The invention pertains to a display for creating color images and texts recognizable by incident light, in which the image area consists of numerous electronically controllable pixels in a raster-like arrangement and in which each pixel has at least three color levels arranged beside one another (side by side) or behind one another (back to back) for the colors red, green, blue or cyan, magenta, yellow that are formed by flat transparent containers and whose inner chambers are connected to color reservoirs whose content can be moved by electronic control in such a way that transparent color fluids is fed from the color reservoirs into the color levels or from the color levels into the color reservoirs.
Displays of this type are known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,037,955, U.S. Pat. No. 6,747,777 and EP 1 090 384. With these displays illuminated from outside by sunlight, daylight or lamps there is also the desire—depending on location and time of day—to illuminated the image formed by the pixels also from the back. Therefore, in EP 1 090 384 it is already suggested that one or more light sources be arranged behind the color levels made of transparent material and in front of the color reservoirs, so that the image formed by the pixels is also visible in darkness.
It is the task of this invention to create a color display, in which there is the possibility, with incident light particularly daylight, to optically highlight and/or color-wise alter parts of the image formed by the controlled pixels.
This task is fulfilled according to the invention, in that light sources are arranged behind the color levels of the pixels, each of the light sources being allocated to one pixel and being individually electronically controllable.
With the help of these light sources parts of the image illuminated by daylight can be optically highlighted or altered in their colors. The color mixing can take place—as in a color TV—by additive mixing of the three basic colors red, green blue, or—as in the case of color photography—by subtractive mixing of the colors yellow, magenta, and cyan.
The light sources allocated to the pixels could especially be white light emitting diodes.
The light sources could however also consist of plane illuminating bodies that illuminate a larger number of pixels from the back and of masks arranged between the illuminating bodies and the color levels of the pixels, which can be controlled for each pixel in such a way that the light passage through the mask is open for each pixel or more or less closed.
For backlighting of a larger pixel field, particularly illuminating device as known in flat screens are suitable, which consist of a rectangular or quadratic light-conducting illuminating surface covering the pixel field and light emitting diodes (LEDs) or cathode ray tubes arranged on the side edges of the illuminating surface.
The masks can be formed by polarization filters, whose light passage can be controlled for each pixel with the help of electronic fields. Two polarization filters can be arranged and controlled in such a way that they block passage of all planes of polarization of the light. The polarization filters are foil-type and can be placed directly on the illuminating surface.
So that the color levels can give an as brilliant image as possible with incident daylight, a white or silvery but non-reflective reflection layer, that is partially or temporarily light-permeable, is arranged behind the layer of the color level. The reflection layer can be formed by a milky-turbid glass surface or plastic foil, or by a glass pane or plastic foil that is provided with a mat, white or silvery structure.
For improving the reflection of incident light and for improving the light-permeability of the backlighting a reflection layer is suggested that contains leaf-shaped white or silvery pigments, and the pigments can be aligned parallel to the layer plane or perpendicular to it by means of an electrical or magnetic field. The swimming leaf-shaped pigments distributed uniformly in a fluid form a good reflection layer when they are aligned parallel to the layer plane, and this layer is largely light-permeable when the leaf structure of the pigments extends perpendicular to the reflection plane.
However, the reflection layer can also be formed from one flat container made of transparent material that is filled with a white or silvery color, when this layer is not supposed to reflect, and is filled with a clear transparent fluid when it is supposed to be light-permeable.
The flat containers filled with white or silvery color fluid or with colorless fluid can be arranged behind a pixel field or even as fourth color level for each pixel. In both cases, the display can be switched over from day operation to night operation by changing the white or silvery reflection layer to a light-permeable layer allowing backlighting.
In the following description design embodiments of the invention are explained in more details on the basis of drawings.
Each pixel 1 of the display has three color level layers 2, 2′, 2″—with an upper color level 3, a central color level 3′ and a rear color level 3″. The color levels 3, 3′, 3″ are flat containers made of transparent material that are connected to color reservoirs through channels 8, 8′, 8″ and 9, 9′, 9″. Transparent color fluids of the colors CYAN, MAGENTA and YELLOW (CMY) or RED, GREEN, BLUE (RGB) can be moved out of the color reservoirs into the color levels 3, 3′, 3″ and back into the color reservoirs. The color fluid can be moved back and forth against an air cushion, or it can be moved along with a non-mixable colorless fluid in a closed loop or back and forth. If the color levels 3, 3′, 3″, the channels 8, 8′, 8″ and 9, 9′, 9″ as well as the corresponding color reservoir are partly filled with a color fluid and partly with a colorless fluid that is non-mixable with the color fluid, and transportation of the color fluid and the colorless fluid takes place in the known method by means of electro-wetting (U.S. Pat. No. 6,037,955) or by means of another micro-pump, then the color fluids can be fed to the color levels 3, 3′, 3″ through the channels 8, 8′, 8″ and simultaneously the colorless fluid can be drained from the color levels 3, 3′, 3″ through the channels 9, 9′, 9″ or vice-versa. Behind the color levels 3, 3′, 3″ of each pixel 1 a light source 6 is arranged, in particular a white emitting LED. This light source can be switched on and off independent of the other light sources 6 and, if required, can also be controlled in light intensity. These light sources are fixed on a carrier plate 7.
Behind the color levels and in front of the light sources 6 there is a light-permeating white or silvery reflection layer 5, which can be formed by a plastic foil or a thin glass pane and whose light-permeability is at least 40%.
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This flat container 5′ covering one pixel field can however also be connected to a system that is filled with two fluids that cannot be mixed with one another. One fluid is a white or silvery color fluid and the other fluid is colorless fluid or a colorless gas. With the help of electro-wetting or a micro-pump the fluids can be moved in such a way that the transparent flat container is filled only with white or silvery color, or only with the colorless clear transparent fluid, depending on whether this layer is supposed to reflect the incident light or is supposed to allow the back-illuminating light to pass through.
The color reservoirs (not shown) are arranged behind the reflection layer, so that the color fluids can be moved out of the visible range of the person observing the display.
In
The size of the pixels 1 is dependent on the size of the display and the distance of the observer from this display and lies in the range of 0.5 mm2 to 16 mm2, that in case of a quadratic pixel conforms to a pixel width of 0.7 to 4 mm.
The channels 8, 9; 8′, 9′ and 8″, 9″ leading from the color reservoirs behind the reflection layer to the color levels 3, 3′, 3″ are worked into the webs 10 that separate the pixels 1 or their color levels 3, 3′, 3″ from one another and that rest with their surface against under face of the cover layer 4 as well as lie against the front and middle color level layer 2 and 2′ and are tightly welded or affixed on to them.
List of reference signs:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 007 191.0 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
10 2005 008 834.1 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP06/50933 | 2/14/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/14/2007 |