Not Applicable.
The present invention relates generally to polarization compensation for projection displays, and in particular, to an electronically-tuned LCD assembly incorporating an LCD panel and a trim retarder, and to a method for electronic tuning of said LCD assembly for improving contrast.
Liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) are commonly used in projection displays for large screen televisions and monitors. In these LCD-based projection systems, a high power beam of light is passed through a polarizer before being incident on a LCD panel. The LCD panel controls the polarization of the incident light pixel-by-pixel and redirects it towards the corresponding polarizer/analyzer, which then redirects light having the proper polarization to a projection lens that projects an image onto a screen.
One particularly successful LCD-based projection system is a WGP-based LCoS microdisplay system, which uses both wire grid polarizers (WGPs) and liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) panels. This microdisplay system, which has been proven to exhibit both high resolution and high image contrast when compared to other microdisplay technologies such as transmissive liquid crystal (xLCD), digital light processor (DLP), and direct-view LCD, typically uses three or more microdisplay panels (e.g., one for each primary color band) to improve on-screen brightness.
Referring to
Prior to reaching each LCoS display panel 20a, 20b, and 20c, the incident light first passes through a WGP 15, 14, and 13 and a trim retarder compensator 21a, 21b, and 21c, respectively. Each WGP 15, 14, and 13 is a polarizer/analyser formed from a plurality of parallel micro-wires that transmits light having a polarization orthogonal to the direction of the parallel micro-wires and reflects light having a polarization parallel to the direction of the wires; e.g., if the polarizers are designed to pass horizontal or P-polarized light, as illustrated in
The reflective LCoS panels 20a, 20b, and 20c, hereinafter generally referred to as LCoS panels 20, may be either twisted nematic, e.g. 45.degree. twist (45TN), or vertically-aligned nematic (VAN-mode) panels, which get switched (or relaxed) to near homeotropic orientation. Other LC-modes in reflective LCOS and transmissive xLCD, i.e. bend-aligned nematic or pi-cell, also require trim retarders, if the LC-technology employs a dark-state director orientation near the homeotropic alignment. A VAN-mode cell on a reflective substrate is functionally equivalent to a pi-cell in transmission mode, i.e. both operate as electrically controllable birefringence for gray-scale with viewing angle symmetry about an axis orthogonal to the LC tilt-plane.
In homeotropic alignment the LC uniaxial positive molecules are oriented normal to the device plane. The dark, or OFF state may be a switched, or voltage-driven state or a relaxed state where no or little voltage is applied, depending on LC modes. In most applications, a true homeotropic orientation in the dark state is not suitable, i.e. a pre-tilt is required to provide consistent and faster switching behavior. Moreover, true homeotropic orientation in the dark state may not be available due to a lack of high voltage supplies in 45TN panels wherein the dark state requires the application of the electric field to the LC film, or due to boundary LC layers being anchored by alignment surface effects. As a consequence, the display panels in the dark state exhibit both an in-plane and an out-of-plane residual retardation component, i.e. A-plate and C-plate components, respectively. Due to the use of positive-only uniaxial LC in LCD panels, the c-plate component is always positive, thereby adding to the net panel retardance at off-axis illumination.
The trim retarder compensators 21a, 21b, and 21c, hereinafter simply referred to as trim retarders (TR) 21, are compensating elements used to improve the contrast performance level of the microdisplay system, which is otherwise limited by the residual birefringence of the LCoS panels in the dark, e.g., off state. In particular, each trim retarder 21 introduces a phase retardance that cancels the retardance resulting from the inherent birefringence of the corresponding LCoS panel. The term ‘retardance’ or ‘retardation’, as used herein, refers to linear retardance magnitude as opposed to circular retardance magnitude, unless stated otherwise. Linear retardance is the difference between two orthogonal indices of refraction times the thickness of the optical element. Linear retardance causes a phase difference between two orthogonal linear polarizations, where one polarization is aligned parallel to the extra-ordinary axis of the linear retarder and the other polarization is aligned parallel to the ordinary axis of the linear retarder. In contrast, circular retardance causes a relative phase difference between right- and left-handed circular polarized light.
Linear retardance may be described as either in-plane or out-of-plane retardance. In-plane retardance (IPR), expressed as optical path length difference, refers to the difference between two orthogonal in-plane indices of refraction times the physical thickness of the optical element. Out-of-plane retardance refers to the difference of the index of refraction along the thickness direction (z direction) of the optical element and one in-plane index of refraction, or an average of in-plane indices of refraction, times the physical thickness of the optical element. Normal incidence rays in a cone bundle see only in-plane retardance, whereas off-axis rays including oblique rays (i.e. non-normal but along the principal S- and P-planes) and skew rays (i.e. non-normal and incident away from the principal S- and P-planes) experience both out-of-plane retardance and in-plane retardance.
In the absence of trim retarders 21, the P-polarized light that illuminates each microdisplay panel in the dark (off) state is slightly elliptically polarized upon reflection due to the residual birefringence of the LCoS panels 20. When the elliptically polarized light, which contains both a P- and an S-component, is transmitted to the corresponding WGP 15, 14, 13, the S component is reflected to the X-cube 19 thus allowing dark state light leakage onto the large screen and limiting the contrast of the projection system.
The TR-compensated LCoS panel comprising the TR 21 and LCoS panel 20, also referred to as the imager assembly, is schematically shown in
The origin of the residual retardance of an LCoS panel in a dark state is illustrated in
For a very small pre-tilt angle (<<10°) and low birefringence, the in-plane and out-of-plane retardances are approximately the squares of sine and cosine of the pre-tilt angle multiplied by the LCoS cell retardance Δn·d, respectively, where the birefringence Δn=(ne−no) is the difference between the extraordinary refractive index ne and the ordinary refractive index no of the LC material in the LCoS cell 70.
The use of trim retarders 21 improves the contrast level by providing in-plane retardance that compensates for the retardance resulting from the residual birefringence in the respective LCoS panels 20. More specifically, the trim retarders 21 can be selected to have the same single-pass IPR as the corresponding LCoS displays 20, and oriented such that their slow axes are at orthogonal azimuthal alignment to the slow axes of the LCoS panels 20,
while their fast axes are at orthogonal azimuthal alignment to the fast axes of the LCoS panels 20, resulting in a configuration conventionally termed “crossed axes” configuration. This TR/LCoS panel configuration is illustrated in
The LCoS SA 61 is shown in the second quadrant, with an azimuthal angle of 62, relative to the +X-axis; a right-hand XYZ coordinate system is assumed, RH-XYZ, with the z-axis directed normally to the LCoS/TR plane, and the x-axis directed along the polarization direction of the incident P-polarized light, with the y-axis directed along the polarization direction of the S-polarized light; this relationship between the three axes of the XYZ coordinate system and the polarization orientation of the incident and reflected light is assumed throughout this document. The SA 61 of the LCoS panel is typically oriented to be substantially parallel to the bisector of the S- and P-axes. Notably, orienting the slow axis of the VAN-LCoS at ±45° or ±135° is important for the VAN-LCoS panel to function as an efficient electrically-controlled birefringence (ECB) device, providing a crossed polarization conversion of light according to equation (1):
where Γeff is the effective single-pass voltage-dependent retardance, in length units, as seen by the incident ray, λ is the illumination wavelength, and φ is the azimuthal orientation angle of the slow-axis relative to the P-polarization. In this configuration, the VAN-LCoS in an on-state functions approximately as a quarter-waveplate retarder in a single pass.
Once the slow axes 61, 63 of the trim retarders 21 and LCoS panels 20 are configured at orthogonal azimuthal orientations, a component of the incident light polarized along the SA 63 of the TR 21 will alternately experience a larger delay when propagating through the TR 21, and a smaller delay when propagating through the LCoS panel 20; conversely, a component of the incident light polarized along the FA of the TR 21, which is directed along the LCoS SA 61, will alternately experience a smaller delay when propagating through the TR 21, and a larger delay when propagating through the LCoS panel 20. If the one-way retardance of the LCoS 20 is equal to that of the TR 21, the net effect is a zero relative delay for the two orthogonal components of the incoming polarization, and as a result, an unchanged polarization of the incident light after propagation through the TR/LCoS assembly 20, 21; i.e., the output light has the same polarization as the incident light. The corresponding WGP 14 and/or an optional clean-up polarizer then rejects the output light so that the dark-state panel leakage does not appear on the screen. Since the trim retarder 21 does not alter significantly the throughput of the LCoS panel on-state, the resulting sequential contrast (full on/full off) is substantially improved.
In addition to providing in-plane retardance, it is common for trim retarders 21 to also provide out-of-plane retardance to increase the field of view. More specifically, it is common for trim retarders to include both an A-plate compensation component for compensating the in-plane retardance and a -C-plate compensation component for compensating the out-of plane retardance. Optionally, the trim retarders 21 also include an O-plate component. An A-plate is an optical retarder formed from a uniaxially birefringent material having its extraordinary axis oriented parallel to the plane of the plate. A C-plate is an optical retarder formed from a uniaxially birefringent material having its extraordinary axis oriented perpendicular to the plane of the plate, i.e. parallel to the direction of normally incident light. A -C-plate exhibits negative birefringence. An O-plate is an optical retarder formed from a uniaxial birefringent element having its extraordinary axis, i.e., its optic axis or c-axis, oriented at an oblique angle with respect to the plane of the plate.
As discussed above, the trim retarder 21 ideally provides an A-plate retardance that matches the in-plane retardance of the corresponding LCoS panel 20 in the off-state. In practice, however, the A-plate retardance of both the LCoS panels 20 and the trim retarders 21 tends to vary within each component due to manufacturing tolerances in device thickness and material birefringence control, as well as due to operational drifts (temperature, mechanical stress etc). As a result, to ensure adequate compensation it is common to provide a higher A-plate retardance in the trim retarders 21 than that exhibited by the LCoS panels 20. For example, a trim retarder with an A-plate retardance of 5 nm is often provided to compensate for a vertical aligned nematic (VAN) LCoS exhibiting a 2 nm A-plate retardance at the same wavelength λ.
As is known to those skilled in the art, this mismatch in A-plate value requires offsetting of the SA of the trim retarder 21, relative to the crossed axes orientation 63 described above, and the optimal contrast is obtained by deviating from the crossed axes configurations. In other words, the trim retarder is mechanically ‘clocked-in’ by rotating its azimuth orientation away from the crossed-axes configuration by an angle φob that is referred to as an over-clocking angle. When the slow and fast axes of the VAN-LCoS panel bisect the S- and P-polarization planes, as discussed above, the over-clocking angle, φob, of a higher IPR value trim retarder is calculated from the following equation:
where ΓaTR is the trim retarder A-plate retardance and ΓaLC is the LCoS A-plate retardance, with ΓaTR>ΓaLC.
Referring to Table 1, the calculated over-clocking angles for trim retarders providing 2 to 10 nm A-plate retardance for compensating an LCoS panel exhibiting 2 nm A-plate retardance are shown. Both positive and negative azimuthal offsets are given. In addition, two more azimuthal locations are found in the opposite quadrant (i.e., the listed over-clocking angles ±180°).
The mechanical rotation of a discrete trim retarder compensator relative to an LCoS panel as a means of optimizing the LCoS panel contrast is the prevalent assembly methodology in the LCoS display industry, having as large as 20% in-plane retardance distribution from part to part over a large batch of wafers. The active mechanical alignment of each LCoS-TR pair, referred to as the mechanical ‘clocking’, has the required angle granularity to always clock in any given panel.
An alternative arrangement would be to provide one-piece imager assemblies wherein an LCoS panel is integrated with a TR compensator, as described e.g. in a pending US Patent application 2005/0128391 assigned to the assignee of the current application. Advantageously, this LCoS panel/TR integration could be performed at a wafer level at the same manufacturing step where the LCoS panels are produced, resulting in one-step manufacturing of a plurality of the imager assemblies from a single compensated wafer. However, due to the variations in the residual IPR of the individual LCoS panels from the wafer, this approach would result in inaccurate retardance compensation for at least some of the imager assemblies, and will lower the production yield of high-contrast imager panels.
It is therefore desirable to provide a method for compensating the residual in-plane retardance of the LCoS display panels that does not require the individual mechanical LCoS panel-trim retarder alignment, or clocking, while providing high system contrast.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide a TR-LCD panel assembly that does not require the step of active mechanical clocking for providing high system contrast.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method of electronic tuning of the TR-LCD panel polarization alignment for providing a high system contrast.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method for electronic compensation of the residual in-plane retardance of the LCD panel.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method of wafer-level manufacturing of the LCD panel-trim retarder assemblies that are suitable for electronic contrast adjustment.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method for electronic tuning of the image contrast in LCD-based image forming devices.
In accordance with the invention, a method is provided for compensating, or at least lessening unwanted effects from a residual in-plane retardance of a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel for an incident light beam having a pre-determined polarization. The method comprises the following general steps: a) optically coupling a trim retarder with the LCD panel, the trim retarder having an in-plane retardance greater than the residual in-plane retardance of the LCD panel; b) orienting the trim retarder relative to the LCD panel in a fixed position so that a polarization-changing effect of the residual retardance of the LCD panel on the incident beam is at least partially compensated by a polarization-changing effect of the trim retarder; and,
c) adjusting at least one of a voltage to the LCD panel, a temperature of the LCD panel and a temperature of the trim retarder, so as to lessen a combined polarization changing effect of the LCD panel and the trim retarder on the pre-determined polarization state of the incident light beam, to attain a dark-state operation condition of the LCD panel.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, step (b) comprises orienting the trim retarder relative to the LCD panel so as to over-compensate the residual in-plane retardance of the LCD panel for the incident light, and step (c) comprises d) applying the voltage to the LCD panel for changing the magnitude of the LCD panel in-plane retardance away from the residual in-plane retardance; e) adjusting the voltage to the LCD panel so as to substantially minimize the combined polarization changing effect of the LCD panel and the trim retarder on the pre-determined polarization state of the incident light beam; and, f) utilizing the adjusted voltage as a dark state voltage of the LCD panel.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to an LCD assembly for modulating a light beam incident thereupon in a pre-determined linear polarization state, comprising an LCD panel having a residual in-plane retardance in a dark state, and a retardance compensating element disposed in the path of the incident light beam for over-compensating the residual in-plane retardance of the LCD panel for the light beam, so as to induce a cross-polarization conversion of the light beam at the output of the LCD assembly that can be lessened by a voltage applied to the LCD panel.
Another feature of the present invention provides an LCD panel assembly for modulating a light beam incident thereupon in a pre-determined linear polarization state, comprising: an LCD panel having a residual in-plane retardance in a dark state and comprising an array of LC pixels, and a retardance compensating element disposed in the path of the light beam for at least partially compensating the polarization-changing effect from the residual in-plane retardance of the LCD panel for the light beam, wherein the LCD panel is sectionalized into a plurality of sections, each section comprising a spatial groupings of pixels, and wherein in operation each of said groupings of pixels is driven by a voltage waveform associated with a distinct dark-state voltage that is different from respective dark-state voltages for the other groupings of pixels, so as to improve spatial uniformity of a resulting image contrast in comparison with an image contrast resulting from using a same dark-state voltage for each of said groupings of pixels.
Another aspect of the present invention provides a method of LCD panel manufacturing. The method comprises the following steps: providing a backplane wafer comprising a plurality of back-plane wafer portions configured for forming a plurality of LCD panels each having a residual in-plane retardance, providing a trim retarder wafer having an in-plane retardance greater than the residual in-plane retardance of each of the plurality of LCD panels, disposing the trim retarder wafer over the back-plane wafer with a gap therebetween for holding an LC layer, bonding the trim retarder wafer to the back-plane wafer in a fixed relative orientation for forming an LCD panel assembly array, and dicing the LCD panel assembly array into a plurality of individual LCD panel assemblies, each comprising an LCD panel integrated with a trim retarder; wherein the fixed relative orientation of the trim retarder wafer and the back-plane wafer is selected so as to over-compensate the residual in-plane retardance of at least a majority of the LCD panels for an incident beam having a pre-determined polarization state, to enable electronic contrast enhancement by adjusting dark state voltages for the at least the majority of the individual LCD panel assemblies.
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings which represent preferred embodiments thereof, wherein:
In connection with optical polarization, compensation and retardation layers, films or plates as described in the present application, the following definitions of terms as used throughout this application are given.
The term “optic axis”, when referred to a birefringent material such as a liquid crystal (LC), is used to mean an axis in the material whereby a light ray propagating along this axis does not experience birefringence. Hereinafter in the specification the LC materials used in LCD panels are assumed to be optically uniaxial and have positive birefringence, i.e. the extraordinary refractive index ne is the highest refractive index of the material, wherein the optic axis coincides with the extraordinary axis.
The term “slow axis” (SA) as used herein means the projection of the optic axis of the birefringent film (or plate, or layer) on the film plane.
The terms ‘tilted structure’ or ‘tilted orientation’ means that the optic axis of the film is tilted at an angle θ between 0 and 90 degrees relative to the film normal.
The term ‘homeotropic structure’ or ‘homeotropic orientation’ means that the optic axis of the film is substantially perpendicular to the film plane, i.e. substantially parallel to the film normal.
The term ‘dark-sate (bright-state) voltage’ mean voltage Ud (Ub) applied across the LC material of an LCD panel or an LC cell for minimizing (maximizing) optical throughput of a respective color channel wherein said LCD panel or LC cell is used, thereby minimizing (maximizing) the brightness of a resulting image produced by said panel or cell.
The term ‘nominal dark-state (bright-state) voltage’ is used to mean dark-state (bright-state) voltage Udnom (Ubnom) applied to the LC film of an LCD panel that is specified for a plurality of LCD panels of a particular type on the basis of a nominal, or expected, electro-optical (EO) characteristic of the LCD panels and capabilities of electrical circuitry driving these LCD panels, e.g. the silicon backplane CMOS in the case of LCoS panels. The relevant EO characteristic is, for example, the LCD panel cross-polarization reflectance R for a light beam of a pre-defined polarization, e.g. the P-polarized beam at normal incidence, in dependence on a voltage U applied across the LC layer of the LCD panel. The nominal EO characteristic could be in this case a computed R(U) dependence for a given nominal thickness of the LC layer assuming known LC parameters, or an R(U) dependence obtained by averaging measurement results for a plurality of the LCD panels, preferably having same design parameters.
The terms ‘TR clock-in’, or ‘TR clocking’ mean mechanically orientating a TR relative to an LCD panel to which it is optically coupled at a pre-determined relative azimuthal orientation in the plane of the panel; the terms ‘optimally clock-in’ or ‘optimal clocking’ in relation to the TR/LCD panel pair is used to mean that said pre-determined relative orientation is such that a polarization-changing effect of the residual IPR of the LCD panel on an incident beam having a pre-determined linear polarization is compensated by a polarization changing effect of the TR on said beam, so that the combined, or net polarization-changing effect of the TR/LCD panel assembly is substantially minimized.
Other terms and notations used in the specification will be explained hereinafter as they are introduced.
The present invention in one general aspect thereof provides a method for compensating the residual in-plane retardance of an LCD panel with a TR compensator, which includes two general steps: the step of coarse mechanical alignment of the TR-LCD panel pair in a pre-determined relative azimuthal orientation, with said orientation being preferably but not necessarily the same for a plurality of LCD panel-TR pairs, and the step of non-mechanical fine-tuning of the dark state conditions of the resulting LCD panel/TR assembly for increasing the panel on/off contrast ratio, e.g. by adjusting at least one of: a dark-state voltage of the LCD panel, a temperature of the LCD panel, and a temperature of the TR.
The invention will be described hereinbelow with reference to particular embodiments thereof, but is not limited to said embodiments. In particular, the invention will be described with reference to LCD panels embodied as reflective VAN-mode LCoS panels for use in image projecting systems of the type shown in
A first aspect of the invention provides a method of LCD panel manufacturing wherein a TR compensator is integrated with the LCD panel at a wafer level, as illustrated in
According to this aspect of the invention, an entire trim retarder wafer 91 is bonded to a Silicon (Si) backplane wafer 81 wherein a plurality 89 of LCD backplane devices are defined, sandwiching a gap for LC filling. This process includes the following general steps:
a) providing the silicon backplane wafer 81 comprising a plurality 89 of backplane wafer portions configured for forming a plurality of LCD panels;
b) providing a trim retarder wafer 91 having an in-plane retardance that is greater than the in-plane retardance of each of the plurality of LCD panels that will be formed from the silicon backplane wafer 81;
c) disposing the trim retarder wafer 91 over the backplane wafer 81 with a gap therebetween for holding an LC layer;
d) bonding the trim retarder wafer 91 to the backplane wafer 81 in a fixed relative orientation for forming an LCD panel assembly array from the plurality 89 of the backplane wafer portions; and,
e) dicing the LCD panel assembly array into a plurality of individual LCD panel assemblies, each comprising an LCD panel integrated with a trim retarder.
In one embodiment, the resulting assembly 80 is brought together by laminating the TR wafer 91 onto the Silicon backplane wafer 81. The TR wafer 91 is formed by coating a cover glass with a birefringent retardance compensating film having pre-defined A-plate and C-plate retardance on one surface thereof, and ITO and alignment layers on a second surface. The homogenous trim retarder wafer has a nominal slow-axis 92, forming a pre-defined azimuthal angle 93 with respect to the X-axis. The top side of the silicon backplane wafer 81 onto which the TR wafer 91 is laminated has an array of reflective pixel electrodes which have been pre-fabricated onto said wafer 81 together with underlining electrical driving circuitry, each reflector defining an LC cell also referred to herein as an LC pixel, with individual adhesive seal line defining each backplane LCD panel portion, also referred to herein as LCoS die. In the shown exemplary embodiment, the Si backplane wafer 81 has 12 backplane LCD panel portions of rectangular shape, e.g. portions 84 and 85, arranged in a 3×4 array 89. The top surface of the LCoS wafer 81 facing the TR wafer 91 has been treated with an alignment layer which subsequently anchors a nominal slow-axis 82 of the LC cells at an azimuthal angle 83 with respect to the X-axis. After the TR wafer 91 is bonded to the LCoS wafer 81 with the LC material filling the gap therebetween, the resulting pre-compensated LCoS wafer assembly 80 includes the LCD (LCOS) panel array 89 of 12 individual TR/LCD panel assemblies; since these assemblies are defined by their respective backplane portions, e.g. 84, 85, said LCD panel assemblies will be referred to hereinafter by the reference numerals of their respective Si backplane portions, e.g. 84, 85; these TR/LCD panel assemblies will also referred to hereinafter as compensated LCD panels, pre-compensated LCD/LCoS panels, or mechanically compensated LCD/LCoS panels.
The cover glass 202 forms an LC cell gap with the pixel reflector 201 and this cell gap is filled with LC mixture 203. A transparent conductive oxide (ITO) layer 204 is coated on the surface of cover glass 202 facing the LC layer 203. LC alignment layers 208, 207 are coated on the top surface of the silicon wafer 81 and the lower surface of the ITO layer 204, respectively, to anchor the LC 203 molecule orientations. A retardance compensating element in the form of a birefringent film 205 is disposed on the other surface of the cover glass 202. The LC molecules are driven to a variety of optical states by applying a voltage U across the LC cell between the ITO electrode 204 and the backplane reflector 201. This voltage U is the difference of the backplane reflector 201 voltage V and the ITO 204 voltage W, and will be referred to as the LC voltage.
For a given LC gap size d and a given composition of the LC material 203, the LC alignment layers 208, 207 determine a nominal orientation of the LCoS wafer SA 82, and a nominal residual IPR thereof ΓLCnom, i.e. the LCoS panel IPR in the relaxed LC state, when the LC voltage U is zero or close to zero. Similarly, the nominal SA 92 of the TR wafer 91 and its nominal IPR ΓTRnom are defined by the composition, thickness and molecular orientation of the retarder compensator film 205. Note that here and in the following, where it does not lead to a confusion, we have dropped the subscript ‘a’ from the IPR notation Γa, e.g. ΓaLC≡ΓLC, since this specification is primarily concerned with the in-plane retardance.
The selection of the relative orientation of the TR wafer 91 and the Si backplane wafer 81, which is defined by the azimuthal angles 83 and 93, in the wafer assembly 80 according to the present invention will now be described.
Were the retardance and SA orientations of the wafers 81 and 91 uniform across each of said wafers and defined by the respective nominal wafer parameters, the conventional approach would be e.g. to use the aforedescribed ‘over-clocking’ arrangement, wherein ΓTRnom is selected to exceed ΓLCnom, with the over-clocking azimuthal orientation of the TR and LCoS wafers 91, 81 defined by equation 2.
However, in practice the residual LCoS retardance can have substantial variations across the LCoS wafer 81, e.g. due to variations in the LC gap size d, the LC composition, and the pre-tilt angle 75 (
Because of the variations of the LCoS residual retardance across a wafer, the LC layer of the LCoS wafer portions 84 and 85 can potentially exhibit substantial, e.g. up to ±20% as
According to the invention, the wafer-level approach to manufacturing of LCoS/TR assemblies 89 described hereinabove with reference to
The selection of the relative orientation of the TR wafer 91 with respect to the Si backplane wafer 81, and the subsequent step of non-mechanical tuning of the resulting assembly 80 in one embodiment of the invention can be described with reference to
In line with the prior-art ‘over-clocking’ approach described hereinabove with reference to
In accordance with the current invention, a target LCoS IPR 105 for optimal mechanical clocking is chosen when bonding the TR wafer 91 to the LCoS wafer 81. With the wafer-level assembly, the target IPR may not be the average of LCoS wafer retardance and may not even be the statistical average of all LCoS panels from a large number of wafers and batches. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the fixed relative orientation of the trim retarder wafer 91 and the Si backplane wafer 81, which is defined by the azimuthal angles 93 and 83, is selected so as to over-compensate, for an incident beam having a pre-determined polarization state, the residual in-plane retardance of at least a majority of the LCoS panels from the wafer 80, or from a batch of such compensated LCoS wafers, or from a number of such wafer batches. This over-compensation, as explained hereinafter more in detail, enables subsequent electronic contrast enhancement by adjusting dark state voltages for the at least the majority of the individual LCoS panel assemblies.
The term ‘overcompensation’, as used herein, refers to a particular TR-LCD panel arrangement in a TR/LCD panel assembly wherein the TR is oriented to provide optimal compensation of a larger residual IPR than that of the LCD panel said TR is coupled with, for a normal-incidence beam having a pre-determined polarization. This can be further illustrated with reference to
The combined polarization-changing effect of the TR/LCD assembly 22 for the incident beam 36 is equivalent to that of a single reflective retarder characterized by a net IPR magnitude Γnet and a net SA which is oriented between the SAs 61, 64 of the LC layer 203 and the TR 21.
The optimal mechanical clocking of the TR 21 corresponds to such a selection of the IPR ratio (ΓTR/ΓLC) for a given relative SA 64, 61 orientation, that the net SA of the TR/LCD assembly 22 oriented either along the P-axis 68 or orthogonally thereto for over-clocked orientation 66 in
If the residual LC 203 IPR ΓLC is smaller than Γtarget that is required for the optimal panel compensation for given ΓTR and φrel, i.e. if x=(Γtarget−ΓLC)>0, the net SA of the assembly 22 is oriented away from the P-axis 68 towards the TR SA 64 at an angle φover>0, as schematically shown by an arrow 69a; this retardance compensation arrangement is referred to herein as the over-compensation of the residual LC retardance by the TR 21, and the respective LCoS panel 20 is referred to as being over-compensated by x [nm]. The residual LC retardance can be increased by adjusting the dark-state LC voltage Ud away from its nominal value Udnom, e.g. increasing it if the LCD panel is a VAN-mode LCoS, whereby causing the net SA 69a to rotate towards the P-axis. The LC voltage Ud>Udnom at which the SA 69a is aligned with the P-axis 68 so that φover=0 is used in the invention as the dark-state voltage in operation of the LCD panel assembly 22.
If the TR IPR is smaller, or the residual LCD panel IPR is larger than required for the optimal panel compensation for a given φrel, the net SA of the assembly 22 is oriented away from the P-axis 68 towards the LC SA 61, as schematically shown by an arrow 69b; this is referred to herein as the under-compensation of the residual LC retardance by the TR. If the residual LC retardance refers to the dark-state IPR of the LC layer 203 at non-zero nominal LC voltage Udnom, said IPR can be potentially somewhat decreased by reducing the VAN LC voltage U, so to lessen the combined effect of the LC and TR retardance on the polarization of the incident beam 36. However, the ability to lessen the dark-state IPR of an LCoS panel is limited by the available backplane voltage and a saturation of the ΓLC(U) dependence at low LC voltages.
Returning to
The goal of the non-mechanical step of the present invention is to shift the in-plane retardance 106 of the LC layer 203 in the LCoS panel die 84 to the compensation target 105, as schematically shown by an arrow 107. By way of example,
R=Is/Ip·(Ip/Is)max, (3)
where Ip and Is are the intensities of the incident p- and the deflected s-polarized beams 36 and 37, respectively, and (Ip/Is)max is a maximum value of the ratio (Ip/Is) across all LC voltages.
The curves 220, 221 and 222 represent the R(U) characteristic for the blue, green and red color bands, respectively. The measurements were taken with an f/2.4 cone of illumination while varying the voltage U applied across the LC layer of the LCoS panel without utilizing a retarder compensator. The three primary color bands, Red, Green and Blue correspond to the wavelength ranges of the incident light of approximately 610 to 700 nm, 510 to 570 nm and 415 to 500 nm, respectively. The retro-reflection setup 45, which is schematically shown in
CR=R(Ub)/R(Ud) (4)
for either of the three primary color bands of at most several hundreds to one, corresponding to the normalized reflectance of a few tenths of a percent even in the completely voltage-off, i.e. Ud=0, mode.
In equation (4), Ud is the dark-, or off-state value of the LC voltage U, and Ub is the bright-, or on-state value thereof. Ideally, they should provide a minimum and maximum values, respectively, of the normalized cross-polarization reflectance R(U) to maximize the contrast CR, which for the case shown in
Hereinafter in the description, the invention will be illustrated referring to the green-band EO panel characteristics 221, 231 as an example, and the retardance characteristic 231 is assumed to be the nominal LCoS panel retardance corresponding to a maximum 102 in the distribution 101 of the residual IPR shown in
The step of TR/LCoS panel assembly tuning by adjusting the dark-state LC voltage will now be further described with reference to
By way of example, the IPR of the TR wafer 91 is assumed hereinafter to be 10 nm and substantially constant across the wafer. The nominal bright-state voltage Ubnom=5V, the nominal dark-state voltage is selected as Udnom=(Ubnom−Vmax)=1.2V, where Vmax=3.8V is assigned as the maximum swing voltage provided by the Si backplane circuitry.
The EO profile 231 for the uncompensated nominal-panel 85 delivers 100 s to one contrast at best. The EO profile 112 of the nominal panel 85 shows a sharp notch at about 1.2V of applied voltage. This corresponds to the optimal point of the mechanical clocking for contrast optimization. Note that the extremely low crossed polarization leakage in the notch is a consequence of assumed approximations, when the non-ideal behaviour of crossed polarizers, panels, trim retarders and other optical element in the display optical system have not been yet accounted for.
Although the plus and minus panels 86, 84 at the nominal dark-state voltage of 1.2V have considerably higher reflectance R than the nominal panel 85, their contrast ratio can be improved by appropriately adjusting the dark state voltage. In fact, the optimal dark-state voltage for the minus-panel is about 1.55V, and corresponds to a minimum in the R(U) dependence 113. This means that the minus-panel 84, which has a 20% lower residual in-plane retardance at U=0 than the nominal panel 85, has to be driven harder in order to shift its off-state retardance to approximately 5.7 nm, which is illustrated in
As stated hereinabove, it is typically easier to increase the LCoS IPR above it residual low-voltage value than to decrease it below said residual IPR value. Hence, in a preferred embodiment the TR wafer 91 orientation relative to the LCoS wafer 81 is selected to over-compensate the residual IPR of at least the majority, or preferably all the LCoS panels from the array 89. Moreover, it is further preferable to use TR wafers of a same nominal design and orientation to bond to different Si backplane wafers from the same batch of wafers, and from different batches. It may thus be preferable to select the nominal orientation of the TR wafer 91 to match the residual IPR of the plus panel, i.e. the panel having the largest expected residual retardance.
In practice, the contrast ratio of an imager is further limited by light divergence, and non-ideal cross polarizers. Turning back to
where CR(system) is the expected real-system contrast, CR(baseline) is the contrast limit placed upon the system by the non-ideal optical components at the given cone illumination and CR(TR+panel) is the contrast associated with a double pass through the compensated TR/LCD panel assembly as determined by equation (4).
Curves shown in
Hereinabove the principles of the electronic contrast tuning by dark-state voltage adjustment according to the present invention have been described with reference to wafer-level manufacturing of the TR/LCoS assemblies wherein a plurality of LCoS panels are integrated with a plurality of trim retarders in the same technological step wherein the LCoS panels are produced. However, the method of the present invention is not limited to the wafer-level manufacturing of the TR/LCoS panel assemblies, and is applicable also to non-integrated assemblies wherein the TR and the LCD panel are manufactured separately and then are assembled together in a fixed predetermined relative orientation, which is the same for a large plurality of TR LCD panels pairs of a same nominal design. In this aspect of the invention, a method is provided for compensating, i.e. lessening the unwanted contrast-decreasing effect of the residual IPR of each LCD panel from a plurality of LCD panels, preferably but not exclusively of a same nominal design. In one embodiment, general steps of this method are illustrated in
The method starts with step 305 wherein a target range of the residual IPR magnitudes to be compensated is determined, e.g. from an expected distribution of the residual panel IPR for a plurality of LCD panels; this can correspond, for example to the range between the ±3σ IPR magnitudes 103, 104 for the distribution 101 in
In a next step 310, a TR compensator is selected with an IPR ΓTR greater than the residual IPR of any of the LCD panels to be compensated, i.e. with ΓTR>ΓLC res max;
In a next step 315, an azimuthal orientation of the TR compensator relative to an LCD panel that is being compensated, i.e. the angle φrel between their respective SAs, is selected so as to over-compensate, preferably by at least 0.2 nm, the residual IPR of said LCD panel for an incident beam of a pre-determined polarization, e.g. the linear P-polarization, as described hereinabove with reference to
In a next step 320, the TR and the LCD panel are optically coupled in a fixed relative orientation selected in step 315, so as to form a pre-compensated TR/LCD panel assembly 22 for modulating the polarization of an incident P-polarized beam;
Next, the pre-compensated TR/LCD panel assembly 22 is placed in a measurement setup 55 schematically illustrated in
In a next step 325, the light beam 36 having the pre-determined, e.g. linear P polarization is double-passed through the trim retarder 21 and the LC layer of the LCD panel 20 to obtain a reflected dark state beam, which is then passed to the WGP 14 that functions as a polarization analyzer, deflecting a filtered beam 37, wherein substantially only the S-polarized component of the dark-state beam remains, via the collimating or focusing optics 31 towards the photodetector 32, which measures the filtered beam intensity producing a feedback signal S that is proportional to the intensity of the filtered dark state beam 37, and indicates the degree of cross-polarization conversion of the incident beam 36 by the panel assembly 22. This signal S is communicated to the processor 33, which sends a control signal 38 to the voltage generator/LCD controller 34 for changing the LC voltage U of the LCD panel 20, and for providing to the LCD controller 34 information related to the beam 37 intensity for updating gamma correction tables.
In a next step 330, the feedback signal S is used by the processor 33 to adjust the LC voltage U so as to substantially minimize, or at least lessen the intensity of the filtered dark-state beam 37, thereby minimizing, or at least lessening the polarization-changing effect of the residual panel IPR for enhancing the sequential panel contrast CR. The adjusted value of the LC voltage U that minimizes the feedback signal from the photodetector 32 is then set in step 335 as the dark-state voltage Ud of the LCD panel assembly 22; depending on a particular implementation of the LCD panel controller 34, this value can be either hard-coded or stored in memory of the LCD controller 34, as described hereinbelow. In one embodiment, this step also includes varying the LC voltage U between the adjusted dark-state voltage Ud and the bright-state voltage Ub and while recording with the processor 33 the feedback signal S, and a resulting information characterising the shape of the adjusted EO characteristics R(U), e.g. in the form of a look-up table, is stored in the LCD controller 34.
Finally, in an optional step 340, the bright-state voltage of the LCD panel assembly 22 can be adjusted so as to maximize the feedback signal from the PD 32 in dependence on the LC voltage U, and the adjusted value thereof stored or hard-coded in the LCD panel controller 34 for use in the operation of the LCD panel assembly 22.
The aforedescribed general approach to LCD panel contrast enhancement by a fine-tuning of the dark-state and, optionally, bright-state LC voltage magnitudes can be realized for both analogue-driven and digitally-driven LCD panels. Analog driving of the LC pixels may utilise a single transistor at each pixel whereas the digital driving relies on pulse width modulation (PWM) of full-on (U=Ub) and full-off (U=Ud) pixels and may require multiple transistors per pixel, or LC cell. Each driving mechanism has its advantages and disadvantages in terms of optical image quality and electronic circuit design and layout trade-off.
U=V−W; (5)
therefore, the LC voltage can be adjusted, or its signed can be reversed, by adjusting either the ITO voltage W, the backplane voltage V, or both. In the following, the backplane voltage V required to obtain the dark-state LC voltage Ud is denoted as Vd, and the backplane voltage V required to obtain the bright-state LC voltage Ub is denoted as Vb. As known in the art, the electrical field in the LC layer 203 has to be DC-balanced, such that there is no long-term electro-chemical degradation of the LC molecules. Hence, the LCD panel is typically driven so that a positive frame wherein U>0 is followed by a negative frame wherein U<0, and the dark and bright state voltages Vd and Vb will generally differ for the positive and negative frames; hereinafter the positive-frame dark-state and bright-state voltages are denoted as Vdp and Vbp, respectively, while the negative-frame dark-state and bright-state voltages are denoted as Vdn and Vbn, respectively.
In order to form the positive and negative voltage frames, it's common to fix the ITO 204 voltage W at mid-rail between the extreme voltage swings at the backplane mirror. This halves the effective applied electric field across the LC cell. There is limited backplane voltage available and hence it's not always possible to increase the supply rail voltages. An alternative LCD panel drive scheme can be utilized where the front ITO voltage W is toggled between a low, e.g. negative, voltage value and a high voltage value.
Because the backplane supply rails for a given CMOS geometry cannot be increased appreciably, e.g. due to hot-electron degradation and drain punch-through effects at high saturation electric fields, the front ITO electrode voltage W has to swing a larger magnitude than the maximum backplane swing voltage Vmax. In this analog addressing scheme example, a gray scale is created by charging the pixel capacitor to a voltage between 0 and 3.8V. The ITO electrode therefore toggles between Wn=5V during the negative frame 510 and Wp=−1.2V during the positive frame 520 in order that a dynamic range of 1.2V to 5V voltages be applied to each LC cell. The backplane waveform 502 illustrate addressing of three pixels, #1, #2 and #3, which are driven by the backplane voltages V1n,p, V2n,p and V3n,p such that they are in the same nominal dark state (U=±1.2V), grey state (U=±4V) and nominal bright state (U=±5V), respectively, during both the negative and positive frames 510, 520. The pixel ITO, backplane and LC cell voltages shown by the waveforms 501, 502 and 503, respectively, are also listed in Table 2. The nominal pixel addressing scheme is defined in this case by the following equations (6a)-(6f):
Wn=Ubnom (6a)
Wp=−Udnom (6b)
Vdn=Vmax (6c)
Vdp=0 (6d)
Vbn=0 (6e)
Vbp=Vmax (6f)
When the pre-compensated LCoS panel assembly 22, or a group of pixels therein, is not optimally clocked in at the nominal dark-state voltage Udnom, the voltage tuning step 330 is employed for enhancing the sequential pixel contrast CR for the LCoS assembly or the group of pixels concerned. By way of example, the new adjusted dark-state LC voltage Ud determined in step 330 is 1.5V vs. the nominal 1.2V.
First, we will consider an embodiment wherein the dark state LC voltage Ud is adjusted by appropriately adjusting the ITO toggle voltage W. This embodiment is illustrated in Table 3, which lists the voltages V, W at the backplane and ITO electrode as well as the LC voltage U that are required to drive the three pixels to the adjusted dark state, the grey state and the bright state, similarly as in table 2. In this example, the positive-frame value Wp of the ITO toggle voltage W is adjusted to match in value the increased dark-state LC cell voltage Ud=1.5V, i.e. Wn=−1.5V. The dark-state backplane voltage in the positive frame V1p is unchanged but its negative frame voltage V1n is adjusted by the same amount as the ITO voltage adjustment. Also by way of example, the gray-level pixel has to be driven to a new LC voltage U=4.2V vs. 4.0V previously, but the full-bright voltage Ub remains at 5V. The adjusted pixel addressing scheme is defined in this case by the following equations (7a)-(7f):
Wn=Ubnom (7a)
Wp=−Ud (7b)
Vdn=(Ubnom−Ud) (7c)
Vdp=0 (7d)
Vbn=0 (7e)
Vbp=(Ubnom−Ud) (7f)
Next, in another embodiment the voltage tuning steps 330, 340 of the current invention are implemented using an alternative pixel addressing scheme, which may involve fixing the toggling ITO voltages Wn, Wp, while changing the dark-state backplane mirror voltages Vd in both the positive and negative frames. Table 4 lists relevant pixel voltages in this embodiment for the same three-pixel configuration as described hereinabove with reference to
Wn=Ubnom (8a)
Wp=−Ud (8b)
Vdn=(Ubnom−Ud) (8c)
Vdp=(Ud−Udnom) (8d)
Vbn=0 (8e)
Vbp=(Ubnom−Ud) (8f)
Tables 3 and 4 demonstrate that method of the present invention requires that the control and driving circuitry of the LCD panel provides means for adjusting either the dark state voltage Vd at the backplane electrode during the positive and negative frames, or the ITO voltages W, or both. For a digital addressing scheme employing PWM for gray scale dithering, only the full-on, i.e. dark, and full-off, i.e. bright, pixel states are relevant. The bipolar LC cell voltages of pixel #1 and #3 from Tables 3 and 4 show the required voltage waveforms. Backplane pixel driving circuitry that provides the capability to adjust the dark-state is backplane voltage Vd is known in the art, see e.g. US Patent Applications 2004/0070562 assigned to eLCOS Microdisplay Technology, Inc, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The backplane voltage generator 435 receives a video signal 425 including pixel brightness information, and an accompanying address signal 430 defining pixel address or addresses in the LCD panel 445 to which the video signal pertains. In response to these signals, the backplane voltage generator 435 generates analogue backplane voltages Vi,j, wherein the superscripts ‘i,j’ define the pixel row and column addresses as designated by the address signal 430, using pre-determined dark-state and bright-state backplane voltages Vd, Vb for the positive and negative frames, and gamma-correction tables for scaling grey-scale voltages Vi,j to account for the nonlinearity of the EO characteristic of the LCD panel and the desired human visual response.
The controller 400 includes a processor/memory module (PMM) 440, which can be embodied e.g. using an FPGA and which includes memory for storing the dark-state and bright-state backplane voltage values and gamma-correction tables, which are then provided to the backplane voltage generator 435. Optionally, the PMM 440 can also process and store the ITO voltage values Wn and Wp, and provide them to the ITO voltage generator 420.
In one embodiment, the PPM 440 stores the default nominal dark-state and bright-state LC voltage values Ubnom and Udnom and a nominal gamma-correction table for a selected color band, and computes the ITO voltages Wn, Wp and of the backplane voltages Vdn, Vdp, Vbn, Vbp, e.g. using equations (6a)-(6f). Turning back
The description hereintofore was focused primarily on embodiments wherein the dark state and bright state voltages are defined and updated as required for a whole LCD panel, so that a pixel with coordinates (i,j) is driven by a same set of voltages in response to a same video signal for regardless of the pixel location in the display, i.e. regardless of the pixel's coordinates i,j. However, this may result in the contrast ratio non-uniformity across the LCD panel assembly 22, due to spatial non-uniformity of retardance characteristics of the TR 21 and of the LC layer of the LCD panel 20. Turning back to
Therefore, another aspect of the invention provides a method for electronic tuning of the contrast ratio uniformity of a TR/LCD panel assembly by individually adjusting the dark-state LC voltage Ud for different spatial groupings of LC pixels of the LCD panel, and a sectionalized LCD panel assembly adopted for practicing said method.
The set of N dark-state voltages Vd(k) is then provided to the LCD voltage controller 38 for storing therein, and for generating voltage waveforms associated with said dark-state voltages, including grey-level voltage waveforms.
One skilled in the art will realize, that different LCD voltage control and pixel addressing schemes can be employed for driving the sectionalized LCD panel assembly 150. By way of example, in one embodiment the LCD panel of the assembly 150 is analogue-driven, and includes a uniform non-pixelated and non-sectionalized ITO layer. In this embodiment, the general architecture of the controller board 400 shown in
With reference to
In yet another embodiment, the distinct LC dark-state voltages can be hard-coded on LCoS chip 445 using known in the art approaches.
Although voltage tuning has been described as the second step contrast optimization, a pre-compensated TR/LCD panel assembly wherein the TR is oriented relative to the LCD panel so as to partially compensate for the residual LCD panel retardance can be further tuned-in by other non-mechanical means, so that further lessen the combined, or net polarization changing effect of the LCD panel and the TR on the pre-determined polarization state of the incident light beam.
For example, it is known in the art that the refractive indices and birefringence of the LC mixture in the LCD panel, and that used in the TR are temperature dependent. Hence, the temperature of either the LCD panel and/or the trim retarder can be varied such that the contrast of the system is optimized.
Furthermore, the aforedescribed electronic fine-tuning of the LCD panel assembly 22 can also be performed in operation, e.g. when the LCD panel assembly 22 is used in a device for displaying an image on a screen, such as the projector shown in
Although the invention has been described hereinabove with reference to VAN LCoS panels, it is also applicable to other liquid crystal modes of operations, such as twisted-nematic etc; in all these systems, TR compensators having a wide range of A-plane retardance can be used to practice the invention. Further, it can also be applicable to the direct-view LCD panels, in which fabrication a large area compensator film is typically passively aligned to the screen thin-film-transistor (TFT) array. The invention can also be applicable to transmissive LC microdisplays. Further, the aforedescribed voltage and/or temperature tuning schemes are equally applicable to wire-grid, 3M Vikuiti, MacNeille and other PBS based reflective optical systems.
While the C-plate retardance in the compensating TR has not been described in detail herein, it is understood that a high performance TR requires a suitable amount of negative C-plate retardance to achieve a high contrast ratio in conjunction with a positive C-plate LCoS device. The C-plate retardance in the TR is thought to be sufficiently invariant with regard to mechanical in-plane clocking of TR orientations to allow for any suitable mechanical alignment of the TR and LCoS slow axes in the first contrast optimization step, before said electronic adjustment step is performed.
Of course numerous other embodiments may be envisioned without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present invention claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/727,969 filed Oct. 18, 2005, entitled “Electronically Compensated LCD Assembly”, which is incorporated herein by reference. This application is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/009,476 filed on Dec. 10, 2004, Ser. No. 11/358,605 filed Feb. 21, 2006, Ser. No. 11/419,872 filed May 23, 2006, and Ser. No. 11/468,860 filed Aug. 31, 2006, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2478385 | Gaiser | Aug 1949 | A |
3185020 | Thelen | May 1965 | A |
3463574 | Bastien et al. | Aug 1969 | A |
3565509 | Sulzbach | Feb 1971 | A |
3604784 | Louderback et al. | Sep 1971 | A |
3781090 | Sumita | Dec 1973 | A |
3799653 | Ikeda | Mar 1974 | A |
3822926 | Dalbera et al. | Jul 1974 | A |
3936136 | Ikeda et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
4313647 | Takazawa | Feb 1982 | A |
4666250 | Southwell et al. | May 1987 | A |
4889412 | Clerc et al. | Dec 1989 | A |
5142393 | Okumura et al. | Aug 1992 | A |
5184237 | Iimura et al. | Feb 1993 | A |
5196953 | Yeh et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5220447 | Yokokura et al. | Jun 1993 | A |
5375006 | Haas et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5490006 | Masumoto et al. | Feb 1996 | A |
5508830 | Imoto et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5619352 | Koch et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5688566 | Broer et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
5777709 | Xu | Jul 1998 | A |
5798808 | Van Haaren et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5895106 | VanderPloeg et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
5986733 | Winker et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6057901 | Xu | May 2000 | A |
6141075 | Ohmuro et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6175400 | Duncan et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6280036 | Suzuki | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6350033 | Fujimori | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6356325 | Shimoshikiryo | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6394608 | Shiraishi et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
6556266 | Shirochi et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6585378 | Kurtz et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6587171 | Georges et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
6805445 | Silverstein et al. | Oct 2004 | B2 |
6805924 | Ishikawa et al. | Oct 2004 | B1 |
6857747 | Pentico et al. | Feb 2005 | B2 |
6867834 | Coates et al. | Mar 2005 | B1 |
6885422 | Suzuki et al. | Apr 2005 | B2 |
6909473 | Mi et al. | Jun 2005 | B2 |
6912030 | Coates et al. | Jun 2005 | B1 |
7079209 | Nakagawa | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7345723 | Robinson et al. | Mar 2008 | B2 |
20020033992 | Den Bossche et al. | Mar 2002 | A1 |
20020047968 | Yoshida et al. | Apr 2002 | A1 |
20040070562 | Hudson et al. | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20040114079 | Kurtz et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20040125090 | Hudson | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20050122482 | Ellis et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050128380 | Zieba et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050128391 | Tan et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20060215091 | Muramoto et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0621499 | Oct 1994 | EP |
WO2004104680 | Dec 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070085972 A1 | Apr 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60727969 | Oct 2005 | US |