The present invention is a U.S. National Stage under 35 USC 371 patent application, claiming priority to UK Serial No. 1803487.6, filed on 5 Mar. 2018, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention generally relates to flexible/curved displays.
There are many applications for curved displays and for displays which are flexible so that they may be conformed to a curved surface. These include conforming a display to the curved interior surface of a vehicle for displaying information to the driver and/or one or more passengers; and consumer electronic devices (CEDs) such as mobile phones, tablets, televisions and other devices with display screens.
Depending upon the application there may be a need to restrict the viewing angle of a curved display, for example for privacy or so that the driver of a vehicle, or a passenger, is not distracted. It may also be desirable to provide a bright, uniform display for a particular viewing direction, which may impose different but related requirements.
In one aspect a display for mounting on a curved surface includes a display stack comprising: a substrate to conform to a curved surface; a pixelated display medium on the substrate; and a parallax barrier. The parallax barrier may comprise a pattern of light blocking elements to restrict viewing of pixels of the display medium to a viewing angle.
In some implementations the parallax barrier is configured so that positions of the light blocking elements, with respect to the pixels, change with lateral position on the display. This can improve the effectiveness of the parallax barrier in limiting the viewing angle for a curved display.
Examples of such a display are able to restrict the viewing angle of a flexible or curved display when, for example, it is mounted on a curved surface. The particular displacements of the light blocking elements away from a nominal position, which may for example be when an element is centered over a pixel, depend on the degree to which the display is curved, or configured to be curved when in use.
In implementations, by changing the positions of the light blocking elements, more particularly the lateral positions or “in plane” positions of these elements, with location on the display the light blocking elements may be aligned with respect to a local viewing direction which changes with lateral position on the display in accordance with curvature of a surface of the display.
There are two effects which may contribute to different degrees. First, for a particular viewing direction the position of a light blocking element with respect to a pixel of the display medium can change as the surface of the display is tilted with respect to the viewing direction, because the light blocking elements are generally slightly displaced in a vertical direction away from the display medium. Second the viewing direction changes according to which lateral location on the (curved) display is viewed. The changing positions of the light blocking elements may compensate for one or both these effects.
Thus in some implementations the positions of the light blocking elements with respect to the pixels change with lateral position on the display to compensate for a change in viewing angle (with respect to the display) with lateral position on the display when the display is mounted on the curved surface.
In some implementations the positions of the light blocking elements with respect to the pixels are increasingly offset from an initial relative position at an initial location with increasing lateral distance across the display from the initial location. The initial location may be at the centre of the display in one or two dimensions, or towards or at an edge of the display, depending upon the intended location of the viewer with respect to the display. The initial relative position may be a position where a light blocking element is centered on a pixel, for example where design viewing angle is at 90 degrees to the surface of the display at the initial location. Alternatively a light blocking element may be displaced away from the lateral centre of a pixel of the display medium at the initial location.
The display may be curved, for example pre-curved to fit onto a curved surface and/or the display may be flexible. The curvature may be curvature in one or two dimensions.
Where the curvature is in one dimension the light blocking elements may comprise stripes with a distance from one strip to an adjacent defined by a stripe pitch. The pixels may have a pixel pitch in the same direction as the stripe pitch. The stripe pitch may be less than the pixel pitch to account for changing lateral positions of the stripes across the display.
Where the curvature is in two dimensions the positions of the light blocking elements with respect to the pixels may change with lateral position on the display in two orthogonal directions. The light blocking elements may define 2D frames around the pixels having windows, to define the viewing angle in 2D.
The parallax barrier may be in front of or behind the pixelated display medium. For example where the display medium is an LCD display medium with a backlight the parallax barrier may be in front of the display medium or between the backlight and the display medium. Alternatively, where the display medium is an LCD display medium the parallax barrier may be between an upper or front side of the substrate and a polarising layer of the LCD display.
Where the display medium is an LCD display medium there may be two substrates, a first substrate bearing a thin film transistor (TFT) backplane and electrodes, a second substrate bearing the display medium. In such a structure the two substrates may sandwich the TFT and display medium layers. The first substrate may have a first polariser on the opposite side of the substrate to the TFT layer. The second substrate may have a second polariser on the opposite side of the substrate to the display medium. The parallax barrier may be between the first substrate and the TFT/electrode layer and/or between the second substrate and the second polariser. A layer of the LCD display medium may include spacers to define a thickness of the layer. In this case the parallax barrier may be integrated with the spacers; that is in some implementations the spacers may also function as the parallax barrier, or vice-versa.
Where the display medium is an emissive display medium such as an organic light emitting diode display medium the parallax barrier may be in front of the display medium.
The wherein the light blocking elements may comprise black resin, which is advantageous in being non-reflective; or they may comprise metal.
In another aspect there is provided a method of displaying information over a limited viewing angle using a curved display. The method comprises providing a parallax barrier for the display, the parallax barrier comprising a pattern of light blocking elements to restrict viewing of pixels of the display to a viewing angle.
The method may further comprise compensating for a change in viewing angle with respect to lateral position on the curved display by laterally positioning the light blocking elements.
Further aspects of the method may be as previously described with reference to the display.
The method may comprise displaying information on a curved surface such as a curved surface inside a vehicle, for example a pillar of the vehicle; or on a curved surface of a consumer electronic device.
A vehicle may be provided with a camera to capture an image of the external environment and part or all of the captured image may then be reproduced on the curved display to increase visibility for the driver. This may give the impression that a part of the vehicle, such as an A-pillar, is partially or wholly transparent. In such a use case it is beneficial to ensure that the image, which is tailored for the driver, is not seen by a passenger as the view would be distorted and distracting.
Embodiments of the invention will be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the structure of
In the structure of
In each of
The display 200 of
A viewer 220 sees different parts of the display from different angles with respect to the surface of the display because of the curvature of the display. For example as illustrated the viewer sees a central part of the display straight-on, that is with a viewing direction 222a at 90 degrees to the central part of the display. However the same viewer sees the edge of the display at an acute angle, that is viewing direction 222b makes an acute angle to the surface of the display at the edge of the display. It will be appreciated that in general the viewing angles differ even when the central part of the display is viewed obliquely rather than straight-on.
The light blocking element 212a of the parallax barrier is arranged to obscure pixel 204a from viewing at angles beyond those defined by a viewing cone (or triangular prism for a 1D shield). This is approximately defined by the locations of the edges of light blocking element 212a—beyond the viewing cone light blocking element 212a obscures the pixel 204a from view. The pixel has a finite lateral extent and thus the blocking is gradual rather than immediate—from some intermediate angles a viewer may see part of the pixel, and thus a dimmed display.
In a similar way the light blocking element 212b of the parallax barrier is arranged to obscure pixel 204b from viewing at angles beyond those defined by the same viewing cone (or triangular prism). However because of the change in viewing direction to direction 222b the position of light blocking element 212b with respect to the underlying pixel 204b is preferably laterally shifted towards the centre of the display. This shift may be in one or two directions, depending upon whether the display is curved in one or two directions.
There may be one light blocking element per pixel. However the relative positions of these elements with respect to the underlying pixels may gradually shift across the display. They may have a slightly different pitch to the underlying pixels.
In the stack of
In general the parallax barrier may advantageously be formed in a planarising layer of the stack. For example for a viewing distance of order 1 metre the distance between the parallax barrier and pixel may be around 1-50 μm, or 1-10 μm. These distances are such that the parallax barrier may be formed is/using a planarising layer.
In some implementations liquid crystal layer 130 may include spacers. Potentially the parallax barrier and spacers may be integrated.
The light blocking elements may comprise metal but to reduce reflections black resin is preferable. A thickness in the range 0.1-1 μm may be suitable for a metal barrier; a black resin barrier may have a thickness in the range 0.8-3 μm, for example around 1 μm)
Applications of the technology include, but are not limited to, in-vehicle displays, mobile phone/tablet displays, and ATM (Automated Teller Machine) displays.
No doubt many other effective alternatives will occur to the skilled person. It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the described embodiments and encompasses modifications apparent to those skilled in the art lying within the spirit and scope of the claims appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1803487.6 | Mar 2018 | GB | national |