, in sufficiently short times; a rapid drift of the threshold voltages because of the high voltage applied.
These oscillations can lead to perceptible flickers on the image displayed, which damage the “cosmetic” quality of the display.
It is known practice to reduce these oscillations by deliberately degrading, in manufacture, the threshold voltages of the transistors. However, how to do so in a perfectly controlled manner is not known. Furthermore, these degradation techniques reduce the life of the transistors, therefore of the screens.
Finally, these screens consume more because of the power supply and control voltage levels used.
The subject of the invention is an alternative technique making it possible to propose active-matrix screens that perform over wide temperature ranges, at lower cost and with lower power consumption.
One idea on which the invention is based is to retain transistors of standard size, but adapt, as a function of the temperature, the power supply voltages which control these transistors, more particularly the transistors of the pixel row selection circuits.
By increasing these voltages for low temperatures, the most unfavorable transistor conduction conditions are compensated; by lowering these voltages for the high temperatures, conduction conditions that are on the contrary more favorable can be taken advantage of and the threshold voltage drift, which depends greatly on the gate voltage value of the transistor, is reduced. In all cases, the leakage currents are minimized, therefore optimized. Overall, by this adaptation of the voltages as a function of the temperature, the power consumed by a screen is also advantageously reduced.
The invention therefore relates to a display screen comprising an active matrix of pixels arranged in rows and columns, the active matrix comprising a control transistor associated with each pixel, the screen comprising a display control circuit supplying signals driving the control transistors of the pixels, characterized in that the screen comprises:
means for supplying a temperature measurement,
a programmable circuit supplying as output a numeric code associated with the temperature measurement and
a circuit supplying a first voltage and a second voltage powering the display control circuit making it possible to apply, respectively, a switch-on voltage and a switch-off voltage to the control transistors of the pixels, the circuit receiving the numeric code and supplying the first and second voltages as a function of numeric values of the code.
When the temperature drops, the numeric code defined leads to an increase in the first and the second analog voltages, and also an increase in their difference.
When the temperature rises, the numeric code defined leads to a decrease in the first and the second analog voltages, and also a decrease in their difference.
The numeric code can comprise numeric values setting the gamma reference voltages which define at least one gray scale.
In the various implementations proposed, the programmable circuit can be implemented by a memory circuit which contains a plurality of codes, each defined for a given temperature band.
It is also possible to provide for the code to be computed by the programmable circuit, for the measured temperature, according to a predetermined computation function.
In a variant, provision can advantageously be made for the codes to be defined or computed as a function of the temperature, but also as a function of a lighting level received by the control transistors.
Other features and advantages of the invention are presented in the following detailed description, and in the attached drawings in which:
The invention will be explained in an exemplary application to an active-matrix, liquid crystal (LCD) display screen.
The screen comprises an active matrix 1 of pixels px. Each pixel is associated with a control transistor Tp and comprises a liquid crystal between an electrode Ep specific to the pixel and a counter-electrode CE common to a pixel, a group of pixels, or to all the pixels. The screen also comprises a display control circuit 2 which drives the transistors Tp of the pixels and the counter-electrode, making it possible to control the pixel voltage Vpx applied between the terminals Ep and CE of the pixel capacitor in each display frame; and a light box BAL supplying the backlighting light for the liquid crystal.
The matrix of pixels comprises n rows L1 to Ln each comprising m pixels and m columns C1 to Cm each comprising n pixels. The gate electrodes of the transistors Tp in a same row of pixels are linked in common to the row conductor L1, . . . Lm and the source or drain conducting electrodes of the transistors Tp in a same column of pixels are linked in common to the column conductor C1, . . . Cm, the other electrode being linked to a pixel electrode Ep of the associated pixel px. The counter-electrode of the pixel receives a bias voltage VCE.
The display of a gray level on a pixel of the matrix comprises: a pixel row Li selection time, with the application of a voltage to the row Li conductor controlling the switching on of the transistor Tp of each of the pixels of the row and of a column voltage VGj to the column conductor Cj corresponding to the gray level to be displayed by the pixel; a time to establish the pixel voltage at the terminals of the pixel capacitor; a display time during which the light box lights the liquid crystal which allows more or less light to pass depending on the pixel voltage level at its terminals (absolute value of the difference VGj minus VCE).
This display is controlled by the display control circuit 2 which notably comprises a sequencing circuit 20 ensuring the synchronized operation of a circuit 21 for addressing the rows L1-Ln, of a circuit 22 controlling the voltages on the columns C1-Cm and of a circuit 23 controlling the counter-electrode CE. The sequencing circuit makes it possible to control, at a frame frequency, the display of an image from digital data stored in a buffer memory 24.
There are a number of pixel addressing and sequencing modes. A choice was made to present a fairly standard addressing and sequencing mode in relation to
The row addressing circuit 21 is usually a shift register with as many output stages as there are rows L1-Ln of the matrix to be controlled. The output stages comprise voltage switching transistors Tc. These circuits are widely known and described in the technical literature.
The column control circuit 22 mainly comprises a converter for supplying, for each new row L1 selected, the column voltages VG1-VGm to be applied to the columns C1-Cm, as a function of data Data, Data_I (
As illustrated in
As schematically illustrated in
With respect to liquid crystal screens, it also has to be indicated that it is necessary to periodically invert the bias of the voltage applied to the terminals of the liquid crystal, to prevent the marking of the screens. There are various inversion mode implementations and techniques that are well known: frame inversion, row inversion, column inversion, or point inversion. In the example represented with reference to
In this addressing mode, on each new display frame, a row conductor receives, from the row addressing circuit 22, a select pulse for a time called row select time, such that:
during this row select time, the row conductor receives a switch-on voltage VH for the transistors Tp of the row, and
outside of this row select time, it receives a voltage VL which makes it possible to switch off the transistors Tp of the row.
The switch-on voltage VH for the pixel transistors Tp corresponds, to within the threshold voltage of a control transistor Tc, to a first power supply voltage VGON of the circuit 22, corresponding to a positive voltage.
The switch-off voltage VL for the pixel transistors Tp corresponds substantially to a second power supply voltage VGOFF of the circuit 22, negative or zero.
On each frame, the row addressing circuit 21 (shift register with n stages), successively addresses, at a row frequency, the rows of the matrix. During the addressing (the selection) of a row, the column control circuit 22 receives the information Data or Data_I to be displayed on the pixels of the row selected at the input IN-DAC of the converter R-DAC which establishes, at the output OUTDAC, for the gamma reference voltages Vγ1-Vγz supplied, the analog voltages VG1-VGm which are to be applied to the column conductors C1 . . . Cm. In this exemplary implementation, it has been seen that the counter-electrode bias voltage VCE is continuous. Its level is set to take account of a voltage offset. This offset is that induced by the capacitive coupling which exists de facto between each pixel and its associated row, at the moment of the deselection of this row. To have an absolute voltage value at the terminals of the pixel capacitor, identical over the even and odd frames, for a same gray level, the counter-electrode voltage is shifted by the value of the offset, ensuring an overall compensation over all the pixels. Since the value of the offset is variable as a function of the gray level (that is to say as a function of the voltage applied to the column at the moment of deselection), a second offset compensation level is incorporated in the definition of the gamma voltage reference voltages, which establishes the gray level scale.
With these recaps being given with regard to the control of an active-matrix LCD screen, the invention consists primarily in setting, as a function of a temperature measurement, the power supply voltages VGON and VGOFF and their difference VGON−VGOFF, for an optimized control of the transistors Tc used in high-impedance switching in the circuit 21 to supply, to a respective row of the matrix, the row select signal as illustrated in
This adaptation is more specifically performed as follows:
In all cases, the leakage currents are minimized. Overall, by this adaptation of the voltages as a function of the temperature measurement, the power consumed by a screen is also advantageously reduced, notably at high temperature.
Take a practical example. Assume that the voltage applied to the columns varies between 0 and ±6 volts (
According to the prior art, the VGON and VGOFF levels and their level difference VGON−VGOFF are set to:
switch with the least possible loss the VGON level on the selection rows regardless of the temperature;
optimize VGON to favor the conduction of the control transistors Tp of the pixels selected at low temperatures;
optimize VGOFF to ensure the switching off, by minimizing the leakage current of the transistors Tp, at high temperatures.
In practice, VGOFF=−11 volts and VGON=22 volts are chosen for an amplitude VGON−VGOFF=33 volts (VDD).
According to the invention, by considering only two opposing temperature bands:
With this adaptation, it is then possible to use transistors with standard geometry, that is to say no different from that of the transistors used in screens intended for applications in more conventional environments.
As schematically represented in
In a practical embodiment (
In another embodiment, the code is computed for the temperature measurement, by a programmable circuit, from computation functions defined for the screen concerned.
The temperature measurement T is made by a temperature sensor 101 and supplied in numeric form by an associated converter 101-N. The sensor is, in practice, an electrical sensor, metal or semiconductor-based, incorporated in proximity to the display control circuit 2, for the measurement supplied to reliably represent the temperature to which the transistors are subjected. This measurement has a corresponding code supplied by a programmable circuit 100: either it is stored in this circuit 100 and the measurement makes it possible to point to a memory address (for example via a threshold comparator, which makes it possible to determine the rank of the corresponding temperature band out of the k temperature bands of
In practice, it has been seen that, in each temperature band, a value for VGON and a value for VGOFF are preferably defined: the code will for example be able to contain a series of two coded numeric values, one for each voltage, applied to a respective analog voltage generation circuit (with digital-analog converters and amplifiers) which supplies the voltages VGON and VGOFF. For example, the values are coded on 10 bits.
In a refinement which takes into account the gamma correction aspects contributing to the cosmetic quality of the display, provision is made to also define, for each of the k temperature bands, not only the power supply voltages VGON and VGOFF, but also the gamma reference voltages defining a gray scale. If a number of gray scales are provided for the control of the screen, for example as a function of the color to be displayed on a pixel, the code defines the gamma voltage references of the different gray scales.
More generally, provision is made for the code to define the different power supply or reference voltages used for the control of the display.
To return to the example of a liquid crystal screen and of an addressing mode as described in relation to
In particular, it has been seen that the offset induced by capacitive coupling at the moment of the row deselection is a function of the difference VGON−VGOFF. If VGON−VGOFF is modified, it is thus preferable, in order to retain a good compensation and therefore the quality of the display, to modify the setting of the counter-electrode bias voltage VCE. It is then necessary to also adapt the set of gamma reference voltages, since it has been seen that the offset varies according to the gray level.
If, for example the gray level scale is defined by z=19 gamma reference voltages, the code can thus be formed by a series of 22 voltage values, which will each be applied to a corresponding analog voltage generation circuit.
It has been seen that there are other addressing and control modes. For example, the inversion mode can be conducted differently, by varying the counter-electrode bias voltage between a more positive high level and a more negative low level. The application of the invention is then reflected in a setting of the counter-electrode bias voltage offset by temperature.
More generally, a person skilled in the art applies the invention according to the control voltages used in the screen concerned, as a function of the type of pixel (liquid crystal, OLED), of the addressing mode, of a color or non-color display, . . . , by determining the power supply or reference voltage values necessary to the control of the screen, for the different temperature bands.
In a refinement, provision is made to also take account of the light received by the transistors of the screen. In fact, it has been seen that the leakage current of the transistors increases with the intensity of the light received by the transistors. This intensity can vary. In the case of liquid crystals in particular, the light intensity of the backlighting of the light box varies according to whether the ambience is daytime ambience (maximum intensity) or nighttime ambience (minimum intensity). This problem of sensitivity of the transistors to the light relates equally to the control transistors Tp of the pixels, which are directly in the lighting field, and the control transistors Tc of the display control circuit (which receive the light by guidance effect and multiple reflections).
It is then advantageous to adapt the voltage levels, more specifically the VGOFF level, to favor the switching off and therefore minimize the possibilities of current leakage in case of strong light intensity (strong lighting level).
To return to the exemplary implementation in which codes are defined and stored in a programmable circuit 100, there are then established, as for the temperature, brightness bands. The circuit 100 can take the form of a table structure with two inputs: a brightness band and a temperature band, which, for each pair of bands, supplies a corresponding numeric code, as schematically illustrated in
The light sensor 102 uses, for example, a photodiode implanted in the lighting system of the LCD on the rear face. The measurement is supplied in numeric form by an associated converter 102-N. As for the temperature, a threshold comparator makes it possible to discretize the brightness bands. The temperature and brightness bands selected make it possible to point to a corresponding numeric code in the circuit 100.
In
As indicated previously, the invention, which has just been described by taking a particular example of a screen, applies more generally to the definition of the power supply and reference voltages necessary to the control of the pixels, as a function of the temperature, and preferably also as a function of the brightness received by the transistors. This principle adapts to other addressing modes or variants, to color or non-color screens, and to liquid crystal screens as well as to OLED screens. Typically, for the latter which use metastable materials sensitive to temperature and light, the same issues of conductivity/leakage current and of gamma correction as a function of the temperature and of the light arise.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13 02015 | Aug 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/068036 | 8/26/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/028448 | 3/5/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20070063959 | Iwabuchi | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20090040163 | Sun | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20110205212 | Matsumoto | Aug 2011 | A1 |
20120139955 | Jaffari | Jun 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2005073951 | Aug 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160203750 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |