The present invention relates to control of a signal applied to a drive transistor for supplying current through an electroluminescent emitter.
Flat-panel displays are of great interest as information displays for computing, entertainment, and communications. For example, electroluminescent (EL) emitters have been known for some years and have recently been used in commercial display devices. Such displays employ both active-matrix and passive-matrix control schemes and can employ a plurality of subpixels. Each subpixel contains an EL emitter and a drive transistor for driving current through the EL emitter. The subpixels are typically arranged in two-dimensional arrays with a row and a column address for each subpixel, and having a data value associated with the subpixel. Single EL subpixels can also be employed for lighting and user-interface applications. EL subpixels can be made using various emitter technologies, including coatable-inorganic light-emitting diode, quantum-dot, and organic light-emitting diode (OLED).
Electroluminescent (EL) technologies, such as organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology, provide benefits in luminance and power consumption over other technologies such as incandescent and fluorescent lights. However, EL subpixels suffer from performance degradation over time. In order to provide a high-quality light emission over the life of a subpixel, this degradation must be compensated for.
The light output of an EL emitter is roughly proportional to the current through the emitter, so the drive transistor in an EL subpixel is typically configured as a voltage-controlled current source responsive to a gate-to-source voltage Vgs. Source drivers similar to those used in LCD displays provide the control voltages to the drive transistors. Source drivers can convert a desired code value into an analog voltage to control a drive transistor. The relationship between code value and voltage is typically non-linear, although linear source drivers with higher bit depths are becoming available. Although the nonlinear code value-to-voltage relationship has a different shape for OLEDs than the characteristic LCD S-shape (shown in e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 4,896,947), the source driver electronics required are very similar between the two technologies. In addition to the similarity between LCD and EL source drivers, LCD displays and EL displays are typically manufactured on the same substrate: amorphous silicon (a-Si), as taught e.g. by Tanaka et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,034,340. Amorphous Si is inexpensive and easy to process into large displays.
Amorphous silicon, however, is metastable: over time, as voltage bias is applied to the gate of an a-Si TFT, its threshold voltage (Vth) shifts, thus shifting its I-V curve (Kagan & Andry, ed. Thin-film Transistors. New York: Marcel Dekker, 2003. Sec. 3.5, pp. 121-131). Vth typically increases over time under forward bias, so over time, Vth shift will, on average, cause a display to dim.
In addition to a-Si TFT instability, modern EL emitters have their own instabilities. For example, in OLED emitters, over time, as current passes through an OLED emitter, its forward voltage (Voled) increases and its efficiency (typically measured in cd/A) decreases (Shinar, ed. Organic Light-Emitting Devices: a survey. New York: Springer-Verlag, 2004. Sec. 3.4, pp. 95-97). The loss of efficiency causes a display to dim on average over time, even when driven with a constant current. Additionally, in typical OLED display configurations, the OLED is attached to the source of the drive transistor. In this configuration, increases in Voled will increase the source voltage of the transistor, lowering Vgs and thus, the current through the OLED emitter (Ioled), and therefore causing dimming over time.
These three effects (Vth shift, OLED efficiency loss, and Voled rise) cause an OLED subpixel to lose luminance over time at a rate proportional to the current passing through that OLED subpixel. (Vth shift is the primary effect, Voled shift the secondary effect, and OLED efficiency loss the tertiary effect.) Therefore, the subpixel must be compensated for aging to maintain a specified output over its lifetime.
It has been known to compensate for one or more of the three aging effects. Considering Vth shift, the primary effect and one which is reversible with applied bias (Mohan et al., “Stability issues in digital circuits in amorphous silicon technology,” Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2001, Vol. 1, pp. 583-588), compensation schemes are generally divided into four groups: in-pixel compensation, in-pixel measurement, in-panel measurement, and reverse bias.
In-pixel Vth compensation schemes add additional circuitry to the subpixel to compensate for the Vth shift as it happens. For example, Lee et al., in “A New a-Si:H TFT Pixel Design Compensating Threshold Voltage Degradation of TFT and OLED”, SID 2004 Digest, pp. 264-274, teach a seven-transistor, one-capacitor (7T1C) subpixel circuit which compensates for Vth shift by storing the Vth of the subpixel on that subpixel's storage capacitor before applying the desired data voltage. Methods such as this compensate for Vth shift, but they cannot compensate for Voled rise or OLED efficiency loss. These methods require increased subpixel complexity and increased subpixel electronics size compared to the conventional 2T1C voltage-drive subpixel circuit. Increased subpixel complexity reduces yield, because the finer features required are more vulnerable to fabrication errors. Particularly in typical bottom-emitting configurations, increased total size of the subpixel electronics increases power consumption because it reduces the aperture ratio, the percentage of the subpixel which emits light. Light emission of an OLED is proportional to area at a fixed current, so an OLED emitter with a smaller aperture ratio requires more current to produce the same luminance as an OLED with a larger aperture ratio. Additionally, higher currents in smaller areas increase current density in the OLED emitter, which accelerates Voled rise and OLED efficiency loss.
In-pixel measurement Vth compensation schemes add additional circuitry to each subpixel to allow values representative of Vth shift to be measured. Off-panel circuitry then processes the measurements and adjusts the drive of each subpixel to compensate for Vth shift. For example, Nathan et al., in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2006/0273997, teach a four-transistor pixel circuit which allows TFT degradation data to be measured as either current under given voltage conditions or voltage under given current conditions. Nara et al., in U.S. Pat. No. 7,199,602, teach adding a switching transistor to the subpixel to connect it to an inspection interconnect. Kimura et al., in U.S. Pat. No. 6,518,962, teach adding correction TFTs to the subpixel to compensate for EL degradation. These methods share the disadvantages of in-pixel Vth compensation schemes, but some can additionally compensate for Voled shift or OLED efficiency loss.
In-pixel measurement Vth compensation schemes add circuitry around a panel to take and process measurements without modifying the design of the panel. For example, Naugler et al., in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2008/0048951, teach measuring the current through an OLED emitter at various gate voltages of a drive transistor to locate a point on precalculated lookup tables used for compensation. However, this method requires a large number of lookup tables, consuming a significant amount of memory. Further, this method does not recognize the problem of integrating compensation with image processing typically performed in display drive electronics.
Reverse-bias Vth compensation schemes use some form of reverse voltage bias to shift Vth back to some starting point. These methods cannot compensate for Voled rise or OLED efficiency loss. For example, Lo et al., in U.S. Pat. No. 7,116,058, teach modulating the reference voltage of the storage capacitor in an active-matrix pixel circuit to reverse-bias the drive transistor between each frame. Applying reverse-bias within or between frames prevents visible artifacts, but reduces duty cycle and thus peak brightness. Reverse-bias methods can compensate for the average Vth shift of the panel with less increase in power consumption than in-pixel compensation methods, but they require more complicated external power supplies, can require additional pixel circuitry or signal lines, and may not compensate individual subpixels that are more heavily faded than others.
Considering Voled shift and OLED efficiency loss, U.S. Pat. No. 6,995,519 by Arnold et al. is one example of a method that compensates for aging of an OLED emitter. This method assumes that the entire change in emitter luminance is caused by changes in the OLED emitter. However, when the drive transistors in the circuit are formed from a-Si, this assumption is not valid, as the threshold voltage of the transistors also changes with use. The method of Arnold will thus not provide complete compensation for subpixel aging in circuits wherein transistors show aging effects. Additionally, when methods such as reverse bias are used to mitigate a-Si transistor threshold voltage shifts, compensation of OLED efficiency loss can become unreliable without appropriate tracking/prediction of reverse bias effects, or a direct measurement of the OLED voltage change or transistor threshold voltage change.
Alternative methods for compensation measure the light output of the subpixel directly, as taught e.g. by Young et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 6,489,631. Such methods can compensate for changes in all three aging factors, but require either a very high-precision external light sensor, or an integrated light sensors in the subpixel. An external light sensor adds to the cost and complexity of a device, while integrated light sensors increase subpixel complexity and electronics size, with attendant performance reductions.
There is a continuing need, therefore, for improving compensation to overcome these objections to compensate for EL subpixel degradation.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided apparatus for providing a drive transistor control signal to a gate electrode of a drive transistor in an electroluminescent (EL) subpixel, comprising:
(a) the electroluminescent (EL) subpixel having an EL emitter with a first and second electrode, and having the drive transistor with a first supply electrode, a second supply electrode, and the gate electrode, wherein the second supply electrode of the drive transistor is electrically connected to the first electrode of the EL emitter for applying current to the EL emitter;
(b) a first voltage supply electrically connected to the first supply electrode of the drive transistor;
(c) a second voltage supply electrically connected to the second electrode of the EL emitter;
(d) a test voltage source electrically connected to the gate electrode of the drive transistor;
(e) a voltage controller for controlling voltages of the first voltage supply, second voltage supply and test voltage source to operate the drive transistor in a linear region;
(f) a measuring circuit for measuring the current passing through the first and second supply electrodes of the drive transistor at different times to provide a status signal representing variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter caused by operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter over time, wherein the current is measured while the drive transistor is operated in the linear region;
(g) means for providing a linear code value;
(h) a compensator for changing the linear code value in response to the status signal to compensate for the variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter; and
(i) a source driver for producing the drive transistor control signal in response to the changed linear code value for driving the gate electrode of the drive transistor.
The present invention provides an effective way of providing the drive transistor control signal. It requires only one measurement to perform compensation. It can be applied to any active-matrix subpixel. The compensation of the control signal has been simplified by using a look-up table (LUT) to change signals from nonlinear to linear so compensation can be in linear voltage domain. It compensates for Vth shift, Voled shift, and OLED efficiency loss without requiring complex pixel circuitry or external measurement devices. It does not decrease the aperture ratio of a subpixel. It has no effect on the normal operation of the subpixel. Improved S/N (signal/noise) is obtained by taking measurements of the characteristics of the EL subpixel while operating in the linear region of transistor operation.
The present invention compensates for degradation in the drive transistors and electroluminescent (EL) emitters of an EL subpixel, such as an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) subpixel. In one embodiment, it compensates for Vth shift, Voled shift, and OLED efficiency loss of all subpixels on an active-matrix OLED panel.
The discussion to follow first considers the system as a whole. It then proceeds to the electrical details of a subpixel, followed by the electrical details for measuring the subpixel. It next covers how the compensator uses measurements. Finally, it describes how this system is implemented in one embodiment, e.g. in a consumer product, from the factory to end-of-life.
A compensator 13 receives the linear code value, which can correspond to the particular light intensity commanded from the EL subpixel. As a result of variations in the drive transistor and EL emitter caused by mura and by operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter in the EL subpixel over time, the EL subpixel will generally not produce the commanded light intensity in response to the linear code value. The compensator 13 outputs a changed linear code value that will cause the EL subpixel to produce the commanded intensity, thereby compensating for variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter caused by operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter over time, and for variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter from subpixel to subpixel. The operation of the compensator will be discussed further in “Implementation,” below.
The changed linear code value from the compensator 13 is passed to a source driver 14 which can be a digital-to-analog converter. The source driver 14 produces a drive transistor control signal, which can be an analog voltage or current, or a digital signal such as a pulse-width-modulated waveform, in response to the changed linear code value. In a preferred embodiment, the source driver 14 can be a source driver having a linear input-output relationship, or a conventional LCD or OLED source driver with its gamma voltages set to produce an approximately linear output. In the latter case, any deviations from linearity will affect the quality of the results. The source driver 14 can also be a time-division (digital-drive) source driver, as taught e.g. in commonly assigned WO 2005/116971 by Kawabe. The analog voltage from a digital-drive source driver is set at a predetermined level commanding light output for an amount of time dependent on the output signal from the compensator. A conventional source driver, by contrast, provides an analog voltage at a level dependent on the output signal from the compensator for a fixed amount of time (generally the entire frame). A source driver can output one or more drive transistor control signals simultaneously. A panel preferably has a plurality of source drivers, each outputting the drive transistor control signal for one subpixel at a time.
The drive transistor control signal produced by the source driver 14 is provided to an EL subpixel 15. This circuit, as will be discussed in “Display element description,” below. When the analog voltage is provided to the gate electrode of the drive transistor in the EL subpixel 15, current flows through the drive transistor and EL emitter, causing the EL emitter to emit light. There is generally a linear relationship between current through the EL emitter and luminance of the light output of the emitter, and a nonlinear relationship between voltage applied to the drive transistor and current through the EL emitter. The total amount of light emitted by an EL emitter during a frame can thus be a nonlinear function of the voltage from the source driver 14.
The current flowing through the EL subpixel is measured under specific drive conditions by a current-measurement circuit 16, as will be discussed further in “Data collection,” below. The measured current for the EL subpixel provides the compensator with the information it needs to adjust the commanded drive signal. This will be discussed further in “Algorithm,” below.
In one embodiment of the present invention, first supply electrode 204 is electrically connected to first voltage supply 211 through a PVDD bus line 1011, second electrode 208 is electrically connected to second voltage supply 206 through a sheet cathode 1012, and the drive transistor control signal is provided to gate electrode 203 by a source driver 14 across a column line 32 when select transistor 36 is activated by a gate line 34.
Neglecting leakage, the same current, the drive current, passes from first voltage supply 211, through the first supply electrode 204 and the second supply electrode 205, through the EL emitter electrodes 207 and 208, to the second voltage supply 206. The drive current is what causes the EL emitter to emit light. Therefore, current can be measured at any point in this drive current path. Current can be measured off the EL panel at the first voltage supply 211 to reduce the complexity of the EL subpixel. Drive current is referred to herein as Ids, the current through the drain and source terminals of the drive transistor.
Hardware
Still referring to
The EL subpixel 15 is measured at a current corresponding to a measurement reference gate voltage (
The current mirror unit 210 is attached to voltage supply 211, although it can be attached anywhere in the drive current path. A first current mirror 212 supplies drive current to the EL subpixel 15 through a switch 200, and produces a mirrored current on its output 213. The mirrored current can be equal to the drive current, or a function of the drive current. For example, the mirrored current can be a multiple of the drive current to provide additional measurement-system gain. A second current mirror 214 and a bias supply 215 apply a bias current to the first current mirror 212 to reduce the impedance of the first current mirror viewed from the panel, advantageously increasing the response speed of the measurement circuit. This circuit also reduces changes in the current through the EL subpixel being measured due to voltage changes in the current mirror resulting from current draw of the measurement circuit. This advantageously improves signal-to-noise ratio over other current-measurement options, such as a simple sense resistor, which can change voltages at the drive transistor terminals depending on current. Finally, a current-to-voltage (I-to-V) converter 216 converts the mirrored current from the first current mirror into a voltage signal for further processing. The I-to-V converter 216 can include a transimpedance amplifier or a low-pass filter.
Switch 200, which can be a relay or FET, can selectively electrically connect the measuring circuit to the drive current flow through the first and second electrodes of the drive transistor 201. During measurement, the switch 200 can electrically connect first voltage supply 211 to first current mirror 212 to permit measurements. During normal operation, the switch 200 can electrically connect first voltage supply 211 directly to first supply electrode 204 rather than to first current mirror 212, thus removing the measuring circuit from the drive current flow. This causes the measurement circuitry to have no effect on normal operation of the panel. It also advantageously permits the measurement circuit's components, such as the transistors in the current mirrors 212 and 214, to be sized only for measurement currents and not for operational currents. As normal operation generally draws much more current than measurement, this permits substantial reduction in the size and cost of the measurement circuit.
Sampling
The current mirror unit 210 permits measurement of the current for one EL subpixel at a single point in time. To improve signal-to-noise ratio, in one embodiment the present invention uses correlated double-sampling.
Referring now to
Referring back to
The analog or digital output of differential amplifier 223 can be provided directly to compensator 13. Alternatively, analog-to-digital converter 230 can preferably digitize the output of differential amplifier 223 to provide digital measurement data to compensator 13.
The measuring circuit 16 can preferably include a status signal generation unit 240 which receives the output of differential amplifier 223 and performs further processing to provide the status signal for the EL subpixel. Status signals can be digital or analog. Referring to
In a first embodiment of the present invention, the current difference, e.g. 43, can be the status signal for a corresponding subpixel. In this embodiment the status signal generation unit 240 can perform a linear transform on current difference, or pass it through unmodified. The current through the subpixel (43) at the measurement reference gate voltage depends on, and thus meaningfully represents, the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter in the subpixel. The current difference 43 can be stored in memory 619.
In a second embodiment, memory 619 stores a target signal i0 611 for the EL subpixel 15. Memory 619 also stores a most recent current measurement i1 612 of the EL subpixel, which can be the value most recently measured by the measurement circuit for the subpixel. Measurement 612 can also be an average of a number of measurements, an exponentially-weighted moving average of measurements over time, or the result of other smoothing methods which will be obvious to those skilled in the art. Target signal i0 611 and current measurement i1 612 can be compared as described below to provide a percent current 613, which can be the status signal for the EL subpixel. The target signal for the subpixel can be a current measurement of the subpixel and thus percent current can represent variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter caused by operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter over time.
Memory 619 can include RAM, nonvolatile RAM, such as a Flash memory, and ROM, such as EEPROM. In one embodiment, the i0 value is stored in EEPROM and the i1 value is stored in Flash.
Sources of Noise
In practice, the current waveform can be other than a clean step, so measurements can be taken only after waiting for the waveform to settle. Multiple measurements of each subpixel can also be taken and averaged together. Such measurements can be taken consecutively, or in separate measurement passes. Capacitance between voltage supplies 206 and 211 can add to the settling time. This capacitance can be intrinsic to the panel or provided by external capacitors, as is common in normal operation. It can be advantageous to provide a switch that can be used to electrically disconnect the external capacitors while taking measurements.
Noise on any voltage supply will affect the current measurement. For example, noise on the voltage supply which the gate driver uses to deactivate rows (often called VGL or Voff, and typically around −8 VDC) can capacitively couple across the select transistor into the drive transistor and affect the current, thus making current measurements noisier. If a panel has multiple power-supply regions, for example a split supply plane, those regions can be measured in parallel. Such measurement can isolate noise between regions and reduce measurement time.
Whenever the source driver switches, its noise transients can couple into the voltage supply planes and the individual subpixels, causing measurement noise. To reduce this noise, the control signals out of the source driver can be held constant. This will eliminate source-driver transient noise.
Current Stability
This discussion so far assumes that once the subpixel is turned on and settles to some current, it remains at that current for the remainder of the column. Two effects that can violate that assumption are storage-capacitor leaking and within-subpixel effects.
Referring to
Even when the storage capacitor's value is stable, within-subpixel effects can corrupt measurements. A common within-subpixel effect is self-heating of the subpixel, which can change the current drawn by the subpixel over time. The drift mobility of an a-Si TFT is a function of temperature; increasing temperature increases mobility (Kagan & Andry, op. cit., sec. 2.2.2, pp. 42-43). As current flows through the drive transistor, power dissipation in the drive transistor and in the EL emitter will heat the subpixel, increasing the temperature of the transistor and thus its mobility. Additionally, heat lowers Voled; in cases where the OLED is attached to the source terminal of the drive transistor, this can increase Vgs of the drive transistor. These effects increase the amount of current flowing through the transistor. Under normal operation, self-heating can be a minor effect, as the panel can stabilize to an average temperature based on the average contents of the image it is displaying. However, when measuring subpixel currents, self-heating can corrupt measurements.
To correct for self-heating effects and any other within-subpixel effects producing similar noise signatures, the self-heating can be characterized and subtracted off the known self-heating component of each subpixel.
Error due to self-heating, and power dissipation, can be reduced by selecting a lower measurement reference gate voltage (
Referring to
At the measurement reference gate voltage 510, the un-aged subpixel produced the current represented at point 511. The aged sub-pixel, however, produces at that gate voltage the lower amount of current represented at point 512a. Points 511 and 512a can be two measurements of the same subpixel taken at different times. For example, point 511 can be a measurement at manufacturing time, and point 512a can be a measurement after some use by a customer. The current represented at point 512a would have been produced by the un-aged subpixel when driven with voltage 513 (point 512b), so a voltage shift ΔVth 514 is calculated as the voltage difference between voltages 510 and 513. Voltage shift 514 is thus the shift required to bring the aged curve back to the un-aged curve. In this example, ΔVth 514 is just under two volts. Then, to compensate for the Vth shift, and drive the aged subpixel to the same current as the un-aged subpixel had, voltage difference 514 is added to every commanded drive voltage (linear code value). For further processing, percent current is also calculated as current 512a divided by current 511. An unaged subpixel will thus have 100% current. Percent current is used in several algorithms according to the present invention. Any negative current reading 511, such as might be caused by extreme environmental noise, can be clipped to 0, or disregarded. Note that percent current is always calculated at the measurement reference gate voltage 510.
In general, the current of an aged subpixel can be higher or lower than that of an un-aged subpixel. For example, higher temperatures cause more current to flow, so a lightly-aged subpixel in a hot environment can draw more current than an unaged subpixel in a cold environment. The compensation algorithm of the present invention can handle either case; ΔVth 514 can be positive or negative (or zero, for unaged pixels). Similarly, percent current can be greater or less than 100% (or exactly 100%, for unaged pixels).
Since the voltage difference due to Vth shift is the same at all currents, any single point on the I-V curve can be measured to determine that difference. In one embodiment, measurements are taken at high gate voltages, advantageously increasing signal-to-noise ratio of the measurements, but any gate voltage on the curve can be used.
Voled shift is the secondary aging effect. As the EL emitter is operated, Voled shifts, causing the aged I-V curve to no longer be a simple shift of the un-aged curve. This is because Voled rises nonlinearly with current, so Voled shift will affect high currents differently than low currents. This effect causes the I-V curve to stretch horizontally as well as shifting. To compensate for Voled shift, two measurements at different drive levels can be taken to determine how much the curve has stretched, or the typical Voled shift of OLEDs under load can be characterized to permit estimation of Voled contribution in an open-loop manner. Both can produce acceptable results.
Referring to
In one embodiment, the EL emitter 202 (
In a preferred embodiment, the EL emitter 202 is connected to the drain terminal of the drive transistor 201, for example, in PMOS non-inverted configurations, in which the OLED anode is tied to the drive transistor drain. Voled rise thus changes Vds of the drive transistor 201, as the OLED is connected in series with the drain-source path of the drive transistor. Modern OLED emitters, however, have much smaller ΔVoled than older emitters for a given amount of aging, reducing the magnitude of Vds change and thus of Ids change.
The requirement for extra measurement sensitivity can be mitigated by operating the drive transistor in the linear region of operation while taking current measurements. As is known in the electronics art, thin-film transistors conduct appreciable current in two different modes of operation: linear (Vds<Vgs−Vth) and saturation (Vds>=Vgs−Vth) (Lurch, op. cit., p. 111). In EL applications, the drive transistors are typically operated in the saturation region to reduce the effect of Vds variation on current. However, in the linear region of operation, where
I
ds
=K[2(Vgs−Vth)Vds−Vds2]
(Lurch, op. cit., pg. 112), the current Ids depends strongly on Vds. Since
V
ds=(PVDD−Vcom)−Voled
as shown in
One embodiment of the present invention, therefore, includes a voltage controller. While measuring currents as described above, the voltage controller can control voltages for the first voltage supply 211 and second voltage supply 206, and the drive transistor control signal from source driver 14 operating as a test voltage source, to operate drive transistor 201 in the linear region. For example, in a PMOS non-inverted configuration, the voltage controller can hold the PVDD voltage and the drive transistor control signal at constant values and increase the Vcom voltage to reduce Vds without reducing Vgs. When Vds falls below Vgs−Vth, the drive transistor will be operating in the linear region and a measurement can be taken. The voltage controller can be included in the compensator. It can also be provided separately from the sequence controller as long as the two are coordinated to operate the transistors in the linear region during measurements.
OLED efficiency loss is the tertiary aging effect. As an OLED ages, its efficiency decreases, and the same amount of current no longer produces the same amount of light. To compensate for this without requiring optical sensors or additional electronics, OLED efficiency loss as a function of Vth shift can be characterized, permitting estimation of the amount of extra current required to return the light output to its previous level. OLED efficiency loss can be characterized by driving an instrumented OLED subpixel with a typical input signal for a long period of time, and periodically measuring Vth, Voled and Ids at various drive levels. Efficiency can be calculated as Ids/Voled, and that calculation can be correlated to Vth or percent current. Note that this characterization achieves most effective results when Vth shift is always forward, since Vth shift is readily reversible but OLED efficiency loss is not. If Vth shift is reversed, correlating OLED efficiency loss with Vth shift can become complicated. For further processing, percent efficiency can be calculated as aged efficiency divided by new efficiency, analogously to the calculation of percent current described above.
Referring to
To compensate for Vth and Voled shift and OLED efficiency loss due to operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter over time, the second above embodiment of the status signal generation unit 240 can be used. Subpixel currents can be measured at the measurement reference gate voltage 510. Un-aged current at point 511 is target signal i0 611. The most recent aged-subpixel current measurement 512a is most recent current measurement i1 612. Percent current 613 is the status signal. Percent current 613 can be 0 (dead pixel), 1 (no change), less than 1 (current loss) or greater than 1 (current gain). Generally it will be between 0 and 1, because the most recent current measurement will be lower than the target signal, which can preferably be a current measurement taken at panel manufacturing time.
Referring to
Percent current 613 is sent to the next processing stage 63, and is also input to a model 695 to determine the percent OLED efficiency 614. Model 695 outputs an efficiency 614 which is the amount of light emitted for a given current at the time of the most recent measurement, divided by the amount of light emitted for that current at manufacturing time. Any percent current greater than 1 can yield an efficiency of 1, or no loss, since efficiency loss can be difficult to calculate for pixels which have gained current. Model 695 can also be a function of the linear code value 602, as indicated by the dashed arrow, in cases where OLED efficiency depends on commanded current. Whether to include linear code value 602 as an input to model 695 can be determined by life testing and modeling of a panel design.
Referring to
Referring back to
In parallel, the compensator receives a linear code value 602, e.g. a commanded voltage. This linear code value 602 is passed through the original I-V curve 691 of the panel measured at manufacturing time to determine the desired current 621. This is divided by the percent efficiency 614 in operation 628 to return the light output for the desired current to its manufacturing-time value. The resulting, boosted current is then passed through curve 692, the inverse of curve 691, to determine what commanded voltage will produce the amount of light desired in the presence of efficiency loss. The value out of curve 692 is passed to the next stage as efficiency-adjusted voltage 622.
If efficiency compensation is not desired, linear code value 602 is sent unchanged to the next stage as efficiency-adjusted voltage 622, as indicated by optional bypass path 626. Percent current 613 is calculated whether or not efficiency compensation is desired, but the percent efficiency 614 need not be.
V
out
=V
in
+ΔV
th(1+α(Vg,ref−Vin)) (Eq. 1)
where Vout is compensated voltage out 603, ΔVth is voltage shift 631, α is alpha value 632, Vg,ref is the measurement reference gate voltage 510, and Vin is the efficiency-adjusted voltage 622. The compensated voltage out can be expressed as a changed linear code value for a source driver, and compensates for variations in the characteristics of the drive transistor and EL emitter caused by operation of the drive transistor and EL emitter over time.
For straight Vth shift, α will be zero, and operation 633 will reduce to adding the Vth shift amount to the efficiency-adjusted voltage 622. For any particular subpixel, the amount to add is constant until new measurements are taken. When this is so, the voltage to add in operation 633 can be pre-computed after measurements are taken, permitting blocks 63 and 64 to collapse to looking up the stored value and adding it. This can save considerable logic.
Image-processing paths known in the art typically produce nonlinear code values (NLCVs), that is, digital values having a nonlinear relationship to luminance (Giorgianni & Madden. Digital Color Management: encoding solutions. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1998. Ch. 13, pp. 283-295). Using nonlinear outputs matches the input domain of a typical source driver, and matches the code value precision range to the human eye's precision range. However, Vth shift is a voltage-domain operation, and thus is preferably implemented in a linear-voltage space. A source driver can be used, and domain conversion performed before the source driver, to effectively integrate a nonlinear-domain image-processing path with a linear-domain compensator. Note that this discussion is in terms of digital processing, but analogous processing can be performed in an analog or mixed digital/analog system. Note also that the compensator can operate in linear spaces other than voltage. For example, the compensator can operate in a linear current space.
Referring to
Referring to Quadrant I, domain-conversion unit 12 receives respective NLCVs for each subpixel, and converts them to LCVs. This conversion should be performed with sufficient resolution to avoid objectionable visible artifacts such as contouring and crushed blacks. In digital systems, NLCV axis 701 can be quantized, as indicated in
Transform 711 is an ideal transform for an unaged subpixel. It has no relationship to aging of any subpixel or the panel as a whole. Specifically, transform 711 is not modified due to any Vth, Voled, or OLED efficiency changes. There can be one transform for all colors, or one transform for each color. The domain-conversion unit, through transform 711, advantageously decouples the image-processing path from the compensator, permitting the two to operate together without having to share information. This simplifies the implementation of both. Domain-conversion unit 12 can be implemented as a look-up table or a function analogous to an LCD source driver.
Referring to Quadrant II, compensator 13 changes LCVs to changed linear code values (CLCVs).
Transform 721 represents the compensator's behavior for an unaged subpixel, for which the CLCV can be the same as the LCV. Transform 722 represents the compensator's behavior for an aged subpixel, for which the CLCV can be the LCV plus an offset representing the Vth shift of the subpixel in question. Consequently, the CLCVs will generally require a large range than the LCVs in order to provide headroom for compensation. For example, if a subpixel requires 256 LCVs when it is new, and the maximum shift over its lifetime is 128 LCVs, the CLCVs will need to be able to represent values up to 384=256+128 to avoid clipping the compensation of heavily-aged subpixels.
In one embodiment, the NLCVs from the image-processing path are nine bits wide. The LCVs are 11 bits wide. The transformation from nonlinear input signals to linear code values can be performed by a LUT or function. The compensator can take in the 11-bit linear code value representing the desired voltage and produce a 12-bit changed linear code value to send to a source driver 14. The source driver 14 can then drive the gate electrode of the drive transistor of the EL subpixel in response to the changed linear code value. The compensator can have greater bit depth on its output than its input to provide headroom for compensation, that is, to extend the voltage range 78 to voltage range 79 and simultaneously keep the same resolution across the new, expanded range, as required for minimum linear code value step 713. The compensator output range can extend below the range of transform 721 as well as above it.
Each panel design can be characterized to determine what the maximum Vth shift, Voled rise and efficiency loss will be over the design life of a panel, and the compensator and source drivers can have enough range to compensate. This characterization can proceed from required current to required gate bias and transistor dimensions via the standard transistor saturation-region Ids equation, then to Vth shift over time via various models known in the art for a-Si degradation over time.
Panel Design Characterization
This section is written in the context of mass-production of a particular OLED emitter design. Before mass-production begins, the design can be characterized: accelerated life testing can be performed, and I-V curves can be measured for various subpixels of various colors on various sample substrates aged to various levels. The number and type of measurements required, and of aging levels, depend on the characteristics of the particular panel. With these measurements, a value alpha (α) can be calculated and a measurement reference gate voltage can be selected. Alpha (
The α value can be calculated by optimization. An example is given in Table 1. ΔVth can be measured at a number of gate voltages, under a number of aging conditions. ΔVth differences are then calculated between each ΔVth and the ΔVth at the measurement reference gate voltage 510. Vg differences are calculated between each gate voltage and the measurement reference gate voltage 510. The inner term of Eq. 1, ΔVth·α·(Vg,ref−Vin), can then be computed for each measurement to yield a predicted ΔVth difference, using the appropriate ΔVth at the measurement reference gate voltage 510 as ΔVth in the equation, and using the appropriate calculated gate voltage difference as (Vg,ref−Vin). The α value can then be selected iteratively to reduce, and preferably mathematically minimize, the error between the predicted ΔVth differences and the calculated ΔVth differences. Error can be expressed as the maximum difference or the RMS difference. Alternative methods known in the art, such as least-squares fitting of ΔVth difference as a function of Vg difference, can also be used.
In addition to α and the measurement reference gate voltage, characterization can also determine, as described above, Voled shift as a function of Vth shift, efficiency loss as a function of Vth shift, self-heating component per subpixel, maximum Vth shift, Voled shift and efficiency loss, and resolution required in the nonlinear-to-linear transform and in the compensator. Resolution required can be characterized in conjunction with a panel calibration procedure such as co-pending commonly-assigned U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2008/0252653, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein. Characterization also determines, as will be described in “In the field,” below, the conditions for taking characterization measurements in the field, and which embodiment of the status signal generation unit 240 to employ for a particular panel design. All these determinations can be made by those skilled in the art.
Mass-Production
Once the design has been characterized, mass-production can begin. At manufacturing time, appropriate values are measured for each subpixel produced according to a selected embodiment of the status signal generation unit 240. For example, I-V curves and subpixel currents can be measured. Current can be measured at enough drive voltages to make a realistic I-V curve; any errors in the I-V curve can affect the results. Subpixel currents can be measured at the measurement reference gate voltage to provide target signals i0 611. The I-V curves and reference currents are stored in a nonvolatile memory associated with the subpixel and it is sent into the field.
In the Field
Once in the field, the subpixel ages at a rate determined by on how hard it is driven. After some time the subpixel has shifted far enough that it needs to be compensated; how to determine that time is considered below.
To compensate, compensation measurements are taken and applied. The compensation measurements are of the current of the subpixel at the measurement reference gate voltage. The measurements are applied as described in “Algorithm,” above. The measurements are stored so they can be applied whenever that subpixel is driven, until the next time measurements are taken.
Compensation measurements can be taken as frequently or infrequently as desired; a typical range can be once every eight hours to once every four weeks.
For example, the EL subpixel 15 shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the invention is employed in a subpixel that includes Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) which are composed of small molecule or polymeric OLEDs as disclosed in but not limited to U.S. Pat. No. 4,769,292, by Tang et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,061,569, by VanSlyke et al. Many combinations and variations of organic light emitting materials can be used to fabricate such a panel. Referring to
The above embodiments can apply to any active matrix backplane that is not stable as a function of time (such as a-Si). For example, transistors formed from organic semiconductor materials and zinc oxide are known to vary as a function of time and therefore this same approach can be applied to these transistors. Furthermore, as the present invention can compensate for EL emitter aging independently of transistor aging, this invention can also be applied to an active-matrix backplane with transistors that do not age, such as low-temperature poly-silicon (LTPS) TFTs. On an LTPS backplane, the drive transistor 201 and select transistor 36 are low-temperature polysilicon transistors.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Reference is made to commonly-assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/962,182 filed Dec. 21, 2007, entitled “Electroluminescent Display Compensated Analog Transistor Drive Signal” to Leon et al, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.