This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. §365 of International Application PCT/EP2005/050439, filed Feb. 1, 2005, which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on Aug. 25, 2005 in English and which claims the benefit of French patent application No. 0401636, filed Feb. 18, 2004.
The present invention relates to a display device of front or rear projector type comprising an LCOS (Liquid Crystal On Silicon) type valve.
It will be described within the framework of a sequential colour display although it may be applied to a monochrome display.
A conventional LCOS valve is an array of elements arranged in rows and columns, each element being intended to display an image pixel. Currently, the architecture of an LCOS valve may be of two types:
With reference to
The operation mode of this valve element is illustrated by
As mentioned previously, this architecture allows each element of the valve to receive and display simultaneously different video levels. Its main drawback is the large number of transistors in the drive circuit of the elements. The size of the drive circuit of each element of the valve is therefore large, this being prejudicial to the overall size of the valve.
Currently, with a 0.35 μm CMOS technology supporting voltage levels of the order of 3 to 5 volts necessary for the driving of the liquid crystals of the valve, the dimensions of each valve element are 12 μm×12 μm. In the case of a high-definition image (1920×1080), this represents a diagonal of 1.05 inches.
An object of the invention is to propose a new architecture of valve for reducing the dimensions of the latter and decreasing its manufacturing cost.
According to the invention, it is proposed to reduce the number of transistors and of capacitors in the drive circuit of the liquid crystals by sharing some of them in common between several elements of the valve.
The present invention relates to an image display device comprising:
In the case of a sequential colour display with at least two colours, the specific drive means and the common drive means that are coupled to one and the same group of elements control the liquid crystals of the elements of the group in such a way as to alternately display the specific values of the video information relating to a colour and the common values of the video information relating to said colour or to another colour.
In the case of a sequential colour display, the device then comprises for example:
According to the invention, the adjacent elements of a group of elements may belong either to one and the same column of elements of the valve and to consecutive rows, or to consecutive rows and consecutive columns of elements of the valve.
According to the invention the specific drive means of an element comprises:
The common drive means of a group of elements of the valve comprises:
The invention will be better understood on reading the description which follows, given by way of nonlimiting example, and with reference to the appended figures among which:
According to the invention, there is proposed a new architecture of valve elements making it possible to reduce the number of transistors and of capacitors in the valve. According to this architecture, transistors and capacitors are used in common by several elements of the valve to drive the liquid crystals of these elements. It is more particularly proposed that a single transistor T3 and a single capacitor CS2 be used in each group of at least two elements of the valve. Various embodiments are proposed to illustrate this principle.
This architecture requires the use of a particular coding of the video information and of a particular address of the video information coded in the valve. This particular coding consists in decomposing the video information of each image pixel into two parts: a value common to a group of at least two adjacent pixels and a value specific to each pixel. In order for the common values and the specific values to be displayed during one and the same video frame, the frequency of addressing of the elements of the valve is multiplied by two with respect to a conventional sequential colour display (180 Hz). According to the invention, the common value shared by a group of pixels is stored in the capacitor CS2 of the group of at least two valve elements charged with displaying said group of at least two pixels and the specific value of each pixel is stored in the capacitor CS1 of the valve element charged with displaying this pixel. According to the invention and within the framework of a sequential colour display of an image, the common values and the specific values for a given colour are transmitted sequentially to the valve alternating, for said image, the transmission of the common values for a given colour and the transmission of the specific values for the same colour or another colour. Within the framework of a monochrome display, the specific values for one and the same image are transmitted one after the other during a first part of the video frame and the common values during the other part of the frame.
Several valve architectures in accordance with the invention are proposed.
A first embodiment is proposed in
The particular coding to be used to operate these elements is described hereinafter. This coding is identical to that already defined in French patent FR 2 841 366. This coding has been defined so as to decrease the addressing time for the elements of the valve when the display frequency is increased. It is used, in this application, to code video information which is displayed with conventional valve elements, with or without pixel memory. The coding to be employed with the valve elements of
The video levels NG1 and NG2 are decomposed into a common value VC shared by the two pixels P1 and P2 and two specific values VS1 and VS2, one for each pixel, such that
possible to take
i.e. 125 in the present case. The specific values VS1 and VS2 are then equal to 175 and 75. This example is summarized by Table 1 below.
When, for a given pixel the specific value is displayed after the common value or vice versa, the value of grey level perceived by the human eye is the mean value, i.e. 150 for pixel P1 and 100 for pixel P2, this corresponding to the video levels NG1 and NG2 to be displayed. Of course, the specific value may be displayed before the common value VC or vice versa.
According to the invention, the specific values of the pixels of the image for each colour are provided alternating with the common values corresponding to the valve. These values are for example transmitted as illustrated in the
If the sequencing of
During field 2, the common value VC stored in the capacitor CS2 is displayed by the liquid crystals 12 and 12′. The transistors T4 and T4′ are therefore conducting during the whole of this field. The specific values VS1 and VS2 for the colour blue are stored respectively in the capacitors CS1 and CS1′. The transistors T1 and T1′ are therefore turned on when the values VS1 and VS2 are present on the column 11 during this field. The other transistors, T2 and T2′, are off.
In the same manner, during field 3, the common value for the red colour is stored in the capacitor CS2 and the specific values for the colour blue are displayed. During field 4, the specific values for the green colour are stored in the capacitors CS1 and CS1′ and the common value for the red colour is displayed. During field 5, the common value for the colour blue is stored in the capacitor CS2 and the specific values for the green colour are displayed. Finally, during field 6, the specific values for the red colour are stored in the capacitors CS1 and CS1′ and the common value for the colour blue is displayed.
In this architecture where the elements of the valve are grouping together in groups of 2, the single capacitor CS2 is used to store the common values VC shared by the two elements and the two capacitors CS1 and CS1′ are used to store the specific values VS1 and VS2. This architecture makes it possible to dispense with a transistor and a capacitor for each group of two elements of the valve.
It is also possible to save a bigger number of transistors and capacitors. It is then sufficient to use common values which are common to a larger number of elements, for example to four elements, as illustrated hereinafter.
The particular coding to be used to operate these elements is given hereinafter through an example. Let us consider the case of four image pixels P1, P2, P3 and P4 having respectively, for a given colour (red, green or blue), video levels NG1=150, NG2=130, NG3=120 and NG4=100 and to be displayed by the elements 10, 10′, 10″ and 10′″.
The video levels NG1, NG2, NG3 and NG4 are decomposed into a common value VC shared by the four pixels and four specific values VS1, VS2, VS3 and VS4 for each of the four pixels. The common value VC is, for example, the mean value of the four input grey levels. These values are defined in Table 2 below.
Thus, when, for a given pixel, the specific value and the corresponding common value are displayed sequentially, the value of grey level perceived by the human eye is the mean value, which corresponds to the video levels NG1, NG2, NG3 and NG4 which are to be displayed.
These coded values are transmitted and displayed by the elements 10, 10′, 10″ and 10′″ as shown in
In this architecture, the single capacitor CS2 is common to four valve elements. This architecture therefore makes it possible to dispense with three transistors (T3) and three capacitors (CS) for each group of four elements of the valve.
This technique may of course be extended to groups of eight or sixteen valve elements, or even more.
These architectures of valve element and the associated codings are given merely by way of example.
A sequencing such as shown in
Of course, a light source producing coloured light directly may be provided in place of the white light source+colour wheel assembly.
In practice, the coding means 2 control the frequency of rotation of the colour wheel. To implement the sequencing of
The light thus transmitted by the valve 1 is then redirected towards a screen by an optical device.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 01636 | Feb 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/050439 | 2/1/2005 | WO | 00 | 5/23/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/078695 | 8/25/2005 | WO | A |
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