The present invention relates to a digital logic circuit and to a shift register and an active matrix device including such a circuit. Such a circuit may be used, for example, as a flip-flop, suitable for use in a clock generator to drive the rows and/or columns of an active-matrix display.
The pixels are addressed one row at a time. The scan driver includes an M-phase clock generator, which produces a series of clock pulses as shown in
All the pixels of one row may be addressed simultaneously, or they may be addressed in B blocks of b pixels, where bB=N. In the latter case, the data driver may also include a B-phase clock generator of the type described, such that each clock pulse OUTi activates block i for each Ii such that 1≦i≦B.
Normal operation of the display is such that data is sampled onto the pixels from top to bottom and from left to right, corresponding to the timing shown in
In this case, the clock generators must in addition be able to operate bi-directionally, producing either clock pulses as in
Scan drivers of the type described may be formed directly on the display substrate, reducing the number of connections required to the display. This is advantageous, since it reduces the area occupied by the connector, and leads to a display which is more mechanically robust. In such cases, it is common to use a single type of transistor for the clock generator circuit. For example, the circuit may be composed of only n-type transistors, rather than a mixture of n- and p-type transistors, as commonly used in CMOS circuits. The use of a single type of transistor is advantageous for manufacturing cost. However, it is difficult to design low-power, high-speed logic, such as AND gates and inverters, using a single type of transistor.
A clock generator for use in a scan driver may be formed from a shift register. A shift register is a multi-stage circuit capable of sequentially shifting a sequence of data from stage to stage along its length in response to a clock signal. In general, a shift register may shift an arbitrary sequence of data. However, when a shift register is used as a clock generator in a scan or data driver, it is only required to shift a single high state along its length. Such a shift register is referred to as a “walking one” shift register, and may or may not be capable of shifting an arbitrary sequence of data.
An example of such a type of clock generator is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,377,099, and is shown in
In addition, U.S. Pat. No. 6,724,361 describes a similar clock generator which uses non-overlapping clocks.
A RS latch is a well-known logic block. As shown in
where 0 and 1 are the low and high logic levels respectively, X is an undefined or disallowed state, Qn is the current output state, and Qn-1 is the previous output state.
A typical implementation of a RS latch is shown in
When the set input is subsequently lowered to a logic low state, and while the reset input remains in a logic low state, the high state on Q causes NOR gate 8 to output a low state, which in turn causes NOR gate 10 to output a high state. The Q and QB inputs therefore retain their previous values.
This state illustrates the bi-stable nature of the flip-flop: there is a positive feedback loop from the Q output, via NOR gate 8, the QB output, and NOR gate 10, back to the Q output. If the Q output is affected by noise, its value will be restored by NOR gate 10 and the state of QB; similarly, QB is held by NOR gate 8 and the state of Q. The state of the flip-flop's outputs is therefore immune to the effects of noise (at least within reasonable limits).
Transistor 12 may also be diode-connected, such that the connection to Vdd is replaced by an additional connection to the S input, without affecting the operation described above.
A major disadvantage of this architecture is that there is no positive feedback, and the Q node is floating. Thus any noise in the system can easily be coupled onto the node, and its state may be corrupted. The state will not be restored unless either the R or S input is raised to a high level.
An additional disadvantage is that the Q node is not fully charged to Vdd in the set state. An n-channel transistor conducts when its gate is higher than the source by at least the threshold voltage of the transistor, VTH. Therefore, if the S input is raised to Vdd, transistor 12 will only conduct until Q reaches (Vdd−VTH). In many applications, it is desirable for the level of the Q and QB outputs to swing from the high to the low voltage supply rails.
To effect a reset operation, the R input is raised to a high level, discharging the Q output through transistor 20, and turning off transistor 25. Transistor 18 is diode-connected, so conducts if its source is at least one threshold drop below the high voltage supply, Vdd. QB is therefore raised to a high level by transistor 18, turning on transistor 22. Thus, when the R input is subsequently lowered to a low state, transistor 22 maintains the low state on Q, and transistor 18 maintains the high state on QB. The circuit therefore shows good noise immunity in the reset state.
To effect a set operation, the S input is raised to a high level, charging the Q output to a high level through transistor 16. This turns on transistor 25, discharging the QB output, which in turn turns off transistor 22. However, when the S input is subsequently lowered to a low state, transistors 16, and 22 are all off, and the Q node floats. The circuit therefore has poor noise immunity in the set state. In addition, Q is not fully charged to Vdd, for reasons described previously.
A further disadvantage of the circuit of
Other approaches to this circuit, such as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,690,347, 5,701,136, 5,410,583, 5,222,082, 6,813,332 and 6,928,135, all exhibit at least one of the two disadvantages described: there is a floating node or a short-circuit current in at least one state of the latch.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,038,653 also describes a single-channel output switch for a shift register stage, and illustrates the use of a bootstrap capacitor, as shown in
A second type of latch is the D latch. A well-known type of such a latch is shown in
US patent application publication number 2007/0091014 describes a single-channel shift register made from a cascade of D latches.
The circuit has similar disadvantages to those previously described: transistors 28 and 30 are always on, and one of transistors 32 and 34 is on for any data. Therefore a short-circuit current flows from Vcc 1 to the low supply rail Vss, increasing the power consumed by the circuit. In addition, the output voltage is lower than Vcc1, except in the case where Vcc2 is at least equal to (Vcc1+VTH). However, generating a higher-voltage Vcc2 increases both the power consumption of the circuit and the complexity of a reference-generation circuit.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a digital logic circuit comprising a plurality of transistors of a same conduction type, the plurality of transistors comprising: a first transistor whose source, gate and drain are connected to a first circuit node, a second circuit node and a first power supply line, respectively; a second transistor whose source, gate and drain are connected to the second node, the first node and the first supply line, respectively; a third transistor whose drain is connected to the first node; a fourth transistor whose gate and drain are connected to a third circuit node and the second node, respectively; and a fifth transistor whose gate is connected to the first or second node and whose drain is connected to the third node.
The gate of the third transistor may be connected to the third node.
The circuit may comprise a first bootstrap capacitor connected between the first and second nodes.
One of the first and second nodes may comprise a first output of the circuit.
The first node may comprise a first input node of the circuit.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a sixth transistor whose source and gate are connected to the first node and a first input of the circuit, respectively.
The sources of the third and fourth transistors may be connected to the first input.
The sources of the third and fourth transistors may be connected to a second input of the circuit.
The sources of the third and fourth transistors may be connected to a second power supply line.
The drain of the sixth transistor may be connected to the first supply line.
The drain of the sixth transistor may be connected to the first input.
The drain of the sixth transistor may be connected to a third input of the circuit.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a seventh transistor whose source and gate are connected to the drain of the sixth transistor and a fourth input of the circuit respectively.
The plurality of transistors may comprise an eighth transistor whose source and gate are connected to the first node and a fifth input of the circuit, respectively.
The fifth input may comprise a global reset input.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a ninth transistor whose gate and drain are connected to the first input and the third node, respectively.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a tenth transistor whose source, gate and drain are connected to the third node, a sixth input of the circuit and the first supply line, respectively.
The plurality of transistors may comprise: an eleventh transistor whose source, gate and drain are connected to the third node, a fourth circuit node and the first supply line, respectively; a twelfth transistor whose source, gate and drain are connected to the fourth node, the third node, and the first supply line, respectively; and a thirteenth transistors whose drain is connected to the fourth node.
The gate of the thirteenth transistor may be connected to the first or second node.
The circuit may comprise a second bootstrap capacitor connected between the third and fourth nodes.
One of the third and fourth nodes may comprise a second output of the circuit.
The third node may comprise a second input node of the circuit.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a fourteenth transistor whose source and gate are connected to the third node and a seventh input of the circuit, respectively.
The sources of the fifth and thirteenth transistors may be connected to the seventh input.
The sources of the fifth and thirteenth transistors may be connected to a or the second power supply line.
The sources of the fifth and thirteenth transistors may be connected to an eighth input of the circuit.
The drain of the fourteenth transistor may be connected to the first supply line.
The drain of the fourteenth transistor may be connected to the seventh input.
The drain of the fourteenth transistor may be connected to a ninth input of the circuit.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a fifteenth transistor whose source and gate are connected to the drain of the fourteenth transistor and a tenth input of the circuit, respectively.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a sixteenth transistor whose source and gate are connected to the third node and an eleventh input of the circuit, respectively.
The plurality of transistors may comprise a seventeenth transistor whose gate and drain are connected to the sixth input and the first node, respectively.
The circuit may comprise a latch or flip flop.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a shift register comprising a plurality of latches or flip flops comprising circuits according to the first aspect of the invention.
According to a third aspect of the invention, there is provided an active matrix device comprising a register according to the second aspect of the invention.
The device may comprise a liquid crystal device.
It is thus possible to provide a versatile digital logic circuit which may be used with advantage in various applications. For example, when used or configured as a latch or flip-flop in a shift register, the circuit is capable of providing improved noise immunity because of positive feedback. Also, short-circuit currents between supply lines may be substantially avoided, resulting in reduced power consumption with power being consumed substantially only during switching. This may be achieved with transistors of a single conduction type. For example, all of the transistors may be either p-channel MOS transistors or n-channel MOS transistors.
The first, preferred embodiment is shown in
The circuit is configured as an RS latch: when the S input is raised to a high state, the Q output is charged high, switching on transistors 46-50; the QB output and the gate of transistor 40 are discharged by transistors 48 and 50, and transistors 40 and 42 are switched off; similarly, the low state on QB turns off transistors 52 and 54. Thus no steady-state current flows.
Q is charged to (Vdd−VTH), which in turn charges node X to (Vdd−2VTH). QB and node Y are both discharged to Vss.
When the S input subsequently falls, Q remains charged to (Vdd−VTH), which maintains the voltage on node X. Similarly, if Q is affected by noise, and its voltage falls, it will be maintained at (Vdd−3VTH) by node X. The circuit therefore exhibits improved noise immunity.
When the R input is raised to a high state, the operation of the latch is similar, with the roles of Q and QB, and of X and Y reversed.
It is also possible to use node X as an alternative Q output, and node Y as an alternative QB output: X is high when Q is high, although its voltage is lower, and low when Q is low. Y and QB are similarly related.
For the same reason, it is also possible to connect the gates of transistors 48 and 50 to either the Q output or node X. The gates of both transistors may be connected to the same node, or one may be connected to node X and the other to the Q output. Similarly, the gates of transistors 52 and 54 may be connected to either the QB output or node Y.
The second embodiment is shown in
These bootstrap capacitors operate as described in the prior art, and serve to increase the voltage on Q, QB, X and Y: when the S input is raised to a high state, Q is charged to (Vdd-VTH); transistor 46 then charges node X; as the voltage on X increases, this rise is coupled to Q by capacitor 62, increasing the voltage on Q; X therefore rises to Vdd or (VQ−VTH), whichever is the lower, where VQ is the maximum voltage on Q. Capacitor 60 operates similarly, bootstrapping QB.
The third embodiment is shown in
The circuit operates as previously described, except that the stage may now be set by the logical combination (S1 OR S2), and reset by the logical combination (R1 AND R2).
It will be clear to one skilled in the art that it is possible to incorporate any desired logical combination for setting and resetting the latch using the techniques illustrated above.
In addition, if each R input is connected to a logical complement of each S input, the block functions as a logic gate. For example, the circuit in
Similarly, an AND and NAND gate could be formed by connecting the IN signals to the R inputs, and the INB signals to the S inputs. In this case, QB=IN1 AND IN2, Q=IN1 NAND IN2.
It will be clear to one skilled in the art that it is possible to generate any standard logical function by using series and parallel connections of the input transistors, as illustrated above.
The fourth embodiment is shown in
The fifth embodiment is shown in
The operation of the circuit is similar to that previously described: when S is at a low level, the sources of transistors 52 and 54 are connected to Vss, as before, and both transistors are conducting; when S rises, this rise is conducted onto nodes Q and X, causing both to rise, as before.
The sixth embodiment is shown in
The seventh embodiment is shown in
The operation of the circuit is as described for the first embodiment. When the S input is raised to a high level, the QB output is discharged directly via transistor 70, permitting faster switching and reduced short-circuit current during switching. Similarly, transistor 68 discharges the Q output when the R input is raised to a high level.
It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that elements of the above embodiments may be combined to give further circuit architectures.
The eighth embodiment is shown in
The operation of the circuit is similar to the first embodiment. However, the circuit operates as a D-type latch if INB is the logical complement of IN: when the CK input is high, Q will be high if IN is high and INB low (similar to the previous set state), and Q will be low if IN is low and INB is high (similar to the reset state); when CK falls, the state of the latch immediately before the falling edge will be held until the next rising edge on CK (similar to the latched state previously, when both the S and R inputs are low).
The ninth embodiment is shown in
The operation of the circuit is similar to the eighth embodiment. If IN1B and IN2B are logical complements of IN1 and IN2 respectively, the circuit operates as a latch: when the CK1 input is high, Q will be high if IN1 is high and IN1B low, and Q will be low if IN1 is low and IN1B is high; when CK1 falls, the state of the latch immediately before the falling edge will be held until the next rising edge on CK1 or CK2. Similarly, when the CK2 input is high, Q will be high if IN2 is high and IN2B low, and Q will be low if IN2 is low and IN2B is high; when CK2 falls, the state of the latch immediately before the falling edge will be held until the next rising edge on CK1 or CK2.
CK1 and CK2 should not be high simultaneously.
The tenth embodiment is shown in
The operation is similar to the eighth embodiment: when the CK1 and CK2 inputs are both high, Q will be high if IN is high and INB low, and Q will be low if IN is low and INB is high; when CK1 or CK2 falls, the state of the latch immediately before the falling edge will be held until the next time CK1 and CK2 are both high.
It will be clear to one skilled in the art that it is possible to incorporate any desired logical combination of clocks for latching data using the techniques illustrated above.
Bootstrap capacitors may be added to the D-latch, as in the second embodiment.
The eleventh embodiment utilises the RS latch in a shift register, as shown in
In addition, a global reset may be added to the shift register, as shown in
It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that a shift register may also be formed using any of the latches in
The twelfth embodiment utilises the latch in a bi-directional shift register. A three-stage section of a register is shown in
The operation of the circuit is similar to the eleventh embodiment. When UD is high, the Q output of latch 84 rises when the OUT output of gate 88 rises, and falls when the OUT output of gate 92 rises; when UD is low, and UDB is high, the Q output of latch 84 rises when the OUT output of gate 92 rises and falls when the OUT output of gate 88 rises. Thus the register pulses scan from top to bottom when UD is high, and from bottom to top when UD is low.
As for the eleventh embodiment, node X may be used to replace Q and/or node Y may be used to replace QB in each latch. A global reset may be added in a similar way to that illustrated in
As described in the prior art, the shift registers of the eleventh and twelfth embodiments may be used with either complementary or non-overlapping clocks.
GB published patent applications numbers 2452278 and 2452279 describe modifications to the output switch for a shift register of the form of
The above embodiments have been described using n-channel transistors. It will be clear to one skilled in the art that it is possible to implement all the embodiments using only p-channel transistors, with all polarities reversed, such that active-high signals are replaced by active-low signals and connections to Vss and Vdd are replaced by connections to Vdd and Vss, respectively.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0807751.3 | Apr 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2009/056919 | 3/27/2009 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/133749 | 11/5/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4412139 | Horninger | Oct 1983 | A |
5051610 | Terane et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5222082 | Plus | Jun 1993 | A |
5410583 | Weisbrod et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5434899 | Huq et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
5701136 | Huq et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5949398 | Kim | Sep 1999 | A |
6166571 | Wang | Dec 2000 | A |
6377099 | Cairns et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6657472 | Raza et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
6690347 | Jeon et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6724361 | Washio et al. | Apr 2004 | B1 |
6777988 | Tung et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6778627 | Yu | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6813332 | Nagao et al. | Nov 2004 | B2 |
6831489 | Cheung et al. | Dec 2004 | B2 |
6845140 | Moon et al. | Jan 2005 | B2 |
6922217 | Kim | Jul 2005 | B2 |
6928135 | Sasaki et al. | Aug 2005 | B2 |
7038653 | Moon | May 2006 | B2 |
7236029 | Gossmann | Jun 2007 | B2 |
20040257111 | Tobita | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20070091014 | Yamashita et al. | Apr 2007 | A1 |
20080123799 | Otose | May 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 452 278 | Mar 2009 | GB |
2 452 279 | Mar 2009 | GB |
02-290320 | Nov 1990 | JP |
04-352511 | Dec 1992 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110033022 A1 | Feb 2011 | US |