This application claims the benefit of United Kingdom Patent Application No. 1606517.9, filed Apr. 26, 2016, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a display and a method of driving a display.
Displays are ubiquitous and are a core component of every wearable device, smart phone, tablet, laptop, desktop, TV or display system. Common display technologies today range from Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) to more recent Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) displays.
Referring now to
A plurality of peripheral driving blocks comprise:
In some matrices, a constant supply voltage (Vdd) is provided to each cell of the matrix to drive the light emitting device during a frame according to the cell programming. Typically, for a constant supply voltage (Vdd) implementation, the data driver provides analog outputs which determine the brightness of a cell for a subsequent frame.
In the matrix of
UK Patent Application No. 1604699.7 (Ref: 135-1702-01GB) filed 21 Mar. 2016 discloses a hybrid scheme where the data driver provides combinations of analog or digital outputs limiting the switching frequency required of the PWM driver.
In
Each row within the matrix is addressed with a respective scan line S1 . . . Sn which goes high or is asserted when a respective row of the display is to be addressed (or programmed) by the data driver for the subsequent frame or sub-frame. For PWM, during a given frame, for each row, the PWM driver provides a sequence of driving pulses using respective PWM signals P1 . . . Pn. Each signal P can be a time shifted version of the adjacent PWM signal synchronized with the scan line signals S1 . . . Sn and data driver signals D1 . . . Dm.
Active matrix circuitry, for example, as described in WO2010/119113, uses thin film transistor technology (TFT), where cells comprise transistors based on amorphous, oxide or polycrystalline silicon technology manufactured on a glass substrate ranging in size from 30 cm×40 cm to the latest generation (known as GEN10) of 2.88 m×3.15m. The TFTs are used either as voltage switches or current sources to control the operation of light emitting devices within each cell.
In most portable, typically battery powered, devices, the display uses the majority of the available power. The most common user complaint for portable devices is insufficient display brightness. To extend battery life and improve brightness levels it is necessary to develop new display technologies that reduce power consumption and produce higher luminance emission from the light source.
WO2013/121051 discloses an improved light emitting device for a display, referred to as an integrated or inorganic LED (iLED) which comprises a substrate with a semiconductor material comprising a light generating layer positioned on the substrate. The semiconductor material and/or the substrate are configured to control light internally to output quasi-collimated light from a light emitting surface of the iLED. The iLED comprises an optical component positioned at the light emitting surface and configured to receive quasi-collimated light exiting the light emitting surface and to alter one or more optical properties of at least some of the quasi-collimated light.
Whereas OLED cells operate by passing current through organic or polymer materials sandwiched between two glass planes to produce light; iLED displays replace the OLED material with discrete LED die (which is made of inorganic materials) placed at each cell of the display.
Nonetheless, both OLED and iLED cells are current driven. This means that their emitted brightness is controlled by the current that flows through them, so the stability of the biasing current across the display will determine the uniformity of light emitted from the display.
Referring now to
where W and L are the gate width and length, respectively, μ is the carriers mobility, Cox is the gate-oxide capacitance, Vgs is the gate-to-source voltage and Vth is the threshold voltage of the TFT device. Another way of expressing the above is:
As indicated above, TFT devices can be either amorphous silicon (a-Si), Indium-Gallium-Zinc-Oxide (IGZO), Low-Temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) or organic (OTFTs). Depending on the fabrication process, threshold voltage variations occur either during fabrication (LTPS) or during operation, under positive bias stress (A-Si, IGZO, OTFT). The threshold voltage variation can be regarded as a completely random process and can exist even for TFT devices fabricated on the same substrate.
Thus, for a display where cells are programmed with the same Vdata during the frame refresh so that two cells might emit the same grey scale (same light brightness), their driving TFTs can have different threshold voltages. The produced bias current will be different since Vth1≠Vth2→Idrain1≠Idrain2, resulting in different emitting brightness. This non-uniformity of brightness caused by threshold voltage variations of the TFT is called mura effect.
According to a first aspect, there is provided a display according to claim 1.
In embodiments, by choosing an appropriate set of driving signals, as well as TFT dimensions, threshold voltage compensation and data loading can occur during the same phase.
Thus, no separate phase for threshold voltage extraction is needed, resulting in a very fast programming phase. Embodiments are therefore suitable for high performance displays with high frame rate and short programming time.
The cell design can be used for both OLED and iLED high performance displays with high frame rate and short programming time.
According to a second aspect, there is provided a display according to claim 8.
In the second aspect, each cell is arranged to accommodate at least two discrete light emitting devices. Changing the value of the data voltage relative to a bias voltage, determines which, if any, light emitting device will emit light.
A repair mode can be implemented where the data voltage is set so that none of the light emitting devices will emit light and so the cell turns black leaving surrounding pixels to determine the display image. This repair mode can be used, if both placed light emitting devices are identified as defective.
In embodiments, one light emitting device is connected to a p-type TFT and a second is connected to an n-type TFT. By controlling the data and bias voltages (Vdata, Vbias), the sign of the driving voltage is set, determining which of the p or n-type TFT will be turned ON and consequentially which light emitting device will emit light.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In embodiments of the present invention, compensation for threshold voltage variation is provided locally on a cell by cell basis. If the threshold voltage of the driving TFT, T2, is extracted and added to Vdata, then the effective gate voltage of the driving TFT would be:
V
gs,eff
=V
data
+V
th (3)
In this case, the produced drain current would be:
As it can be seen from Equation (4), the produced drain current that would bias the light emitting device would then be independent of the driving TFT threshold voltage and the light brightness would exhibit immunity to the threshold voltage variations.
Referring now to
The total scan pulse duration (τscan) depends on the frame rate (FR) of the display as well as from the total number of rows (Nrow), and can follow the equation:
The cell comprises 5 TFTs T1 . . . T5 and 1 storage capacitance Cst. The objective is to produce a voltage at the storage capacitance (node A) equal to the effective voltage shown in equation (3). In an embodiment, T4 is four times larger than T3 (k4 =4k3) and the bias voltage (Vbias) is 3 times larger than data voltage (Vbias =3*Vdata) and is provided by the data driver at the same time as Vdata. Thus for a matrix as shown in
I
drain,T3
=I
drain,T4
→k
3(Vgs,T3−Vth3)2=k4(Vgs,T4−Vth4)2
k
3(3*Vdata−VA−Vth3)2=4k3(Vdata−Vth4)2
3*Vdata−VA−Vth3=2*Vdata−Vth4
If it is assumed that the two TFTs (T3 and T4) share the same threshold voltage (Vth4=Vth3=Vth) which is true, at least for LTPS, the voltage at node A, will be:
V
A
=V
gs,T5
=V
data
+V
th
Therefore, the bias current produced from T5, is threshold voltage independent and well controlled, since it will be calculated by the equation:
As it can be seen from
The only requirement to ensure the proper operation of the cell is that all TFTs operate within their saturation region. The most critical TFT is T3 because its gate node is biased with the highest voltage. The condition which will ensure that T3 operates in its saturation region is:
VDS,T3>Vgs,T3−Vth
Vdd>3*Vdata−th
Therefore, by choosing the supply voltage (Vdd) properly, the operation of the cell is ensured.
It will be appreciated that while the above embodiment has been described with k4×X*k3 and Vbias=Y*Vdata; where X=4 and Y=3, any combination of X and Y values which meant that the current through the light emitting device was substantially independent of the driving transistor threshold voltage could be employed.
It will also be appreciated that while a ground reference is shown in
In operation, during the frame programming phase, the Scan signal for a row containing the cell goes high “1” causing T1 and T2 to turn ON. Vbias and Vdata (provided from the data driver) are biased to the circuit simultaneously, so based on their value, node A voltage and so the ILED current are adjusted. The storage capacitance Cst is added in order to keep the voltage at node A constant during emission phase resulting in stable iLED current. The cell design allows both analog Vdata and PWM driving or mixed mode schemes to be employed. In the case of a PWM driving scheme, rather than providing a constant Vdd to the ilED, a pulsed PWM signal can be applied. Alternatively, as described in UK Patent Application No. 1604699.7 (Ref: I35-1702-01GB), the iLED can be connected to the drain of T5 and the PWM signal can be applied directly to the cathode of the iLED. The mixed mode scheme described in UK Patent Application No. 1604699.7 (Ref: I35-1702-01GB) can also be employed.
The cell of
I
drain,T3
=I
drain,T4
→k
3(Vgs,T3−Vth3)2=k4(Vgs,T4−Vth4)2
k
3(Vdata−VA−Vth3)2=k3(Vbias−Vth4)2
V
data
−V
A
−V
th3
=V
bias
−V
th4
If it is assumed that the two TFTs (T3 and T4) share the same threshold voltage (Vth4=Vth3=Vth) which stands true for LTPS TFT process, the voltage at node A, will be:
V
A
=V
data
−V
bias
Therefore, by setting Vbias at a pre-determined value, the sign of the node A voltage is determined by Vdata independent of the threshold voltage of the driving transistors. If Vdata>Vbias, then VA>0 and ILED1 emits light or if Vdata<Vbias, then VA<0 and ILED2 will emit light. There is also the special case in which Vdata=Vbias resulting in the voltage at node A being equal to zero. In this case none of T5 or T6 will be turned ON so neither ILED1 nor ILED2 will emit light. This can be used for “electrical repair” where no light is emitted from the cell and it is turned into a “black” cell.
Note that in the cell designs of
In the matrix of
In one application, a matrix based on the cell design of
A second pick-and-place places ILEDS in sockets or locations corresponding to ILED2 in cells where ILED1 has been identified as defective. (Note that the defective ILED does not need to be removed.) Also note that ILEDs chosen for placement in the second pick-and-place phase can be known good devices. For light emitting devices where say 95% of devices work, this means that only 5% need to be replaced and so this reduces the need to test devices before they are placed and yet still obtain higher manufacturing yield than the natural reliability of the devices would provide.
When the second pick-and-place procedure is completed, the panel is visually tested again. If any of the ILED2 locations still don't work, then these cells (along with other cells forming a pixel) can be converted into black pixels meaning that they will not emit light. Again, a panel map indicating cells containing two defective ILEDs can be generated and stored in a memory available to the matrix controller (not shown) and this map will be used for the programming of the display when in operation.
The selection of the appropriate Vdata value can be made using the above mentioned panel map(s), produced during the fabrication process and after the visual inspection. Each cell can be programmed individually so that, if the cell has a second iLED placed because the first was defective, in the programming phase, the Vdata value will be set less than Vbias (or at least the opposite to cells where the first iLED works). Similarly for “black” pixels, Vdata=Vbias value can be set during the programming phase for pixels indicated by the panel map to contain two defective ILEDs.
In another application, two different types of light emitting devices are placed in sockets or locations corresponding to iLED1 and iLED2 to enable the display to selectively operate in one of two modes. For example, iLED1 devices might have more focussed light emission characteristics whereas iLED2 devices might have more diffuse light emission. The panel controller can therefore swap between driving either the first set of devices or the second set of devices to swap between a display providing a narrow (private) viewing angle and a wider more accessible viewing angle.
In a still further application, again two different sets of light emitting devices can be placed in sockets corresponding to iLED1 and ilED2 and these can be selectively driven to provide a display which can selectively operate in one of a 2D display mode and a 3D display mode.
In each of these multi-mode embodiments, Vbias (or Vdata) can be a global signal and swapping this between one of two levels can change the panel from driving iLED1 to iLED2 within each cell.
In still further variants of the above described embodiments, the above principals can be extended to cell designs comprising more than two light emitting devices and appropriate switching circuitry to provide both threshold compensation and redundancy; redundancy and multi-mode operation; threshold compensation and multi-mode operation; or indeed threshold compensation, redundancy and multi-mode operation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1606517.9 | Apr 2016 | GB | national |