The invention relates to a display panel comprising a light guide plate, a second plate facing the light guide plate, a movable element between the light guide plate and the second plate, for locally coupling light out of the light guide plate, the light guide plate having a contact surface facing the movable element for contacting the movable element, the second plate having a contact surface facing the movable element for contacting the movable element, the movable element having a first contact surface facing the light guide plate for contacting the light guide plate and a second contact surface facing the second plate for contacting the second plate, means for reducing sticking of the movable element to the plates comprising a roughness R1 at the contact surface of the light guide plate and a roughness R2 at the first contact surface of the movable element, at least one of the roughnesses R1 and R2 being larger than 5 nm and both the roughnesses R1 and R2 being smaller than 100 nm, and electrodes to locally bring the contact surfaces of the movable element into contact with respectively the contact surface of the light guide plate and the contact surface of the second plate.
An embodiment of the display panel of the type mentioned in the opening paragraph is known from WO 99/28890.
The known display panel comprises a light guide plate of a fluorescent material, in which display panel, in operation, light is generated and trapped so that this first plate forms a light guide, a second plate and, between said two plates, a movable element. By applying suitable voltages to the electrodes on the light guide plate, the second plate and the movable element, the movable element is locally brought into contact with the light guide plate or the second plate. The electrode on the movable element is also referred to as common electrode. At locations where the movable element is in contact with the light guide plate, light is coupled out of the light guide plate during operation and scattered out of the movable element. Locations where light can be coupled out of the light guide plate are known as picture elements. By regulating whether or not light is coupled out at picture elements an image is represented.
Roughnesses R1 and R2 are present at the contact surface of the light guide plate facing the movable element and at the contact surface of the movable element facing the light guide plate to reduce sticking of the movable element to the light guide plate by reducing adhesive Van der Waals' forces. Roughness is defined as the distance range within which the surface profile is confined, as measured with e.g. an atomic force microscope. It is known that, if at least one of the roughnesses R1 and R2 is larger than 5 nm, the Van der Waals' forces are reduced substantially. On the other hand, if one of the roughnesses R1 and R2 is larger than 100 nm, then the optical contact between the movable element and the light guide plate is reduced, such that the coupling of light out of the light guide plate is severely diminished. Furthermore, anti-adhesion layers are present in between the movable element and the light guide plate as well as in between the movable element and the second plate. These layers reduce sticking of the movable element to the plates by reducing the magnitude of the chemical adhesive forces.
Electrodes on the surfaces of both plates facing the movable element are separated from the common electrode on the movable element by an insulating layer having a thickness of about one micrometer. These insulating layers are present on the electrodes on the light guide plate and the second plate to prevent direct electrical contact with the common electrode on the movable element. The insulating layer represents the contact surface of the plate. Therefore, the contact surface of a member facing another member denotes the free surface of the member, whether or not covered with layers, which is capable of making direct contact with the other member.
A drawback of the known display panel is that it requires relatively much energy to locally bring about contact between the light guide plate and the movable element by applying voltages to the electrodes. Therefore, in operation, the known panel requires relatively much energy.
It is an object of the invention to provide a display panel of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph, which requires relatively little energy to be operated.
This object is achieved in that the means for reducing sticking further comprise a roughness R3 at the contact surface of the second plate and a roughness R4 at the second contact surface of the movable element, and both the roughnesses R1 and R2 are smaller than at least one of the roughnesses R3 and R4.
The inventors have recognized that the energy to locally bring about contact between the light guide plate and the movable element by applying voltages to the electrodes is smaller if a roughness R3 is present at the contact surface of the second plate facing the movable element and a roughness R4 is present at the contact surface of the movable element facing the second plate. If at least one of the roughnesses R3 and R4 is larger than 5 nm, the Van der Waals' forces between the second plate and the movable element are reduced substantially, resulting in a display panel requiring relatively little energy to locally bring about contact between the light guide plate and the movable element. Taking into account only these Van der Waals' forces, there is no reason for the roughnesses R3 and R4 to be over 5 nm. However, the inventors have further recognized that the roughnesses R3 and R4 influence, at a given voltage difference between the second plate and the movable element, the attractive electrical force between the second plate and the movable element. This attractive electrical force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the electrode on the second plate and the common electrode on the movable element. For the second plate and the movable element, which stick together tightly via intimate surface contact, this attractive electrical force is relatively large. To pull them apart, this relatively large attractive electrical force has to be overcome, as it is very difficult in practice to delete this attractive electrical force by removing the voltage difference. If the distance between the second plate and the movable element is larger, the movable element and the second plate do not stick together tightly via intimate surface contact, i.e. the contact surfaces mostly touch each other at the tips of protrusions protecting from either one of the surfaces or from both surfaces, and it is easier to pull them apart. It is clear that if the movable element sticks tightly to the second plate, the voltage difference between the electrodes on the movable element and the light guide plate that is necessary to interrupt this contact is relatively large. By virtue of the roughness R3 at the contact surface of the second plate facing the movable element and the roughness R4 at the contact surface of the movable element facing the second plate, a smaller attractive electrical force between the movable element and the second plate, if the movable element is in contact with the second plate, has to be overcome in order to interrupt this contact. This attractive electrical force can still be non-negligible if one of the roughnesses R3 and R4 is smaller than 5 nm and the other roughness is equal to 5 nm. A roughness larger than 5 nm causes the energy necessary to interrupt this contact to be smaller. In fact, the maximum value for the roughnesses R3 and R4 is limited by the space in between the light guide plate and the second plate, which space is reduced by the thickness of the movable element.
A relatively small attractive electrical force between the movable element and the second plate, induced by voltages applied to the electrodes on the movable element and the second plate if the movable element is in contact with the second plate, causes the required electrical force, induced by voltages applied to the electrodes on the movable element and the light guide plate, necessary to interrupt this contact to be relatively small, relatively little subject to variations and well-controllable.
In an embodiment of the display panel in accordance with the invention, at least one of the roughnesses R3 and R4 is larger than 100 nm and both roughnesses R3 and R4 are smaller than 1000 nm.
The electrodes on the surface of both plates facing the movable element are covered by an insulating layer having a thickness of about one micrometer. This insulating layer represents the contact surface of the plate. For a roughness below 100 nm, the electrical forces to be overcome are hardly reduced as the roughness is small compared to the thickness of the insulating layer. For larger values of the roughness, the electrical force to be overcome is reduced significantly. If the roughness is larger than 1000 nm, the roughness is non-negligible compared to the distance of about four micrometers between both plates, which distance is reduced by the thickness of the movable element, which is generally in the range between one and two micrometers.
In another embodiment of the display panel in accordance with the invention, the roughness R2 is larger than the roughness R1 and the roughness R4 is larger than the roughness R3. Both the light guide plate and the second plate have smooth contact surfaces, which is easier to realize in a production process. Furthermore, the light guide properties of the light guide plate improve with increasing smoothness of its surface.
In a modification of the last embodiment, the roughness R2 is in the range between 5 and 100 nm and the roughness R4 is in the range between 100 and 1000 nm. These are the preferred ranges for the roughnesses now present on the movable element. Furthermore, as the roughness R4 ranges between 100 and 1000 nm, the isotropicity of the emitted light at the picture element is large.
It is favorable if at least one of the roughnesses R2 and R4 is brought about by inorganic protrusions from the movable element. The inorganic protrusions are not readily subject to elastic and/or plastic deformations when the movable element is in contact with one of the plates, thus preventing elastic and/or plastic deformation-induced Van der Waals' adhesion. It is especially favorable if the movable element, having a volume, comprises a matrix layer selected from the group consisting of glassy amorphous and crystalline polymeric layers, with 1 to 25 percent of the volume being occupied by TiO2 particles having a diameter between 200 and 400 nm, and an indium tin oxide layer. The matrix layer exists either in a glassy amorphous state or in a crystalline state or in a mixed glassy amorphous/crystalline state such as to give the polymeric material a stiffness similar to that of a crystalline organic material. These matrix layers are for example parylene, polymethylmethacrylate, some fluoropolymers and polyimide layers. These materials do not readily suffer from plastic deformations and/or creep. The movable element may have a surface roughness on the surface facing the light guide plate in the range from 30 to 50 nm, as formed by TiO2 particles slightly protruding from the movable element and a surface roughness of the surface facing the second plate in the range from 100 to 1000 nm. The thickness of the movable element may be for example in between one and two micrometers. The conducting indium tin oxide (ITO) layer represents the common electrode across the entire surface of the movable element in order to apply a voltage to the movable element. The ITO layer is transparent to prevent absorption of light emitted at the contact surface between the light guide plate and the movable element. A preferred thickness of the ITO layer is about 30 to 50 nm. Light that is extracted from the light guide by the movable element is scattered by scattering centers, such as TiO2, and the surface roughnesses on both sides of the movable element. Particles smaller than 0.05 micrometer do not scatter the light very efficiently. Particles larger than one micrometer are too large to be properly confined within the movable element.
In an embodiment of the display panel in accordance with the invention, the display panel is part of a display device. The display device further comprises selection means arranged to apply voltages to the electrodes dependent on the image information to be displayed.
These and other aspects of the invention will be further elucidated and described with reference to the drawings, in which:
The figures are schematic and not drawn to scale and in all the figures identical reference numerals refer to corresponding parts.
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Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB02/04885 | 11/20/2002 | WO |