This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(a) from Korean Patent Application No. 10-2007-0107818, filed on Oct. 25, 2007, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present general inventive concept relates to a buffer amplifier and a method of generating driving voltages using the same and, more particularly, to a buffer amplifier included in a display driver and a method of generating a driving voltage using the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
As a gradation representation performance of a display system is improved, a display driver of the display system must apply a precise driving voltage to a display panel. That is, the display driver must generate a more accurate driving voltage as a number of gray scales increases.
The decoders DEC1, DEC2, DEC3, . . . respectively convert display data signals D1, D2, D3, . . . into gradation voltages V1, V2, V3, . . . . The buffers BUF1, BUF2, BUF3, . . . respectively buffer the gradation voltages V1, V2, V3, . . . to generate driving voltages Vo1, Vo2, Vo3, . . . . The driving voltages Vo1, Vo2, Vo3, . . . are respectively applied to the source lines S_l, S_2, S_3, . . . .
For example, the display data D1 is converted into the gradation voltage V1 by the decoder DEC1, the gradation voltage V1 is buffered by the buffer BUF1, and the driving voltage Vo1 generated according to a buffering operation of the buffer BUF1 is applied to the source line S_1. The buffer BUF1 has a respective offset characteristic thereof, and thus a deviation exists between an output voltage (that is, the driving voltage Vo1) and an input voltage (that is, the gradation voltage V1) of the buffer BUF1. That is, the output voltage (that is, the driving voltage Vo1) of the buffer BUF1 includes a positive deviation or a negative deviation. Furthermore, the buffers BUF2 and BUF3 have respective offset characteristics thereof and the driving voltages Vo2 and Vo3 generated by the buffers BUF2 and BUF3 include a positive deviation or a negative deviation.
Moreover, the buffers BUF1, BUF2, BUF3, . . . have different offset characteristics, and thus the buffers BUF1, BUF2, BUF3, . . . have different deviation polarities and deviation sizes. Accordingly, the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2, Vo3, . . . respectively generated by the buffers BUF1, BUF2, BUF3, . . . have different levels even though a same gradation voltage is applied to the buffers BUF1, BUF2, BUF3, . . . . Furthermore, when the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2, Vo3, . . . are generated with a large dispersion range of deviations, display quality and gradation representation performance of the display device decrease.
The present general inventive concept provides a method of generating a plurality of driving voltages such that all the driving voltages have a positive deviation or a negative deviation to reduce a dispersion range of deviations by approximately half and a buffer amplifier implementing the method.
The present general inventive concept also provides a driver device in which a dispersion range of deviations of a plurality of driving voltages can be reduced by approximately half when a display driver generates the plurality of driving voltages. That is, the display driver generates the driving voltages such that the dispersion ranges of deviations included in the driving voltages can be decreased by approximately half.
Additional aspects and utilities of the present general inventive concept will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the general inventive concept.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may be achieved by providing a method of generating a driving voltage, the method including inputting a test gradation voltage to a first input terminal and a second input terminal of a buffer, latching the logic level of a test driving voltage output from an output terminal of the buffer, setting the buffer to a first type when the logic level of the test driving voltage is high and setting the buffer to a second type when the logic level of the test driving voltage is low, and operating the buffer set to the first type or the second type to generate a driving voltage corresponding to a gradation voltage.
The buffer may be set to the first type in such a manner that the second input terminal of the buffer is connected to the output terminal of the buffer and a high-level chopping signal is input to a chopping terminal of the buffer. The gradation voltage is input to the first input terminal of the buffer and the driving voltage is output from the output terminal of the buffer when the buffer is set to the first type.
The buffer may be set to the second type in such a manner that the first input terminal of the buffer is connected to the output terminal of the buffer and a low-level chopping signal is input to the chopping terminal of the buffer. The gradation voltage is input to the second input terminal of the buffer and the driving voltage is output from the output terminal of the buffer when the buffer is set to the second type.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a buffer amplifier including a buffer including a first input terminal, a second input terminal, a chopping terminal and an output terminal, a first type first switch to transfer a gradation voltage to the first input terminal, a first type second switch to connect the second input terminal to the output terminal, a second type first switch to transfer the gradation voltage to the second input terminal, a second type second switch to connect the first input terminal to the output terminal, a test switch to transfer a test gradation voltage to the first input terminal and the second input terminal, and a chopping signal latch to latch the logic level of a test driving voltage output from the output terminal when the test switch is on.
In a test operation, the first type first switch, the first type second switch, the second type first switch and the second type second switch are off, the test switch is on, and the chopping signal latch latches the logic level of the test driving voltage.
The buffer amplifier may perform a first type operation or a second type operation in response to the logic level of a chopping signal output from the chopping signal latch in a buffering operation.
When the buffer amplifier performs the first type operation, the test switch, the second type first switch and the second type second switch are off, the first type first switch and the first type second switch are on, the gradation voltage is input to the first input terminal, and a driving voltage corresponding to the gradation voltage is output from the output terminal. That is, the first type first switch and the first type second switch are on in response to a high-level chopping signal and the high-level chopping signal may be input to the chopping terminal when the buffer amplifier performs the first type operation.
When the buffer amplifier performs the second type operation, the test switch, the first type first switch and the first type second switch are off, the second type first switch and the second type second switch are on, the gradation voltage is input to the second input terminal, and the driving voltage corresponding to the gradation voltage is output from the output terminal. That is, the second type first switch and the second type second switch are on in response to a low-level chopping signal and the low-level chopping signal may be input to the chopping terminal when the buffer amplifier performs the second type operation.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a method of generating a plurality of driving voltages respectively corresponding to a plurality of gradation voltages using a plurality of buffers and a plurality of chopping signal latches, the method including inputting a test gradation voltage to first input terminals and second input terminals of the buffers and latching the logic levels of test driving voltages respectively output from output terminals of the buffers on the chopping signal latches, setting buffers outputting a high-level test driving voltage from among the plurality of buffers to a first type and setting buffers outputting a low-level test driving voltage from among the plurality of buffers to a second type, and respectively inputting the plurality of gradation voltages to the buffers set to the first type or the second type to generate the plurality of driving voltages.
In the buffers set to the first type from among the plurality of buffers, high-level chopping signals may be respectively output from the chopping signal latches respectively corresponding to the buffers may be respectively input to chopping terminals of the buffers, the output terminals of the buffers are connected to the second input terminals of the buffers, corresponding gradation voltages may be respectively input to the first input terminals of the buffers, and corresponding driving voltages may be respectively output from the output terminals of the buffers.
In the buffers set to the second type from among the plurality of buffers, low-level chopping signals may be respectively output from the chopping signal latches respectively corresponding to the buffers may be respectively input to chopping terminals of the buffers, the output terminals of the buffers are connected to the first input terminals of the buffers, corresponding gradation voltages may be respectively input to the second input terminals of the buffers, and corresponding driving voltages may be respectively output from the output terminals of the buffers.
The plurality of buffers and the plurality of chopping signal latches may be included in a display driver, and the display driver may receive the plurality of gradation voltages, generate the plurality of driving voltages and output the plurality of driving voltages to a display panel. The display driver may include N buffers and N chopping signal latches when the display panel includes N data lines. In the present embodiment, N is an integer.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a driving device usable with a display panel, the driving device including a plurality of buffers to receive input voltages and to output driving voltages, respectively, each of the buffers having a positive or negative deviation corresponding to a difference between the respective input voltage and the driving voltage, and a plurality of latches to set operation type of each of the buffers such that all of the buffers have positive deviation or all of the buffers have negative deviation to reduce a dispersion range of the deviations.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a method of generating a plurality of driving voltages from a plurality of input voltages by using a plurality of buffers, the method including determining whether each of the buffers has a positive deviation or a negative deviation, setting buffers having a positive deviation to a first type and setting buffers having a negative deviation to a second type, and generating the plurality of driving voltages from the plurality of input voltages by using the plurality of buffers set to the first type or the second type, wherein all of the driving voltages respectively have positive deviation from corresponding input voltage, or all of the driving voltages respectively have negative deviation from corresponding input voltage.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and utilities of the general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a computer-readable recording medium having embodied thereon a computer program to execute a method of generating a plurality of driving voltages from a plurality of input voltages by using a plurality of buffers, wherein the method including determining whether each of the buffers has a positive deviation or a negative deviation, setting buffers having a positive deviation to a first type and setting buffers having a negative deviation to a second type, and generating the plurality of driving voltages from the plurality of input voltages by using the plurality of buffers set to the first type or the second type, wherein all of the driving voltages respectively have positive deviation from corresponding input voltage, or all of the driving voltages respectively have negative deviation from corresponding input voltage.
The above and other features and utilities of the present general inventive concept will become more apparent by describing in detail exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the attached drawings in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the present general inventive concept, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present general inventive concept by referring to the figures.
Referring to
In
Specifically, the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2 and Vo4 having the positive deviation +Dev are generated and output as is, and the driving voltages Vo3 and Vo5 having the negative deviation −Dev are generated and the negative deviation −Dev is inverted, as illustrated in
Otherwise, the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2 and Vo4 having the positive deviation +Dev are generated and the positive deviation +Dev is inverted, and the driving voltages Vo3 and Vo5 having the negative deviation −Dev are generated and output as is, as illustrated in
As described above, the dispersion range of deviations can be decreased by approximately half when deviation polarities are standardized although deviation sizes are not reduced. To achieve this, a buffer amplifier to invert a deviation polarity is required. The buffer amplifier illustrated with reference to
The buffer amplifier illustrated in
The buffer BUF1 includes a first input terminal T1, a second input terminal T2, a chopping terminal receiving a chopping signal CHP, an inverted chopping terminal receiving an inverted chopping signal CHPB, a first power terminal receiving the first power supply voltage VDD, a second power terminal receiving the second power supply voltage VSS, and an output terminal to output a test driving voltage Vot1 or a driving voltage Vo1. The first type first switch SW11 transfers a gradation voltage V1 to the first input terminal T1 of the buffer BUF1. The first type second switch SW12 connects the second input terminal T2 and the output terminal of the buffer BUF1. The second type first switch SW21 transfers the gradation voltage V1 to the second input terminal T2 of the buffer BUF1. The second type second switch SW22 connects the first input terminal T1 and the output terminal of the buffer BUF1. The test switch SW31 transfers a test gradation voltage Vtest to the first input terminal T1 and the second input terminal T2 of the buffer BUF1.
The chopping signal latch L1 latches the logic level of the test driving voltage Vot1 output from the output terminal of the buffer BUF1 when the test switch SW31 and the latch switch SW32 are on. The chopping signal latch L1 includes a first inverter INV1 and a second inverter INV2. The chopping signal CHP is output from the first inverter INV1 and the inverted chopping signal CHPB is output from the second inverter INV2 in
The operation of the buffer amplifier illustrated in
The test operation of the buffer amplifier will now be explained with reference to
If the buffer BUF1 has offset characteristic that induces a positive deviation +Dev, the output terminal of the buffer BUF1 outputs the first power supply voltage VDD as the test driving voltage Vot1 in terms of a saturation characteristic of a comparator operation. In this case, the test driving voltage Vot1 has a logic high level, and thus the chopping signal latch L1 latching the logic level of the test driving signal Vot1 outputs the chopping signal CHP having a logic high level. If the buffer BUF1 has an offset characteristic that induces a negative deviation −Dev, the output terminal of the buffer BUF1 outputs the second power supply voltage VSS as the test driving voltage Vot1 in terms of the saturation characteristic of the comparator operation. In this case, the test driving voltage Vot1 has a logic low level, and thus the chopping signal latch L1 latching the logic level of the test driving signal Vot1 outputs the chopping signal CHP having a logic low level.
The buffering operation of the buffer amplifier will now be explained with reference to
When the test driving voltage Vot1 having a logic low level is output as a test operation result, the buffer amplifier is set to a second type in response to the chopping signal CHP having a logic low level in the buffering operation. That is, the first input terminal T1 of the buffer BUF1 is connected to the output terminal of the buffer BUF1 and the low-level chopping signal CHP is input to the chopping terminal of the buffer BUF1, as illustrated in
If the buffer amplifier is set to the first type even though the test driving voltage Vot1 having a logic low level is output as a test operation result, that is, if the test switch SW31, the second type first switch SW21 and the second type second switch SW22 are off, the first type first switch SW11 and the first type second switch SW12 are on, and the high-level chopping signal CHP is input to the chopping terminal of the buffer BUF1, the driving voltage Vo1 output from the output terminal of the buffer BUF1 has a negative deviation −Dev.
Referring to
In consideration of the result of the test operation illustrated in
Referring to
A buffering operation illustrated in
The buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4 respectively buffer the gradation voltages V1, V2 and V4 in response to a high-level chopping signal CHP in the first type operation and generate the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2 and Vo4. In this case, high-level chopping signals CHP respectively output from the chopping signal latches L1, L2 and L4 respectively corresponding to the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4 are respectively applied to the chopping terminals of the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4. The output terminals of the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4 are respectively connected to the second input terminals T2 of the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4. The gradation voltages V1, V2 and V4 are respectively input to the first input terminals T1 of the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4 and the driving voltages Vo1, Vo2 and Vo4 are respectively output from the output terminals of the buffers BUF1, BUF2 and BUF4.
The buffers BUF3 and BUF5 respectively buffer the gradation voltages V3 and V5 in response to a low-level chopping signal CHP in the second type operation and generate the driving voltages Vo3 and Vo5. In this case, low-level chopping signals CHP respectively output from the chopping signal latches L3 and L5 respectively corresponding to the buffers BUF3 and BUF5 are respectively applied to the chopping terminals of the buffers BUF3 and BUF5. The output terminals of the buffers BUF3 and BUF5 are respectively connected to the first input terminals T1 of the buffers BUF3 and BUF5. The gradation voltages V3 and V5 are respectively input to the second input terminals T2 of the buffers BUF3 and BUF5 and the driving voltages Vo3 and Vo5 are respectively output from the output terminals of the buffers BUF3 and BUF5.
As illustrated in
If the source driver 110 illustrated in
If 16 buffer amplifiers illustrated in
The present general inventive concept can also be embodied as computer-readable codes on a computer-readable medium. The computer-readable medium can include a computer-readable recording medium and a computer-readable transmission medium. The computer-readable recording medium is any data storage device that can store data that can be thereafter read by a computer system. Examples of the computer-readable recording medium include read-only memory (ROM), random-access memory (RAM), CD-ROMs, magnetic tapes, floppy disks, and optical data storage devices. The computer-readable recording medium can also be distributed over network coupled computer systems so that the computer-readable code is stored and executed in a distributed fashion. The computer-readable transmission medium can transmit carrier waves or signals (e.g., wired or wireless data transmission through the Internet). Also, functional programs, codes, and code segments to accomplish the present general inventive concept can be easily construed by programmers skilled in the art to which the present general inventive concept pertains.
While the present general inventive concept has been particularly illustrated and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present general inventive concept as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2007-0107818 | Oct 2007 | KR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20030146923 | Nakahira et al. | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20060017680 | Chen et al. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
20060290619 | Lee et al. | Dec 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2001343948 | Dec 2001 | JP |
2005316188 | Nov 2005 | JP |
20030014750 | Feb 2003 | KR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090109198 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |