1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the pixel circuit of active matrix displays and a drive scheme to operate the displays comprising such pixel circuits. Pixel circuits and a method are provided to set a data in a pixel and to deliver a drive current to the pixel according to said data setting.
Furthermore, the present invention relates to the pixel circuits and drive method of an active matrix display, where the pixel circuits comprise active elements, such as thin film transistors, for controlling the light emitting operation of the respective light emitting devices in a pixel. More specifically, the present invention provides structures of pixel circuit that combines a data setting circuit formed between a data electrode and a scan electrode, and a voltage referencing circuit that provides a reference voltage to a storage device in the pixel during a data setting period without having to keep the storage element to adhere to the same reference voltage in other periods of operation.
Furthermore, preferred embodiments of pixel circuits comprising alternating conducting channels, controlled by a multi-functional control electrode are provided. Pixel circuits capable of performing current-controlled drive scheme for active matrix light emitting device display, with reduced complexity than existing solutions, are provided as preferred application of the present invention.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Organic light emitting diode displays (OLED) have attracted significant interests in commercial application in recent years. Its excellent form factor, fast response time, lighter weight, low operating voltage, and prints-like image quality make it the ideal display devices for a wide range of application from cell phone screen to large screen TV. Passive OLED displays, with relatively low resolution, have already been integrated into commercial cell phone products. Next generation devices with higher resolution and higher performance using active matrix OLEDs are being developed. Initial introduction of active matrix OLED displays have been seen in such products as digital camera and small portable video devices. Demonstration of OLED displays in large size screens further propels the development of a commercially viable active matrix OLED technology. The major challenges in achieving such a commercialization include (1) improving the material and device operating life, and (2) reducing device variation across the display area. Several methods have been suggested to address the second issue by including more active switching devices in individual pixels, by switching of power supply lines externally, or by reading back the pixel parameters combined with an external memory and tuning circuit. As more elaborated control circuits being incorporated into individual pixels as proposed in these solutions, concerns over complexity and practical manufacturing issues arise.
The operation of an OLED display differs from a liquid crystal display (LCD) in that each and every pixel in an OLED display comprises a light emitting element. The light output of such light emitting elements is more conveniently controlled by the current directed to the pixel. In contrast, an LCD is readily operable by voltage signals as its optical response being more favorably expressed in a simple form of applied voltage. While typical storage devices hold information in the form of voltage, operating an active matrix OLED display via a typical storage element requires a conversion mechanism within a pixel to convert a stored voltage data into specific current output. In practice, a conversion method needs to be reliable and fairly independent of such factors as pixel-to-pixel variation in the characteristics that affect said conversion, to make an OLED display operable with fair uniformity.
Basic examples of using organic material to form an LED are found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,482,896, U.S. Pat. No. 5,408,109 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,663,573, and examples of using organic light emitting diode to form active matrix display devices are found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,684,365 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,157,356, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
An active matrix OLED display (
As illustrated in the above example, the electrical current for producing light output is directed to the light emitting element via a current path that comprises at least a control element that regulates the current. In a conventional light emitting device display, these control elements are fabricated on a thin film of amorphous silicon on glass. Power consumed in such control elements are converted to heat rather than yielding any light. To reduce such power consumption, polycrystalline silicon is preferred over amorphous silicon for its better mobility. More elaborated methods employing self-regulated multiple-stage conversions suitable for pixel circuit using polysilicon base material may be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,501,466 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,580,408. These methods provide a current drive scheme while largely eliminated the impact from material and transistor non-uniformity typically associated with thin film polysilicon on glass base plate. In these methods, typically a minimum of four transistors are required to achieve such self-regulated, multi-stage conversion to achieve a pixel-independent current drive for the light emitting device display. An example of such methods is illustrated in
The circuit in
These examples of prior art provide a brief overview of the existing solutions considered in the art to resolve the uniformity issue. Comparing to the basic pixel circuit in
The present invention provides a multi-functional scan electrode for pixel access that carries the conventional pixel select function and providing a conversion function for converting a data current to a data voltage. The present invention further provides multiple conducting channels in a pixel, for setting the data voltage and delivering drive current. The pixel structure so constructed comprises a direct current path from a data electrode to a scan electrode, and may further comprise a direct current path from a scan-power electrode to the light emitting element. The turning-on and off of such channels are fully controlled by the voltage applied on a scan-power electrode.
In an active matrix display, data information is delivered to the pixels of the display in a data setting period. Such data setting period for a pixel is controlled by applying a scan voltage to the scan electrode that turns on a gating circuit in the pixel to allow data information to enter said pixel. A conventional gating circuit is a gating transistor, such as transistor 203 illustrated in
The present invention provides a pixel circuit in an active matrix display with a data setting circuit connecting a data electrode and a scan electrode. Said data setting circuit conducts a data current directed from a data electrode to a scan electrode during a data setting period. Furthermore, said data setting circuit sets a storage element to a data voltage according to the data information. Furthermore, a voltage referencing circuit and method are provided to operate an active element, such as a transistor, in a data setting period in such a manner that one end of said storage element in the pixel is connected to a reference voltage via this active element that is configured in reverse direction of its configuration in other period of time. Such operation provides a fixed reference voltage to said storage element in a data setting period during which a data voltage is set to the storage element, while releasing the storage element from such voltage constraint in other period of operation.
Preferred embodiments of said voltage referencing circuit comprising a transistor which operates as a drive transistor regulating a drive current directed to a light emitting element in the pixel are provided.
The present invention further provides preferred embodiments of pixel circuits within which a scan electrode further operates to deliver a full drive current to a light emitting device in the pixel. Such a multi-functional scan electrode is different from a conventional scan electrode which performs a narrower function of selecting pixels for data input. Such multi-functional scan electrode is herein referred to as scan-power electrode.
As a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the data setting circuit between a data electrode and a scan electrode is structured to convert a data current directed thereto to a data voltage. Such data voltage sets the voltage of the storage element in the pixel. Such a stored data voltage controls a drive current to the light emitting element in a pixel. Preferred embodiments are provided for the data setting circuit comprising a data setting transistor which generates said data voltage at the gate terminal of the data setting transistor.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are provided to illustrate applications of such pixel circuits and drive method in current drive scheme for light emitting device display.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are provided for the operation of a display in current drive scheme to eliminate dependency on threshold voltage variation and OLED characteristics. Preferred embodiments in three-transistor implementation are provided to illustrate the application to the solutions for current drive scheme for light emitting device display. Furthermore, current drive scheme is demonstrated in common cathode, n-channel transistor drive configuration.
The present invention provides pixel circuits and a drive method to operate said pixel circuits, where a pixel comprises a conducting channel between a data electrode and a scanning electrode; the enabling and inhibiting of such conducting channel are fully operated by the control signal voltages applied to the scan electrode.
The present invention provides a display comprising at least a pixel, a data electrode, and a scan electrode. The pixel comprises at least a data setting transistor and a capacitor comprising two ends. Said data setting transistor generates a data voltage and sets one end of the storage element to this data voltage during a data setting period when a scan signal is applied to a scan electrode; wherein said scan electrode further sets the voltage of the other end of the capacitor to the same level as said scan electrode during said data setting period.
Additional features and advantages of the present invention will be set forth in the description which follows, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objectives and other advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by the structure particularly pointed out in the written description and claims hereof as well as the drawings.
The present invention is directed to the operation of active matrix displays. Preferred embodiments and respective claims are described in light of the application to light emitting device display.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are herein described using organic light emitting diodes as illustration. Examples of using organic material to form an LED are found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,482,896 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,408,109, and examples of using organic light emitting diode to form active matrix display devices are found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,684,365 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,157,356, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Herein in this specification, voltages and potentials in an embodiment are referenced to a reference voltage level VREF in that embodiment. The meaning of voltage and potential are thus interchangeable within each respective case. Claimed subjects follow the same descriptive convention.
As evidenced in the prior art illustrated in
The present invention provides a data setting circuit in a pixel circuits that connects a data electrode and a scan electrode. Such data setting circuit conducts a current directed from a data electrode and a scan electrode. Such data setting circuit is controlled according to a signal voltage applied to the scan electrode. Said data setting circuit is further arranged to provide a conversion function to convert a data current to a data voltage, and to set an internal storage element to said data voltage.
The present invention further provides a voltage referencing circuit comprising an active element, such as a MOS transistor, and a method to operate such that in a data setting period, one end of a storage element in a pixel is connected to a reference voltage via this active element that is configured in reverse direction of its configuration in other time. Such operation provides a fixed reference voltage to said storage element in a data setting period during which a data voltage is set to the storage element, while releasing the storage element from such voltage constraint in other period of operation.
The present invention provides active matrix pixel circuits and a method to drive such. The circuit comprises a conducting channel between a data electrode and a scan electrode. Enabling and inhibiting of said conducting channel is controlled by the signal applied to the scan electrode.
The present invention further combines with a scan-power electrode that operates to deliver drive power via a scan electrode. The same electrode that selects a pixel for data input delivers a full amount of drive current in a subsequent operating period. A pixel so constructed utilizes a scan-power electrode that delivers drive current while inhibiting data transfer between said data electrode and said pixel in one period, and enables data input from data electrode into said pixel according a scanning signal in another period.
A scan-power electrode represents an access electrode that is structured to perform both a scanning operation where a scanning signal is delivered to enable data input in selected pixels in one period of the operation, and a drive operation where a drive current is delivered to a light emitting device in another period of operation. A scan electrode represents an access electrode that performs a scanning (or select) operation. A scanning (or data setting, write) cycle is a period that a pixel is selected to allow data to be transferred from a data electrode to the selected pixel. The transferred data information is stored in a storage element in the pixel thereafter until the next scanning period.
In the description of this invention, a direct current path is a current path not interrupted by or ended on a capacitor; it may comprise such elements as resistor, drain-to-source and emitter-to-collector channel of a transistor, anode-to-cathode of a diode, and conductive lines that allow a current to continue. A direct current path in this description implies that it is enabled and conducts intended current in at least one of the operation periods for operating a display device. A charging current ended on or via a capacitor does not constitute a direct current path. Transient currents arising from charging of input gate or parasitic capacitors are not considered as providing valid current path. The reverse leakage of a diode, the leakage current in a transistor in its off-state, and current via the high impedance input terminals (such as a base or a gate) are also not considered as valid current paths. Accordingly, a direct current path in this description is a current path that allows the conduction of an intended current for the purpose of operating a display pixel, and allows such current to continue for as long as the set conditions persist.
An active element comprises a high-impedance control terminal and a channel between a second terminal and a third terminal, wherein the control terminal controls the current between the second and the third terminals. In operation, a control signal is applied to said high-impedance control terminal to regulates the current directed along said second and third terminals. The high impedance control terminal is also referred to as a gate. An MOS transistor having a gate as the control terminal, and the other two terminals arranged as source and drain is considered as a preferred embodiment of an active element in this description. Bipolar transistors and JFETs are alternatives as preferred embodiments. For those skilled in the art, it is well recognized that all such similar devices operate equally well as an active element in this description and in respective claims.
An organic light emitting diode (OLED) is used in most preferred embodiments wherever appropriate; the presence of such a device in such embodiments should not be construed as setting forth a limitation on the present invention directed for light emitting devices in general. MOS devices are used in preferred embodiments for switching elements. Similar bipolar transistors will perform similar functions as MOS devices. Those skilled in the art can quickly derive variations by a substitution of an arbitrary light emitting device for the organic light emitting diode, or by different types and polarities of switching devices. Preferred operating condition and preferred input data format do not necessitate limitations on the operation of the present invention.
A storage element includes one or a combination of a capacitor structure and parasitic capacitors.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are provided for the current drive scheme to eliminate dependency on threshold voltage variation and OLED characteristics. Preferred embodiments in three transistor implementation are provided to illustrate the solutions for current drive scheme within the present invention.
The present invention comprises a combination of two features in a pixel circuit: (1) conducting channel between a data electrode and a scan electrode that generates and sets a data voltage to a storage capacitor from a data current, and (2) a drive transistor that reverse its source and drain in a data setting period to provide a reference voltage level through said drive transistor to said storage capacitor. This method provides a solution to construct a common-cathode pixel while using an n-channel drive transistor in current control mode.
The present invention may also be viewed as a pixel circuit comprising a data setting circuit connecting a data electrode and a scan electrode, wherein said data setting circuit generates and sets a data voltage to a storage capacitor from a data current, in conjunction with feature (2) described hereinabove.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will hereinafter be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
The drive scheme provided in the present invention may be operated with a preferred embodiment of a data setting circuit element provided in
In a preferred operation of
According to embodiment of
In addition to the data setting circuit described in a preferred embodiment of
A preferred implementation of
With reference to the circuit of
1. Data signal and desired output. When a current is conducted in an OLED, the light output of the OLED is conveniently considered linear to the drive current. In order to maintain a uniform control of light output insensitive to the variation from pixel to pixel, it is highly desirable to devise a pixel circuit that provides a transfer function converting input signal from a data electrode linearly into output current on OLED. Such a transfer function needs to be independent of variation of major parameters in a pixel circuit such as threshold voltage of the control transistors and OLED forward voltage. It is recognized in the art that such a site-independent transfer may be better accomplished by using data signals in the form of current source, as illustrated in prior art. Accordingly, the discussion here focuses on the operation using current source IW delivered on a data electrode to produce a current output ID on an OLED. For example, in a preferred format, any data information is formatted in the form of a data current, where the data current is proportional to the brightness of the corresponding data point of the information to be displayed. For example, to display an image in 64 levels of gray scales, each increment in the gray scale corresponds to 1/(64-1) of the maximum current that corresponds to the full brightness level. A preferred circuit and its operation are expected to produce an output current in a drive cycle that is converted linearly from the input data current in a scan cycle.
2. Scanning (data setting, wrtie) cycle. A voltage low VLO is applied on a scan-power electrode 810, turning on p-channel transistor 803 and allowing data current IW to enter the pixel, where VLO is set to be equal to VREF, and is set to be the lowest potential in a display system. As input data current IW is directed toward the gates of n-channel transistors 802 and 801 and capacitor 804, any non-zero current will accumulate positive charge (and voltage) on the gates of 802 and 801, turning on both transistors, as discussed above for 600 and 700. As transistor 801 is turned on, floating point F is thus reset to VLO as a fixed reference level for capacitor 804. The data information is therefore properly registered into capacitor 804 with reference to VLO. On transistor 802, a positive voltage on the gate and A-terminal sets A-terminal a drain and B-terminal a source, as discussed above for 600. Transistor 802 then has a configuration of drain-to-gate short, and provides
VGS2=VDS2 (1)
where VGS2 is the gate-to-source voltage of transistor 802, and VDS2 is the drain-to-source voltage drop on 802.
According to the characteristics of MOS transistors, the condition given in Eq. (1) ensures that 802 is at the onset of saturation, and the current (ID) through 802 is controlled by the gate voltage according to a formula:
ID2=C2(VGS2−VTH2)2 (2)
where VTH2 is the threshold voltage of 802, and C2 is a constant determined by the width, length, and intrinsic parameters such as the mobility of silicon, the thickness and dielectric constant of the gate oxide of transistor 802. Approaching the end of a scan cycle, the current branched into the capacitor 804 diminishes to zero, and the entire data current IW is channeled through transistor 802, thereby giving
ID2=IW, (3)
It should be noted that the voltage drop VC on capacitor 804 is the same as VGS2, VGS2=VC, since the line voltage on 810 is at the same level as VREF in a scanning cycle.
3. Drive cycle. After data is written into a pixel and the capacitor 804 charged to a voltage VC=VGS2 that sets transistor 802 in saturation region, electrode 810 is set to a voltage high (VHI) sufficient to provide a full forward bias on OLED 805, and to keep transistor 801 in its saturation region. A preferred voltage high (VHI) is typically equal to, or higher than the sum of the maximum OLED forward operating voltage and the dynamic data range of input data. Such a condition for VHI ensures that the drain-to-source voltage drop VDS1 of transistor 801, in a drive cycle, is higher than the stored voltage VC in the capacitor 804 set in a scan period, thereby forcing transistor 801 into its saturation region. As electrode 810 being set high, p-channel transistor 803 is turned off. Transistor 802 has its drain and source reversed from the scanning cycle as described above in the discussion related to
ID1=C1(VGS1−VTH1)2 (4)
where ID1 is the current through 801, C1 is a constant determined by the width, length, and intrinsic parameters such as the mobility of silicon, the thickness and dielectric constant of the gate oxide of transistor 801, and VGS1 is the gate-to-source voltage of transistor 801 in a drive cycle, noting that VGS1=VC=VGS2.
Given the close proximity between 801 and 802, all the intrinsic parameters and the thickness of oxide are expected to be fairly the same for both. That gives VTH1=VTH2, and the C's only be different through dimensional parameters of length and width by design. It is straightforward for those skilled in the art to conclude that the current ID1 so delivered in a drive cycle is given proportional to the input current IW by
ID1/IW=C1/C2=W1L2/W2L1 (5)
or
ID1∝IW
The drive method and pixel circuit provided herein thus provide a three-transistor solution in current control mode, using n-channel drive transistor pixel circuit in common-cathode structure; the drive current output is not susceptible to the variation in characteristics of its circuit elements such as the threshold voltage of transistors. The ratios of dimensional parameters in Eq. (5) are constant by design, and remain constant to the first order of process variation, thereby providing a transfer function that is fairly independent of geometry change due to non-uniformity in processing. It should be noted that the linearity between the input and output is a preferred transfer characteristics, but not a necessary condition for this invention to operate. It should also be noted that the ratio C1/C2 is not necessarily the same for all current levels. A slightly higher C1/C2 at lower current IW than at higher IW is typical. This is due to the condition of a constant total voltage applied across the combined light emitting element 805 and transistor 801, thereby causes an increase in drain-to-source voltage VDS1 on drive transistor 801 from VDS2 that set VC. Such a deviation of VDS1 from VDS2 is more significant at lower IW than at higher IW, and thus driving 801 further into saturation from the onset point at lower current IW. For transistors exhibit incomplete saturation, this shift of VDS causes an increase in C1, and a deviation of the ratio C1/C2. To the first order of operation, this deviation may be neglected; for more accurate image reproduction, this deviation may be compensated in input IW, or with additional offset elements.
As another example of a preferred operating condition, considering a pixel circuit comprising a small-molecule OLED operating in 8.5V range, a typical NMOS TFT for drive transistor, and a dynamic data range of 3.3V, a preferred voltage high (VHI) will be in the range of 12-13 volts above VREF. Such a condition for VHI ensures that the data information corresponds to upper current level is properly reproduced in the output according to the same prescribed linear relation.
According to embodiment of
In a data setting (write) period, the voltage on the scan-power electrode is lower than the gate and F end of transistor 801, making the F end of transistor 801 a drain in reverse of that in a drive period wherein the F end operates as a source of transistor 801. In a data setting period, F node is at the same voltage as that of the scan-power electrode.
In a drive period, the voltage at F-node is released from the voltage constraint of that in a data setting period, and adjusts itself according the operating current in transistor 801 and the forward voltage of light emitting element 805.
In the preferred embodiment of
As described hereinabove, the preferred embodiment in
It should be noted that various electrical elements may be further inserted or divided in such a current path to further modify the operation. These further modifications shall be construed as not violating the provision of a current path between a scan-power electrode and a data electrode to incorporate a drive function into the same scan-power electrode, as described in the present invention.
The preferred embodiment of
The preferred embodiment of
As another feature of this preferred embodiment, said data setting circuit comprises a data setting transistor 802, wherein a data voltage is generated at the gate (P2) which is in common with the source (P3) of transistor 802 while passing a current from the data electrode and the scan electrode via transistor 802. Said data voltage sets the voltage of the capacitor 804.
During the period when a drive voltage (VHI) is applied to the scan-power electrode, all paths leading to the storage element 804 are inhibited, isolating the capacitor (and the gate of transistor 801) from any other influence.
An active matrix display may be constructed from the pixel unit provided in this embodiment by forming such pixels at intersects between a plurality of data electrodes and a plurality of scan-power electrodes. As an example for a complete display unit, a current driver unit with matching number of output terminals is attached to the edge of such matrix display where each data electrode is connected to an output terminal of the data driver unit to provide data current signal. A scan-power driver is attached to another edge of such display matrix where each scan-power electrode is connected to an output terminal of the scan-power driver unit to receive scanning pulses and driver current.
In a preferred implementation of the embodiment of
Additional preferred embodiments of data setting circuit connecting a data electrode and a scan electrode are provided in
Additional preferred embodiments of pixel circuits utilizing data setting circuit elements of
A preferred embodiment similar to
The operation of pixel circuits in
The present invention is not restricted to using a merged scan-power electrode. The voltage source for delivering drive current may be separate from and switched simultaneous with the scan-power electrode. A variation from
Furthermore, as illustrated in the preferred embodiments of
Although various embodiments utilizing the principles of the present invention have herein been shown and described in detail, those skilled in the art can readily devise many other variances, modifications, and extensions that still incorporate the principles disclosed in the present invention. The scope of the present invention embraces all such variances, and shall not be construed as limited by the number of active elements, wiring options of such, or the polarity of a light emitting device therein.
The present application is claiming the priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/522,396, filed on Sep. 24, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60522396 | Sep 2004 | US |