1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a control apparatus of a low-cost multi-frequency cathode ray tube (CRT) display such as a computer monitor and, more specifically, to a control circuit of the high voltage power supply of the CRT.
2. State of the Art
The tube of a CRT display typically comprises a screen biased at the anode voltage of the tube. The cathode of the tube is provided for emitting a video-modulated beam of electrons toward the screen. Horizontal and vertical deflection yokes deflect the electron beam so that it sweeps a predetermined area of the screen. The video modulation of the intensity of the electron beam during the sweeping of the screen enables displaying a picture on the screen.
The horizontal deflection yoke 8 of the display is connected to a yoke control unit comprising a diode 12, a switch 14 and capacitors 16 and 18. The cathode of diode 12 is connected to a first end of the yoke 8. The anode of diode 12 is connected to a ground or common reference voltage. Switch 14 and capacitor 16 are connected in parallel with the diode 12. The second end of yoke 8 is connected to the ground through capacitor 18. The first end of yoke 8 is connected through an inductor 20 to a power supply 21. Power supply 21 comprises a controlled current source 22 delivering an average supply current Is. A capacitor 23 is connected in parallel with current source 22. Current source 22 is a known step up current mode source.
Inductor 20 forms the primary coil of a low/high transformer 24 of an anode biasing unit. A high turn count secondary coil 28 of transformer 24 has a first end connected to the ground and a second end connected to the anode of a diode 30. The cathode of diode 30 is connected through a low pass filter 32 to the anode 4 of the display. Low pass filter 32 is illustrated as comprising a resistor 34, corresponding to the resistance of the coil 28, connected in series with diode 30, and a capacitor 36 connected between the anode 4 and the ground.
A sensing coil 37 of transformer 24, comprising a low number of turns compared to coil 28, has one end connected to the ground and one end connected to a control circuit 38. The control circuit 38 comprises a feedback block 39 and may comprise other blocks that are not illustrated. Feedback block 39 comprises a rectifying diode 40, a filtering capacitor 42, a voltage divider and an amplifier. The anode of diode 40 is connected to sensing coil 37. The cathode of diode 40 is connected to the ground through capacitor 42. The voltage divider is comprised of two resistors 44, 46 connected in series between the cathode of diode 40 and the ground. The amplifier comprises an operational amplifier 48 having its inverting input connected to the node between resistors 44 and 46 and its non-inverting input connected to a reference voltage Vref. A capacitor 49 is connected between the inverting input and the output of amplifier 48 in a known manner for stability purposes. The output of amplifier 48 controls the current source 22. While most often the current source 22 works in a switched mode, the important point is that the average of the current it supplies is controlled by the output voltage of amplifier 48.
For sweeping a line of the screen, switch 14 is alternatively opened and closed to make the current in yoke 8 increase at a predetermined speed from a predetermined negative maxima to a predetermined positive maxima, then to make the current in yoke 8 return fast to the predetermined negative maxima (current flyback). This causes the electron beam to sweep a line of the screen and then return fast to an appropriate position for sweeping the next line. The vertical deflection yoke (not illustrated) is controlled to move the beam vertically to the next line during flyback.
A voltage peak appears across inductor 20 during flyback. A corresponding high voltage peak appears across coil 28, which is rectified through diode 30 and smoothed by filter 32 with a time constant which may be equivalent to the display time of several pictures, i.e. generally more than 10 ms, so as to obtain a substantially constant high D.C. biasing voltage Vb.
The amplifier 48 of the feedback block 39 receives a monitoring voltage Vm substantially proportional to the biasing voltage Vb, and regulates the supply current Is so that voltage Vm remains equal to the reference voltage Vref. This keeps the supply voltage Vs substantially constant, whereby the current maximum in coil 8 and the biasing voltage Vb remain substantially constant. The feedback block 39 performs as an integrator because of the capacitor 49.
The above control apparatus is known to be prone to a problem often referred to as “dynamic breathing” of the screen. The dynamic breathing corresponds to a variation of the length of lines of the screen when a sharp change of the brightness of an image being displayed on the screen occurs.
A need exists for a control apparatus that provides for the functionalities of the above control apparatus while suppressing the dynamic breathing of the screen.
A contribution of the inventor has been to identify the causes of the dynamic breathing. Displaying a bright area below a dark area on the screen results in significant extra power being drawn by the display from the secondary coil of the transformer. This significant extra power is not compensated immediately by the feedback block since the feedback loop has a response delay, whereby the extra power is immediately drawn from the primary coil of the transformer, which reduces the power supplied to the horizontal deviation yoke and reduces the width of the lines displayed. Similarly, displaying a dark area below a bright area results in increasing the width of the lines displayed. In a known manner, the change in the power drawn by the display follows a change of the current flowing through the cathode of the display. It is only after a while that the power supply will provide the new power level required by the displayed image, thus restoring the normal line width.
An aspect of the invention is that a measure of the cathode current is used to generate a compensation voltage that is added in a regular feedback loop.
Accordingly, the present invention relates to a control circuit of a power supply delivering a supply current to an inductor connected in series with the horizontal deflection yoke of a CRT display for displaying pictures comprised of successive lines, said inductor also being the primary coil of a low/high transformer operatively connected for delivering a rectified low-pass filtered biasing voltage to the anode of the display, said low-pass filtering having a first time constant corresponding to the display time of a plurality of pictures.
In particular, said control circuit comprises a feedback block generating a monitoring voltage substantially proportional to the biasing voltage of the anode and controlling the supply current so as to keep the monitoring voltage equal to a reference voltage; and a feedforward block for measuring the cathode current supplied to the cathode of the display tube and for adding to the monitoring voltage a compensation voltage corresponding to the cathode current, low-pass filtered with a second time constant corresponding to the display time of a small number of lines and high-pass filtered with said first time constant.
The features and advantages of the present invention can be more readily understood with reference to the following description and appended claims when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
According to the invention, the control circuit 38 comprises, in addition to the elements disclosed in connection with
According to a first embodiment of the invention, unit 52 is comprised of a driving transistor 64 having its emitter connected to the cathode 6, its collector connected to the ground through a sensing resistor 66, and its base operatively connected to receive a video signal. A capacitor 68 is connected in parallel with resistor 66. A buffer 70 is preferably connected between the collector of transistor 64 and the output of unit 52.
The buffer 70 of the feedforward block delivers to filter 62 a voltage Vc corresponding to the cathode current flowing through resistor 66, filtered by the parallel connection of resistor 66 and capacitor 68. Preferably, the low-pass filter 66–68 is chosen to introduce a time constant of a few lines, i.e. 0.1 ms, so as to smooth the cathode signal.
In filter 62, capacitor 54 and resistor 58 are chosen so as to filter the voltage signal Vc provided by buffer 70 with a time constant RC substantially equal to the time constant of filter 32 so as not to take into account slow variations of the smoothed cathode signal and to give the filtered voltage an appropriate time constant, as explained below. The voltage supplied by filter 62 through the coupling capacitor is integrated by the amplifier 48, configured as an integrator by capacitor 49. Resistor 60 provides for tuning the compensation voltage.
The successive display of a dark zone and a bright zone on the screen corresponds to a step increase of the cathode current supplied to cathode 6, which corresponds to a step increase ΔV of the voltage across resistor 66. In response to the step increase ΔV, filter 62 delivers a filtered compensation voltage Vf=ΔV.e(−t/RC), which after integration gives a correction voltage Vcor proportional to ΔV.RC.(1−e(−t/RC)). The inventor has shown that such a correction voltage, added to the usual control voltage provided by the feedback block, compensates the step increase of the cathode current. A reciprocal correction is caused when a dark zone is displayed after a bright zone on the screen.
Initially, voltage V66 corresponds to the display of a dark picture and remains at a low value, while comprising voltage peaks shorter than the display time of a small number of lines. The variations of voltage Vc corresponds to the variations of current Icat, smoothed by filter 66, 68. As long as Vc is constant, Vf remains null. The variations of voltage Vc, slow, are suppressed by filter 62 and voltage Vf is constant. Correction voltage Vcor is constant.
At a time to, voltage V66 follows a step increase ΔV corresponding to the display of a plurality of bright lines. Since the step increase lasts longer than a small number of lines, voltage Vc follows a same step increase ΔV. The influence of filter 66, 68 is hardly visible at this scale. As described above, in response to step increase ΔV of voltage Vc, filter 62 delivers filtered voltage Vf=ΔV.e(−t/RC) and integrator 48 delivers, in addition to the usual control voltage provided by the feedback block, the correction voltage Vcor proportional to ΔV.RC.(1−e(−t/RC)).
At a time t1 is illustrated a reciprocal correction corresponding to a step reduction of voltage V66, when a dark zone is displayed above a bright zone.
Due to the control circuit according to the invention, the transformer delivers to the horizontal deviation yoke of the display a substantially constant power through its primary coil, while the power delivered to the biasing unit follows the variations of the cathode current, thereby eliminating dynamic breathing.
Accordingly, unit 52′ comprises a voltage divider, comprised of two resistors 72, 74 connected in series between the cathode 6 of the display 2 and the ground. The output of the voltage divider is connected through a filter capacitor 68 to the ground and through a buffer 70 to the output of unit 52′. In addition, the output of the voltage divider is connected to the anode of a diode 76 through a resistor 78. The cathode of diode 76 is connected to a predetermined threshold voltage Vt.
As long as the cathode voltage is smaller than a predetermined voltage depending on the dividing ratio of the voltage divider and of threshold voltage source Vt, voltage Vc delivered by unit 52′ follows the variations of the cathode voltage along a first slope depending on the dividing ratio of the voltage divider.
When the cathode voltage is greater than the predetermined voltage, voltage Vc follows the variations of the cathode voltage along a second slope depending on the dividing ratio of the voltage divider modified by the parallel connection of resistor 78.
In the exemplary embodiments, the display as illustrated has a general configuration of a monochrome display with only one cathode. Those skilled in the art, however, will appreciate that the number of cathode may vary without departing from the spirit of the present invention and that the words “cathode current” must in that case be understood as actually designating the sum of the currents flowing through each of the cathodes of the display.
In the case of a color monitor (not illustrated) comprising two additional cathodes, the unit 52′ of
Also, in view of the above, one skilled in the art will easily adapt the structure of the unit 52 of
For clarity's sake, unit 52′ has been illustrated as being connected directly to cathode 6. Actually, the video unit (not illustrated) driving cathode 6 is often connected to the cathode 6 through a clamping unit comprising a series capacitor, in which case unit 52′ will preferably be connected to the output of the video unit and receive only the variations of the cathode voltage due to the video signal.
Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that there may be other ways of designing or combining the feedback block or the feedforward block of the control circuit, including modifications and combinations of the means described herein. As an example, the capacitor 56 of unit 50 may be eliminated by biasing the voltage Vc to a voltage level appropriate not to shift the D.C. level of the input of amplifier 48. Thus, while certain representative embodiments and details have been shown for purposes of illustrating the invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes in the invention disclosed herein may be made without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03300045 | Jul 1999 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5717296 | Onozawa et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6573669 | Chiu | Jun 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040130275 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |