The present invention relates to liquid crystal display (LCD) devices used to display a picture on a television screen or computer monitor while harnessing unused light source energy.
The active liquid crystal display (LCD) has been in use for over thirty-five years rather unchanged in function and structure. It is electronically-controlled optical device shaped into a flat panel and placed in front of a light source or reflector. The panel itself comprises an array of monochrome pixels, each of which consists of a layer of liquid crystals sandwiched between to transparent electrodes and two polarizing filters, whose axes of transmission are perpendicularly aligned.
In a black and white LCD, incident light passes through the first polarizer and contacts the liquid crystal, which refracts the light, thereby allowing it to pass through the second polarizer. The angle of refraction determines the amount of light passing through the second polarizer. Molecular structure of the liquid crystal, and the angle of refraction, is determined by the current applied by the transparent electrodes.
Color LCD's differ in that each pixel in divided into three subpixels that are colored by additional filters: red, blue, and green. Subpixels are controlled independently, yielding a vast number of possible colors. The liquid crystal structure itself, like the black and white LCD, is controlled by means of the transparent electrodes. The same refraction principles also apply.
The average amount of energy consumed by a modern LCD is less than that of a modern plasma television and slightly more than that consumed by CRT technology or DLP/rear projection televisions. Today, LCD TVs in the stand-by state (also the OFF state) consume anywhere from 0.1 W to 40 W, a variation due to updates being performed while the user is away from the TV. This can add up to a substantial amount of energy being consumed while the TV is not being used. Currently, a method of harnessing the light inside of the TV unused by the LCD panel does not exist.
Accordingly, a display device includes a chassis, a display on the chassis, and a light source to illuminate the display. The display device may be a TV or computer. In the case of the TV, a tuner to receive external signals and a processor to convert the signal into an image are mounted on the chassis. A recycle circuit is implemented to harness unused illumination outputted by the light source and store the energy in a battery. A light converter, such as a solar panel, receives excess light from the light source. The battery can power a standby module necessary for updates to the display device and for processing a wireless command signal received from a remote control when a main power supply to the light source is deenergized. A DC/DC Buck/Boost circuit may be used to transfer energy from the light converter to the battery and standby system. By generating its own power, the display device can be disconnected from the electrical grid, thereby saving a significant amount of power for the consumer and the electric company.
In another aspect, a display apparatus includes a chassis holding a display including display elements and a light source in the chassis and positioned to provide illumination to the elements of the display. The illumination is necessary to cause the display to present demanded images. Some of the illumination is excess illumination that does not illuminate the elements of the display but nonetheless requires power to generate. A recycle circuit advantageously is positioned in the chassis to receive and recycle the excess illumination so that not all of the excess illumination is wasted.
In another aspect, a display device includes an electronic display requiring illumination to present a demanded image. A converter is separate from the display and requires illumination to generate electricity. At least one lamp provides illumination to the display to facilitate presentation of the demanded image thereon and also provides illumination to the converter to facilitate electricity production thereby.
In another aspect, a method includes using a non-solar light source to illuminate a visual display to enable the display to produce a demanded image thereon, and simultaneously with using the non-solar light source to illuminate a visual display, using the non-solar light source to charge at least one battery.
Referring initially to
For the LCD display 14 to present a demanded image, a light source 26 mounted in the chassis 12 generates light that illuminates the interior elements of the LCD display 14. The light source 26 may include, but is not limited to, a cold cathode fluorescent lamp (CCFL) that receives power from the main power supply 22. As set forth further below, a converter member is mounted on the chassis 12 as part of a recycle circuit 28 and receives light from the light source 26. The converter member, such as an amorphous silicon solar panel, translates the light energy into electrical energy that can be input into a standby power supply circuit 24 also inside the chassis. The standby power supply circuit 24 may include, but is not limited to, a DC/DC buck/boost circuit receiving electricity from the converter member and communicating with a standby power supply battery.
The converter member of recycle circuit 28 may include at least one solar cell. By housing the solar cell, or solar panel, inside the TV 10, the high intensity light source may be harnessed directly. The chassis 12 substantially blocks sunlight from impinging of the solar cell.
The standby power supply circuit 24 is necessary to keep the TV 10 active for updates and to provide standby power to process a wireless command signal received from a TV remote control when a main power supply to the light source 26 is deenergized. TV updates may include software upgrades, TV guide updates, system monitoring, etc. The standby power supply circuit 24 may include a battery charged by the converter member of the recycle circuit 28.
Now referring to
Each of the components of the overall LCD module may be mounted separately on the chassis 12 in orientations similar to what is shown in
Moving in reference to
The light source 52 consists of at least one lamp providing illumination to the display 46 to facilitate presentation of the demanded image thereon and providing illumination to a converter, which is integrated into the recycle circuit 54, to facilitate electricity production thereby. The light source 52 may be, but is not limited to, a CCFL. The converter member of the recycle circuit 54 may be, but is not limited to, an amorphous silicon solar panel. The computer chassis 44 substantially blocks sunlight from impinging on the converter member.
As was the case for the display shown in