1. Field of the Invention
The invention is related to display systems. In particular, the present invention relates to driving circuits for liquid crystal display (LCD) systems.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In recent years, LCDs are widely used in personal and commercial products. How to reduce the power consumption of an LCD and its driving circuits, so as to achieve the goal of reducing carbon emission or prolong the usable time of a portable device, has been an important issue for product designers.
As known by those skilled in the art, by providing different voltages to liquid crystal molecules, the rotational direction of liquid crystal molecules can be adjusted. The gray level of each pixel in an image to be displayed is correspondingly controlled. However, the rotational direction of a liquid crystal molecule cannot be fixed for a long time; otherwise the characteristic of the molecule will be destroyed and can no longer rotate corresponding to the voltage. Inevitably, in some practical situations, the image displayed on an LCD must be the same for a long time. To prevent liquid crystal molecules from being destroyed, the driving circuit of an LCD has to continuously adjust the voltages of the display electrodes and the common electrode disposed besides the liquid crystal molecules.
Generally, all the liquid crystal molecules in an LCD share the same common electrode, and the molecules in the same vertical line share one display electrode. When the voltage of a display electrode for a certain molecule is higher than the voltage of the common electrode, the molecule is called as having positive polarity. On the contrary, when the voltage of a display electrode for a certain molecule is lower than the voltage of the common electrode, the molecule is called as having negative polarity.
As lone as the voltage difference between the two electrodes is kept the same, no matter whether the display electrode or the common electrode has the higher voltage, the molecule is corresponding to the same gray level though the rotational directions under these two conditions are opposite to each other. Hence, the driving circuit can change the polarity of liquid crystal molecules between positive and negative alternatively, so as to keep the image the same and the liquid crystal molecules not being destroyed.
There are several ways to alternatively change the aforementioned polarity, for example, continuously changing the voltage of the common electrode. One commonality of these solutions is that the polarity of liquid crystal molecules is changed whenever the image data is changed. For an LCD having an image updating frequency equal to 60 Hz, the driving circuit of the LCD changes the polarity of all the liquid crystal molecules every 16 ms.
As shown in
In this example, the output voltage generated by the DC voltage generating unit 14 is kept as VDC; the AC voltage generating unit 12 generates a periodical square wave changing alternatively between 0V and voltage VCAC. Correspondingly, as shown in
Practically, VCAC is typically twice the supply voltage of the DC voltage generating unit 14 and the image driving unit 16. Therefore, to periodically change the voltage at terminal A and the voltage of the common electrode 34 consumes much power.
To solve the aforementioned problem, the invention provides a driving circuit for an LCD system. By utilizing the techniques of charge sharing and pre-charging, the power consumption of changing the voltage of the common electrode can be effectively reduced.
One embodiment according to the invention is a driving circuit for an LCD system including a DC voltage supply unit, an image driving unit, an AC voltage output terminal, a charging/discharging switch, a charging/discharging unit, a charge sharing switch, and a control unit. The AC voltage output terminal is coupled to the common electrode via a coupling capacitor in the LCD system. The DC voltage supply unit is also coupled to the common electrode and supplies a DC voltage to the common electrode. The image driving unit is used for providing an image driving signal to the display electrode of the LCD system.
The charging/discharging unit is coupled to the AC voltage output terminal via the charging/discharging switch. When the charging/discharging switch is turned on, the charging/discharging unit charging or discharging the AC voltage output terminal. The charge sharing switch is coupled between the display electrode and the AC voltage output terminal. When the charge sharing switch is turned on, the display electrode and the AC voltage output terminal is electrically coupled to each other. The control unit is coupled to the charging/discharging switch and the charge sharing switch, respectively. Based on a requirement to change the electrical polarity of the common electrode, the control unit respectively controls the charging/discharging switch and the charge sharing switch.
In the driving circuit according to the invention, when the voltage of the AC voltage output terminal is required to be raised from low to high, the control unit can first turns on the charge sharing switch, so that the charge at the display electrode can be transferred to the AC voltage output terminal and preliminarily pulls high the voltage of the terminal. Then, the control can turns off the charge sharing switch and turns on the charging/discharging switch, so that the charging/discharging unit can finish the charging to the AC voltage output terminal.
As described above, the polarity of liquid crystal molecules is typically changed whenever the driving circuit changes the image. The driving circuit according to the invention can provide best power saving effect when the voltage of the AC voltage output terminal is pulling from low to high and, at the same time, the voltage of the display electrode is turning from high to low.
The advantage and spirit of the invention may be understood by the following recitations together with the appended drawings.
One embodiment according to the invention is a driving circuit.
As shown in
The charging/discharging unit 23 is coupled to terminal A via the charging/discharging switch S1. When the charging/discharging switch S1 is turned on, the charging/discharging unit 23 can charge or discharge terminal A. The control unit 24 is coupled to the charge sharing switch S2 and the charging/discharging switch S1, respectively. According to the polarity requirement for the common electrode 34, the control unit 24 controls the charge sharing switch S2 and the charging/discharging switch S1.
As shown in
In this example, after turning on the charge sharing switch S1 for a first predetermined duration T1, the control unit 24 turns off the charge sharing switch S2 and re-turns on the charging/discharging switch 51. The charging/discharging unit 23 then proceeds to finish the charging process for terminal A and pulls high VA to a high-level status, VCAC. At the same time, the control unit 24 also re-turns on the image driving switch S3, so as to adjust the voltage VD provided from the image driving unit 22 to the display electrode 32 as VT3.
During the above voltage transition, when VA is going to be pulled from low to high, the image driving unit 22 is going to pull VD from high to low (i.e. from VT1 down to VT3). Hence, the charge originally at terminal D can be provided to assist in pulling high VA. Subsequently, the charging/discharging unit 23 only needs to pull VA from VT2 to VCAC. The process of charge sharing almost consumes no power. Compared with the AC voltage generating unit 12 that needs to independently pull the voltage of terminal A from 0 to VCAC, the charging/discharging unit 23 according to the invention consumes less power.
Please refer to
As shown in
According to the invention, after the duration T1 and the charge sharing switch S2 is turned off, the control unit 24 can first turn on the first charging switch S1A for a second predetermined duration T2, so as to let the first reference voltage source 23A preliminarily charge terminal A; VA is pulled high from VT2 to VDD. After the duration T2, the control unit 24 turns off the first charging switch S1A and turns on the second charging switch S1B, so as to let the second reference voltage source 23B pull VA from VDD to VCAC. Because circuits adopting lower supply voltage generally consume less power, the proposed two-stage charging consumes less power than the condition only using second reference voltage source 23B. The total power consumption of the driving circuit according to the invention can accordingly be further reduced.
Practically, the driving circuit 20 according to the invention can also utilize the processes of charge sharing and preliminary discharging to pull VA from high to low. As shown in
In this embodiment, after deciding to change the polarity of the common electrode 34 from positive to negative at time instant t2, the control unit 24 first turns on the first charging switch S1A, so as to let the first reference voltage source 23A preliminarily discharge terminal A; VA is pulled low from VCAC to VDD. After the first charging switch S1A is turned on for a third predetermined duration T3, the control unit 24 turns off the first charging switch S1A and turns on the charging sharing switch S2. Terminal D can accordingly share charge with terminal A; the voltages at the two terminals gradually become the same. As shown in
After the charge sharing switch S2 is turned on for a fourth predetermined duration T4, the control unit 24 can turn off the charge sharing switch S2 and turn on the discharging switch S1C, so as to let the ground terminal pulls VA from VT2 further to 0V. After turning off the charge sharing switch S2, the control unit 24 can re-turns on the image driving switch S3, so as to adjust the voltage VD provided from the image driving unit 22 to the display electrode 32 as VT1.
According to the invention, the circuit for preliminary charging terminal D can also be added. As shown in
In actual applications, the driving circuit can include plural image driving units 22 respectively corresponding to different vertical lines of liquid crystal molecules. According to the invention, the terminals between the image driving units and the display electrode 32 can all be coupled to terminal A via charge sharing switches and used as sources of providing charge.
Another embodiment according to the invention is an LCD system including all the components shown in
Because the process of charge sharing almost consumes no power, the driving circuit and LCD system according to the invention can effectively reduce the power needed for changing the polarity of the common electrode. With experiments and simulations, the inventors have proved the architecture according to the invention can considerably reduce power consumption compared with prior arts.
With the example and explanations above, the features and spirits of the invention will be hopefully well described. Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device may be made while retaining the teaching of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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098123183 | Jul 2009 | TW | national |