1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a circuit arrangement and a method for driving segmented LED backlights in particular.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventional displays produce white background illumination either by a cold cathode tube, white light-emitting diodes or by a combination of red, green and blue light-emitting diodes. Because of their fast turn-on time, backlights with light-emitting diodes allow control of the brightness by means of pulse modulation. Such LED backlights will be considered further here.
For a subjective increase of contrast, the LED backlighting of a display is typically subdivided into segments, each with its own driving and thus its own brightness control. The task of determining the brightness is taken on here by a digital video processor. The segments are conventionally driven by means of pulse-modulated signals that are generated independently of one another. This leads to intermodulation interference on the display, which is visible to the observer in the form of stripes.
One object of the present invention is to provide a circuit arrangement and a method with which intermodulation interference on displays with segmented LED backlighting, in particular, can be reduced.
In one embodiment, the circuit arrangement comprises a generator with a first input to be supplied with a synchronizing signal, a second input to be supplied with a data signal and with an output for providing a modulated signal. The synchronizing signal comprises line frequency information of a display unit. Every television and monitor system comprises a first frequency, referred to as the image frequency, for changing the picture, and a second frequency, referred to as the line frequency, for changing the line. The line frequency is synchronous with the image frequency, and is substantially higher. The data signal comprises image information of the display unit. The modulated signal comprises control information for controlling one segment of, for example, the segmented LED backlight.
The generator overlays the synchronizing signal with the data signal and generates the modulated signal at its output.
The modulated signal advantageously follows the clock rate of the synchronizing signal and is therefore synchronous with the line frequency of the display unit. Intermodulation interference is significantly reduced and/or eliminated in this way.
In one refinement, the synchronizing signal comprises image frequency information and line frequency information of the display unit.
In a preferred refinement of the circuit arrangement, the synchronizing signal is supplied via a phase-locked loop.
In one embodiment, a display driving unit comprises the generator and a driver. The driver has an input to be supplied with the modulated signal and an output for providing a control signal. The output of the generator is coupled to the input of the driver.
As a function of the modulated signal, the driver generates the output control signal for an LED segment, particularly of a segmented LED backlight, by supplying current or voltage.
The control signal is advantageously synchronous with the line and/or image frequency of the display unit. Intermodulation noise is thus significantly reduced.
In an advantageous refinement, the display driving unit comprises a second generator and a second driver. The second generator has an input to be supplied with the synchronizing signal, an input to be supplied with a second data signal and an output for providing a second modulated signal. The second data signal comprises image information for driving a second LED segment. The second driver has an input to be supplied with the second modulated signal and an output for providing a second control signal.
The second generator produces the second modulated signal by superimposing the synchronizing signal with the second data signal. By supplying current or voltage as a function of the second modulated signal, the second driver generates the second control signal.
Both the second modulated signal and the second control signal advantageously have the clock rate of the synchronizing signal. The two LED segments are thereby driven synchronously with the line and/or the image frequency of a display. Intermodulation interference is avoided.
In one embodiment, a display unit comprises the display driving unit, a first and second LED segment of a segmented LED backlight and a digital video processor. The digital video processor has one output for providing the synchronizing signal, an additional output for providing the first data signal and a third output for providing the second data signal. The first and second LED segments each comprises a series circuit of several LEDs. The outputs of the digital video processor are coupled to the associated inputs of the generators for the display driving unit. The LED segments are coupled to the outputs of the drivers of the display driving unit.
The digital video processor generates the synchronizing signal, as well as the first and second data signal with image information for driving the first and second LED segments. The display driving unit generates the first and second control signal by modulation of the synchronizing signal with the respective first or second data signal and subsequent supply of current or voltage. The first control signal is supplied to the first LED segment, and the second control signal is supplied to the second LED segment.
The first and the second LED segments are advantageously driven synchronously with one another and synchronously with the line and/or image frequency of the display unit. Intermodulation noise is significantly reduced.
In one embodiment, a method for generating the modulated signal comprises a supply of the synchronizing signal, which has line frequency of a display unit, a supply of the data signal, which has at least image brightness information of a display unit, and the provision of the modulated signal by superimposing the synchronizing signal with the data signal.
The modulated signal advantageously follows the clock rate of the synchronizing signal, and is therefore synchronous with the line frequency of the display unit. Intermodulation interference is thereby avoided.
In another embodiment, the synchronizing signal comprises image frequency information and line frequency information of the display unit.
In an advantageous refinement, a pulse-width modulation is used for superimposing the synchronizing signal with the data signal.
In another advantageous refinement, a sigma-delta modulation is used for superimposing the synchronizing signal with the data signal.
Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the appended claims. It should be further understood that the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale and that, unless otherwise indicated, they are merely intended to conceptually illustrate the structures and procedures described herein.
The invention will be described in detail below for several embodiments with reference to the figures. Components and circuit parts that are functionally identical or have the same effect bear identical reference numbers. Insofar as circuit parts or components correspond to one another in function, they will not be described again in each of the following figures.
Digital video processor 80 provides a synchronizing signal SYNC at its first output 81, and a data signal DATA at its second output 82. Generator 50 provides a modulated signal MOD at its output 30. Driver 70 provides a control signal ST at its output 72. An arrangement consisting of generator 50 and driver 70, which are coupled in the described manner and comprise the described inputs and outputs, is referred to as a display driving unit 100.
At its first output 81, digital processor 80 generates the synchronizing signal SYNC, which has the image frequency and/or the line frequency of a display unit, and at its second output 82, the data signal DATA, which comprises at least image brightness information of a display unit. Generator 50 modulates the synchronizing signal SYNC present at its first input 10 with the data signal DATA present at its second input 20 and provides the modulated signal MOD generated from them at its output 30. As a function of the modulated signal MOD present at its input 71, driver 70 generates the control signal ST at its output 72 by supplying current or voltage. The control signal ST is fed to one segment of a segmented LED backlight, in particular.
Both the modulated signal MOD and the control signal ST are advantageously synchronous with the image and/or line frequency of the display unit. Intermodulation noise can thereby be reduced.
The line signal SYNC1 is supplied via first phase-locked loop 60 to input 11 of programmable counter 51. Programmable counter 51 counts the pulses of line signal SYNC1 and forms a respective counter state. The counter state provided at output 31 of programmable counter 51 is compared in first comparator 53 to the first image information value P. If the counter state has reached the first image information value P, output 32 of first comparator 53 is set to logic state 1. At the same time, programmable counter 51 is reset via the reset input 15. Second comparator 55 compares the counter state of programmable counter 51 with the second image information value M. As long as the counter state is less than the second image information value M, logic state 1 is present at output 30 of second comparator 55. As soon as the second image information value M is reached, output 30 of first comparator 55 goes to logic state 0.
The modulated signal MOD provided at output 30 of second comparator 55 advantageously follows the clock rate of line signal SYNC1. Because the line signal SYNC1 carries line frequency information of a display unit, for example, the modulated signal MOD is synchronized to this line frequency. Intermodulation noise is thereby significantly reduced or disappears completely.
In an alternative embodiment, the circuit of
It is clearly recognizable from
At its output 33, delay element 57 generates the signal S2, which is delayed by the third image information value N for the image signal SYNC2 and follows the clock rate of line signal SYNC1. The delayed signal S2 can reset programmable counter 51 via OR-gate 58. Programmable counter 51 can also be reset by the logic state 1 at output 32 of first comparator 53. Programmable counter 51 begins to count with the first pulse of delayed signal S2 and forms a respective counter state. As long as the counter state is less than the second image information value M, the modulated signal MOD remains at logic state 1. As soon as the counter state has reached the second image information value M, the modulated signal goes to logic state 0. The first image information value P can have values greater than the third image information value N, or values less than the third image information value N. Depending on the choice of the first image information value P, programmable counter 51 is reset either via the delayed signal S2, or via the pulse generated at output 32 of first comparator 53 when the counter state P is reached.
The modulated signal MOD is advantageously synchronous with the line signal SYNC1 and the image signal SYNC2, i.e., the image and line frequency of a display unit. Intermodulation noise is thereby significantly reduced or avoided.
In an alternative embodiment of the circuit from
At a respective starting time T0′, the delayed signal S2 transmits the pulse delayed relative to the image signal SYNC2 by the third image information value N. As is evident in the fourth line, programmable counter 51 is started at the starting time T0′. The modulated signal MOD thereby assumes the logic state 1. At a first time T1′, the counter state has reached the second image information value M and the modulated signal MOD goes to logic state 0. At a second time T2′, programmable counter 51 is restarted via the pulse of the delayed signal S2. As is evident in the fifth line, programmable counter 51 is likewise started at the starting time T0′ by the pulse of the delayed signal S2. The modulated signal MOD assumes the logic state 1. When the counter state has reached the second image information value M at a first intermediate time T1″, the modulated signal goes to logic state 0. At a second intermediate time T2″, the counter state has reached the first image information value P. This generates the reset pulse at input 15 of programmable counter 51. The process between the starting time T0′ and the second intermediate time T2″ repeats periodically up to a third time T3. At the third time T3 an additional pulse of the delayed signal S2 appears. This resets programmable counter 51, whereby the modulated signal MOD assumes the logic state 1.
From
By means of sigma-delta modulation of the brightness signal DATA2, the present circuit generates the modulated signal MOD, which is synchronized to the clock of the line signal SYNC1, at output 30 of adder 63. The mean value of the modulated signal MOD corresponds to the mean value of the brightness signal DATA2.
The modulated signal MOD is advantageously synchronous with the line signal SYNC1, which comprises line frequency information, for example. Intermodulation noise is thereby significantly reduced.
Alternatively, the present circuit can also be constructed without first phase-locked loop 60. The line signal SYNC1 is then supplied directly to clock input 8 of flip-flop chain 62.
It is clearly recognizable from
At its output 81′, digital video processor 80 generates the line signal SYNC1, which comprises line frequency information of display unit 102. At its output 81″, digital video processor 80 generates the image signal SYNC2, which comprises image frequency information of display unit 102. At its output 82″, digital video processor 80 generates the first data signal DATA_A, which comprises the first image information value P, the second image information value M and the third image information value N. At its output 82″, digital video processor 80 generates the second data signal DATA_B, which comprises the first image information value P, the second image information value M and the third image information value N. Digital video processor 80 additionally generates all signals that are necessary for the representation of an image on a display. Via a serial interface, first generator 64 reads image information values P, M and N present at its input 20′. By modulation of the first data signal DATA_A with the line signal SYNC1 and the image signal SYNC2, first generator 64 generates the first modulated signal MOD1 at its output. The first modulated signal MOD1 controls the first switch of the first LED-segment 93, which is operated by first current source 91. Via a serial interface, second generator 65 reads image information values P, M and N supplied via the second data signal DATA_B. By modulation of the line signal SYNC1 and the image signal SYNC2 with the first data signal DATA_B, second generator 65 generates the second modulated signal MOD2 at its output. The second modulated signal MOD2 controls the second switch of first LED-segment 94, which is operated by second current source 92.
Both the first modulated signal MOD1 and the second modulated signal MOD2 are advantageously synchronous with the line signal SYNC1 and the image signal SYNC2. Intermodulation noise is avoided by virtue of the fact that the driving of first LED segment 93 and second LED segment 92 are synchronized both among one another, as well as to the line frequency and the image frequency.
As described in
All LED segments are driven synchronously by the synchronous derivation of all control signals from the line frequency and the image frequency of display unit 102. Intermodulation noise is thus avoided.
The scope of protection of the invention is not limited to the examples given hereinabove. The invention is embodied in each novel characteristic and each combination of characteristics, which includes every combination of any features which are stated in the claims, even if this feature or combination of features is not explicitly stated in the examples.
The synchronization signal comprises image frequency information or a multiple integer thereof. The image frequency multiplied with the number of lines forming the display is known as the line frequency. Therefore, the line frequency information referred to below is also denoted a multiple integer of the image frequency information.
Thus, while there have shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements and/or method steps which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements and/or method steps shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 033 471 | Jul 2007 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/669,752 which was filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Jun. 17, 2010 as a National Stage of PCT/EP2008/059023 filed on Jul. 10, 2008, and which claims priority from a German application filed on Jul. 18, 2007, No. 10 2007 033 471.2, the contents of which are incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12669752 | US | |
Child | 13559999 | US |