This application is a national stage application under 35 U.S.C. 371 and claims the benefit of PCT Application No. PCT/GB2014/053825 having an international filing date of 22 Dec. 2014, which designated the United States, which PCT application claimed the benefit of Great Britain Application No. 1322917.4 filed 23 Dec. 2013 and Great Britain Application No. 1417974.1 filed 10 Oct. 2014, the disclosures of each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a display device.
There have been considerable developments in display technologies, for example in the field of portable computing and communication devices. Some display technologies, such as back-lit color displays have relatively high power consumption and are complex to make. Different technologies provide non-back-lit black-and-white displays, but have slow switching speeds, so are not capable of displaying video, and, of course lack color. Further technologies require high drive voltages, which are inconvenient to generate, and tend to have a high power consumption. With all of these technologies, there is also the problem of producing high resolution displays.
The present invention has been devised in view of the above problems.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a display device comprising:
a plurality of electrodes;
a portion of solid state material, wherein said material has a refractive index that is reversibly controllable by application of a voltage to said electrodes; and
a controller adapted to apply at least one voltage, via said electrodes, to change said refractive index of said material.
Further optional features of the invention are defined in the dependent claims.
The present invention enables a display device to be fabricated that can operate at high speed, and provide color. The invention provides a display device that can be simple to fabricate and can offer high resolution display. The display device of an embodiment of the invention is compatible with other readily available commercial electronics and industrial technology, and can be fabricated on a variety of substrates, including flexible substrates.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
An embodiment of a display device will be described with reference to
The portion of material 10 is provided on a reflector 12, which in this embodiment is a layer of metal such as platinum or aluminium. A spacer layer 14 is sandwiched between the material 10 and the reflector 12. A capping layer 16 is provided on top of the material layer 10. In this particular embodiment, the upper surface 18 of the capping layer 16 constitutes the viewing surface of the display device, and the reflector 12 is the back-reflector. Light enters and leaves through the viewing surface 18, as indicated by the arrows in
The spacer 14 and the capping layer 16 are both optically transmissive, and are ideally as transparent as possible. In this embodiment, the spacer 14 and capping layer 16 also have the dual function of being electrodes for use in applying a voltage to the material layer 10 which is sandwiched between these electrodes. Therefore, the spacer 14 and the capping layer 16 are made of a transparent, electrically conductive, material such as indium tin oxide (ITO).
The whole structure showing in
In the preferred embodiment, the material layer 10, composed of GST, is less than 100 nm thick, and preferably less than 10 nm thick, such as 6 or 7 nm thick. The spacer layer 14 is grown to have a thickness typically in the range from 10 nm to 250 nm, depending on the color and optical properties required, as discussed below. The capping layer 16 is, for example, 20 nm thick.
The material of the layer 10, in this embodiment GST, can undergo an electrically induced reversible phase change. It is deposited in the amorphous state.
As previously explained, there is a substantial change in the refractive index when the material is switched between amorphous and crystalline phases. The material is stable in either state. This means that the voltage can be entirely removed when the display is in a steady-state (not being switched), so the power consumption of the device is low. Switching can be performed an effectively limitless number of times. The switching speed is also very rapid, typically less than 300 ns, and certainly several orders faster than the human eye can perceive.
A controller 19 (schematically depicted in
Thus, on viewing the device of
Another way of presenting these results is illustrated in
In this way, the display device of
A further enhanced embodiment is that the material of the layer 10 does not have to be switched simply between a fully crystalline and a fully amorphous state. A mixture of phases can be achieved, such as 20% crystalline, 40% crystalline etc. Partial crystallisation is achieved by simply limiting the maximum current allowed during a switching event (e.g. using a variable resistor in series with one of the electrodes connected to the device). The resulting effective refractive index of the material is somewhere between the two extremes of fully crystalline and fully amorphous depending on the degree of partial crystallisation. Typically between 4 and 8 distinct mixed phases are achievable, but with appropriate control, can be much higher, such as 128 values, and effectively a continuum of refractive index values can be achieved, corresponding to tracing a path through color space.
Each intersection of the horizontal and vertical electrodes now constitutes a stack-like structure as shown in
Other embodiments of the device can be made in which further electronic components are fabricated in an integrated manner for each pixel to provide what is know in the art as an active matrix.
Further embodiments of display devices will now be explained with reference to
Although some of the embodiments use ITO as the preferred material for the transparent electrodes, this is merely an example, and other suitable materials can be used, such as carbon nanotubes, or a thin layer of metal, such as silver. It is also understood that it is not essential for the electrodes to be transparent when a structure such as that of
The preceding embodiments have been described with reference to GST (Ge2Sb2Te5) as the phase change material of the layer 10, but this is not essential to the invention, and many other suitable materials are available, either separately or in combination, including compounds or alloys of the combinations of elements selected from the following list: GeSbTe, GeTe, GeSb, GaSb, AgInSbTe, InSb, InSbTe, InSe, SbTe, TeGeSbS, AgSbSe, SbSe, GeSbMnSn, AgSbTe, AuSbTe, and AlSb. It is also understood that various stoichiometric forms of these materials are possible; for example GexSbyTez; and another suitable material is Ag3In4Sb76Te17 (also known as AIST). Furthermore, the material can comprise one or more dopants, such as C or N.
Although the embodiments described herein mention that the material layer is switchable between two states such as crystalline and amorphous phases, the transformation could be between any two solid phases, including, but not limited to: crystalline to another crystalline or quasi-crystalline phase or vice-versa; amorphous to crystalline or quasi-crystalline/semi-ordered or vice versa, and all forms in between. Embodiments are also not limited to just two states.
The mechanism of switching is not limited to applied electric pulse induced heating, but could be any electromagnetic field induced heating for example a light pulse from a laser or other source, or could be thermal heating for example using electrical resistive heating of an adjacent layer that is in thermal contact with the phase change material.
A further embodiment of an optical device is to provide one or more additional phase change material layers 10 and spacer layers 14 to the previously described structure to create a multilayer stack. By repeating alternating layers, as in this embodiment, the width of the spectral response peak can be reduced to make it more wavelength (color) specific. However, the absorption losses also increase as more layers are added, so the maximum number of phase change material layers is typically two or three.
In the multilayer stack optical device, the thicknesses of each of the layers can be selected separately from each other to engineer desired optical properties. For example, the thickness of each phase change material layer 10 determines the contrast between the different states or phases of the material 10 across the spectrum. Multiple colour combinations (spectra) can be obtained by separately switching/selecting the phase of each material layer. For example, in the case of two phase change material layers, four different apparent colors can be obtained by the combinations: Am-Am; Cry-Am; Am-Cry; and Cry-Cry (where the symbols Am=amorphous, and Cry=crystalline, and the pairs of symbols correspond to the two layers). Each of the multiple layers can be separately switched when appropriate respective electrodes are provided.
A further embodiment of the invention is similar to
In the preferred embodiments of
VOx compounds are merely one example of suitable phase change materials for these further embodiments. Any of the so-called “Mott memristors” (materials that undergo a metal-to-insulator transition, MIT, at some specific temperature) are suitable, for example NbOx. These compounds can, of course, be used in any of the earlier embodiments described herein, from
Drive circuitry is required to control the switching of each of the pixels composed of a monostable material (such as VO2 described above). The phase change is temperature dependent, but it is impractical to provide a thermocouple and temperature control feedback system for each pixel; however, it is also important to finely control the current supplied, to prevent overheating and unnecessary power consumption. One suitable form of drive circuit is a self-oscillating circuit, such as a Pearson-Anson oscillator, as illustrated in
A further variant on any of the preceding embodiments is include a liquid crystal transmissive display (not shown) at either the front or back surface of the layered display structure. The liquid crystal display can be used to provide extra control over the polarization of light entering and/or leaving the display device.
Display devices embodying the invention can be produced that have low power consumption, but provide a high-resolution, color display (the resolution is only limited by lithographic techniques). The display devices can switch at high speed, so can show video, and have a wide viewing angle. The devices can be fabricated using standard techniques, and can be made very thin, and also flexible if desired.
The preceding embodiments of the invention provide a two-dimensional (2D) display. Although, the display panel can be flexible and/or can be provided on a curved surface, it is still basically 2D. However, it can be desirable to provide a display such that items can be visualized in three-dimensions (3D). As previously mentioned, the arrangement of
The 3D display of this embodiment is especially suited for use in any field that uses tomography, such as is common in medical imaging, because the data is intrinsically obtained as slices of the object being imaged. The control box 60 provides each 2D display panel with the image data for a respective slice of the object, and the user can move around the 3D display to view the object from different angles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1322917.4 | Dec 2013 | GB | national |
1417974.1 | Oct 2014 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2014/053825 | 12/22/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/097468 | 7/2/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3460884 | Heller | Aug 1969 | A |
3496429 | Robinson | Feb 1970 | A |
3515880 | Letter | Jun 1970 | A |
3535598 | Feist | Oct 1970 | A |
3823998 | Yazaki | Jul 1974 | A |
3998523 | Otomo | Dec 1976 | A |
5272359 | Nagasubramanian | Dec 1993 | A |
5347377 | Revelli, Jr. | Sep 1994 | A |
5764317 | Sadovnik et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
6819469 | Koba | Nov 2004 | B1 |
7262899 | Bigman | Aug 2007 | B2 |
8456514 | Leister | Jun 2013 | B2 |
8917440 | Kim et al. | Dec 2014 | B2 |
20060119774 | Chen | Jun 2006 | A1 |
20070125997 | Kim | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20090027758 | Koshida et al. | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20110149371 | Liu et al. | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20130043375 | Baleine et al. | Feb 2013 | A1 |
20150098032 | Park | Apr 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2009-086060 | Apr 2009 | JP |
Entry |
---|
Kats, Mikhail A. et al. “Nanometre Optical Coatings Based on Strong Interference Effects in Highly Absorbing Media” Letters—Nature Materials; vol. 12; Jan. 2013. |
Kats, Mikhail A. et al., “Ultra-Thin Perfect Absorber Employing a Tunable Phase Change Material” Applied Physics Letters 101, 221101; 2012. |
Yamada, Noboru “Origin, Secret, and Application of the Ideal Phase-Change Material GeSbTe” Physica Status Solidi (B), vol. 249, No. 10; pp. 1837-1842; Oct. 1, 2012. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion prepared by the European Patent Office dated Feb. 12, 2015, for International Application No. PCT/GB2014/053825. |
Noboru Yamada: “Origin, secret, and application of the ideal phase-change material GeSbTe”, Physica Status Solidi (B), vol. 249, No. 10, Oct. 1, 2012 (Oct. 1, 2012), pp. 1837-1842. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170031231 A1 | Feb 2017 | US |