Embodiments of the present disclosure relate to the field of liquid crystal display, and particularly to a gate drive method and a gate drive device of a liquid crystal display.
Recently, the liquid crystal display (LCD) related products have been developed rapidly. More and more LCDs with high quality gradually come into the market, and the application fields thereof are increasingly broadened.
The basic principle of displaying images by a LCD is as follows. Different voltages are applied between the two electrode plates of the liquid crystal to deflect the liquid crystal molecules by a certain angle, so that the light can pass through. The transmission ratio of the liquid crystal is determined by the deflection angle of the liquid crystal molecules. Thereby, a gradation display with different grayscales is generated.
Usually, in order to prevent the liquid crystal molecules from aging, a polarity reversion is used when images are displayed by the LCD. The polarity in the “polarity reversion” is referred to as a positive polarity when the pixel voltage is higher than the voltage of the common electrode signal, and referred to as a negative polarity when the pixel voltage is lower than the voltage of the common electrode signal. Due to factors such as parasitic capacitance, the actual pixel voltage of the pixel electrode is inconsistent with the data line voltage, and there is a voltage difference ΔVp. Due to the existence of ΔVp and the requirement for polarity reversion between the positive polarity and the negative polarity, the common electrode signal Vcom is required to be in the center between the positive polarity and the negative polarity.
Usually, at the development stage as well as the mass production stage, the common electrode signal Vcom is adjusted to be in the center between the positive polarity and the negative polarity of the actual pixel electrode, then applied to the product. In the prior art, generally, either ΔVp is reduced by reducing the parasitic capacitance, or the common electrode signal Vcom is adjusted by using a feedback loop. However, the inventor finds out that there are at least the following problems in the prior art. Firstly, in the method of reducing ΔVp by reducing the parasitic capacitance, due to restrictions on the charge and discharge requirements, ΔVp is reduced in a limited extent, and adjustment effect is unsatisfactory. Secondly, in the method of adjusting the common electrode signal Vcom by using the feedback loop, since a decision depending on the visual sense of the operator is needed, the adjusted common electrode signal Vcom may not be exact in the center between the positive polarity and the negative polarity of the actual pixel electrode. Therefore, the adjustment effects of the two methods are both unsatisfactory, and the two methods cannot resolve the flickering caused by the voltage difference ΔVp and the residual image caused by the residual direct current.
Embodiments of the present disclosure provide a gate drive method and a gate drive device of a liquid crystal display, which can avoid the influence by the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage and the data line voltage, and eliminate the flickering phenomenon and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively.
To achieve the above object, the gate drive method and the gate drive device of the liquid crystal display in the present disclosure adopt the following technical solutions.
An embodiment provides a gate drive method of a liquid crystal display, which comprises: inputting a compensation voltage Vgc to the N-th row of gate line when the n-th row of gate line is turned off completely in the current frame; keeping on inputting the compensation voltage Vgc; and stopping inputting the compensation voltage Vgc to the n-th row of gate line when a turn-on voltage Vgh is input to the n-th row of gate line in the next frame; wherein, N≦the total number of the gate lines.
In an example, before the n-th row of gate line is completed turned off, the method further comprises: inputting the turn-on voltage Vgh to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned on; and inputting a turn-off voltage Vgl to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned off.
In an example, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line is used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst.
In an example, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line and a common electrode line are used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst.
Another embodiment provides a gate drive device of a liquid crystal display, which comprises: a compensation module connected to the gate line, which inputs a compensation voltage Vgc to the n-th row of gate line when the n-th row of gate line is turned off completely in the current frame; keeps on inputting the compensation voltage Vgc; and stops inputting the compensation voltage Vgc to the n-th row of gate line when a turn-on voltage Vgh is input to the n-th row of gate line in the next frame; wherein, N≦the total number of the gate lines.
In an example, the gate drive device of the liquid crystal display further comprises: a turn-on module, which inputs the turn-on voltage Vgh to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned on; and a turn-off module, which inputs a turn-off voltage Vgl to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned off.
In an example, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line is used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst.
In an example, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line and a common electrode line are used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst.
In the technical solutions according to the embodiments of the present disclosure, when each gate line is turned off completely, a constant compensation voltage Vgc is compensated for the gate line until the gate line is turned on in the next frame, thereby canceling out the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage of the pixel electrode and the voltage of the data line signal due to factors such as parasitic capacitance, avoiding the influence by the voltage difference ΔVp, and eliminating the flickering phenomenon caused by the voltage difference ΔVp and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively.
Further scope of applicability of the present disclosure will become apparent from the detailed description given hereinafter. However, it should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the disclosure, are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the disclosure will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description.
In order to explain the technical solutions of the embodiments of the present disclosure or the prior art more clearly, a brief introduction will be given hereinafter to the figures necessary for the description of the embodiments. Obviously, the figures for the embodiments in the following description are only some embodiments of the present disclosure, and those of ordinary skill in the art can derive other figures from these figures without inventive labor, in which:
In the following, the technical solutions of the embodiments of the present disclosure will be described clearly and thoroughly with reference to the figures in the embodiments of the present disclosure. Obviously, the described embodiments are only a part of, but not all, embodiments of the present disclosure. All the other embodiments obtained based on the embodiments of the present disclosure without inventive labor by those of ordinary skill in the art shall fall within the protection scope of the present disclosure.
The embodiments of the present disclosure provide a gate drive method and a gate drive device of a liquid crystal display, which can avoid the influence of the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage and the data line voltage, and eliminate the flickering phenomenon and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively.
Due to factors such as parasitic capacitance, the actual pixel voltage of the pixel electrode is inconsistent with the data line voltage, and there is a voltage difference ΔVp. In order to avoid the influence of the voltage difference ΔVp and eliminate the flickering phenomenon and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively, a gate drive method of the liquid crystal display is provided in an embodiment of the present disclosure, which comprises the following steps as shown in
At step 101, a compensation voltage Vgc is input to the n-th row of gate line when the n-th row of gate line is turned off completely in the current frame;
at step 102, the compensation voltage Vgc is kept on being input; and
at step 103, the compensation voltage Vgc is stopped being input to the n-th row of gate line when a turn-on voltage Vgh is input to the n-th row of gate line in the next frame;
wherein, N≦the total number of the gate lines.
In the gate drive method of the liquid crystal display provided in the embodiment of the present disclosure, when each gate line is turned off completely, a constant compensation voltage Vgc is compensated for the gate line until the gate line is turned on in the next frame, thereby canceling out the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage of the pixel electrode and the voltage of the data line signal due to factors such as parasitic capacitance, avoiding the influence of the voltage difference ΔVp, and eliminating the flickering phenomenon caused by the voltage difference ΔVp and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively.
In the embodiment of the present disclosure, preferably, the technical solution of the present disclosure is described in detail by the following method.
As shown in
At step 201, the turn-on voltage Vgh is input to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned on.
In the image of each frame, the gate line is turned on row by row under the control of a gate drive device. For each row of gate line, the turn-on voltage Vgh needs to be input thereto by the gate drive device, so as to control the row of gate line to be turned on. After the gate line is turned on, image data is input to the pixel unit corresponding to the row of gate line. As shown in
At step 202, a turn-off voltage Vgl is input to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned off.
As shown in
At step 203, when the n-th row of gate line is turned off completely, the compensation voltage Vgc is input to the n-th row of gate line until the next frame when the turn-on voltage Vgh is input to the n-th row of gate line.
As shown in
It is to be noted that there are many ways to obtain the compensation voltage Vgc. Preferably, it is designed to generate the compensation voltage Vgc in a chip at the time point when the gate line is controlled to switch from on to off by a timing control signal, and to continue until the time point when the row of gate line is turned on in the next frame.
In the following, a case will be described as an example where the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which a storage capacitor is formed on the gate line (Cst on Gate), i.e., a structure in which the gate line is used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst. As shown in
The detailed principle and implementation are as follows.
As shown in
During the time period T2, the change in the voltage of the gate line signal of the pixel itself corresponding to the (n+1)-th row of gate line is −(Vgh+Vgc), which results in a pixel voltage change ΔV1 through the TFT capacitance Cgs:
ΔV1=−(Vgh+Vgc)×Cgs/(Cst+Cgs+Clc),
wherein, Clc is the pixel capacitance.
During the time period T3, the change in the voltage of the n-th row of gate line is +Vgc, which results in a pixel voltage change ΔV2 of the pixel corresponding to the (n+1)-th row of gate line through the storage capacitance Cst:
ΔV2=Vgc×Cst/(Cst+Cgs+Clc)
During the time period T4, the change in the voltage of the gate line signal of the pixel itself corresponding to the (n+1)-th row of gate line is +Vgc, which results in a pixel voltage change ΔV3 through the TFT capacitance Cgs:
ΔV3=Vgc×Cgs/(Cst+Cgs+Clc)
Therefore, after the time period T4, the pixel voltage Vpixel is:
Vpixel=Vdata−ΔV1+ΔV2+ΔV3
In the above formula, as long as (−ΔV1+ΔV2+ΔV3) is zero, the pixel voltage Vpixel written when the TFT is turned on is equal to Vdata. The pixel voltage Vpixel returns to the data line voltage Vdata after a series of capacitance coupling effects during the time periods T1, T2, T3 and T4. Substituting the above three formulas therein, it follows that the design requirement for the capacitance coupling change being zero is:
Vgc×Cst=Vgh×Cgs.
Then, by adjusting the compensation voltage Vgc only, the influence by the voltage change due to the capacitance coupling can be avoided, and the capacitance coupling effect of the gate line can be compensated completely. Thereby, the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage of the pixel electrode and the voltage of the data line signal due to factors such as parasitic capacitance is cancelled out, so that the influence by the voltage difference ΔVp is avoided, and the flicking phenomenon caused by the voltage difference ΔVp and the residual image caused by the residual direct current are eliminated effectively.
It is to be noted that, the above mentioned method also applies in a liquid crystal display with a pixel structure in which a storage capacitor is formed on the gate line and the common electrode line (Cst on Gate+common), i.e., the value of the compensation voltage is Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst. Similarly, by adjusting the compensation voltage Vgc, the influence by the voltage variance caused by the capacitance coupling can be avoided, and the capacitance coupling effect of the gate line can be compensated for completely. It will not be described here to avoid redundancy.
The embodiment of the present disclosure also provide a gate drive device applied to the gate drive method of the liquid crystal display. As shown in
Further, the gate drive device also comprises a turn-on module 22 and a turn-off module 33.
The turn-on module 22 inputs the turn-on voltage Vgh to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned on. The turn-off module 33 inputs a turn-off voltage Vgl to the n-th row of gate line to control the gate line to be turned off.
Further, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line is used as the lower electrode plate of a storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst. Optionally, the pixel structure of the liquid crystal display is a structure in which the gate line and a common electrode line are used as the lower electrode plate of the storage capacitor Cst, the capacitance of a thin film transistor is Cgs, and the compensation voltage Vgc=Vgh×Cgs/Cst.
The method using the gate drive device of the liquid crystal display of the present embodiment is the same as the gate drive method described in the above embodiment, and will not be described here to avoid redundancy.
In the technical solutions of the embodiments of the present disclosure, the compensation module compensates a constant compensation voltage Vgc for each gate line when the gate line is turned off completely, until the gate line is turned on in the next frame, thereby canceling out the voltage difference ΔVp between the pixel voltage of the pixel electrode and the voltage of the data line signal caused by factors such as parasitic capacitance, avoiding the influence by the voltage difference ΔVp and eliminating the flickering phenomenon and the residual image caused by the residual direct current effectively.
Through the description on the above implementations, those skilled in the art can appreciate that the present disclosure can be implemented by software in combination with the necessary hardware for general purpose. Of course, the present disclosure can be implemented by hardware as well, but in many cases, the former one is a preferred implementation. Based on such understanding, the essential technical solutions of the present disclosure as a whole, or a part thereof that contribute to the disclosure over the prior art, can be embodied in a form of software product, which can be stored in a readable storage medium such as a soft disk, a hard disk or an optical disk of a computer etc., and comprises instructions that enables a computer device (which may be a personal computer, a server, or a network device, etc.) to execute the method described in the various embodiments of the present disclosure.
The above are only detailed embodiments of the present disclosure. Nevertheless, the protection scope of the present disclosure is not limited thereto. Those skilled in the art can think of variations or alternations easily within the technical scope disclosed by the present disclosure, and such variations or alternations shall be within the protection scope of the present disclosure. Therefore, the protection scope of the present disclosure shall be defined by the claims only.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010 1 0620163 | Dec 2010 | CN | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6067064 | Furuhashi et al. | May 2000 | A |
7079123 | Shino et al. | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7486264 | Taguchi | Feb 2009 | B2 |
7924255 | Hsu et al. | Apr 2011 | B2 |
20040017344 | Takemoto | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20040095342 | Lee et al. | May 2004 | A1 |
20040189573 | Lee et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20040189584 | Moon | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20050057481 | Chung | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20060176255 | Do et al. | Aug 2006 | A1 |
20080074404 | Sashida | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20080174588 | Kim et al. | Jul 2008 | A1 |
20090225106 | Kim et al. | Sep 2009 | A1 |
20090244049 | Yamamoto et al. | Oct 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101354870 | Jan 2009 | CN |
101551974 | Oct 2009 | CN |
101770750 | Jul 2010 | CN |
2006-350335 | Dec 2006 | JP |
10223347 | Jul 1999 | KR |
20050027612 | Mar 2005 | KR |
1020060062645 | Jun 2006 | KR |
Entry |
---|
Chinese First Office Action dated Feb. 6, 2013; Appln. 201010620163.1. |
Chinese Rejection Decision dated Jul. 25, 2013; Appln. No. 201010620163.1. |
Korean Office Action dated Jan. 29, 2014; Appln. No. 10-2011-0145686. |
Korean Office Action dated Jul. 3, 2014, Appln. No. 10-2011-0145686. |
Chinese Notice of Reexamination dated Sep. 12, 2014; Appln. No. 201010620163.1. |
Chinese Notification of ReExamination dated May 13, 2014; Appln. No. 201010620163.1. |
Chinese Notice of Reexamination dated Dec. 17, 2014; Appln. No. 201010620163.1. |
Korean Notice of Allowance dated Jan. 28, 2015; Appln. No. 10-2011-0145686. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120169706 A1 | Jul 2012 | US |