This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the prior Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-192910, filed on Jun. 30, 2004, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a display control device of a liquid crystal display apparatus and a liquid crystal display apparatus having such a device, and in particular relates to a display control device capable of securing the timing margin of a liquid crystal panel without depending on an external clock signal, and to a liquid crystal display apparatus having such a device.
2. Description of the Related Art
A liquid crystal display apparatus has a display panel having a liquid crystal layer, gate drivers which drive the display panel, data drivers, and a display control device which controls the gate drivers and data drivers; the apparatus is supplied with image data and a clock signal from a personal computer or other display signal supply apparatus, and displays an image corresponding to the image data.
The liquid crystal display apparatus latches the supplied image data supplied in synchronization with an externally supplied input clock, generates a timing control signal for internal panel driving in synchronization with the input clock, and through this timing control signal controls the operation to drive data lines and gate lines by the data drivers and gate drivers. Thus the input image data is input in synchronization with the input clock input from the display signal supply apparatus, to generate display panel control signals.
For example, a display control device for a liquid crystal display apparatus is proposed in Japanese Patent Laid-open No. 2003-66911. This patent describes a method in which image data is written to one pair of a left line memory unit and right line memory unit in synchronization with the input clock, and data is read in parallel from the pair of left and right line memory units and supplied to the data driver. According to this patent, image data is read in parallel from a plurality of line memory units in synchronization with an internally generated clock and is supplied to the data driver, so that the supply of image data to the data driver can be performed reliably. However, there is no description of a timing control signal to control the timing of the data drivers and gate drivers.
As described above, excluding some exceptions, the display control device of conventional liquid crystal display apparatuses controls the driving timing of the display panel in synchronization with an input clock. However, the larger sizes of liquid crystal display panels and increases in the number of pixels in recent years have been accompanied by stricter margins for the driving timing of gate lines and for the driving timing of data lines. Further, more complicated driving control than in the past has become necessary for this driving, so that there is a trend for various timing margins to become more strict, that is, to become smaller.
On the other hand, there is increased scattering in the clock speeds on the side of the personal computer or other display signal supply apparatus, and often display signals are supplied at clock speeds exceeding the prescribed stipulated range, so that together with the above-described reductions in timing margins, there is the problem that stable display control is no longer possible merely through control of the driving timing of the display panel in synchronization with an external clock signal.
Hence an object of the invention is to provide a display control device for a liquid crystal display apparatus enabling stable display control without depending on the frequency of an external clock signal, as well as a liquid crystal display apparatus using such a display control device.
In order to attain the above object, a first perspective of this invention is a display control device to which an external clock as well as image data are supplied, and which supplies timing control signals to control the driving timing of the data driver and gate driver of the liquid crystal display panel, comprising an internal clock generation unit which generates an internal clock without depending on the external clock; buffer memory to which the supplied image data is written in synchronization with the external clock; and a timing control unit which supplies the image data written to the buffer memory to the data driver in synchronization with the internal clock, and generates, in synchronization with the internal clock, a timing control signal including, at least, a voltage application signal to control the timing of application to data lines of data voltages corresponding to the image data by the data driver, and a gate clock signal to control a driving timing of the gate line by the above gate drivers.
In a preferred embodiment of the above first perspective, the timing control unit is characterized in that the data hold time over which application of data voltage to the data line is continued after the end of driving of the gate lines, and the charge share time over which adjacent data lines are short-circuited prior to data voltage application to the data line, are controlled so as to be in synchronization with the internal clock.
In order to attain the above object, a second perspective of the invention is a liquid crystal display apparatus comprising the display control device of the first perspective, a liquid crystal display panel, data driver, and gate driver.
By means of the above first perspective of the invention, the timing control signal for the driving circuits of a liquid crystal display panel is generated in synchronization with an internal clock not dependent on the input clock, rather than with the input clock supplied externally, so that stable display control is possible through the timing control signal which satisfies the various driving margins of the driver circuit.
Below, aspects of the invention are explained using the drawings. However, the technical scope of this invention is not limited to these aspects, but extend to the inventions described in the scope of claims, and to inventions equivalent thereto.
Further, image data E-DATA is supplied to the display control device 20 in synchronization with an input clock E-CLK from a personal computer or other display signal supply apparatus, and the display control device 20 generates the above-described timing control signals for drivers, which are the gate signal control signal GSG, gate clock G-CLK, and data line voltage application signal DVD, as well as the internal image data D-DATA, and supplies these to the drivers GD and DD. The display control device 20 has an internal clock generation oscillator circuit OSC, which generates an internal clock I-CLK having a constant frequency without depending on the input clock; a timing control unit 22, which generates timing control signals; and line memory 24, as buffer memory for temporarily storage of input image data E-DATA.
The timing control unit 22 writes the supplied image data E-DATA to line memory 24 in synchronization with the input clock E-CLK, and generates the above timing control signals in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK, while also reading data written to line memory 24 in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK and supplying the data to the data drivers DD. Details of this operation are described below.
With the goal of lengthening the lifetime of the liquid crystals, a liquid crystal display panel is generally driven using an inverted driving method, in which the polarities of the voltages applied to adjacent data lines are inverted at each horizontal sync interval. In this case, in neighboring horizontal sync intervals, data voltages for application are generated in the current horizontal sync interval with polarities opposite those of the applied voltage polarities in the previous horizontal sync interval. In order not to waste the power applied in the previous horizontal sync interval, the adjacent data lines are short-circuited, the charge on the two data lines is shared, and thereafter data voltages of opposite polarities are applied. By optimizing the short-circuited time, power consumption can be reduced without wasting the charge in the data lines. Hence the timing of control to short-circuit adjacent data lines is controlled through the data line voltage application signal DVD. Hence the timing of this data line voltage application signal DVD affects power consumption.
The gate clock G-CLK rises earlier, by a prescribed time, than the rising edge of the enable signal ENABLE, and falls in response to the rising edge of the enable signal ENABLE, to control the scan timing of gate lines. That is, the gate lines GL-1, GL-2, GL-3 are scanned and driven in sequence, in synchronization with the rising edges of the gate clock G-CLK. The gate signal control signal GSC is a timing control signal which falls in response to the rising edge of the gate clock G-CLK and rises after a prescribed time, and is controlled such that the driving waveforms of the gate lines GL-1, GL-2 fall gradually from H level in response to the rising edge of the gate signal control signal GSC. The gate line driving waveform is made to decline in order that the voltage waveform applied to gate lines extending in the horizontal direction of the display panel is not blunted on the opposite side of the gate driver.
The data voltage application signal DVD, which rises at the falling edge and falls at the rising edge of the enable signal ENABLE, is a timing control signal for the short-circuit circuit which causes adjacent data lines to be short-circuited; during the time tSC when the data voltage application signal DVD is at H level, adjacent data lines are short-circuited. Hence during the time tSC of short-circuiting (or the charge-sharing time) from the start of the horizontal sync interval Hsync, the adjacent data lines are short-circuited, and thereafter, while the data voltage application signal DVD is at L level, the data lines DL are driven by data voltage corresponding to the image data D-DATA. That is, the data voltage application signal DVD controls the timing of voltage application to the data lines DL. Even after the gate voltage has been applied to the gate lines GL-1, GL-2, the data voltage continues to be applied to the data lines DL for a prescribed data hold time DH.
The above data hold time DH affects the driving characteristics of the liquid crystal display panel, and so must be confined to within a predetermined time. Similarly, in order that the charge accumulated during the previous horizontal sync interval is utilized effectively so as not to waste driving power, a predetermined time must be secured for the short-circuit time (charge-sharing time) tGS, and by this means, power conservation can be optimized.
The sync signal generation circuit 46 withtin the timing control unit 22 generates an internal sync signal I-SYNC in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK based on the timing of the enable signal ENABLE, and supplies this signal to the counter 40 as a reset signal RST. The counter 40, upon being reset by the reset signal RST, performs counting operation in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK. The count value COUNT of the counter is supplied to the timing control signal generation circuit 42, which generates timing control signals from the gate clock G-CLK, gate signal control signal GSC, and data voltage application signal DVD with the timing of a preset count value. The line memory control circuit 48 within the timing control unit 22 inputs this count value COUNT and generates a read enable signal RE and read clock RCLK with the timing of a preset count value, to control operations to read the line memory 22.
First, in response to the read enable signal RE, image data D-DATA in the line memory 22 is read and supplied to the data driver. On the other hand, in response to the gate clock G-CLK, gate lines are driven to H level in sequence, and in response to the gate signal control signal GSC, the gate voltage drops. And in response to the data voltage application signal DVD, the data driver applies data voltages corresponding to the image data D-DATA to data lines. Thus internal timing control signals are all synchronized on the internal clock I-CLK and so have timing according to design, so that the short-circuit interval across data lines (charge-sharing interval) tSC, and the data hold interval DH over which data voltages continued to be applied to data lines after the end of voltage application to gate lines, can be held to the time durations according to design.
As shown in
On the other hand, the timing control unit 22 reads the image data I-DATA-L, I-DATA-R written to the left and right line memories 24L, 24R in parallel with the timing of the read enable signal RE in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK, and supplies the data to the corresponding data drivers DD. At this time, the read clock RCLK is synchronized with the internal clock ICLK, and it is preferable that this clock be faster than for example the input clock E-CLK. By this means, the image data in the left and right line memories can be transferred to the data drivers in a short time. The gate clock G-CLK for the gate driver GD, the gate signal control signal GSC, and the data voltage application signal DVD for data drivers DD are, as in the aspect described above, generated in synchronization with the internal clock I-CLK.
Further, dual-port memory is adopted as the left and right line memories so that serial writing of image data can be performed simultaneously with parallel reading of data. And as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-192910 | Jun 2004 | JP | national |