Embodiments described herein relate generally to a display device and a manufacturing method of the same.
A device in which a front surface side of a thin display such as a liquid crystal display is closed by a half mirror (a mirror display) has been put into practical use. The mirror display has a structure in which the thin display is provided in a casing or in a wall where outside light is shut out, and a display side is made darker than a provided space by closing a front surface side space of the display by the half mirror whose light reflectivity is approximately 50%. In the mirror display as stated above, the half mirror is normally made function as a mirror. When an image is displayed on a display screen, backlight of the display is transmitted to the front surface side via the half mirror, and thereby, the image is visually recognized from the front surface side of the half mirror.
In a conventional mirror display, the image is displayed by transmitting the backlight to the front surface side via the half mirror, and therefore, the half mirror whose reflectivity and transmittance of light are each approximately 50% is used. There is a defect in the mirror display that the screen is dark compared to a normal mirror. There is a tendency in which the screen totally seems yellowish affected by a thickness of a metal film which constitutes the half mirror or the like. If the function as the mirror is improved by increasing the reflectivity of light by the half mirror, an amount of light transmitting through the half mirror decreases, and the screen becomes dark when the image is displayed. Therefore, it has been required to increase an amount of transmitted light when the image is displayed while increasing the reflectivity of light to improve the function as the mirror.
In addition to the mirror display, a hybrid-type liquid crystal display in which reflection and transmission of light are used is known. In the hybrid-type liquid crystal display, a reflection display is performed by using light in which outside light is reflected when the outside light such as sunlight and illumination light are obtained at a periphery thereof, and a transmission display is performed by using light in which backlight is transmitted when the outside light is dark. According to this method, it is possible to suppress power consumption by turning off the backlight when the outside light is obtained, and therefore, it is often used for a liquid crystal display device for mobile use which is battery-driven. The half mirror is used as a means to transmit the backlight while reflecting the outside light also in the hybrid-type liquid crystal display.
The hybrid-type liquid crystal display using the half mirror has problems similar to the mirror display. Namely, the screen is easy to be dark, further hue deviation is easy to occur in case of the reflection display. When the light reflectivity by the half mirror is increased to increase luminance of the reflection display, the light intensity through the half mirror decreases, and therefore, the screen of the transmission display becomes dark. A hybrid-type liquid crystal display using a metal layer such as a pixel electrode as a partial mirror instead of the half mirror is also known. In the partial mirror, reflection light and transmission light are in a complete trade-off relationship, and therefore, it is impossible to improve both image qualities of the reflection display and the transmission display. Therefore, it has been required to improve the amount of transmitted light of the backlight to improve the image quality of the transmission display while improving the light reflectivity to improve the image quality of the reflection display.
A display device according to the embodiment includes: a mirror part which includes a flat plate transparent for visible light, a reflective film formed at one surface of the transparent flat plate, and a plurality of micro-windows formed at the reflective film; a flat display part which is disposed at a formation surface side of the reflective film of the mirror part, and emits non-parallel light whose light emission angle distribution is skewed in a normal direction toward the mirror part; and a microlens array part which is disposed between the mirror part and the flat display part, and includes a plurality of microlenses converging the non-parallel light emitted from the flat display part toward the mirror part to the plurality of micro-windows individually.
Hereinafter, display devices according to the embodiments are described with reference to the drawings. Note that there are cases when the same reference numerals and symbols are supplied to substantially the same component and a part of the description is not given in each embodiment. Please be noted that the drawings are schematic ones, and a relationship between a thickness and a flat dimension, a ratio of the thickness of each part, and so on are different from actual ones. Terms indicating directions such as upward and downward in the description indicate relative directions when a later-described display surface side of a flat display part is set to be upward unless other wise specified, and there is a case when it is different from a real direction in which a gravitational acceleration direction is set as a reference.
Light emitted from the display surface 10a of the liquid crystal display is non-parallel light whose light emission angle distribution is skewed in a normal direction. The flat display part 10 is not limited to the backlight-type liquid crystal display, but may be a display which emits the non-parallel light whose light emission angle distribution is skewed in the normal direction. The flat display part 10 may be an organic EL display, a field-emission display, a plasma display, an LED display, and so on. It is preferable that the light emitted from the flat display part 10 is approximated to parallel light so as to effectively focus the light by later-described microlenses. A display in which an emission angle is optically focused is the normal direction is easy to be applied for the flat display part 10 by crossing, for example, trapezoidal linear prism sheets. When a surface light source which is nearer to parallel is required as the backlight of the flat display part 10, it is preferable to use triangle circular prism sheets, paraboloid sheets, and so on.
The mirror part 30 is disposed at the display surface 10a side of the flat display part 10. The mirror part 30 has a flat plate 31 which is transparent for visible light. A reflective film 32 is formed at one surface 31a of the transparent flat plate 31. A formation material of the transparent flat plate 31 may be either an inorganic material or an organic material. A glass plate and an acrylic resin plate with high transparency are suitably used for the transparent flat plate 31. A metal film whose reflectivity for the visible light is high or a dielectric multilayer film is used for the reflective film 32. The metal film as the reflective film 32 is preferable to be a thin film of silver, silver alloy, aluminum, aluminum alloy, and so on. The mirror part 30 is disposed such that the reflective film 32 is located at the display surface 10a side of the flat display part 10. A surface of the reflective film 32 is a mirror surface. The mirror part 30 functions as a mirror by reflecting light (outside light) OL which is incident on a surface (front face) 31b at an opposite side from the formation surface 31a of the reflective film 32 of the transparent flat plate 31.
The reflective film 32 has a plurality of micro-windows 33. The micro-windows 33 are ones formed by partially opening the reflective film 32. The micro-windows 33 function as transmission holes of the light emitted from the flat display part 10. A shape of the micro-window 33 is not particularly limited, and a square, a rectangle, a rhombus, a hexagon, an octagon, a circular, an oval, and so on are applicable. Note that there is a case when some errors occur in each hole shape form a designed shape when the micro-window 33 is manufactured by the later-described laser machining, but variation within a range satisfying a size condition is allowable. The micro-windows 33 are formed by, for example, performing a partial removal process by using high energy light such as laser light and the photoetching process using a mask for the metal film which is uniformly formed on the transparent flat plate 31 and a supporter 22 of the microlens array part 20. A formation method of the micro-windows 33 is not particularly limited, and the micro-windows 33 may be formed by applying the partial plating process, the vapor deposition process and the lift-off process after a masking layer is formed in accordance with a window pattern on the transparent flat plate 31 and the supporter 22 of the microlens array part 20. As the formation method of the micro-windows 33, reforming or the like by oxidation of the metal film (for example, the aluminum film) can be applied in addition to the removal of the metal film. The formation method of the micro-windows 33 is described later in detail.
It is preferable that the micro-window 33 has a size which cannot be recognized by a human visual sense when the mirror part 30 is functioned as a reflecting mirror when the flat display part 10 is not displayed. A resolution limit of the human visual sense can be cited as a standard. Namely, the size of the micro-window 33 is preferably set to be 1/16 mm (62.5 μm) or less being the resolution limit of the visual sense. The size of the micro-window 33 indicates a diameter in case of the circular, a major axis in case of the oval, and a length of a longest diagonal line in case of a polygon. The size of the micro-window 33 is preferable to be spreading of non-parallel light or more as it is described later. The size of the micro-window 33 is preferable to be smaller within a range of the size as stated above.
The microlens array part 20 having a plurality of microlenses 21 each of which converges the non-parallel light emitted from the flat display part 10 toward the mirror part 30 to the plurality of micro-windows 33 individually is disposed between the flat display part 10 and the mirror part 30. The plurality of microlenses 21 individually correspond to the micro-windows 33. Here, convex lenses are formed with a pitch of 100 μm as the microlenses 21. In each microlens 21, optical characteristics are adjusted such that the light incident from the flat display part 10 to a lens opening part is converged into the micro-window 33 and transmits. The pixels 11A to 11D of respective colors of the flat display part 10 correspond to individual microlenses 21 of the microlens array part 20.
In the display device 1 illustrated in
The display device 1 of the first embodiment functions as a mirror owing to the reflective film 32 reflecting the outside light OL when the flat display part 10 is in a non-display state. The plurality of micro-windows 33 are formed at the reflective film 32, but the micro-windows 33 are not visually recognized in a mirror image based on the size thereof. Namely, there is a characteristic in the human visual sense in which it becomes difficult to distinguish a color difference as an image area becomes small, a characteristic so-called as an area effect. On the other hand, there is a limit of a spatial resolution in the visual sense, and it is said normally to be 0.06 degrees, or approximately 1/16 mm (62.5 μm) at a most easily viewable focal length as a limit value. The micro-window 33 which is independently formed in a mirror (reflective film 32) with a size of the limit value of the spatial resolution or less cannot be visually recognized by reflection with human eyes resulting from physiological characteristics of visual sense as stated above. Accordingly, the reflective film 32 where the micro-windows 33 are formed functions as a mirror having the reflectivity defined by an open area ratio.
For example, when one side of each of the pixels 11A to 11D of the flat display part 10 is 200 μm, and a square micro-window 33 with one side of 20 μm is formed while making one micro-window 33 correspond to one pixel 11, the open area ratio of the micro-window 33 relative to the reflective film 32 is just 1% The reflective film 32 having the micro-windows 33 as stated above substantially has the optical characteristics equivalent to a normal mirror. The reflectivity of light by the reflective film 32 having the micro-windows 33 can be increased without deteriorating the function of the mirror resulting from the micro-windows 33 fallen upon the mirror image or the like. Therefore, it becomes possible to improve the function of the display device 1 as the mirror.
On the other hand, when the flat display part 10 is in a display state, light EL1 emitted from the flat display part 10 toward the mirror part 30 transmits through the micro-windows 33 because the light is converged to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21. Light EL2 transmitting through the micro-windows 33 is emitted toward outside, and thereby, it is possible to visually recognize an image displayed by the flat display part 10 from a front surface (a surface 31b of the transparent flat plate 31) side of the mirror part 30. An optical component in which the micro-window and the microlens which focuses thereon are combined is optically asymmetry, and transmittance and reflectivity relative to parallel light are largely different depending on an incident angle. The optical component in which the micro-window and the microlens are combined based on the optical asymmetry as stated above is effective as a component which changes the light transmitting through the micro-windows into light near the parallel light or as a component which focuses the parallel light into one point.
Note that the flat display part 10 is generally a spread light source, and it is difficult to converge the non-parallel light emitted from the flat display part 10 to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21. It is effective for the point as stated above to limit a range of an emission angle distribution of light emitted from the flat display part 10. It is effective to skew the light emission angle distribution (envelope) of the non-parallel light emitted from the display surface 10a of the flat display part 10 in the normal direction. The non-parallel light whose light emission angle distribution is skewed in the normal direction is easy to be converged to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21. It is possible to increase an amount light transmitting through the mirror part 30 as for the light emitted from the flat display part 10 toward the mirror part 30. Therefore, it is possible to improve the display function of image at the front surface side of the mirror part 30 of the display device 1.
It is necessary to skew the light emission angle distribution (envelope) in the normal direction from requirements on an optical design. As a practical standard, a half value width of the light emission angle distribution relative to air is preferably within ±25 degrees. Namely, when the backlight-type liquid crystal display is used as the flat display part 10, the light (non-parallel light) emitted from the backlight 12 preferably has the light emission angle distribution in which an angle forming the maximum intensity is the normal direction, and an angle to be ½ of the maximum intensity (angle at half maximum) A is within ±25 degrees relative to the normal direction. The non-parallel light having the light emission angle distribution as stated above is applied, and thereby, a major part thereof passes through the micro-windows 33. Therefore, it becomes possible to increase the amount of light transmitting through the mirror part 30. The angle θ to be ½ of the maximum intensity is more preferably within ±20 degrees relative to the normal direction.
The opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 preferably has a size of the spreading of light or more. Accordingly, it is preferable that the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 satisfies the following relationship relative to the lens thickness d, the refractive index n of the transparent material, and the half value angle θ,
d·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n)]≦W/2.
Further, it is necessary to consider the above-stated physiological invisible condition (W 1/16 mm). It is preferable to select a smaller value as an upper limit value of the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 by comparing the above-stated two values. The air layer existing between each component causes the spreading of light. It is preferable that the air layer does not exist between the flat display part 10 and the microlens array part 20, and between the microlens array part 20 and the mirror part 30. It is preferable that the flat display part 10, the microlens array part 20, and the mirror part 30 are each in close contact.
It is preferable that the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 satisfies the following relationship relative to the thickness d1 of the microlens 21, the thickness d2 of the supporter 22, the refractive index n1 of the first transparent material, the refractive index n2 of the second transparent material, and the half value angle θ,
d1·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n1)]+d2·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n2)]≦W/2.
Further, it is necessary to consider the above-stated physiological invisible condition (W≦ 1/16 mm). It is preferable to select a smaller value as an upper limit value of the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 by comparing the above-stated two values.
The display device 1 according to the first embodiment is, for example, manufactured as described below. Here, a manufacturing process of the display device 1 illustrated in
As stated above, the microlens array part 20 may be manufactured as a separated body from the mirror part 30, or may be simultaneously formed with the mirror part 30 by a series of processes. In either case, it is important to accurately align positions of the plurality of micro-windows 33 relative to the plurality of microlenses 21 respectively. When the microlens array part 20 is manufactured as the separated body from the mirror part 30, the plurality of micro-windows 33 are formed by a microfabrication technology represented by, for example, the optical lithography, and the plurality of microlenses 21 are formed by the printing method, the nanoimprint, and so on. When the micro-windows 33 and the microlenses 21 are manufactured by the separated processes, it is necessary to align a position of a center part of the microlens 21 to the micro-window (micropore part) 33 with high accuracy.
It is preferable to form the mirror part 30 simultaneously with the microlens array part 20 by a series of processes to reduce a manufacturing cost of a composite body of the microlens array part 20 and the mirror part 30 and to improve the positioning accuracy of the microlenses 21 and the micro-windows 33. The manufacturing process of the composite body of the microlens array part 20 and the mirror part 30 is described with reference to
As illustrated in
It is preferable that light transmittance of the supporter 22 relative to a wavelength of 550 nm is 70% or more to increase use efficiency of light. Further, it is preferable that the supporter 22 has a wavelength region whose light transmittance is 10% or more relative to a later-described photosensitive wavelength region (for example, 450 nm or less) of a photosensitive layer. The material and the thickness of the supporter 22 are not particularly limited as long as the optical characteristics as stated above are held. The thickness of the supporter 22 is measured by using a micrometer. The focal length of the microlens 21 is found from a stage variation amount between a stage position when a focus is adjusted on a lens formation surface and a stage position when a focus is adjusted on a position where parallel light which is incident from a lens surface focuses at a lens center while, for example, monochromatic parallel light is incident from a lens surface side of the microlens 21 and the light is observed with an optical microscope. The optical characteristics of the supporter 22 is found by measuring transmission spectrum at an ultraviolet visible region by using, for example, an ultraviolet visible spectrophotometer.
As illustrated in
A refractive index of the microlens array 21 is preferably 80% or more and less than 120% of the refractive index of the supporter 22. When the refractive index of the microlens array 21 is less than 80% of the refractive index of the supporter 22, the Fresnel reflection occurred at an interface with the supporter 22 becomes large, and the light use efficiency is lowered. When the refractive index of the microlens array 21 is 120% or more of the refractive index of the supporter 22, a total reflection occurs at the interface with the supporter 22, and the light use efficiency is lowered. The refractive index of the microlens array 21 is found by forming a flat film of the used material, and performing a spectrum analysis of the flat film by using an ellipsometer, a spectrophotometer, and so on.
A lens structure of the microlens array 21 may be any one of a circular, an oval, a triangle, a square, a hexagon when it is observed from a vertical direction of the array, and it is not particularly limited. A lens size of the microlens array 21 is preferably 1 μm or more and less than 500 μm. The lens size described here indicates a size of individual lens when the microlens array 21 is observed from the normal direction. It indicates a diameter of the circle in case of the circular, and indicates a length of a major axis in case of the oval. It indicates a diameter of a circle which inscribes a polygon in case of the polygon. When the lens size is less than intervals between the micro-windows 33 formed at the reflective film 32 become short, and therefore, a diffraction pattern of visible light becomes obvious, and a mirror performance of the reflective film 32 is lowered. When the lens size is 500 μm or more, each of the micro-windows 33 formed at the reflective film 32 approximates to a size capable of visually recognized, and the mirror performance of the reflective film 32 is lowered.
A lens curvature radius of the microlens array 21 is not particularly limited. The microlens array 21 may be arranged cyclically or in random. The random arrangement described here includes an arrangement without any order between adjacent lenses, and an arrangement in which domain regions in each of which a plurality of lenses are cyclically arranged are adjacent without any order. An area ratio occupied by the microlenses in a unit region (lens occupancy ratio) when the microlens array 21 is observed from the normal direction is preferable to be larger to converge light with high efficiency, and specifically, it is preferable to be 50% or more. A non-lens region is a flat surface, and therefore, the light incident on the non-lens region is not converged, and cannot transmit through the micro-windows 33. Therefore, optical loss becomes large when the lens occupancy ratio is less than 50%.
It is preferable that the microlens array 21 is arranged in a lenslet structure in which polygon-type lenses where the non-lens region is not generated are arranged with no space. The lens occupancy ratio thereby becomes 100%, and it is possible to converge light with high efficiency. The following methods can be cited as a measurement method of the lens occupancy ratio. The microlens array 21 is divided into a plurality of regions, and observation is performed for each region by using, for example, an optical microscope at a region where approximately 50 pieces of lenses are contained. Obtained observation images are processed by image processing software, and the lens occupancy ratio per a unit area is found. This process is performed at each region, and the lens occupancy ratio is found by obtaining an average value of each region.
As illustrated in
It is preferable to use aluminum, silver, or an alloy which contains at least one of them each having a high reflectivity at all regions of visible light, and whose plasma frequency exists at the ultraviolet light region as the material of the reflective film 32. The plasma frequency of aluminum exists in a vicinity of 120 nm, and the plasma frequency of silver exists in a vicinity of 320 nm. Aluminum and silver represent metallic optical characteristics at the visible light region, then represent dielectric optical characteristics as it goes to the ultraviolet light region. Therefore, aluminum and silver represent high reflectivity at the visible light region, and generate a transmitting property at the ultraviolet light region.
Calculation results of transmission spectrum and reflection spectrum at a region from a wavelength of 200 nm to 800 nm when an aluminum film is formed on a glass substrate are illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
A relationship between an exposure time and a micropore size is illustrated in
As illustrated in
In the manufacturing process of the composite body 105, the micropore pattern 103 is formed at the photosensitive layer 102 by using the light-converging effect of the microlens array 21 formed on the supporter 22. Further, it is also possible to form the reflective film 32 having a micropore pattern 5 by forming the photosensitive layer 102 before the reflective film 32 is formed, forming the micropore pattern 103 at the photosensitive layer 102, precipitating an activation nuclear to perform the electroless plating for the photosensitive layer 102, and performing the electroless plating. It is also possible to form the reflective film 32 having the micro-windows 33 by forming a negative-type photosensitive material as the photosensitive layer 102 before the reflective film 32 is formed, remaining the region of the photosensitive layer 102 exposed to light, and forming the reflective film 32 by the lift-off method. It is also possible to form the reflective film 32 having the micro-windows 33 by forming a seed layer by electrolytic plating instead of the reflective film 32, forming the photosensitive layer 102, forming the micropore pattern 103 at the photosensitive layer 102, forming the micropore pattern at the seed layer, and performing the electrolytic plating by using the seed layer where the micropore pattern is formed after the photosensitive layer 102 is removed.
A concrete example of the manufacturing process of the composite body 105 is described below. A borosilicate glass substrate having a thickness of 150 μm was prepared as the supporter 22. The microlens array 21 was formed on the glass substrate by the optical imprinting method. A structure in which lenslet-type microlenses having a cycle of 50 μm, a zag depth of 12 μm, a curvature radius of 64 μm, and a lens occupancy ratio of 100% were disposed in closest packing was applied for the microlens array. A mold to form the microlens array was manufactured, an ultraviolet-curing resin was coated on the glass substrate, and the ultraviolet-curing resin was cured by irradiating ultraviolet light under a state in which the mold was imprinted by an optical imprinting device. The microlens array was formed on the glass substrate by releasing the mold.
As a result of measurement of a focal length of the microlens array within the glass substrate, the focal length was at a position of 175 μm from a lens vertex. An aluminum film with a thickness of 28 nm was deposited by the vacuum deposition method at an opposite surface of the glass substrate from a surface where the microlens array was formed. Then transmission and reflection spectra of the deposited aluminum film were measured. These results are illustrated in
The novolak resist was formed on the aluminum film by the spin coating method. Ultraviolet light was irradiated from the microlens array side by using an ultraviolet light source whose directivity half value width was one degree. A result of measurement of an amount of light at the wavelength of 365 nm by a power meter was 3.7 mW/cm2. Development was performed with an alkaline developing solution for one minute after it was baked for 90 seconds on a hot-plate at a temperature of 110 degrees, and thereby, a micropore pattern was formed at the novolak resist. The glass substrate was immersed in the same alkaline developing solution as the developing solution of the resist for 15 seconds, and the aluminum film was wet-etched. The novolak resist was dissolved in an ethanol solution. Finally, the glass substrate was adhered on the aluminum film as the transparent flat plate 31.
A relationship between the exposure time and the micropore diameter formed at the aluminum film is illustrated in
The special mirror was disposed on the liquid crystal display (directivity half value width: 5 degrees) to manufacture the mirror display. When a transmittance distribution and a reflectivity distribution at a display area of the liquid crystal display were measured in the mirror display as stated above, an average transmittance of the mirror display was 59%, an average reflectivity was 68%, and uniform optical characteristics were obtained in the display area. The special mirror manufactured by applying the above-stated manufacturing process is used for the display surface of the mirror display, and thereby, it is possible to enable both high reflecting property and high transmitting property. The special mirror according to the embodiment is able to be used for various optical devices such as a reflection layer of a semitransmissive liquid crystal display, a projecting plane of a projector, optical components using asymmetry of light in a solar cell, a photodetector, and so on without being limited to the mirror display.
Modification examples of the display device according to the first embodiment are described with reference to
According to the display device 1 of the first embodiment, a mirror image equivalent to a mirror which is natural to the visual sense of human is given when the flat display part 10 is turned off. When the flat display part 10 is turned on, the light transmittance higher than a conventional constitution using the half mirror is held, and therefore, it is possible to show an image brighter. It is possible to provide the display device 1 with high performance as the mirror display compared to the conventional mirror display using the half mirror. Further, it is possible to easily form a mirror surface reflective film by processes such as coating of a window part by printing, and a partial plating in the manufacturing process of the special mirror, though the half mirror is sensitive for a film thickness of a reflective layer and high technology is required to enlarge the area thereof. In the manufacturing of the microlens, it is easy to form on the mirror surface because the size thereof is one capable of applying the printing process. It is thereby possible to reduce the manufacturing cost of the display device 1 functioning as the mirror display.
Next, a display device according to a second embodiment is described.
The liquid crystal display 40 has a liquid crystal layer 42 as illustrated in an enlarged view in
The reflection part 50 and the microlens array part 20 are disposed between the liquid crystal display 40 and the backlight 60. The reflection part 50 has a constitution similar to the mirror part 30 in the first embodiment. The reflection part 50 has the transparent flat plate 31, the reflective film 32 provided at one surface of the transparent flat plate 31, and the plurality of micro-windows 33 formed at the reflective film 32. Basically, these have the constitution similar to each element of the mirror part 30 in the first embodiment, and the shapes thereof, the formation materials, the formation methods, and so on are also similar thereto. Note that in the display device 2 of the second embodiment, the reflection part 50 is one performing the reflection display of the liquid crystal display 40 by using the light in which the outside light is reflected, and does not have a function as a mirror. It is not necessary to set the size of the micro-window 33 to be the resolution limit or less of the human visual sense. The reflection part 50 is disposed such that the reflective film 32 is located at the non-display surface 40b side of the liquid crystal display 40.
The microlens array part 20 which has the plurality of microlenses 21 converging the non-parallel light emitted from the backlight 60 toward the liquid crystal display 40 via the reflection part 50 to each of the plurality of micro-windows 33 is disposed between the reflection part 50 and the backlight 60. The plurality of microlenses 21 correspond to the micro-windows 33 individually. Optical characteristics of the individual microlens 21 are adjusted such that the light which is incident on a lens opening part from the backlight 60 is converged into the micro-window 33 and transmits. The pixels 41A to 41C in respective colors of the liquid crystal display 40 correspond to the individual microlenses 21. A correspondence between the pixel 41 of the liquid crystal display 40 and the microlens 21 is not limited to one-to-one correspondence but the plurality of micro-windows 33 may be corresponded to one pixel 41 or one microlens 21 may be corresponded to the plurality of pixels 41A to 41C as same as the first embodiment.
In the display device 2 illustrated in
The display device 2 of the second embodiment reflects the outside light by the reflective film 32 when the outside light such as sunlight or illumination light can be obtained, and the liquid crystal display 40 is displayed by using this reflection light. At this time, the reflective film 32 where the micro-windows 33 are formed functions as a reflection body having the reflectivity defined by the open area ratio, and therefore, it is possible to increase the reflectivity of the outside light compared to a conventional partial mirror. When the outside light is dark, the backlight 60 is lighted, and the liquid crystal display 40 is displayed by the light emitted from the backlight 60. At this time, the backlight is converged to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21, and transmits through the micro-windows 33. The liquid crystal display 40 is displayed by the light which transmits through the micro-windows 33.
As stated above, the optical component in which the micro-windows and the microlenses which adjust the focus thereto are combined is optically asymmetry, and the transmittance and the reflectivity relative to the parallel light are largely different depending on an incident direction. The optical component in which the micro-windows and the microlenses are combined is effective as a component which changes the light passing through the micro-windows into the light near the parallel light, or as a component which focuses the parallel light into one point. Note that the backlight 60 is generally a spread light source, and it is difficult to converge the non-parallel light emitted from the spread light source to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21. A range of the emission angle distribution of the light emitted from the backlight 60 is therefore limited. Specifically, the light emission angle distribution (envelope) is skewed in the normal direction. The non-parallel light whose light emission angle distribution is skewed in the normal direction is easy to be converged to the micro-windows 33 by the microlenses 21. Therefore, it is possible to increase an amount of the backlight which reaches the liquid crystal display 40.
As a concrete example of the backlight 60, the backlight 12 illustrated in
Results of calculations of light reflectivity and light transmittance are illustrated in
An opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 formed at the reflective film 32 preferably has a size of the spreading of light or more as same as the first embodiment. When the microlens 21 made up of a material which is transparent for the visible light (refractive index n) and the supporter 22 made up of the transparent material (refractive index n) which is the same as the formation material of the microlens 21 are used, the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 is preferable to satisfy the following relationship relative to a lens thickness d, the refractive index n of the transparent material, and the half value angle θ,
d·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n)]≦W/2.
When the microlens 21 made up of a first material (refractive index n1) which is transparent for the visible light with a thickness of d1 and the supporter 22 made up of a second material (refractive index n2) which is transparent for the visible light being different from the first material with a thickness of d2 are used, the opening diameter W of the micro-window 33 is preferable to satisfy following relationship relative to the thickness d1 of the microlens 21, the thickness d2 of the supporter 22, the refractive index n1 of the first transparent material, the refractive index n2 of the second transparent material, and the half value angle θ,
d1·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n1)]+d2·tan [arcsin(sin θ/n2)]≦W/2.
Concrete examples of a constitution of the microlens 21 and optical paths are as illustrated in
In the display device 2 illustrated in
Next, a modification example of the display device according to the second embodiment is described with reference to
The backlight 60 has an LED 61 which adjusts light intensity in a plane. The intensity of the outside light is measured by the photosensor 71, and the light intensity in the plane of the backlight 60 is adjusted by the LED 61 according thereto. The light intensity in the plane of the backlight 60 is adjusted such that the intensity balance is taken with the intensity of the outside light measured by the photosensor 71. Namely, the light intensity in the plane of the backlight 60 is adjusted such that the intensity in which the outside light and the backlight are added becomes uniform in the plane of the liquid crystal display 40. According to the display device 2A as stated above, it is possible to simultaneously enable a high quality display and energy saving.
Incidentally, constitutions of the first and second embodiments are able to be applied while combining with each other, further it is possible to replace a part thereof. While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel embodiments described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013-195040 | Sep 2013 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of prior International Application No. PCT/JP2014/004627 filed on Sep. 9, 2014, which is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2013-195040 filed on Sep. 20, 2013; the entire contents of all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2014/004627 | Sep 2014 | US |
Child | 15057313 | US |