An electrophoretic display device can present information (e.g., text and/or images) to a viewer by rearranging electrically-charged particles using an applied electric field. In some implementations, an electrophoretic display may have small white particles that carry the electrical charge and these electrophoretic particles may be dispersed (e.g., colloidally suspended) in a dielectric fluid. This mixture may be placed between a pair of parallel conductive plates and, when a voltage is applied across the plates, the electrophoretic particles can migrate to the plate bearing an opposite charge to that of the electrophoretic particles.
When the electrophoretic particles have migrated toward a viewing surface of a display pixel, which may, in some instances, be visualized as a top surface of a page of paper, the surface can appear white because white light is reflected by and/or transmitted through the white electrophoretic particles to the viewer. When the electrophoretic particles have migrated toward the opposite surface, which may be visualized as a bottom surface of the page of paper, the pixel can appear dark due to incident light being absorbed by a dark-colored dielectric fluid. Using many such pixels, text and/or an image can be formed by applying appropriate voltage to each to create a pattern of reflecting/transmitting and absorbing regions.
However, such an electrophoretic display device may use substantial electrical power and/or a high refresh rate to retain the electrophoretic particles at the top viewing surface. Color reproduction can be limited by, among other factors, pixels having color filters that impart a color to the white electrophoretic particles, which may subtract from an intensity of and/or polarize such light. In addition, each pixel may reflect and/or transmit a single color of light, such that a number of adjacent pixels capable of providing different colors (e.g., red, green, and blue) have to be used to additively reproduce an input color, which may limit the intensity of reproduced color per unit area of the viewing surface and/or accuracy of the color reproduction of such an electrophoretic display device.
The present disclosure describes an electrophoretic display in which an active matrix backplane (AMBP) uses transistors to integrate with in-plane electrodes that can use individual electrical fields to control spreading of electrophoretic particles across a substantially planar surface of a number of electrophoretic pixels. By stacking a number of these substantially planar arrays of the electrophoretic pixels, having electrophoretic particles that reflect and/or transmit different colors, in various embodiments, a gamut of colors can be produced by a subtractive color process. Such a technology can, among various other implementations, be used to mimic the appearance of text and/or images on paper (e.g., using ink) because colors of an original document can be reproduced and the electrophoretic display may, in some situations, approach the thickness of paper and/or be relatively flexible (e.g., compared to a cathode ray tube monitor).
Accordingly, among various embodiments of the present disclosure, displaying electrophoretic particles can be performed by configuring an electrophoretic display for directed spreading of electrophoretic particles across a number of substantially planar display electrodes. Such a configuration can be accomplished by controlling planar spreading of the electrophoretic particles in an electrophoretic pixel with an electrical field between an in-plane storage electrode and an in-plane activation electrode. The in-plane activation electrode can be connected to an in-plane display electrode, which extends across a first area in the electrophoretic pixel adjacent to a display aperture having a second area that is substantially coextensive with the first area.
The electrophoretic display 100 illustrated in
As shown in the red pixel 104, which is representative of the other two pixels of the triad 102, a bottom surface 110 may have a number of charged electrophoretic particles 112 associated therewith. In some implementations, the bottom surface 110 of the red pixel 104 may have a lower electrode plate (not shown) associated therewith to attract and/or repel the charged electrophoretic particles 112.
Attracting and/or repelling the charged electrophoretic particles 112 with the lower electrode plate may cause the charged electrophoretic particles 112 to migrate through a dielectric fluid 114. The dielectric fluid 114 (e.g., a polymer, an oil, etc.) may be dark-colored such that the dielectric fluid 114 absorbs incident light 117 and/or reflects light 118 that may be reflected from an electrophoretic particle, such as the electrophoretic particles 112 associated with the bottom surface 110 of the red pixel 104.
A top surface 116 of the red pixel 104 may, in some instances, have an upper electrode plate (not shown) associated therewith that also can attract and/or repel the charged electrophoretic particles 112. Attracting and/or repelling the charged electrophoretic particles 112 with the upper electrode plate may cause the charged electrophoretic particles 112 to migrate through the dielectric fluid 114.
The top surface 116 of the red pixel 104 also may be the viewing surface for the pixels (e.g., red pixel 104). Accordingly, the top surface 116 may be, or may have a portion that is, at least partially transparent to incident light 117 and/or reflected light 118.
The illustration of
A pixel in the electrophoretic display 100 illustrated in
The implementation of the electrophoretic display 100 illustrated in
The dielectric fluid 114 may be a dark-colored liquid that absorbs incident light 117. In that case, little or none of the incident light 117 entering the red pixel 104 may reach the electrophoretic particles 112 and/or be reflected therefrom to become light reflected out 118 of the red pixel 104. The absorption by the dielectric fluid 114 may result in the area of the red pixel 104, as illustrated in
As such, a substantial portion of an electrophoretic display may be predominantly absorbing light rather than reflecting light. As shown in
As illustrated in
In instances where a filter is associated with the top surface of a pixel in order to confer a particular color to light transmitted and/or reflected by the electrophoretic particles, such a filter may reduce intensity of the transmitted and/or reflected light. In some instances, a filter may polarize the transmitted and/or reflected light.
Reducing the intensity of the light and/or polarizing the light may affect brightness, chroma, and/or hue of a color as perceived by the viewer relative to the color signal input. Color reproduction ability may become affected by electrophoretic display technology using such additive color processes because the number of pixels contributing individual colors to the additive total color may be limited, among other reasons, due to factors related in the present disclosure with regard to
For instance, having a pixel triad with only red, green, and blue pixels positioned alongside each other may limit the color gamut that can be reproduced, while also encountering effects on brightness, chroma, and/or hue of a perceived color of emitted light. Adding additional and/or substitute color pixels to form a pixel quartet, a pixel quintet, etc., in order to enhance color reproduction ability, may exacerbate the described effects on brightness, chroma, and/or hue of the perceived color of emitted light due to, among other reasons, spreading out the area of the pixels contributing the color components.
For instance, when a set of color pixels are side by side, for instance, a change in position of an illuminated portion of the pixel set may be subtly noticeable by the viewer of an overall page of text and/or image. Further, due to the side by side arrangement of the different colored pixels, the granularity or compactness of the pixel array will be several times larger (e.g., the number of different colored pixels to be provided) than an array, for example, of black and white pixels where each pixel is either on (e.g., black) or off (e.g., white).
In various embodiments, the electrophoretic pixel 202 illustrated in
A first set of the electrical pulses can be transmitted from a data line 206 to a source terminal for a transistor 208, which can, in various embodiments, be a thin film transistor (TFT), as described in the present disclosure. A drain terminal for the TFT 208, for example, can be connected to an in-plane storage electrode 210, where, in various embodiments, the in-plane storage electrode 210 can be connected to a storage capacitor 214, as described with regard to
As illustrated in
An in-plane activation electrode 218 can, in various embodiments, provide an opposing voltage, opposite that of the in-plane storage electrode 210, to attract electrophoretic particles (not shown) from the in-plane storage electrode 210 or repel the electrophoretic particles to the in-plane storage electrode 210. In some embodiments, the in-plane activation electrode 218 can be shared with one or more adjacent electrophoretic pixels (not shown).
The in-plane activation electrode 218 can, in various embodiments, facilitate control of spreading of electrophoretic particles in an x-y plane (i.e., in-plane) across an in-plane display electrode 220 by using a third set of electrical pulses transmitted to the electrophoretic pixel 202. In various embodiments, the in-plane activation electrode 218 can receive the third set of electrical pulses from a source (not shown) outside the electrophoretic pixel 202 (e.g., from circuitry associated with the AMBP). The third set of electrical pulses can be used to facilitate, for example, in-plane spreading and/or biasing of the electrophoretic particles involved in forming text and/or images, as well as erasing such, among other functions.
In some embodiments, the in-plane display electrode 220 can be configured as substantially planar and the in-plane activation electrode 218 can be substantially in-plane with the in-plane display electrode 220 to which it is connected. As such, as described in the present disclosure, the third set of electrical pulses can be transmitted to the in-plane activation electrode 218 to control a manner of in-plane spreading of the electrophoretic particles across the in-plane display electrode 220 that is connected to the in-plane activation electrode 218.
The circuitry and associated components 200 of the electrophoretic pixel 202 can, in various embodiments, include the in-plane storage electrode 210. The in-plane storage electrode 210 can, in some embodiments, be controlled by transmitting electrical pulses through the data line 206 connected through the gate electrode of the TFT 208 to the in-plane storage electrode 210. The in-plane storage electrode 210 can, in some embodiments, be substantially coplanar with the in-plane display electrode 220 and the in-plane activation electrode 218.
The in-plane storage electrode 210 can, in some embodiments, be connected to a storage capacitor 214. The storage capacitor 214 can, in some embodiments, also be connected to a second select line 204-2.
The second select line 204-2 can, in some embodiments, be located outside a boundary of the electrophoretic pixel 202, as illustrated in the embodiment of
An electrophoretic pixel, as described in the present disclosure, can include a well in which a number of electrophoretic particles are contained. The electrophoretic particles can be dispersed in the well in a dielectric fluid, in various embodiments, through which the electrophoretic particles can be directed to spread out in response to an applied electrical field.
In embodiments of the present disclosure, the electrophoretic particles can be directed to spread across a well substantially defined by, as illustrated in
For purposes of illustration and not by way of limitation, the embodiment illustrated in
An electrophoretic pixel, as described in the present disclosure, can assume any orientation relative to gravitational pull and/or a position of the viewer. For purposes of illustration, however,
In some embodiments, a second substantially transparent display aperture (not shown) can be positioned on the bottom surface of the electrophoretic pixel 202 so as to allow transit of incident light coming from underneath the electrophoretic pixel 202. For example, as described in the present disclosure, light coming from below electrophoretic pixel 202 can come from a backlight source (not shown) and/or from another electrophoretic pixel (not shown) positioned below the electrophoretic pixel 202. To enable transit of light coming from below the electrophoretic pixel 202, the in-plane display electrode 220 can be formed from an at least partially transparent material (e.g., indium tin oxide, among other suitable compounds).
In various embodiments, display apertures can have borders and/or be positioned such that many of the electrophoretic particles directed to spread across a display electrode are accessible to light transiting an adjacent display aperture and can, in some embodiments, reflect a portion of such light back through the display aperture, which can be seen by a viewer. In some embodiments, electrophoretic particles spread across a substantially transparent display electrode positioned above a first display aperture can cause light supplied by a backlight source positioned below the first display aperture to be transmitted therethrough and emitted through a second display aperture to be viewable by the viewer. In various embodiments, the first and second display apertures can be directly aligned with each other, offset from each other, or otherwise positioned.
In various embodiments, display apertures can have borders and/or be positioned such that few of the electrophoretic particles stored in association with an in-plane storage electrode are accessible to light transiting an adjacent display aperture and, therefore, can reflect and/or transmit little of such light through the display aperture. As such, the positioning of a display aperture adjacent to an in-plane storage electrode can limit an amount of light reaching the viewer from stored electrophoretic particles that have not been directed to spread across the display electrode in response to a color component of signal input.
In some embodiments, the illustration of circuitry and associated components 300 as shown in
In various embodiments, the electrophoretic pixel 302 illustrated in
As also described with regard to
For purposes of illustration in
As further described with regard to
The display electrode 320 can be, in various embodiments, substantially in-plane and/or coplanar with the well 316 in which electrophoretic particles (not shown) and dielectric fluid (not shown) are housed. As used in the present disclosure, in-plane used as an adjective indicates elements that are substantially parallel to a particular plane of reference (e.g., a plane of reference defined by a planar display electrode). Out-of-plane used as an adjective indicates elements at a substantial angle (e.g., 90 degrees) to the plane of reference.
As further described with regard to
The storage electrode 310 can, in some embodiments, be substantially in-plane with the display electrode 320 and the activation electrode 318. The storage electrode 310 can be, in various embodiments, substantially in-plane and/or coplanar with the well 316 in which electrophoretic particles and dielectric fluid are housed.
In various embodiments, a semiconductor channel 309 can be positioned between the data line 306 and the storage electrode 310. As illustrated in the embodiment shown in
As appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the relevant art, a semiconductor channel separating a source of electrical pulses from an electrode can serve to function as a switch where an individual electrical pulse having a magnitude that exceeds a particular threshold imposed by the semiconductor channel is allowed passage to the electrode. As such, as illustrated in
An AMBP having a number of gate electrodes for a plurality of TFTs can, in various embodiments, be integrated with a number of electrophoretic pixels having the remaining components of the plurality of the TFTs by positioning an in-plane semiconductor channel on an in-plane surface of each electrophoretic pixel to form a plurality of bottom gate TFTs. The in-plane semiconductor channel of the bottom gate TFT, the in-plane storage electrode, the in-plane activation electrode, and the in-plane display electrode can, in some embodiments, be positioned on the in-plane surface of each electrophoretic pixel.
In various embodiments, the in-plane semiconductor channel of the bottom gate TFT can be positioned on the in-plane surface by promoting formation and growth of in-plane semiconductor crystal structures on the in-plane surface of each electrophoretic pixel. Semiconductor channels grown as crystal structures on the in-plane surface of an electrophoretic pixel can yield improved performance relative to a preformed semiconductor inserted between an in-plane data line and an in-plane storage electrode. The improved performance can result from an inherent attachment to the in-plane surface of the electrophoretic pixel, a consolidated connection to the in-plane data line and the in-plane storage electrode, and a more ordered structure of the semiconductor channel, among other factors, contributed by forming the semiconductor channels in position and in-plane on the surface of each electrophoretic pixel.
Semiconductor channels usable as described in the present disclosure can be formed from a number of materials. For example, semiconductors can, in various embodiments, be formed from such materials as single elements (e.g., Six, among others), a single metal oxide (e.g., InxOn, among others), a binary metal oxide (e.g., InxSnyOn, among others), multicomponent metal oxides (e.g., InxSnyGazOn, among others), other multicomponent inorganic semiconductors, and organic semiconductors regardless of whether formed as single component, bicomponent, and/or multicomponent semiconductors, among other semiconductor formulations known in the relevant art.
In some embodiments, transmitting the electrical pulses sent to an electrophoretic pixel can be supplied to the electrophoretic pixel by transmitting the electrical pulses through a bidirectional bottom gate TFT. The bidirectional bottom gate TFT can, in various embodiments, allow signals to be transmitted that, for example, direct electrophoretic particles to begin spreading from the storage electrode across the display electrode of the electrophoretic pixel toward the activation electrode and/or allow signals to be transmitted that reverse such signals and direct the electrophoretic particles to retreat from the display electrode toward the storage electrode. Electrical pulses transmitted through a bidirectional bottom gate TFT can be transmitted through a multicomponent oxide semiconductor channel, among the various embodiments of semiconductor channels described in the present disclosure.
As illustrated in the embodiment shown in
The illustration of circuitry and components 300 associated with the embodiment of the electrophoretic pixel 302 shown in
As illustrated in
As described in the present disclosure, an in-plane storage electrode, as illustrated in the embodiment shown in
The well 316 illustrated in the embodiment of the circuitry and associated components 330 of
For example, one of ordinary skill in the relevant art will appreciate that a well of an electrophoretic pixel can contain many more electrophoretic particles than are shown in the embodiment illustrated in
The embodiment of the circuitry and associated components 330 illustrated in
In some embodiments, the display aperture 323 can be configured, as illustrated in
In some embodiments, as illustrated in
The layer of insulating dielectric material 334 additionally can be used to separate and/or insulate a component 307 that contains a gate electrode from the semiconductor channel 309 associated with the data line 306 and the in-plane storage electrode 310. As such, in some embodiments, a bottom gate TFT can be formed for control of the in-plane circuitry of an electrophoretic pixel, as described in the present disclosure.
The component 307, including the gate electrode, can, in various embodiments, be positioned in association with (e.g., on top on a substrate layer 336. The substrate layer 336 can, in various embodiments, be associated with and/or represent an AMBP for a number of electrophoretic pixels, such as the circuitry and associated components 330 of the electrophoretic pixel illustrated in
Although the storage capacitor 314 is illustrated as being coplanar with the data line 306 and the activation electrode 318, and not coplanar with the second select line 304-2 (and potentially the first select line 304-1 as illustrated in
As described with regard to
As described with regard to
The layer of insulating dielectric material 334 can be separated from the lid 332 by various wall configurations, as described in the present disclosure. In some embodiments, a wall 333-3 extending from near the activation electrode 318 to near the data line 306 can contribute to separating the lid 332 and the layer of insulating dielectric material 334 to create a volume for a well (not shown), as illustrated in
As further described with regard to
As further described with regard to
Embodiments described herein can be performed using logic, software, firmware, hardware, application modules, and ASICs, or combinations of these elements, and the like, to perform the operations described herein. Embodiments as described herein are not limited to any particular operating environment or to software/firmware coded and stored in a particular programming language.
The elements described can be resident on the systems, apparatuses, and/or devices shown herein, or otherwise. Logic suitable for performing embodiments of the present disclosure can be resident in one or more devices and/or locations. Processing devices used to execute operations described herein can include one or more individual modules that perform a number of functions, separate modules connected together, and/or independent modules.
The embodiment illustrated in
Block 420 of the embodiment shown in
As such, a refresh rate of the in-plane storage electrode can, in various embodiments, be reduced by associating the in-plane storage electrode with the storage capacitor. Additionally, the refresh rate of the in-plane storage electrode can, in various embodiments, be reduced by associating the in-plane storage electrode with a parasitic capacitor connected to a drain electrode and a select line.
As shown in block 430, the in-plane activation electrode can, in various embodiments, be connected to an in-plane display electrode, which extends across a first area in the electrophoretic pixel adjacent to a display aperture having a second area that is substantially coextensive with the first area. As such, electrophoretic particles can be directed to spread across the in-plane display electrode to become visible through the adjacent display aperture, which can, in various embodiments, be positioned substantially coplanar to the in-plane display electrode.
Controlling spreading of the electrophoretic particles with the in-plane storage electrode can, in various embodiments, include storing the electrophoretic particles outside the first area of the display electrode, which is substantially coextensive with the second area of the display aperture. As such, the stored electrophoretic particles can be stored in a position that is substantially out of the viewer's line of sight when viewing electrophoretic pixels in an electrophoretic display apparatus as described in the present disclosure. In addition, the electrophoretic pixels stored as such can reflect and/or transmit little light through one or more display apertures of the electrophoretic pixel.
In various embodiments, a subset of the electrical pulses can be transmitted to the in-plane storage electrode to control a manner of in-plane spreading of the electrophoretic particles across the display electrode that is connected to the in-plane activation electrode (e.g., to produce grayscale images). Electrical pulse modulation can, in various embodiments, be used to control the manner of in-plane spreading of the electrophoretic particles. As appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the relevant art, electrical pulse modulation techniques, among others can include, in various embodiments: using a number of incremental voltage levels, where the number ranges from two voltage levels to 256 voltage levels, transmitted to the display electrode; using a varying time span of a particular voltage transmitted to the display electrode; using a varying time span of the number of incremental voltage levels transmitted to the display electrode; and/or using waveform diffusion mechanisms.
As described in the present disclosure, an electrophoretic display system can, in various embodiments, include an electrophoretic display having controlled spreading of a set of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles using an electric field, where the set can be distributed in a number of electrophoretic pixels. In some embodiments, a plurality of (i.e., more than one) planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels can, in various embodiments, be arranged in a number of x-y planes, where distributed subsets of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles are controllable to spread in-plane to each of the x-y planes.
In various embodiments, a different color can be used for a subset of the electrically-charged electrophoretic particles in at least one of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels. By way of example and not by way of limitation, the different color for the subset in at least one of the plurality of planar arrays can include using separate subsets of the electrically-charged electrophoretic particles that reflect and/or transmit colors such as substantially cyan, magenta, yellow, and/or black.
However, planar arrays in agreement with the teachings of the present disclosure can, in various embodiments, include electrophoretic pixels having electrophoretic particles that reflect and/or transmit one or more colors, where any particular colors can be used, as can any combinations thereof. In addition, each planar array can, in various embodiments, be formed to include electrophoretic pixels having one or more colors reflected and/or transmitted by electrophoretic particles therein, whether such electrophoretic particle colors are separated in different and/or combined in the same electrophoretic pixels of the planar array.
The electrophoretic display system can include a stack along a z axis of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels, where each of the planar arrays, in some embodiments, has a different color for the subset of the electrically-charged electrophoretic particles contained therein. Various embodiments of the electrophoretic display system, including the embodiment as just described, can be enabled by alignment of at least one display aperture in each of the number of electrophoretic pixels in each array such that electrophoretic pixels that spread across an area of a display aperture of a first planar array positioned below a second planar array are visible to a viewer.
In some embodiments, alignment of the display apertures having the different color for the subset of the electrically-charged electrophoretic particles in each planar array can, in various embodiments, enable image production with a gamut of colors through a color subtraction process. However, embodiments of the present disclosure are not limited to having a different color for the subset of the electrically-charged electrophoretic particles in each planar array.
An electrophoretic display system as described in the present disclosure can, for example, use a bottom planar array having an opaque and/or reflective backplane in which the electrophoretic pixels thereon each have a substantially transparent display aperture of the top surface. Each planar array placed on top of the bottom planar array can have a substantially transparent display aperture on a bottom surface, along with a substantially transparent substrate layer (e.g., including the backplane), layer of insulating dielectric material, and/or display electrode, and a substantially transparent display aperture on the top surface to enable passage therethrough of light reflected by electrophoretic particles in electrophoretic pixels of one or more planar arrays positioned underneath.
As such, the electrophoretic display system described in the present disclosure can, in various embodiments, include a number of components such as, among others: a backplane to at least one of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels that is substantially transparent to facilitate emission through display apertures of light reflected by the set of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles; a backplane to at least one of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels that is substantially opaque to facilitate emission through display apertures of light reflected by the set of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles; a backplane to at least one of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels that is substantially reflective to facilitate emission through display apertures of light reflected by the set of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles; and/or backplanes to all of the plurality of planar arrays of the number of electrophoretic pixels that are substantially transparent to facilitate emission through display apertures of light transmitted through the set of electrically-charged electrophoretic particles from a backlight source.
An electrophoretic display having a number of planar arrays included in the system can, in various embodiments, be substantially constructed using roll-to-roll plastic. Roll-to-roll (R2R) processing can allow efficient manufacture of an electrophoretic display on a flexible substrate (e.g., plastic) at low cost and/or high speed. A continuous roll or web of, for example, the flexible plastic can be run through processing machinery and rollers that can be used to define the path taken and to maintain proper tension and/or position.
R2R processing can construct devices layer by layer and can allow building of connections between components, thereby forming a complete device, rather than a device to which connections are later attached and/or soldered. Using R2R processing can convert the display manufacturing process from inefficient batch production to continuous flow R2R high speed processing in which desired characteristics for the plastic, for example, can be incorporated. As such, the electrophoretic display can, in various embodiments, include a number of characteristics including flexibility, substantially non-filtered emitted light, and substantially non-polarized emitted light, among others.
As described in the present disclosure, having components (e.g., display apertures, display electrodes, etc.) that are substantially transparent to (e.g., do not filter and/or polarize) incident and/or emitted light, can allow individual electrophoretic pixels and/or aligned stacks thereof to provide more color intensity than, in some instances, electrophoretic display devices that do filter and/or polarize such light. In addition, by stacking and/or aligning such electrophoretic pixels (e.g., in planar arrays), combinations of electrophoretic particles that reflect and/or transmit different colors (e.g., cyan, magenta, yellow, and/or black) can subtractively reproduce an input color, in some instances, more closely and/or with higher intensity than an electrophoretic display device that uses a number of adjacent electrophoretic pixels that emit separate colors of light to additively reproduce the input color.
Fabricating and/or using an electrophoretic display device embodiment or method as described in the present disclosure can confer a number of advantages relative to electrophoretic displays as described in prior disclosures, such as the electrophoretic display illustrated in
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, those of ordinary skill in the relevant art will appreciate that an arrangement calculated to achieve the same techniques can be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. This disclosure is intended to cover all adaptations or variations of various embodiments of the present disclosure.
It is to be understood that the above description has been made in an illustrative fashion, and not a restrictive one. Combination of the above embodiments, and other embodiments not specifically described herein, will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the relevant art upon reviewing the above description.
The scope of the various embodiments of the present disclosure includes other applications in which the above structures and methods are used. Therefore, the scope of various embodiments of the present disclosure should be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full range of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
In the foregoing Detailed Description, various features are grouped together in a single embodiment for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted as reflecting an intention that the disclosed embodiments of the present disclosure need to use more features than are expressly recited in each claim.
Rather, as the following claims reflect, inventive subject matter lies in less than all features of a single disclosed embodiment. Thus, the following claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separate embodiment.
This Application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/001,394, filed Nov. 1, 2007, titled “Displaying Electrophoretic Particles” which is hereby incorporated by reference herein as if reproduced in full below.
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