Many of today's display technologies are transmissive. A transmissive display is one which generates or provides an image or images to be displayed, but requires a backlight to illuminate the image(s). Common types of transmissive displays include liquid crystal displays (LCDs), advertising boards, channel displays and icon displays. Traditionally, transmissive displays have been backlit using incandescent bulbs or cold cathode fluorescent lamps (CCFLs). Often, an LCD is backlit by placing a CCFL adjacent an edge of a planar light guide. The light emitted by the CCFL is then channeled and reflected by the light guide before being refracted out from behind the LCD.
With the recent development of high-power and very bright light emitting diodes (LEDs), LEDs are increasingly used to replace incandescent lamps and CCFLs. Given that LEDs are semiconductor light sources, they are very robust and have lifetimes of tens of thousands of hours as compared to CCFLs, which typically last only a couple of thousand hours.
In one embodiment, apparatus comprises a transmissive display and a backlight. The backlight comprises a substrate, positioned behind the display, and a plurality of low-power light emitting diodes (LEDs), mounted on the substrate. The LEDs are positioned behind the display, and each LED is nominally operated at ≦200 milliamps (and, more preferably, at ≦100 milliamps).
Other embodiments are also disclosed.
Illustrative and presently preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
As defined herein, a high-power LED is an LED that is nominally operated at >200 milliamps (mA). By way of example, a typical green Indium Gallium Nitride (InGaN) LED may be operated at 350 mA. While the semiconductor nature of high-power LEDs provides many advantages, such as long life and shock resistance, they also pose some problems. For example, high-power LEDs are substantially point light emitters rather than surface light emitters. When used to backlight a display, a light guide with a diffuser is therefore required to uniformly diffuse their light over the whole of a display. High-power LEDs are also somewhat large, making them inherently less efficient. Furthermore, the large size of a high-power LED leads to the need for a large package (e.g., a transparent or translucent encapsulant or shell), thus making the high-power LED difficult to mount in some locations. For example, in a notebook computer display, a backlight comprised of high-power LEDs must typically be mounted on the side of the display, as a result of depth limitations. In addition, high-power LEDs can generate a lot of heat, and therefore require the design of a thermally efficient environment (e.g., a heatsink) for their use. Such designs can be complex, wieldy and expensive.
In order to achieve the same level of light output as a side-firing backlight, the backlight 104 shown in
The lower power dissipation of low-power LEDs enables them to be mounted on more common (and less expensive) forms of substrates, such as printed circuit boards, lead-frames, or flexible substrates. Flexible substrates can be particularly useful for a couple of reasons. First, they comprise very little material to absorb heat. As a result, it may be unnecessary to provide a heatsink to dissipate the heat generated by the LEDs that are mounted on the substrate. If a heatsink is required, the heatsink may take the form of a copper foil attached to the substrate. The heatsink therefore adds little bulk or weight to the backlight.
A flexible substrate 300 can also be advantageous in that it can be formed to have a three-dimensional contour. See
The LEDs 108-142 may be similarly or differently colored. To provide a white light with wide color gamut, the LEDs 108-142 may comprise red, green and blue LEDs. In some cases, the red, green and blue LEDs may be provided in unequal numbers, such as 3:6:1.
To ensure adequate mixing of the light emitted by different colored LEDs, and/or to ensure good dispersing of their light, some or all of the LEDs 108-142 may be mounted to the substrate 106 in various patterns, including spiral 500, circular 600, radial spoke 700 or serpentine 800 patterns. These patterns 500, 600, 700, 800 are respectively illustrated in
Some or all of the LEDs may also be mounted to the substrate in various groupings, such as triangular (900,
Light mixing and dispersion may also be achieved by mounting one or more three-dimensional reflectors 1100, 1102,1104, 1106 to the substrate 106, and then mounting at least some of the LEDs 108 within the reflectors 1100-1106. In some cases, the LEDs 108 may be mounted on supports 1108, 1110, 1112, 1114 mounted within the reflectors 1100-1106. Also, the reflectors 1100-1106 may take various shapes and forms. In
Light mixing and dispersion may also be achieved by means of an optional light guide that is positioned between the display 102 and the backlight 104. An optional planar light guide 120 is shown in