The present invention relates to display devices.
Display devices have been increasing in size and improving in quality. Large display panels are dominated by liquid crystal and plasma displays which are manufactured with a well-established infrastructure based on photolithographic patterning. Recently, there has been growing interest in organic light emissive displays (OLED) with the potential of further improving image quality and reducing power consumption. The manufacture of increasingly large display panels requires careful control of process conditions for image uniformity and yield. This is particularly true for current driven OLED displays where the uniformity of the drive electronics and emissive layers has a severe impact on the display quality. Drive electronics are typically provided by amorphous Silicon (a-Si) or polycrystalline Silicon (p-Si) backplanes. Amorphous Si is excellent in uniformity, but suffers in operational stability, while p-Si is difficult to manufacture uniformly enough on large areas.
Uniform brightness and color of pixels in large displays is also a challenge. This requires good control over the formation of individual light modulating pixels during their manufacture. Possibilities exist to adjust the relative brightness of pixels post manufacture. However, a suitable drive electronics scheme is required that is capable of such post-manufacture adjustments, such as a scheme that is able to continually monitor and tune the performance of each pixel. Integrating such functionality into backplane electronics is a challenge since it requires several additional transistors per pixel. As the size of displays increases, the performance requirements for these transistors is more and more demanding as they need to drive more current.
There is also a need to provide improved functionalities in modern displays. Displays increasingly incorporate interactive functionalities such as touch sensing. These typically rely on a number of conductive, semitransparent patterns in front of the display pixels, thereby reducing the brightness and viewing quality of the display.
There is also a need for displays that can be manufactured in a simplified manner with improved yield and lower cost. In particular, there is a need to provide displays that are able to incorporate the aforementioned quality and functionality requirements while being produced with a scalable and high yield method.
The above-described problems are addressed and a technical solution is achieved in the art by various embodiments of the present invention. For example, some embodiments of the present invention pertain to a display device that includes a plurality of Y display slices, each display slice having electronic structures. The electronic structures include a one-dimensional array of X adjacent pixels that emit light from a face edge of the display slice in response to electrical power. The display slices are assembled in a layered arrangement to form an emissive face. Also included are control electrodes, power electrodes, data electrodes, and a connection structure on or in each display slice. Each connection structure connects at least (a) each of a plurality of groups of the corresponding display slice's pixels to a separate one of the control electrodes, (b) one or more of the power electrodes to at least one of the corresponding display slice's electronic structures, and (c) one or more of the data electrodes to at least one of the corresponding display slice's electronic structures.
In some embodiments, the electronic structures in each display slice include a first electronic structure having a first input connected to one of the power electrodes, a second input connected to one of the data electrodes, and a plurality of outputs, each output connected to a different pixel in one of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice. Such an electronic structure can be an integrated circuit.
In some embodiments, each output of the first electronic structure is connected to positionally-corresponding pixels in at least two of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice, and wherein no two outputs of the first electronic structure are connected to a same pixel in any of the groups of pixels. in other embodiments, each output of each first electronic structure is connected to positionally-corresponding pixels in all of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice, and wherein no two outputs of the first electronic structure are connected to a same pixel in any of the groups of pixels.
In some embodiments, each display slice includes a memory circuit connected at least to one of the respective display slice's pixels. In some of these embodiments, each memory circuit includes two pixel-selection transistors, and each memory circuit is connected via the respective pixel-selection transistors to one of the data electrodes. In some of these embodiments, each memory circuit includes a first pixel-selection transistor and a second pixel-selection transistor, and the plurality of control electrodes include a plurality of group-select electrodes and a plurality of column-select electrodes. The first pixel-selection transistors in the memory circuits for one of the groups of pixels in a display slice are controlled by a same group-select electrode, and the second pixel-selection transistors in the memory circuits for the one of the groups of pixels are controlled by different column-select electrodes. In such cases, the display device can include X columns of pixels in the emissive face, and timing circuitry connected to the plurality of group-select electrodes, the plurality of column-select electrodes, and the data electrodes and configured to cause the X columns of pixels to refresh data in their memory circuits in sequence at a frequency greater than 20 Hz.
In some embodiments, each memory circuit comprises a pixel-selection transistor, each memory circuit is connected via the respective pixel-selection transistor to one of the data electrodes, and each display slice includes a first electronic structure having a first input connected to one of the power electrodes, a second input connected to one of the data electrodes, and a plurality of outputs, each output connected to one of the pixel-selection transistors in one of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice.
In some embodiments, each display slice comprises a plurality of control electrodes connected to control electrodes in an adjacent display slice. Connections between control electrodes through all of the display slices form or substantially form a line perpendicular or substantially perpendicular to a plane of the display slice.
In some embodiments, at least one of the electronic structures includes sensing capabilities that detect the proximity of an object.
In some embodiments, a display device includes circuitry on or in each display slice, the circuitry including a plurality of electronic structures, a plurality of power electrodes, a plurality of data electrodes, a pixel selection electrode, and a connection structure, the connection structure connecting the circuitry to the pixels on the respective display slice. In these cases, the circuitry for each display slice can be behind the respective one-dimensional edge-emissive array with respect to the emissive face.
In some embodiments, each of the display slices is formed of a flexible material capable of being formed into a roll. In this regard, in some embodiments, display device components include a plurality of display slices formed side-by-side as a roll of flexible material; a one-dimensional edge-emissive array of adjacent pixels formed with each display slice; a plurality of control electrodes formed with each display slice; a plurality of power electrodes formed with each display slice; a plurality of data electrodes formed with each display slice; and a connection structure formed with each display slice. Each connection structure connects at least (a) each of a plurality of groups of the corresponding display slice's pixels to a separate one of the control electrodes, (b) one or more of the power electrodes to at least one of the corresponding display slice's electronic structures, and (c) one or more of the data electrodes to at least one of the corresponding display slice's electronic structures.
In addition to the embodiments described above, further embodiments will become apparent by reference to the drawings and by study of the following detailed description.
The present invention will be more readily understood from the detailed description of exemplary embodiments presented below considered in conjunction with the attached drawings, of which:
It is to be understood that the attached drawings are for purposes of illustrating the concepts of the invention and may not be to scale.
Various embodiments of the present invention provide a display device having a two dimensional emissive display face that is formed from layers of display slices having pixels that emit light from edges of the display slices. Such designs allows all or most of the control circuitry associated with pixels on a display slice to be located behind the pixels with respect to the emissive face, thereby reducing a thickness of the display slices. A reduced thickness of display slices allows more display slices to be incorporated into a display and, consequently, allows higher resolution, functionality, or both. Further, the control circuitry designs of various embodiments of the present invention can be incorporated onto or into flexible substrates, which enables roll-to-roll or web manufacture of displays on an arbitrarily large scale. The local drive electronics associated with embodiments of the present invention enable relatively large, and easy to manufacture, transistors and other features, thereby improving manufacturing yield.
It should be noted that, unless otherwise explicitly noted or required by context, the word “or” is used in this disclosure in a non-exclusive sense.
In order to drive a plurality of display slices 2 efficiently, the pixels 1 on each slice are joined into C groups, in this case, each group including G neighboring pixels. In
The embodiment shown in
The pixels 27 are grouped by the connection structure 44 into groups G1, G2, G3 and so on. For simplicity, each group is shown to include ten pixels in
The IC chip 25 has a first input connected to the power electrode 26, and a second input connected to the data-input electrode 24. The data, i.e., brightness information, for each pixel is provided first to the IC chip 25 via the data-input electrode. When data for all pixels in a group have been received by the IC chip 25, such data is supplied by the IC chip 25 via ouputs, each connected to a different pixel in a group of pixels in
To elaborate, in
In the embodiment shown in
Although the description herein often refers to an IC chip, any form of circuit logic may be used, and such logic may be formed as part of the display slice, instead of being a separately added component. In this regard, the IC chips may also be chiplets, i.e., small silicon crystals without a package. The chips or chiplets may be flip chips mounted or connected at the time of depositing and patterning the interconnect lines on substrate 12.
In instances where an IC chip 25 is provided on a one-to-one basis with pixel groups, each output of an IC chip is connected to a different pixel in the corresponding group of pixels. In instances where an IC chip 25 is provided on a one-chip-to-many basis with pixel groups, each output of a chip is connected to positionally-corresponding pixels in at least two of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice, and no two outputs of the chip are connected to a same pixel in any of the groups of pixels. In instances where a single chip 25 is provided for each display slice 2, each output of the chip can be connected to positionally-corresponding pixels in all of the groups of pixels in the respective display slice, with no two outputs of the chip are connected to a same pixel in any of the groups of pixels.
In the arrangement of
Electrodes 22, 24, 26 in
Table 1 illustrates some possible combinations of pixel groups for high definition displays according to the embodiment of
HD1, HD2, HD3 and HD4 are displays with the current “full HD” specification of 1920*1080 pixels. 2HD1, 2HD2 and 2HD3 are displays with double of the resolution of the full HD specification. X and Y is the number of horizontal and vertical pixels respectively, as described in
In the example of Table 1, X=G*C. N gives an example for the range of input connections required for each chip. P is the approximate range for interconnects required between adjacent display slices. The lower limit for N can be estimated by the requirement for the IC to connect to G pixel data lines and have at least two more power connections and at least one serial data connection. Thus, the lower limit for N is G+3. The upper limit for N can be estimated from the need to have connections to G pixel data lines and assuming an external addressing scheme to select one of the display slices to receive data. Typically 11 or 12 bits will be required to address 1080*3 or 2160*3 display slices. Thus, the upper limit for N is estimated to be G+3+11 for HD1 and G+3+12 for HD2. P is the range for the number of pad interconnects in between display slices. The lower limit for P is obtained from the need to have at least C connections to select the display slices, plus two more power and at least one serial data connections. The lower limit for P is, therefore, C+3. The upper limit for P may be estimated from the need to have at least C connections to select the display slices, plus data, power lines and 11 or 12 bits for an external address scheme to select one display slice. Thus, the upper limit for P is C+3+11 for HD and C+3+12 for 2HD. Note that these numbers are for illustration only and as the display size and its pixel group scheme changes, they may be modified accordingly.
HD3 illustrates one example of an attractive drive scheme, employing 1080*3=3240 display slices, each having one IC chip 25. Each of these chips would typically have 33-44 connections to the display slice. The display slices in turn have between 67-77 connections to each neighboring display slice. Note that this is also the total number of connections to the entire display, which is very small compared to existing display panels. This laminated display does not require integration of further row or column drivers on the panel. The entire panel operates as a quasi-passive matrix display having 64 effective columns.
Table 1 also illustrates that the drive scheme is scalable for higher resolution panels. 2HD2 is a display that can be realized with the same IC chips as HD3. The number of connections on each chip is 33-45 and the number of panel connections is approximately between 131-142. The entire panel operates as a quasi-passive matrix display having 128 effective columns.
The pixel group scheme allows building HD3 and 2HD2 with a surprisingly low number of panel connections. The architecture is particularly advantageous for high resolution panels, since the system is easily scalable without necessarily requiring more chips.
In
Group select signals G1 SELECT, G2 SELECT, etc., select which pixel group is receiving data. For example, once G1 SELECT is active (i.e., on), pixel-selection transistors Tsel 46 are in on state for all pixels in group G1, and the data from IC chip 25 is stored in respective pixel capacitors in memory circuits 45 for the pixels in group G1. Consequently, all pixels (GIP1, G1P2 and so on) in group G1 are simultaneously receiving and storing the data. An advantage of this arrangement is that the display slices form an effective active matrix (AM) display. A top view showing a local layout of pixels 1 and memory circuits 45 according to
Although the embodiment of
It will be appreciated from this that in certain embodiments, for example, where image information remains static for a period of time, the memory circuits 45 can maintain the presentation of the static image without the necessity of a refresh. It will also be appreciated that a frame refresh cycle lower than 20 Hz can be used where the presence of artifacts is acceptable.
The pixels can be grouped in a similar fashion as shown in Table 1. The number of GROUP SELECT connections G, corresponding chip connections N and panel connections P is approximately the same in the embodiment of
Pixel circuitry, according to embodiments like
When a pixel is addressed by GROUP SELECT and COLUMN SELECT, corresponding pixel data is stored in the addressed pixel's capacitor in the corresponding memory circuit 47. Although other variations exist within the scope of the invention, the data originates in
It should be noted that the spacing and order of these SELECT connectors may be different for that shown in
At low frequencies it appears for the viewer that the information is refreshed pixel-column by pixel-column. At frequencies greater than 20 Hz for the refresh of the entire display, the viewer sees the full image without the refresh operation being noticeable.
The drive schemes according to various embodiments of the present invention reduce the number of connections in and between layered display slices 2. The specified pixel arrangements make it possible to form the drive electronics as well as the pixels on the surface of the display slice. This formation can be accomplished in a continuous roll-to-roll process, by forming several display slices simultaneously on a wide web.
The inset in
Light emitted from a pixel 11 can be coupled to the face edge 41 by a variety of structural and optical solutions. For example, at least three approaches can be used: a) mirror structures to reflect the light towards the front face, b) total internal reflection architectures guiding the light in a lightguide forming part of the substrate 12, or c) dye doped lightguides that absorb and re-emit the light towards the front face. Dyes, phosphors, quantum dots or other colorants may also be used within such waveguide or mirror structures. These absorb the perpendicularly emitted light and re-emit it within a lightguide structure. Light coupling may employ mirrors, total internal reflection, scattering or absorption/re-emission solutions as a combination of the above approaches. The coupling solution may be different for each color. Known edge-emissive structures may be employed in the invention. For example, edge emissive pixels described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,535,341 to Kun et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,994,835 to Wilson et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 7,129,965 to Iwamatsu et al. might be used. The lightguides in substrate 12 can be formed by embossing, printing, photolithography or any other suitable patterning technique. Reflective materials may be sputtered or evaporated metal, or coated, printed nanoparticle metal layers. Scattering materials such as TiO2 may also be sputtered or solution coated. Dyes, phosphors, or other colorants may be incorporated by evaporation or solution coating, printing.
The pixels 1 of emissive pixel array 11 can be an organic light emitting diode (OLED). Solution coated polymer light emitting diodes (PLED) or evaporated small molecule organic light emitting diodes can be used (SMOLED). Combinations of PLED and SMOLED layers or their blended formulations can also be used.
The current invention is useful for, among other things, the manufacture of large SMOLED panels. SMOLED are currently patterned by shadow mask processes to define red, green, and blue pixels, the process having limitations for the size and resolution of SMOLED panels. The circuitry 13 of the current invention enables the manufacture of high resolution, large laminated OLED panels. Red, green, and blue display slices can be manufactured separately, without the need for accurate registration of shadow masks for the different colors. The manufacture of SMOLED panels is currently inherently limited to panels about 600 mm diameter due to the registration difficulties of fine shadow masks.
Further advantages of the invention are the enabled optical qualities for the laminate edge emissive panel (LEEP). The display slices can comprise a greater surface emissive pixel 11 than the actual face edge 41 of the pixels, resulting in a higher brightness pixel. Furthermore, it becomes possible to operate the SMOLED material at low voltage regime at its ideal power efficiency. Since the OLED may run at low voltage and brightness, the operational life may be extended. Defects in the plane of the pixel will not be visible to the viewer. As defects (dark spots) develop, the external effect is overall reduction of brightness, which may compensated by gradually increasing the drive voltage or keeping the drive current constant. Additional drive electronics in circuitry 13 may be envisaged for this purpose.
While OLED displays are one example display mode of the current invention, it can be envisaged that the display slices may employ inorganic emissive materials such as AC or DC electroluminescent materials. The display may also be built as a laminated array of liquid crystal (LCD), or plasma modules. Optionally the display may comprise a color filter as part of the face edge 41. Indeed, any emissive display mode may be utilized to form one dimensional pixel arrays and form them into two dimensional architectures using the structural and drive schemes according to various embodiments of the invention. Preferably, the emissive materials may be electroluminescent, phosphorescent organic or inorganic materials. The materials may be evaporated or liquid coated from a dispersion or a solution. In some embodiments, the emissive materials are SMOLED, PLED materials, or inorganic nanoparticles.
Any suitable substrate 12 may be used to form laminate arrays, for example, plastic, glass, steel, ceramic, or composite materials. In some embodiments, the substrate 12 is a plastic material such as polyester, polycarbonate, polyethylene-naphthalene (PEN), polystyrene etc.
The circuitry 13 formed on the surface of the display slices also makes it possible to integrate sensing functionalities. By using silicon chips on each display slice as shown in
It is to be understood that the exemplary embodiments are merely illustrative of the present invention and that many variations of the above-described embodiments can be devised by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention. It is therefore intended that all such variations be included within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/139,134 filed Dec. 19, 2008, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61139134 | Dec 2008 | US |