The invention relates to a display device comprising a layer of electroluminescent material between a first pattern of selection electrodes and a second pattern of data electrodes, in which at least one of the two patterns is transparent to the radiation to be emitted, while at overlap areas of the electrodes, said electrodes, jointly with the interpositioned electroluminescent material, form part of pixels, the device comprising a drive circuit.
Such display devices (matrices of organic LEDs, polymer LEDs) find an increasingly wider application in, for example, mobile telephones.
A problem in driving such matrices of organic LEDs is the LED-associated capacitance constituted by the overlapping electrodes and the interpositioned layer or layers of organic material, as well as the capacitance of the drive lines. This is a problem because the LEDs are usually driven by means of current control so that, during use, a selected pixel is supplied with a substantially constant current. A large part of the initial current, which should actually flow through the relevant LED, charges the LED-associated capacitance so that the LED conveys too little current and consequently emits light at a too low luminance level. In larger matrices, the capacitance and the resistance of the drive lines also have their influence and, due to long RC times, the desired setting level during a writing period cannot be achieved in some cases. Moreover, switching requires much power.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a solution to the above-mentioned problem.
To this end, a display device according to the invention selects only a portion of the pixels per frame period.
Consequently, a plurality of LEDs in, for example, a row are less frequently driven so that they consume less energy during switching.
In a first embodiment, the pixels of the odd columns are supplied with a substantially constant current in every odd frame period in a matrix of pixels at overlap areas of the electrodes, and the pixels of the even columns are supplied with a substantially constant current in every even frame period, the currents being substantially doubled as compared with the current used in a drive circuit which, during use, selects all pixels per frame period. The invention is explicitly not limited to display devices with a matrix of pixels but is also applicable to a segmented display device.
Similarly, the pixels of the odd rows are supplied with a substantially constant current in every odd frame period in a matrix of pixels at overlap areas of the electrodes, and the pixels of the even rows are supplied with a substantially constant current in every even frame period, the currents being substantially doubled as compared with the current used in a drive circuit which, during use, selects all pixels per frame period.
The two measures may also be combined so that each pixel is selected only once per four frame periods. The current through a selected pixel is then quadrupled with respect to the drive in which all pixels are selected per frame period. To prevent too high currents, it is also possible to extend the drive pulse, provided that the product of time and current is substantially the same for each pixel as in a drive circuit which, during use, selects all pixels per frame period.
More generally, one or more pixels can be selected once per p frame periods, with a p-fold current being passed through the selected pixel.
In a preferred embodiment with n (n≧2) sub-pixels of n colors, the sub-pixels of the different colors are supplied with a substantially constant current in n consecutive frame periods, the currents being n-fold as compared with the currents used in a drive circuit which, during use, selects all sub-pixels per frame period.
When using sub-pixels of n colors in some frame periods, the sub-pixels of one of the different colors can be selected and the sub-pixels of m (m>1, m<n) colors can be selected in other frame periods.
These and other aspects of the invention are apparent from and will be elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
In the drawings:
The Figures are diagrammatic; corresponding components are generally denoted by the same reference numerals.
In a customary drive mode, all information for a line to be driven is first stored in the data register 16. Subsequently, the row electrode 13 associated with the line, in this example the row electrode associated with line 1, is selected. To this end, the relevant switch 31 is connected to ground and, dependent on the voltages on the lines 21, currents start to flow in the current sources associated with line 1 and consequently in the LEDs.
As described in the opening paragraph, a capacitance 32 constituted by the overlapping electrodes and the intermediate layer or layers of organic material is associated with each LED. The effect of this capacitance will now be described with reference to the capacitances C11, C21, C31, and Cr1 which are only associated with column 1. Although only the phenomena in column 1 are described, this description is representative of what takes place in the complete matrix of pixels.
During selection of a row of LEDs, the row electrode 13 is connected to ground via switch 31. After termination of a selection period, denoted by tsel in
Simultaneously with (or immediately after) selection of the row 1, the above-mentioned current sources (the combination of a transistor 22 and a resistor 26) are activated via the separate parts 16-1, 16-2, . . . , 16-c of the data register 16 so that they start conveying a current. After selection, the LEDs are reverse-biased, as described hereinbefore. To prevent unwanted emission in the row of LEDs which has just been switched off, but also to prevent a parasitic current, this means that the capacitances C11, C21, C31 and Cr1 must be discharged at least before selection of the next row to a level at which no light is emitted. To this end, the LEDs are, as it were, short-circuited at the end of the selection period by connecting the column electrodes to ground via a switch (transistor) 33. The switches (transistors) 33 (block 40 in
The current from said current sources is partly used for charging the capacitances C11, C21, C31 and Cn1. At a high value of C, i.e. at an intrinsically high capacitance or in the case of many rows, it is possible that the desired voltage level is not achieved within a selection period tsel and the LED emits light having the wrong intensity. Moreover, charging and discharging of the capacitances unnecessarily requires much dissipation.
To prevent this, the number of pixels selected per frame period is reduced in the device of
According to the invention, only the information for the odd columns is presented to the data electrodes 12 (pattern f, Idata,1) in a first frame period during two consecutive frame periods, and only the information for the even columns (pattern g, Idata,2) is presented to the column electrodes 12 in a subsequent frame period. To obtain the same intensity of emitted light as in the case where each pixel is driven in each frame period, the quantity of current through the LED must now be doubled. The quantity of dissipation due to the DC current does not change thereby (the frequency is halved), but a considerable reduction of dissipation is obtained because the LED-associated capacitance now only needs to be charged at half the frequency.
For low grey values, an even lower frequency may be sufficient than once per two frame periods because the eye is less sensitive to flicker at these grey values. The drive unit 18 is provided with extra processing means, for example, a microprocessor or a look-up table, for this frame rate modulation. In this case, use may also be made of pulse width modulation.
In another embodiment, only the information for the odd lines is presented to the data electrodes 12 (pattern h) in a first frame period during two consecutive frame times, and only the information for the even lines (pattern i) is presented to the data electrodes 12 in a subsequent frame period. The frequency of the selection signals may also be halved (patterns j, k, l, m) in which the data patterns are again adapted to the columns (pattern n) (to be compared with interlacing when displaying images by means of a cathode ray tube).
In a color display device, separate red, green and blue signals are presented for the red, green and blue sub-frames, for example, in the same way and during three consecutive frame periods. The energy consumption due to said capacitive currents now decreases by about two-thirds.
|-,G,-|R,G,-|-,G,B|
(Video) information is now presented via the green pixels at the full rate (every frame period) while further color information is presented at a lower frequency. Since the green color is dominant for the perception of the image, said artefacts (jerky image in moving images, flicker and color break-up) are less disturbing, if not invisible.
Several variations are possible within the scope of the invention. For example, the division as described with reference to
|-,G,-|R,G,-|R,G,-|-,G,-|-,G,B|R,G,-|.
Other sequences are alternatively feasible such as, for example, for three consecutive frame periods:
|-,G,-|R,G,-|R,G,B|
or for four consecutive frame periods:
|-,G,-|R,G,-|-,G,B|R,-,-|
If necessary, the sequence may be dynamically adjustable and adapted to the contents of the (video) image to be displayed, using a processor in the drive unit 18.
Where, in
Instead of the combination of red, green and blue LEDs, combinations of more colors can be chosen, while the pixels can be built up of, for example, four instead of three sub-pixels. Basic colors other than red, green and blue may be chosen alternatively. In the examples, the different colors are represented as strips in the column direction, but they may also be provided as strips in the row direction or in a delta-nabla configuration.
Use may also be made of pulse width modulation in which, for example, the drive means vary the pulse width and adjust the current through a pixel in such a way that the product of time and current for each pixel is substantially the same as in a drive circuit which, during use, selects all pixels per frame period.
The desired constant current through the LEDs may also be realized with means other than the current sources 22, 26 shown.
The protective scope of the invention is not limited to the embodiments described. The invention resides in each and every novel characteristic feature and each and every combination of characteristic features. Reference numerals in the claims do not limit their protective scope. Use of the verb “comprise” and its conjugations does not exclude the presence of elements other than those stated in the claims. Use of the article “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements.
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