1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a display panel driving circuit, a display panel, and driving method thereof, and more particularly, to a display panel driving circuit, a display panel, and driving method thereof for relieving horizontal crosstalk.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Polarity inversion is often used on a conventional display panel. Please refer to
The claimed invention is directed to a display panel driving circuit. The display panel driving circuit comprises a plurality of pixel electrode driving modules and a voltage feedback module. The plurality of pixel electrode driving modules is connected in series. The voltage feedback module is coupled to one of the plurality of pixel electrode driving module, for providing the coupled pixel electrode driving module with at least one feedback voltage. The at least one feedback voltage is provided by a display panel. The pixel electrode driving module is capable of driving a corresponding pixel electrode according to the provided at least one feedback voltage.
The claimed invention is directed to a method of driving display panel for neutralizing horizontal crosstalk. The method comprises providing at least one feedback voltage provided by a display panel to one of a plurality of pixel electrode driving module connected in series; and the pixel electrode driving module driving a corresponding pixel electrode according to one of the at least one provided feedback voltage.
The claimed invention is directed to a display panel. The display panel comprises a panel and a display panel driving circuit. The display panel driving circuit comprises a plurality of pixel electrode driving modules and a voltage feedback module. The plurality of pixel electrode driving modules are connected in series. The voltage feedback module is coupled to one of the plurality of pixel electrode driving module, for providing the coupled pixel electrode driving module with at least one feedback voltage. The at least one feedback voltage is provided by a panel. The pixel electrode driving module is capable of driving a corresponding pixel electrode according to the provided at least one feedback voltage.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Please refer to
As shown in
The voltage feedback module 250 includes a first switch SW1 and a second switch SW2. The first switch SW1 has a first terminal coupled to ground, and has a second terminal coupled to the panel 340. The second switch SW2 has a first terminal coupled to the first terminal of the first switch SW1, and has a second terminal coupled to the panel 340 for receiving the common voltage FV.
The voltage feedback module 250 has one of the first and second switches SW1 and SW2 to be switched on according to different requirements in the fabrication procedure of the display panel 300. It indicates that the voltage feedback module 250 has the switched-on switch to be close-circuited, while the other switch is open-circuited, for determining which one among the ground voltage and the common voltage FV to be fed-back to the driving voltages V1, V2, . . . , and V15 through the capacitors C12, C22, . . . , and C152 respectively. Moreover, after the fabrication procedure of the display panel 300 is completed, preferably, statuses of both the switches SW1 and SW2 are not changed anymore. While having the first switch SW1 conducted and having the second switch SW2 un-conducted by setting components on a circuit board in an unchangeable manner, such as burning information on the circuit board, the display panel driving circuit 200 does not receive the fed-back common voltage FV so that the condition of the display panel driving circuit 200 is the same with a conventional display panel driving circuit. Instead, while having the first switch SW1 un-conducted and having the second switch SW2 conducted, the display panel driving circuit 200 receives the fed-back common voltage FV. Note that the fed-back common voltage FV is coupled by noises within the common voltage source ArrayCOM. Therefore, while the display panel driving circuit generates the driving voltages V1, V2, . . . , and V15 and inputs the generated driving voltages into the panel 340, noises coupled to the input driving voltages may be close to synchronous with noises within the common voltage FV so that the horizontal crosstalk is relieved.
Please refer to
Please refer to
The voltage feedback module 250 shown in
The voltage feedback module 250 also has one of the switches SW1, SW2, and SW3 conducted according to different requirements in fabrication procedures of the display panel 300. After the fabrication procedure of the display panel 300 is completed, statuses of the switches SW1, SW2, and SW3 are preferably not changed anymore. By conducting either one of the switches SW2 and SW3 to introduce the common voltage FV1 or FV2 into the driving voltages V1, V2, . . . , and V15, noises within the driving voltages V1, V2, . . . , and V15 may be close to synchronous to noises within the common voltage FV1 or FV2 so that the horizontal crosstalk is relieved.
Please refer to
In
The buffering module 360 includes a first operational amplifier OP1, which has a positive input terminal coupled to the common voltage level VCOMF, and has a negative terminal coupled to an output terminal of the first operational amplifier OP1. With such depositions, the common voltage level VCOMF may be continuously amplified at the output terminal of the first operational amplifier OP1 while the common voltage level VCOMF continuously raises itself, and the common voltage level VCOMF may be continuously attenuated at the output terminal of the first operational amplifier OP1 while the common voltage level VCOMF continuously lowers itself, so that the common voltage level VCOMF may be buffered in a delayed manner. The voltage amplifying module 350 includes a second operational amplifier OP2, a first resistor RA1, a second resistor RA2, a third resistor RA3, and a filtering capacitor CF. The second operational amplifier OP2 has an output terminal coupled to the plurality of pixel electrode driving modules P1, P2, P3, . . . , P7, P8, . . . , and P15, for outputting the amplified feedback voltage VAFB, and has a positive input terminal coupled to the voltage feedback module 250 for receiving either one of the common voltages FV1 and FV2. The first resistor RA1 has a first terminal coupled to the positive input terminal of the second operational amplifier OP2, and has a second terminal coupled to the output terminal of the first operational amplifier OP1. The second resistor RA2 has a first terminal coupled to an negative input terminal of the second operational amplifier OP2, and has a second terminal coupled to the second terminal of the first resistor RA1. The third resistor RA3 has a first terminal coupled to the negative input terminal of the second operational amplifier OP2, and has a second terminal coupled to the output terminal of the second operational amplifier OP2. The filtering capacitor CF has a first terminal coupled to the positive input terminal of the second operational amplifier OP2, and has a second terminal coupled to ground.
The first resistor RA1 and the filtering capacitor CF are used for regulating both the buffered common voltage level VCOMF and the feedback voltage provided by the voltage feedback module 250. The second and third resistor RA2 and RA3 are used for generating divided voltages of the amplified feedback voltage VAFB. The voltage amplifying module 350 amplifies the voltage difference between the common voltage level VCOMF and the at least one feedback voltage, for example, the common voltages FV1 and FV2, to generate the amplified feedback voltage VAFB, and inputs the amplified feedback voltage VAFB into the plurality of pixel electrode driving module P1′, P2′, P3′, . . . , P7′, P8′, . . . , and P15′, for driving corresponding pixel electrodes within the panel 340. Similarly, under the condition that the amplified feedback voltage VAFB brings noises coupled from the common voltage FV1 or FV2, while driving the panel 340 with the aid of the driving voltages V1, V2, . . . , and V15, noises from both sides are close to be synchronous so that horizontal crosstalk is relieved and the display quality of the display panel 340 is improved as a result.
The display panel driving circuit 500 shown in
Please refer to
Step 602: Provide at least one feedback voltage provided by a display panel to one of a plurality of pixel electrode driving module connected in series.
Step 606: The pixel electrode driving module drives a corresponding pixel electrode according to a driving voltage referring to one of the at least one feedback voltage.
Step 608: Buffer a common voltage level.
Step 610: Amplify a voltage difference between the common voltage level and one of the at least one feedback voltage to generate an amplified feedback voltage.
Step 612: Each of the plurality of pixel electrode driving modules drives the corresponding pixel electrode according to a driving voltage referring to one of the at least one feedback voltage.
In steps shown in
The present invention discloses a display panel driving circuit, a display panel including the disclosed display panel driving circuit, and a driving method implemented on the disclosed display panel driving method. With the aid of the property that there are noises in at least one common voltage used by the display panel, the at least one common voltage is fed-back to pixel electrode driving modules so that driving voltages of corresponding pixel electrodes may bring coupled noises while entering the display panel to compensate noises within the display panel. As a result, Each the pixel electrode driving module may drives a corresponding pixel electrode with a stable voltage difference since noises from the display panel are compensated, and horizontal crosstalk on the display panel is thus relieved to raise the display quality of the display panel.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention.
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