1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a charge recycling system and a charge recycling method thereof, and more particularly, to a charge recycling system implemented in a liquid crystal display (LCD) and a charge recycling method thereof.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A conventional LCD comprises a plurality of thin film transistors (TFTs) arranged in a matrix, wherein sources of the TFTs in the same row are connected to the same source line, and through the source line, charges are stored in the capacitors (storage capacitor, parasitic capacitor and capacitor of LCD) coupled to the sources determining voltage levels of the TFTs. TFTs in each column are controlled by a gate line to be conducted in sequence. When the TFT is conducted, a corresponding LCD cell displays luminance according to the voltage level of the TFT; therefore, pictures having different colors can be shown on the LCD after the LCD cells are filtered by RGB filters.
However, charge utilization efficiency is a general problem that LCDs driven by the above driving method need to solve. Charges stored in the capacitors vanish through discharging routes naturally after the display of the TFTs are complete, and these insufficiently utilized charges make the power consumption problem of the LCD more serious.
One objective of the present invention is to therefore provide a charge recycling system that raises utilization efficiency of charges of an LCD and lowers power consumed by the LCD by recycling charge that is not used in the LCD, and a charge recycling method thereof.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a charge recycling system is disclosed. The charge recycling system comprises a controller and at least one switch module. The controller, coupled to at least one source line of an LCD, outputs at least one first control signal when driving signals of a gate line and the source line of the LCD are both disabled. The switch module is coupled to the controller and the source line, and is for coupling the source line to a voltage supply of at least one first driving circuit of the LCD according to the first control signal.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a charge recycling method is disclosed. The charge recycling method comprises outputting at least one first control signal when driving signals of a gate line and a source line of an LCD are both disabled, and coupling the source line to a voltage supply of at least one first driving circuit of the LCD according to the first control signal.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
In one embodiment, the computing unit 114 determines whether a cross voltage of the parasitic capacitor Cp in the LCD cell 140 (i.e. the difference between the voltage level Vsource of the LCD cell 140 and a common voltage level Vcom) is larger than a threshold TH, and outputs a first control signal S1 to the switch module 120 when the difference is larger than the threshold TH. The first control signal S1 is utilized to control the switch module 120 to couple the source line to a voltage supply (not shown) of a first driving circuit 150 of the LCD. Therefore, the threshold TH corresponds to the supply voltage of the first driving circuit 150. For example, when a voltage supply of the first driving circuit 150 is an outer voltage supply (VCI), the threshold can be chosen as the voltage level of VCI. In this way, when the difference between the voltage level Vsource and the common voltage level Vcom is larger than the voltage level of VCI, the switch module 120 couples the source line (i.e. a terminal of the parasitic capacitor Cp) to a storage circuit or a storage element such as a regulating capacitor of the outer voltage supply. Then, the parasitic capacitor Cp charges the regulating capacitor of the outer voltage supply, and charges stored in the parasitic capacitor Cp are recycled to the regulating capacitor. Hence, charging time required for the outer voltage supply to generate a voltage level supplied to the inner circuits of the LCD (for example, a source driving circuit or a gate driving circuit of the LCD) can be shortened and the power consumed can be reduced because the regulating capacitor has already been partly charged. Although the threshold TH is chosen to be the supply voltage level of the first driving circuit 150 in this embodiment, the threshold TH can be adjusted according to system requirements.
Moreover, when the first driving circuit 150 is a source driving circuit, one of the voltage supplies of the first driving circuit 150 is a DDVDH driving circuit that provides DDVDH that is two times of VCI, exceeding the possible maximum difference between the voltage level Vsource and the common voltage level Vcom. In this situation, the controller 110 further controls a common voltage driving circuit 160 to change the common voltage level Vcom when outputting the first control signal S1. For example, the common voltage level Vcom is boosted by a VCI momentarily when the first control signal S1 is outputted, causing the voltage level Vsource to boost by a VCI and momentarily be higher than DDVDH. By doing this, the parasitic capacitor Cp can charge the regulating capacitor of the source driving circuit and recycle the charges stored in the parasitic capacitor Cp to the regulating capacitor.
At the same time when the controller 110 outputs the first control signal S1 to the switch module 120, the first control signal S1 is sent to the protection circuit 130 by the controller 110 to selectively turn off at least part of circuit elements of the first driving circuit 150. The objective of turning off at least part of circuit elements of the first driving circuit 150 is to ensure that the charges stored in the parasitic capacitor Cp will be recycled to the storage circuit or storage element of the voltage supply of the first driving circuit, instead of flowing through unexpected paths and affecting operations of the first driving circuit 150 or other circuits. In addition, this can save power as well. In one preferred embodiment, all active elements (such as transistors or amplifiers) of the first driving circuit 150 are disabled when charges are recycled. Note that the implementation of the protection circuit 130 is not limited in this invention. The protection circuit 130 can be a switch circuit composed of transistors, or any other known switch circuits able to selectively turn other circuits on and off. The protection circuit 130 and the switch module 120 are both driven by the first control signal S1, meaning that the protection circuit 130 and the switch module 120 are enabled only when the charge recycling mechanism is active. When the charge recycling mechanism is complete, the protection circuit 130 and the switch module 120 return to their original states, turning on the part elements of the first driving circuit 150 which were turned off during charge recycling, and uncoupling the source line from the first driving circuit 150 to return the LCD to its normal operating process.
In the embodiment shown in
The common voltage driving circuit 260 is coupled to a plurality of LCD cells and provides the common voltage level VCOM. As mentioned above, the common voltage level VCOM can be appropriately adjusted to accomplish the charge recycling. For example, the common voltage level VCOM can be boosted or lowered according to system design to accomplish the recycling of positive charges or negative charges, respectively. Since a person skilled in the art can easily appreciate the adjusting mechanism of the common voltage level VCOM after reading above disclosure, detailed description is omitted here for brevity.
For clarity, the above embodiments only take one LCD cell 140 (240) as an example to explain the operation of the charge recycling system 100 (200). In fact, the charge recycling system 100 (200) recycles charges stored in a plurality of LCD cells coupled to the source line. Please refer to
In the above embodiments, each source line is coupled to a charge recycling system. However, if the size or cost of LCD is restricted, these charge recycling systems may not be so suitable. A modified charge recycling system based on the charge recycling system 100 and 200 has a plurality of source lines utilizing a single (common) controller, but couples each source line to a switch module which is utilized to couple the source line to the first driving circuit or the second driving circuit. The clock detecting unit detects the gate lines and the source lines and outputs a charge recycling enabling signal when driving signals of a gate line and source lines are disabled. However, the computing unit computes an average voltage level of the source lines, and determines whether a difference between the average voltage level and the common voltage level is larger than a threshold when receiving the charge recycling enabling signal. When the difference is larger than the threshold, the first control signal or the second control signal is outputted to the first switch or the second switch of each switch module to couple the source lines to the first driving circuit or the second driving circuit. In this way, size, complexity and cost of the charge recycling system are significantly reduced while the charge utilization efficiency of LCD is still increased.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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096118858 | May 2007 | TW | national |