This application relates to a display having an image area, which is composed of electronically controllable pixels situated in a raster-like pattern and in which each pixel has at least one color level, which is formed by a flat container, which is clear and transparent at least on the visible side and whose interior is connected to a color reservoir, whose content may, by electronic control of an actuating drive, which acts on the movable wall of the color reservoir, be placed under pressure so that colored liquid from the color reservoir reaches the color level, and, by reducing the pressure in the color reservoir, the colored liquid is transported back from the color level into the color reservoir and a clear, transparent liquid or gaseous fluid reaches the color level.
Displays of this type are known from EP 1 529 274 and EP 1 090 384. In these known displays, piezo actuators are used as the actuating drives, which move the movable walls like a micropump and thus press colored liquid into the color levels or move a clear, transparent, and colorless fluid into the color levels. Magnets may also be used as the actuating drives. The known displays have the disadvantage that their actuating drives are not controllable or are only controllable with difficulty during a control and are therefore not suitable for filling the color levels with colored liquid by one-half, one-third, one-fourth, or another fraction. The partial filling of the color levels with colored liquids of the colors red, green, blue or cyan, magenta, yellow is necessary to achieve as many finely graduated color tones as possible of the pixels.
Furthermore, transporting the colored liquid from the color reservoir into the color level and out of the color level into the color reservoir with the aid of so-called electro-wetting technology is known. Multiple layers must be applied to the transparent wall, in particular an electrode layer and an insulating layer. A fluid layer, which is composed of two liquids which are not miscible with one another, e.g., an oily colored liquid and colorless water, is typically moved using the electro-wetting technology so that a clear, transparent, colorless liquid or a colored liquid is transported into the color levels of a pixel.
These electrodes and layers are applied as ultrathin, transparent layers, but nonetheless these layers obstruct the passage of light, because light beams are deflected and refracted on the edges of these layers. Scattered light partially results, so that the light transparency of the walls of the color levels which are coated to provide the required electrodes is not optically pure. This interferes in particular if three or four color levels of a pixel are situated one behind another. The partial filling of the color levels with colored liquid with the aid of the electro-wetting technology is also only possible with great expenditure and not with the desired rapidity.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide an actuating drive for a micropump or the movable wall of the color reservoir, which may be controlled in such a way that precise intermediate positions are also possible.
According to the system described herein, a display is provided having a color reservoir that is flat and extends parallel to a color level and a wall of the color reservoir facing away from the color level at least partially forms the movable wall, and an actuating drive is formed by at least one micro-linear drive, whose actuator, which causes the displacement of the movable wall, moves in a plane parallel to the plane of the color reservoir and the movable wall is supported on the actuator via a surface extending at an acute angle to the plane of the color reservoir, and thus the movement of the actuator is converted into a shortened lifting or lowering movement, which extends perpendicularly thereto, of the movable wall.
This surface, which extends at an acute angle to the plane of the color reservoir and therefore also to the movable wall, may be directly or indirectly connected via a lifting plate to the movable wall and the actuator may be designed as a pin-shaped projection, whose end facing toward the sliding surface slides along the sliding surface upon displacement of the actuator and therefore presses the movable wall of the color reservoir more deeply into the color reservoir and therefore presses color into the color level. If the actuator moves in the opposite direction, the movable wall is pressed back by a restoring spring. The volume in the color reservoir is thereby enlarged, so that colored liquid is suctioned out of the color level. The colored liquid may also be pressed back into the color reservoir by a compressed air or gas bubble or also electromagnetically.
In a kinematic reversal, the actuator causing the displacement of the movable wall of the color reservoir, or a part connected to this actuator, on which the wall is supported, may also be moved along a path extending at the acute angle to the plane of the color reservoir, so that this movement of the actuator is converted into a shortened lifting or lowering movement, which extends perpendicularly to the plane of the color reservoir, of the movable wall.
All micro-linear drives, whose actuator is precisely positionable to ultra-small steps and may move the movable wall of the color reservoir into the programmed position with sufficient force and speed, are suitable for the drive of the actuator, i.e., in particular piezo linear motors, piezo linear actuators, and ultrasonic motors.
The actuator of the linear drive is advantageously connected to a carriage, on which the movable wall of the color reservoir is supported and which has a sliding surface parallel to the plane of the color reservoir and a sliding surface extending at an acute angle thereto. This carriage is situated between the plane extending parallel to the plane of the color reservoir and the surface extending at an acute angle thereto and causes better distribution of the forces and reduces the force torques to be absorbed by the guide of the movable wall of the color reservoir.
If the displacement force of a micro-linear drive is insufficient, two drives may be provided, whose actuators act in opposing directions on the ends of a rotating bridge, which raises or lowers the movable wall by the maximum lift upon rotation by less than 180°.
Exemplary embodiments of the system described herein are described in greater detail in the following description with reference to the drawings. In the drawings,
The transport of the colored liquid from color reservoir 5 into color level 3 and from there back into color reservoir 5 is caused by an electronically controlled actuating drive, which has a micro-linear drive 7, whose actuator 8, which, in the event of control of the linear drive 7, causes the displacement of movable wall 10, slides directly or indirectly via a carriage 9 along a surface 11, which is connected to movable wall 10 and extends at an acute angle to the plane of color reservoir 5. Actuator 8 is in the left starting position in
In
The acute angle between the plane of color reservoir 5 and inclined surface 11 is a function of the ratio of the maximum displacement path of actuator 8 and the maximum lift of movable wall 10 of the color reservoir 5. For example, if the maximum displacement path of the actuator is 0.4 mm and the maximum lift of the movable wall is 0.1 mm to 0.25 mm, the acute angle is 15° to 20°.
In the specific embodiments of the system described herein according to
Movable wall 10 of color reservoir 5 may be formed by a diaphragm (not shown), which closes color reservoir 5.
In pixel 1 according to
In
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a consideration of the specification or practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with the true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 052 271 | Nov 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/006500 | 10/25/2010 | WO | 00 | 9/10/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/054456 | 5/12/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6473543 | Bartels | Oct 2002 | B2 |
8087191 | Bartels et al. | Jan 2012 | B2 |
20100253993 | Sacher | Oct 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10 2006 009 541 | Aug 2007 | DE |
10 2006 050 404 | Apr 2008 | DE |
1 090 384 | Apr 2002 | EP |
1 529 274 | Oct 2006 | EP |
WO 0000947 | Jan 2000 | WO |
WO 2004021318 | Mar 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120327500 A1 | Dec 2012 | US |