Touch screens are widely being used in a variety of electronic devices and systems. Meeting the needs of consumers of such electronic devices and systems is driving the industry to provide touch screens with appropriately increased sensitivity and ease of use.
Embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the example figures of the accompanying drawings in which:
The following detailed description refers to the accompanying drawings that show, by way of illustration, various embodiments. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice these and other embodiments. Other embodiments may be utilized, and structural, logical, and electrical changes may be made to these embodiments. Various embodiments are not necessarily mutually exclusive, as some embodiments can be combined with one or more other embodiments to form new embodiments. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense.
Waveform capture circuit 110 can be structured to manipulate waveforms to extract relevant information or representations of the waveforms. For example, a rising edge of a voltage pulse and a falling edge of the voltage pulse are correlated to a maximum voltage. Noise or low frequency interference concurrent with the pulse, or a response to the pulse, is typically common to the rising edge and the falling edge. Waveform capture circuit 110 can operate on the pulse, or a response to the pulse, to provide pulses of opposite polarity with associated common noise or low frequency interference of the same polarity. Subtraction of the two pulses effectively reduces or eliminates the associated common noise or low frequency interference and can double the dynamic range associated with the rising and falling edges of the pulse.
As shown in
In various embodiments, waveform capture circuit 110 includes sample and hold circuits. The sample and hold circuits can be coupled to an amplifier such that waveform capture circuit 110 is arranged to provide a representation of a rising edge of a pulse and a representation of a falling edge of a pulse. The amplifier can be realized as a virtual earth amplifier.
In various example embodiments, circuit 210 includes an amplifier 212, a sample and hold circuit 214, a sample and hold circuit 216, and a differential analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 218. Amplifier 212 can be realized as a virtual earth amplifier. A virtual earth amplifier 212 can be used as a charge integration amplifier with respect to Y output line 204. Coupling differential ADC 218 to a virtual earth amplifier in circuit 210 to measure charge transfer provides a mechanism to reject low frequency interference during the measurement of the charge transfer associated with matrix touch screen 201.
As shown in
Circuit 210 can operatively perform charge collection on both edges of a pulse generated by X line 202. Charge collection on both edges of a pulse allows a doubling of the dynamic range for charge measurement at the output of the ADC 218. In addition, direct current (DC) offsets in measurement circuit 210 or interference at a frequency substantially lower than the frequency of a signal on X line 202 tend to cause an equal change in both halves of the measurement and can be removed when the differential measurement is taken at ADC 218.
Apparatus 200 can also include a control unit 220 to manage the charge measurement associated with pulses applied to X lines 202 of matrix touch screen 201 such that the measurement using the output of ADC 218 is synchronized. Control unit 220 can be configured to apply pulses to X lines 202. Alternatively, control unit 220 can be arranged to use and control measurement from pulse generation by another drive source.
By operating on the response to the dual edge of a waveform applied to the X input line 202 using the differential ADC 218, low frequencies of noise relative to the frequency of the waveform can be rejected. Using differential ADC 218 and dual edge charge transfer associated with a rising edge and a falling edge of a pulse can provide for low frequency noise rejection in charge measurement from a touch screen. In addition, differential ADC 218 can generate enhanced dynamic resolution to the charge measurement.
A charge measurement can be conducted with a pulse on an X line. Each pulse has a positive and a negative edge. A positive edge will generate a negative signal and a negative edge will generate a positive signal or visa versa, depending on the circuit. Sampling the signal from the positive edge, a signal from the measurement plus some value from low frequency interference is acquired. The signal with respect to the positive edge can be represented by
SP=−M+L,
where M is the measurement and L is from the low frequency interference.
The signal with respect to the negative edge is acquired as
SN=+M+L.
Note that L will be the same for frequencies much slower than the measurement. With SP and SN fed into differential ADC 218, differential ADC 218 provides a measurement with the output of a signal given by
SADC=(+M+L)−(−M+L)=2M.
This ADC measurement can be viewed as being the same as subtracting the two edge-based signals during the conversion. As shown above, the architecture of circuit 210 can provide for the essential elimination of the low frequency noise, common to both edges of the pulse, while doubling the signal measurement.
In various example embodiments, circuit 310 includes an amplifier 311, an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 313, and a digital subtraction unit 315. Amplifier 311 can be realized as a virtual earth amplifier. A virtual earth amplifier 311 can be used as a charge integration amplifier with respect to Y output line 304. In operation, virtual earth amplifier 311 connected to Y line 304 on matrix touch screen 301 operatively collects charge and generates a negative voltage offset in response to a rising signal on X line 302 on matrix touch screen 301. The resulting voltage from virtual earth amplifier 311 can be sent directly to ADC 313. Lowering the signal on the X line then results in a positive offset from virtual earth amplifier 311, which can be sent directly to ADC 313. ADC 313 provides, to digital subtraction unit 315, digital representations of the two voltages received from virtual earth amplifier 311. Digital subtraction unit 315 can be realized in a number of conventional or equivalent formats. Output of digital subtraction unit 315 is used in the measurement of charge transfer associated with a signal driven on X input line 302 capacitively coupled to receive Y line 304 of matrix touch screen 301. Circuit 310 can operatively perform charge collection on both edges of a pulse generated at X line 302 in which digital subtraction provides for low frequency rejection in the charge measurement.
Apparatus 300 can also include a control unit 320 to manage the charge measurement associated with pulses applied to X lines 302 of matrix touch screen 301 such that the measurement using the output of ADC 313 is synchronized. Control unit 320 can be configured to apply pulses to X lines 302. Alternatively, control unit 320 can be arranged to use and control measurement from pulse generation by another drive source.
Circuit 210 of
At 420, a second response is acquired from the output line, where the second response is a signal derived from a falling edge of the waveform. The second response can be acquired from the output line of the matrix touch screen, where the second response includes a capacitively induced signal derived from a falling edge of the pulse applied to the input line of the matrix touch screen.
At 430, the first response and the second response are manipulated to reject noise at frequencies less than a frequency associated with the waveform. Manipulation of the first response and the second response can be applied with respect to a pulse applied to the input line of the matrix touch screen such as to reject noise at frequencies less than a frequency associated with the pulse. Such manipulation can include a subtraction between a digital representation of the first response and a digital representation of the second response. Other manipulations can include applying the first response and the second response to sample and hold circuits and applying outputs from the sample and hold circuits to a differential analog-to-digital converter such that an output of the differential analog-to-digital converter includes a measure of charge associated with the first and second responses. The first response and the second response can be coupled to the sample and hold circuits through a virtual earth amplifier. With the first response corresponding to a rising edge of the pulse and the second response corresponding to a falling edge of the pulse, the virtual earth amplifier outputs a negative pulse and a positive pulse, respectively, to the sample and hold circuits. Noise common to the rising edge and falling edge of the pulse can be removed by applying the outputs of the sample and hold circuits to a differential analog-to-digital converter.
System 500 can be formed in various manners coupling the individual components of system 500 together or integrating the components into one or a number of units using conventional techniques. In various embodiments, system 500 also includes an electronic apparatus 535 and a bus 515. Bus 515 provides electrical conductivity between controller 505 and electronic apparatus 535, between controller 505 and a memory 525, and among the various components coupled to bus 515. In an embodiment, bus 515 includes an address bus, a data bus, and a control bus, each independently configured. In an alternative embodiment, bus 515 uses common conductive lines for providing one or more of address, data, or control, the use of which is regulated by controller 505. In various embodiment, memory 525 can include one or more memory types, such as but not limited to, a DRAM (Dynamic Random Access Memory), SRAM (Static Random Access Memory), flash memories, magnetic memories, other memory formats, and combinations thereof.
In various embodiments, additional peripheral device or devices 545 are coupled to bus 515. Peripheral devices 545 can include displays, imaging devices, printing devices, wireless devices, additional storage memory, control devices that can operate in conjunction with controller 505.
In various embodiments, system 500 includes display device 555 having touch screen 556 and control circuit 555, where control circuit 555 has an analog-to-digital converter configured for charge measurements from operation of the touch screen. Alternatively, control circuit 555 can be integrated with controller 505 or one or more other components of system 500 separate from touch screen 556. System 500 having a display device 555 includes, but is not limited to, fiber optic systems or devices, electro-optic systems or devices, optical systems or devices, imaging systems or devices, and information handling systems or devices such as wireless systems or devices, telecommunication systems or devices, and computers.
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that any arrangement that is calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. Various embodiments use permutations and/or combinations of embodiments described herein. It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive, and that the phraseology or terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description.
This nonprovisional application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/492,856, filed Jun. 26, 2009, and entitled “Apparatus Using a Differential Analog-To-Digital Converter.”
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Child | 13593982 | US |