This relates generally to electronic devices, and, more particularly, to electronic devices with displays.
Electronic devices such as cellular telephones, computers, and other electronic devices often contain displays. A display includes an array of pixels for displaying images to a user. Display driver circuitry such as data line driver circuitry may supply data signals to the array of pixels. Gate line driver circuitry in the display driver circuitry can be used to assert a gate line signal on each row of pixels in the display in sequence to load data into the pixels.
Brightness variations may also arise from control issues in displays with non-rectangular shapes. If care is not taken, effects such as these may adversely affect display performance.
A display may have an array of pixels such as liquid crystal display pixels controlled by display driver circuitry. The display driver circuitry may supply the pixels with data signals over data lines in columns of the pixels and may supply the pixels with gate line signals over gate lines in rows of the pixels. Gate driver circuitry in the display driver circuitry may be used in supplying the gate lines signals.
The gate driver circuitry may have gate driver circuits each of which supplies a respective one of the gate lines signals to the pixels in a respective row of the array of pixels.
Different rows in a display may have different numbers of pixels and may therefore be characterized by different amounts of capacitive loading. To ensure brightness uniformity for the display, a display may be provided with row-dependent supplemental gate line loading structures.
The gate lines coupled to the short pixel rows may extend into the inactive area of the display. Supplemental gate line loading structures may be located in the inactive area of the display to increase loading on the gate lines that are coupled to short pixel rows. The supplemental gate line loading structures may include data lines and doped polysilicon that overlap the gate lines in the inactive area.
The doped polysilicon may be coupled to a bias voltage supply line such as a ground line or other signal line. A transparent conductive layer such as an extension of a common electrode voltage layer may be used in the inactive area of the display to couple the polysilicon to the bias voltage supply line. In other arrangements, a metal layer may be used to couple the polysilicon to the bias voltage supply line. The metal layer may be formed from the same material that forms the data lines in the active area of the display.
In displays that combine display and touch functionality into a thin-film transistor layer, supplemental loading structures may be used in the inactive area to increase loading on common voltage lines that are coupled to short rows of common voltage pads. The supplemental loading structures may include transparent conductive electrodes that respectively overlap the common voltage pads in the inactive area. The transparent conductive electrodes may be formed from the same material as the pixel electrodes in the active area of the display. The transparent conductive electrodes and the common voltage pads form capacitors that increase the capacitive loading on the common voltage lines that are coupled to short rows of common voltage pads.
An illustrative electronic device of the type that may be provided with a display is shown in
As shown in
Input-output circuitry in device 10 such as input-output devices 12 may be used to allow data to be supplied to device 10 and to allow data to be provided from device 10 to external devices. Input-output devices 12 may include buttons, joysticks, scrolling wheels, touch pads, key pads, keyboards, microphones, speakers, tone generators, vibrators, cameras, sensors, light-emitting diodes and other status indicators, data ports, etc. A user can control the operation of device 10 by supplying commands through input-output devices 12 and may receive status information and other output from device 10 using the output resources of input-output devices 12.
Input-output devices 12 may include one or more displays such as display 14. Display 14 may be a touch screen display that includes a touch sensor for gathering touch input from a user or display 14 may be insensitive to touch. A touch sensor for display 14 may be based on an array of capacitive touch sensor electrodes, acoustic touch sensor structures, resistive touch components, force-based touch sensor structures, a light-based touch sensor, or other suitable touch sensor arrangements.
Control circuitry 16 may be used to run software on device 10 such as operating system code and applications. During operation of device 10, the software running on control circuitry 16 may display images on display 14 using an array of pixels in display 14.
Display 14 may be an organic light-emitting diode display, a liquid crystal display, an electrophoretic display, an electrowetting display, a display based on an array of discrete crystalline light-emitting diode dies, or a display based on other types of display technology. Configurations in which display 14 is a liquid crystal display may sometimes be described herein as an example.
Display 14 may have a rectangular shape (i.e., display 14 may have a rectangular footprint and a rectangular peripheral edge that runs around the rectangular footprint) or may have other suitable shapes. Display 14 may be planar or may have a curved profile.
A top view of a portion of display 14 is shown in
Display driver circuitry 20 may be used to control the operation of pixels 22. Display driver circuitry 20 may be formed from integrated circuits, thin-film transistor circuits, or other suitable circuitry. Thin-film transistor circuitry may be formed from polysilicon thin-film transistors, semiconducting-oxide thin-film transistors such as indium gallium zinc oxide transistors, or thin-film transistors formed from other semiconductors. Pixels 22 may have color filter elements or other colored structures of different colors (e.g., red, green, and blue) to provide display 14 with the ability to display color images.
Display driver circuitry 20 may include display driver circuits such as display driver circuit 20A and gate driver circuitry 20B. Display driver circuit 20A may be formed from one or more display driver integrated circuits and/or thin-film transistor circuitry (e.g., timing controller integrated circuits). Gate driver circuitry 20B may be formed from gate driver integrated circuits or may be thin-film “gate-on-array” circuitry. Display driver circuit 20A of
To display images on display pixels 22, display driver circuitry 20A may supply image data to data lines D while issuing control signals to supporting display driver circuitry such as gate driver circuitry 20B over path 38. Path 38 may, for example, include lines for carrying power signals such as a gate high voltage signal Vgh (which can serve as a maximum gate line signal value output from the gate driver circuitry onto each gate line) and a gate low voltage signal Vgl (which can serve as a ground), control signals such as gate output enable signals, clock signals, etc. Circuitry 20A may supply these signals to gate driver circuitry 20B on one or both edges of display 14 (see, e.g., path 38′ and gate driver circuitry 20B′ on the right-hand side of display 14 in the example of
Gate driver circuitry 20B (sometimes referred to as horizontal control line control circuitry) may control horizontal control lines (gate lines) G using the signals received from path 38 (e.g., using the gate high voltage, gate low voltage, gate output enable signals, gate clock signals, etc.). Gate lines G in display 14 may each carry a gate line signal for controlling the pixels 22 of a respective row (e.g., to turn on transistors in pixels 22 when loading data from the data lines into storage capacitors in those pixels from data lines D). During operation, frames of image data may be displayed by asserting a gate signal on each gate line G in the display in sequence. Shift register circuitry (e.g., a chain of gate driver circuits formed from registers and associated output buffers) in gate driver circuitry 20B may be used in controlling the gate line signals.
An illustrative pixel circuit for pixels 22 of display 14 is shown in
A cross-sectional side view of a portion of the active area of display 14 is shown in
Thin-film transistor circuitry 34 may include a substrate layer such as substrate 36. Substrate 36 may be formed from transparent glass, plastic, or other materials. Light shield structure 202 may be formed under thin-film transistors such as illustrative transistor 56. Light shield structure 202 may be formed from metal (as an example). Dielectric buffer layer(s) 62 may be formed on substrate 36. Thin-film transistor circuitry 34 may also include dielectric layers such as gate insulator layer 64 and interlayer dielectric layers 206 and 218. Dielectric layers such as layers 62, 64, 206, and 218 may be formed from silicon oxide, silicon nitride, other inorganic materials, or other insulators. Dielectric planarization layers such as layers 208 and 214 may be formed from organic layers (e.g., polymers) or other insulators.
Conductive layers such as layers 216 and 220 may be formed from indium tin oxide or other transparent conductive material. Layer 220 may be patterned to form electrode fingers for a pixel electrode driven by thin-film transistor 56. Layer 220 may be separated from a common voltage (Vcom) layer formed from layer 216 by interlayer dielectric layer 218. Transistor 56 may have a channel formed from polysilicon layer 204, gate and source terminals formed from metal layer 60, and a gate formed from metal layer 222 (which is separated from the channel by gate insulator 64). Intermediate metal layer 210 may be interposed between interlayer dielectric layer 206 and planarization layer 208 and may be used to form signal interconnects. Other display structures may be formed using the layers of
In configurations for device 10 in which display 14 has the same number of pixels 22 in each row of display 14, the capacitive loading on the gate lines of display 14 will be relatively even across all of the rows of display 14. In other configurations for display 14 such as the illustrative configuration of
In the illustrative arrangement of
More abrupt shape changes such as the changes in display 14 due to notch 66 will introduce more significant changes in pixel loading on the gate lines. Rows such as row RM+1 . . . RN in display 14 of
Because the gate lines in area A of display 14 (i.e., the gate lines of rows RO . . . RM in the top edge of display 14 adjacent to region 66) and the gate lines in area B of display 14 (i.e., the gate lines of rows RM+1 . . . RN) experience different amounts of loading in the example of
A graph illustrating the impact of various loading schemes that may be used to help smooth out brightness variations in a display having rows of pixels of unequal lengths (different numbers of pixels) is shown in
Brightness variations such as these can be smoothed out by adding supplemental gate line loading structures to appropriate rows of display 14. With one illustrative arrangement, which is illustrated by line 192, gate line loading is smoothed out by adding supplemental loads to the gate lines of rows 198. If desired, further smoothing may be achieved (e.g., by adding varying amounts of load to each of the gate lines of rows RO through RM, as illustrated by line 194). If desired, gate lines in rows RO-RM may be compensated by adding sufficient supplemental gate line loading to equalize the loading on the gate lines of all of the rows in display 14 (see, e.g., illustrative loading line 196 of
Illustrative arrangements for adding supplemental loads to shorter pixel rows of display 14 are shown in
As shown in the illustrative configuration of
The gate lines of pixel rows RO-RM may extend across active area 40 and across notch-region 66 (sometimes referred to as an inactive area or inactive notch region of display 14). The pitch of gate lines Gin inactive region 66 may be smaller than the pitch of gate lines G within active area 40. The reduced pitch of gate lines G in inactive region 66 provides a space such as space 42 at the top of display 14. Space 42 may be used to accommodate one or more electronic components (e.g., input-output components such as a camera, a speaker, an ambient light sensor, a proximity sensor, and/or other input-output components).
Selected gate lines G (e.g., gate lines in pixel rows RO-RM or other suitable gate lines) may be coupled to supplemental loading structures (supplemental gate line loading structures) such as dummy pixels 22D in notch region 66. Any suitable number of pixel rows may be supplied with supplemental loading (e.g., 2-20 rows, 2-100 rows, 50-1000 rows, more than 25 rows, fewer than 2000 rows, etc.). Any suitable number of dummy pixels 22D (e.g., 1-1000, more than 10, fewer than 500, etc.) may be coupled to the gate line Gin each row of display 14 and/or may be coupled to other suitable horizontal control lines in display 14 to reduce row-dependent brightness variations.
Dummy pixels 22D may contain all or some of the pixel circuitry of regular pixels 22 with modifications that prevent these pixels from emitting light. Examples of modifications that may be made to convert active pixels 22 into dummy pixels 22D include: omitting the liquid crystal material of pixels 22 from pixels 22D, omitting the anodes of pixels 22D, omitting small portions of metal traces to create open circuits, etc. The footprint (outline when viewed from above) of each of pixels 22D of
If desired, supplemental loading structures formed from one or more capacitors in region 66. This type of arrangement is shown in
The dielectric material between data line extensions DE and gate lines G and between conductive layer 50 and gate lines G may be formed from one or more layers of inorganic and/or organic dielectric material in display 14. Conductive layer 50 may be formed from metal layers, conductive semiconductor layers (e.g., doped polysilicon, etc.), or other conductive layers. For example, conductive layer 50 may be formed from conductive layers such as a first gate metal layer, second gate metal layer, source-drain metal layer, silicon layer, or other suitable conductive layers in the thin-film transistor circuitry of display 14. In one illustrative arrangement, which is sometimes described herein as an example, conductive layer 50 may be formed from a doped polysilicon layer such as doped polysilicon layer 204 of
If desired, the amount of overlap between data line extensions DE and gate lines G in each dummy pixel 22D may match the amount of overlap between data lines D and gate lines G in light-emitting pixels 22. This ensures that data line extensions DE provide the same or similar capacitive loading to gate lines G in inactive region 66 that data lines D provide to gate lines G in active area 40 of display 14. Similarly, the amount of overlap between conductive layer 50 (e.g., a layer of doped polysilicon) and gate lines Gin dummy pixels 22D may match the amount of overlap between polysilicon layer 204 and gate lines G in pixels 22. This ensures that polysilicon layer 50 provides the same or similar capacitive loading to gate lines G in inactive region 66 that polysilicon layer 204 in pixels 22 provide to gate lines G in active region 40 of display 14.
Polysilicon layer 50 in inactive region 66 may be formed from the same layer of material that forms polysilicon layer 204 in active region 40, but polysilicon layer 50 may be electrically isolated from polysilicon layer 204. Thus, in order to provide the appropriate voltage to polysilicon layer 50, polysilicon layer 50 may be coupled to a bias voltage supply line such as a ground line (e.g., ground line 38-2) or other signal line (e.g., gate low voltage Vgl signal line 38-1).
In one illustrative arrangement, vias such as vias 52 may be used to couple polysilicon layer 50 to a common voltage (Vcom) layer. The Vcom layer may in turn be coupled to ground line 38-2 to provide polysilicon layer 50 with the appropriate bias voltage.
In the example of
Gate insulator 64 and dielectric layers 206, 208, and 214 may include openings for vias 52. For example, as shown in
The example of
In arrangements where dummy polysilicon layer 50 is biased using a ground loop such as ground loop 38-2, it may be desirable to form the ground loop from multiple metal layers to avoid damage to dummy loading structures 22D during manufacturing. If ground loop 38-2 is formed entirely from one metal layer such as metal 222, this could cause polysilicon 50 to absorb charge as the remaining layers in display 14 are formed, which in turn could cause damage to loading structures 22D. To avoid excess charge being absorbed by polysilicon 50, ground loop 38-2 may be formed from alternating segments of different metal layers. This type of shown in
As shown in
The example of
As shown in
Gate insulator 64 and dielectric layer 206 may include openings for vias 74. For example, as shown in
In some arrangements, display 14 may include an integrated touch sensor. Touch sensor structures may, for example, be integrated into thin-film transistor circuitry of the type shown in
Vertical Vcom conductors such as Vcom columns 80Y (called Vcomc) may be interspersed with pads 80X. The Vcomr and Vcomc conductors of
When pixels 22 of display 14 are being used to display an image on display 14, display driver circuitry 20A (
At recurring time intervals, the image display functions of display 14 may be temporarily paused so that touch data can be gathered. During these time intervals (sometimes referred to as display blanking intervals), the display may operate in touch sensor mode. When operating in touch sensor mode, the Vcomr 80X and Vcomc 80Y conductors may be operated independently, so that the position of a touch event can be detected in dimensions X and Y. There are multiple Vcom rows (formed from Vcomr pads 80X) which allows discrimination of touch position with respect to dimension Y. There are also multiple Vcom columns (formed from Vcomc 80Y), which allows touch position to be determined in dimension X.
In arrangements where display 14 has an inactive notch area such as notch region 66, there may be rows of gate lines (not shown) with fewer pixels than other rows of display 14 (as discussed in connection with
In arrangements where touch sensor electrodes are incorporated into the thin-film transistor circuitry of display 14, as in the example of
To reduce loading mismatch in XVcom lines 82 of display 14, short rows of Vcomr pads 80X may be provided with supplemental loads (sometimes referred to as dummy loads, dummy pixels, or supplemental gate line loading structures) to help make those Vcomr rows behave similarly to or identically to longer Vcomr rows in the display.
Polysilicon layer 50 in inactive region 66 may be formed from the same layer of material that forms polysilicon layer 204 in active region 40, but polysilicon layer 50 may be electrically isolated from polysilicon layer 204. Thus, in order to provide the appropriate voltage to polysilicon layer 50, polysilicon layer may be coupled to a bias voltage supply line such as gate low voltage (Vgl) signal line 38-1. Gate low voltage line 38-1 may have vertical segments (e.g., segments extending parallel to the y-axis of
Additional dummy loading structures, sometimes referred to as Vcom row loading structures, may be used to increase loading on XVcom lines 82 in short rows of Vcomr pads Vcom row loading structures may include, for example, conductive electrodes 90. Each conductive electrode 90 may overlap a respective one of Vcomr pads 80X. The use of electrodes over respective Vcomr pads 80X creates capacitors that increase the capacitive loading on XVcom lines 82 near notch 66 to match or more closely match the capacitive loading on XVcom lines 82 below notch 66. Each capacitor includes a first electrode formed from conductive layer and a second electrode formed from Vcomr pad 80X. One or more dielectric layers may separate pads 80X from conductive layer 90. The dielectric material between pads 80X and conductive layer 90 may be formed from one or more layers of inorganic and/or organic dielectric material in display 14. Conductive layer 90 may be formed from metal layers, conductive semiconductor layers (e.g., doped polysilicon, etc.), or other conductive layers. For example, conductive layer 90 may be formed from conductive layers such as a first gate metal layer, second gate metal layer, source-drain metal layer, silicon layer, or other suitable conductive layers in the thin-film transistor circuitry of display 14.
In one illustrative arrangement, which is sometimes described herein as an example, conductive electrodes 90 may be formed from the same layer of transparent conductive material that forms pixel electrodes in active area 40 (e.g., conductive electrodes 90 may be formed from pixel electrode layer 220 of
The capacitor formed from Vcomr pad 80X and conductive electrode 90 may increase the capacitive loading on XVcom lines 82 in the short rows of Vcomr pads 80X to match or more closely match the capacitive loading on XVcom lines 82 in the full-width rows of Vcomr pads 80X. As shown in
If desired, electrodes 90 may also be formed over the portions of column Vcomc electrodes 80Y that extend into inactive notch area 66. Since XVcom lines 82 also overlap the portions of Vcomc electrodes 80Y in inactive area 66 (see
The foregoing is merely illustrative and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the described embodiments. The foregoing embodiments may be implemented individually or in any combination.
This application is a continuation of patent application Ser. No. 17/401,117, filed Aug. 12, 2021, which is a continuation of patent application Ser. No. 16/518,527, filed Jul. 22, 2019, now U.S. Pat. No. 11,100,877, which is a continuation of patent application Ser. No. 15/980,437, filed May 15, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,360,862, which claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 62/555,457, filed Sep. 7, 2017, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
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Child | 18167600 | US | |
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Child | 16518527 | US |