The present disclosure relates to a light emitting apparatus including an optical member, such as microlenses, as well as a display apparatus, an image pickup apparatus, an electronic apparatus, an illuminating apparatus, and a movable object including the same.
Organic light emitting elements are devices including a first electrode, a second electrode, and an organic compound layer disposed therebetween and emits light when carriers are injected from the first electrode and the second electrode. The organic light emitting elements are lightweight and flexible devices. For this reason, display apparatuses including an organic light emitting element have recently attracted attention. To enable the display apparatuses to have high definition, a known method using an organic white light emitting element and a color filter (hereinafter referred to as “white + CF method”) is employed. The white + CF method forms an organic layer over the entire surface of the substrate and is therefore easier to achieve high definition in pixel size and pixel pitch than a method of forming organic layers for individual colors using a metal mask.
PTL 1 discloses a display apparatus including an organic light emitting diode (OLED) and an out-coupling component and the positional relationship between the out-coupling component and the emission area of the OLED.
PTL 2 discloses a light emitting device including a microlens array and a light emitting element group, which changes the distance between the central axis of the light emission of the light emitting element and the central axis of the lens.
PTL 1 describes the position relationship, such as the distance, between the light emitting element and the microlens for increasing the intensity in the frontal direction. PTL 2 describes changing the distance between the central axis of the light emitting element and the central axis of the microlens to uniformize the amount of light in the emitting direction.
However, PTLs 1 and 2 do not describe changing the size of the emission area in consideration of the power consumption and the display quality of the light emitting device.
PTL 1 Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2017-017013 PTL 2 Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2020-004868
The present disclosure is made in view of the above disadvantages. Accordingly, an aspect of the present disclosure is to provide a display apparatus that provides stable display quality regardless of the user’s gaze viewing position while improving the light use efficiency and reducing the power consumption using an optical member, such as microlenses.
The present disclosure provides a light emitting apparatus including a substrate including a principal surface, a first light emitting element disposed on the principal surface, a second light emitting element disposed on the principal surface, a first lens that receives light emitted from the first light emitting element, and a second lens that receives light emitted from the second light emitting element, wherein the first light emitting element and the second light emitting element each include a lower electrode, an upper electrode, and an organic compound layer disposed between the lower electrode and the upper electrode, wherein, in a direction parallel to the principal surface, a distance between a middle point of an emission area of the second light emitting element and an apex of the second lens is larger than a distance between a middle point of an emission area of the first light emitting element and an apex of the first lens, wherein the emission area of the second light emitting element is larger than the emission area of the first light emitting element, and wherein the lower electrode of the second light emitting element is larger than the lower electrode of the first light emitting element.
Further features of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
A light emitting apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure includes a substrate including a principal surface, a first light emitting element disposed on the principal surface, a second light emitting element disposed on the principal surface, a first lens that receives light emitted from the first light emitting element, and a second lens that receives light emitted from the second light emitting element, wherein, in a direction parallel to the principal surface, a distance between a middle point of an emission area of the second light emitting element and an apex of the second lens is larger than a distance between a middle point of an emission area of the first light emitting element and an apex of the first lens, and wherein the emission area of the second light emitting element is larger than the emission area of the first light emitting element.
The second light emitting element may be a light emitting element that emits light at a wide angle to the display apparatus. In the second light emitting element, the optical member is deviated to emit wide-angle light as compared with the first light emitting element. In other words, the distance between the middle point of the emission area of the second light emitting element and the apex of the second lens in a cross section including the lower electrode, the first optical member, and the second optical member is larger than the distance between the middle point of the emission area of the first light emitting element and the apex of the first lens in the cross section.
In this case, the range of the radiation angle of the second light emitting element needed to stabilize the display quality regardless of the user’s gaze position is larger than that of the first light emitting element. This is because the radiation angle depends on the positional relationship between the optical member and a minute light source in the emission area, and therefore the range of the radiation angle increases as the emission area increases.
The emission area of the second light emitting element is larger than that of the first light emitting element to stabilize the display quality regardless of the user’s gaze position. The larger emission area decreases the radiation intensity relative to the input current but stabilizes the display quality in a wide radiation angle range with the turn of the user’s eyeball.
In this specification, the lens may be an optical member, such as microlenses. The lens shape may be spherical or aspherical. The light emitting layer may be composed of an organic compound or an inorganic compound.
Embodiments will be described hereinbelow with reference to the drawings. It is to be understood that the following embodiments do not limit the invention. The embodiments describe a plurality of configurations, but not all of the configurations are required. The configurations may be freely combined. In the drawings, the same or similar components are denoted by the same reference signs, and duplicated descriptions may be omitted.
For example, in the white + CF method, the color filters may be color filters that allow red, green, and blue light to pass through. Addition and mixture of the colors of the subpixels allow the organic EL light emitting apparatus to display a full color image. The following embodiments show color filters that allow three colors of light to pass through as an example. However, this is illustrative only.
In this specification, the lens may be disposed on the light extraction side of the light emitting apparatus, and the convex side of the lens may be on the light extraction side. If the light emitting apparatus emits light from both the lower electrode side and the upper electrode side of the light emitting element, both sides can be referred to as the light extraction side. The microlenses may be spherical lenses, aspherical lenses, or digital microlenses.
Its planar arrangement may be any of a stripe arrangement, a square arrangement, a delta arrangement, and a Bayer arrangement. The delta arrangement is particularly desirable because microlenses with strong lens power and high light extraction efficiency can be disposed at high definition. Matrix arrangement of the main pixels allows the light emitting apparatus to have a large number of pixels.
An example in which organic light emitting elements are used together with an optical system is a head mount display.
The light emitting element may include a microlens. If the light emitting element includes a microlens, the light emitting apparatus may include a second light emitting element in which the distance between the central axis of the emission area and the central axis of the microlens is larger than that of the first light emitting element in a cross section perpendicular to the substrate principal surface. The second light emitting element may have an emission area larger than that of the first light emitting element.
The first light emitting element may have a first electrode larger than that of the second light emitting element. The electrode is not too much large with respect to the emission area.
The light emitting apparatus in
The ends of the lower electrode 101 are in contact and covered with the insulating layer 107. An area of the lower electrode 101 not in contact with the insulating layer 107 may be in contact with the functional layer 102. The area where the lower electrode 101 and the functional layer 102 are in contact with each other is an emission area 108a that emits light by application of an electric field to the between the lower electrode 101 and the upper electrode 103.
The emission area 108a may be identified by observing light emission at application of an electric field from the same direction as in
In
The second light emitting element has a configuration similar to that of the first light emitting element. The distance between the middle point of the emission area 108b and the apex of the microlens 106 of the second light emitting element in the direction parallel to the principal surface of the substrate 100 is larger than the distance between the middle point of the emission area 108a and the apex of the microlens 106 of the first light emitting element. In other words, assuming that the microlens 106 of the first light emitting element is in the normal position, the microlens 106 of the second light emitting element is deviated therefrom.
If the microlens 106 is a convex lens, the apex of the microlens 106 is farthest from the principal surface of the substrate 100 in a plane perpendicular to the principal surface. If the microlens 106 is a concave lens, the apex of the microlens 106 is closest to the principal surface of the substrate 100 in a cross section perpendicular to the principal surface. In other words, the apex of the lens is the center of the lens in a cross section parallel to the principal surface of the substrate 100.
The emission area 108b of the second light emitting element is larger than the emission area 108a of the first light emitting element. In other words, the emission area 108b in
The radiation angle of light passing through the microlens 106 changes at the individual positions of point light sources in the emission area 108b as the emission area 108b is large. In other words, the range of the panel radiation angle is wide. The increase in the emission area 108b of the second light emitting element allows the display quality to be stabilized regardless of the user’s gaze position.
In this embodiment, two sides of the hexagon of the emission area 108a are arranged on the inner side of the hexagon than those of the emission area 108b. However, at least one side of a polygon may be disposed on the inner side of the polygon than that of the emission area 108b of the second light emitting element.
Since all the light from the emission area 108b is bent in one angular direction, as shown in
Thus, increasing the emission area 108b of the second light emitting element as in
Many display apparatuses that use light directed in oblique directions with respect to the display surface in the peripheral area of the display apparatus include a display and an optical system, in which the user views the display through the optical system. With this configuration of the display apparatus, the first light emitting element capable of concentrating light to the front is often disposed in the panel center area. This is because, the luminance of the display apparatus is set for the value of the panel center. Not emitting unused light has the following advantages. For example, unused light entering an optical system 20 in
This embodiment shows a light emitting apparatus including micro lenses as an example. Any small emission area that is less responsible for the light emission of the display apparatus may be used with or without an optical member such as microlenses.
For example, a light emitting apparatus includes a first emission area and a second emission area surrounding the first emission area, and a light emitting element in the second emission area may be required to have wide radiation angle characteristics for the light emission of the light emitting apparatus. In this case, the emission area of the light emitting element in the second emission area may be large.
Since the second emission area surrounds the first emission area, the second emission area includes an area outside the first emission area in the display apparatus. In the case where a plurality of light emitting elements is disposed on the substrate, a light emitting element closer to the end of the substrate than one light emitting element is referred to as an outside light emitting element. The end of the substrate refers to an end of the substrate closest to the one light emitting element.
This embodiment allows the range of the radiation angle of the second light emitting element to be increased, providing good display quality regardless of the user’s gaze position.
In this embodiment, a first light emitting element includes the emission area 108a, a second light emitting element includes the emission area 108c, a third light emitting element includes the emission area 108d, and a fourth light emitting element includes the emission area 108e.
For example, in
Thus, the deviation of the microlens 106 may be increased continuously from the central portion A′ to the peripheral portion A of the display area.
The amount of change in the shift length may be increased with a decreasing distance to the peripheral portion A. In other words, the difference between the shift length in the emission area 108e and the shift length in the emission area 108d is larger than the difference between the shift length in the emission area 108d and the shift length in the emission area 108c. The shift length at the peripheral portion A does not have to be 0. In other words, the center of the lens 106 does not have to be disposed at the center of the emission area.
The amount of change in the shift length may be decreased with a decreasing distance to the peripheral portion A. In other words, the difference between the shift length in the emission area 108e and the shift length in the emission area 108d is smaller than the difference between the shift length in the emission area 108d and the shift length in the emission area 108c. The shift length at the peripheral portion A does not have to be 0. The shift length is larger in the emission area 108e. In other words, the center of the lens 106 does not have to be disposed at the center of the emission area.
The continuous or stepwise increase in emission area allows the light emitting apparatus to have high display quality.
The planar arrangement of the subpixels may be any of a stripe arrangement, a square arrangement, a delta arrangement, and a Bayer arrangement. Matrix arrangement of the main pixels provides a high pixel count display apparatus.
The color filters 109a to 109c are also deviated from the center of the emission areas 108b as the microlenses 106 are. The color filter 109b may be disposed on the line connecting the apex B of the microlens 106 and an end B′ of the emission area adjacent to the first light emitting element.
The color filters 109b is on the line connecting an end C of the microlens 106 and an end C′ of the emission area 108b. At least two kinds of color filter may be disposed on the line connecting the apex B of the microlens 106 directly above the emission area 108b and the emission area next to the emission area 108b. This is for the purpose of preventing the light emitted from the next emission area from passing through an unintended microlens.
This allows the light emitted from the emission area 108b to pass through the color filter 109b and to be refracted in an oblique direction by the microlens 106 and prevents the light from passing through the color filters 109a and 109c of the other subpixels, thereby improving the chromatic purity.
Light is emitted at an angle of θ1 from the emission area 108 and is bent at an angle of θ2 at a point A of the microlens 106. Let α be the gradient of the microlens 106 to the tangent at point A. Eq. 1 holds according to Snell’s law. In the drawing, α + θ1 is expressed as β.
Solving Eq. 1 for θ1 gives Eq. 2.
The size X of an emission area is expresses as Eq. 3,
where Xshift is the shift length of the apex of the microlens 106 from the center of the emission area 108, and L is the distance from the emission area 108 to the microlens 106.
The size X of the emission area 108 is given by Eq. 4 from Eq. 2 and Eq. 3.
The relationship between the angle θ1 of the light emitted from the emission area 108 and the shift amount Xshift of the apex of the microlens 106 from the center of the emission area 108 is expressed as Eq. 5.
Table 1 shows the calculations of the length of shift of the apex of the microlens 106 from the center of the emission area 108 and the aperture ratio of the emission area 108 in a wave-optics simulation. However, actually, the protective layer 104, the color filters 109, and other members are present between the microlens 106 and the emission area 108, which can cause error.
In this specification, the substrate 100 may be made of any material that can support the lower electrode 101, the functional layer 102, and the upper electrode 103. For example, glass, plastic, or silicone is preferable. The plastic may have flexibility. Example materials for the flexible substrate include resin and organic materials, specifically, a polyimide resin, a polyacrylic resin, and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) may be employed. The substrate 100 may have switching devices, such as transistors, wiring lines, and an interlayer insulating film (not shown) thereon.
The lower electrode 101 may be made of a metal material with a visible light reflectance of 50% or more. Specific examples include aluminum (Al), silver (Ag), or other metal, and alloys of such metal and silicon (Si), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), neodymium (Nd), or titanium (Ti). The reflecting electrode may have a barrier layer on the light-exiting surface. Examples of a material for the barrier layer include metal, such as Ti, tungsten (W), molybdenum (Mo), and gold (Au) and alloys thereof, and transparent conductive oxides, such as indium tin oxide (ITO) and indium zinc oxide (IZO). The lower electrode 101 may be a positive electrode. In this case, the upper electrode 103 may be a negative electrode. If the lower electrode 101 is a negative electrode, the upper electrode 103 may be a positive electrode.
In the above embodiments, the lower electrode 101 is a reflecting electrode and the upper electrode 103 is a light extracting electrode. Instead, the lower electrode may be a light extracting electrode. If the lower electrode is a light extracting electrode, the lower electrode has light transmittance as the upper electrode described below. Whether the electrode is a lower electrode or an upper electrode is defined by the distance from the substrate. An electrode closer to the substrate 100 including transistors for controlling light emission is the lower electrode. Insulating Layer
The insulating layer 107 is disposed so as to cover the end of the lower electrode 101 and has an opening so as to expose part of the lower electrode 101. The opening may be used as the emission area 108. The insulating layer 107 is made of an inorganic material, such as silicon nitride (SiN), silicon oxynitride (SiON), or silicon oxide (SiO). The insulating layer is also referred to as a pixel separation film or a bank.
The insulating layer 107 may be formed using a sputtering method, a chemical vapor deposition method (CVD method), or another known method. The insulating layer 107 may also be formed of an organic material, such as an acrylic resin or a polyimide resin.
The functional layer 102 includes a light emitting layer and is disposed on the lower electrode 101. The functional layer 102 can be formed using an evaporation method, a spin coat method, or another known method.
The functional layer 102 may include a plurality of layers, or a laminate formed of a plurality of layers. Examples of the plurality of layers include a hole-injection layer, a hole transport layer, an electron block layer, a light emitting layer, a hole block layer, an electron transport layer, and an electron-injection layer. Another layer, such as a charge generation layer or an electron block layer, may be disposed therebetween.
A hole injected from the positive electrode and an electron injected from the negative electrode are bonded again in the light emitting layer to emit light. The functional layer may be either an organic layer or an inorganic layer.
The light emitting layer may be have multiple layers or a single layer. In the case of the multiple light emitting layers, any of the light emitting layers can contain a red-light emitting material, a green-light emitting material, and a blue-light emitting material, allowing forming white light by mixing the color lights. Some of the organic layers may contain light-emitting materials with complementary relation, such as a blue- light emitting material and a yellow-light emitting material.
The light-emitting material may be a material made of an organic compound or a material including quantum dots. If an organic compound is used, the light emitting layer may contain a first material and a second material. The first material is a main light emitting material, which may also be referred to as dopant or guest. The second material is a material with a ratio by weight higher than that of the first material in the light emitting layer, which may also be referred to as host. Examples of the first material include a material with a Fluoranthene skeleton, a material with a pyrene skeleton, a material with a chrysene skeleton, and a material with an anthracene skeleton. The material with the anthracene skeleton has an anthracene structure and may also be referred to as “anthracene derivative”.
The functional layer 102 may be shared by a plurality of pixels. In this case, the light emitting apparatus includes a plurality of lower electrodes and one functional layer. However, this is illustrative only. The whole or part of the functional layer 102 may be patterned for each pixel.
The upper electrode 103 is disposed above the functional layer 102 and has light transmittance. The upper electrode 103 may be a semitransmissive material having the property of transmitting part of light that has reached the surface and reflecting the other part (that is, semitransmissive reflectivity). Examples of a material for the upper electrode 103 include a transparent material, such as transparent conductive oxide, and a semitransmissive material including simple metal, such as aluminum, silver, and gold, alkali metal, such as lithium or cesium, alkali earth metal, such as magnesium, calcium, or barium, and alloy materials containing such metal materials.
The semitransmissive material may be preferably an alloy that contains magnesium or silver as the main component. The upper electrode 103, if having preferable transmittance, may have a laminate structure of the above materials. The upper electrode 103 may be disposed across a plurality of pixels.
Although the above embodiments are of a case in which the upper electrode 103 is a light extracting electrode, the upper electrode 103 may be a reflecting electrode. In this case, the upper electrode has reflectivity, as described for the lower electrode 101, and may be made of the material illustrated as the material for the lower electrode 101.
The negative electrode may be, but not limited to, a top emission element including an oxide conductive layer, such as ITO, or a bottom emission element including a reflecting electrode, such as aluminum (Al). A more preferable method for forming the negative electrode may be, but not limited to, a direct-current or alternate-current sputtering method, which allows for preferable film coverage, facilitating decreasing the resistance. Protective Layer
The protective layer 104 is disposed to cover the light emitting elements and has light transmittance. The protective layer 104 preferably contains an inorganic material having low permeability to external oxygen and moisture. Specific examples include silicon nitride (for example, SiN), silicon oxynitride (for example, SiON), silicon oxide (SiOx), aluminum oxide (for example, Al2O3), and titanium oxide (for example, TiO2). The inorganic materials, SiN, SiON, and Al2O3, are preferable in terms of protection performance. The protective layer 104 may be formed using a chemical vapor deposition method (CVD method), an atomic layer deposition method (ALD method), or a sputtering method. The protective layer 104 may have any single layer structure or laminate structure in which the above materials and the forming methods are combined having sufficient moisture block performance. For example, the protective layer 104 may have a laminate structure in which a layer formed using the ALD method and a layer formed using the sputtering method are laminated. The protective layer 104 may include a layer formed using the CVD method, a layer using the ALD method, and a layer formed using the CVD method in this order. The protective layer may be disposed across a plurality of pixels.
The planarizing layer 105 is disposed on the protective layer 104. The planarizing layer 105 may be made of any inorganic material or organic material having light transmittance. The planarizing layer 105 is a layer for reducing surface irregularity of the protective layer 104. The planarizing layer 105 may be omitted if the surface irregularities of the protective layer 104 is small, or the protective layer 104 itself is planarized by grinding
The planarizing layer 105 may have a lower refractive index than that of the protective layer 104. Specifically, the planarizing layer 105 may have a refractive index lower than that of the protective layer 104 and higher than 1.5. The refractive index may be from 1.5 to 1.8 (both inclusive) or from 1.5 to 1.6 (both inclusive).
Any planarizing layer disposed between the protective layer 104 and another member can be referred to as “planarizing layer”. Specific examples include a polyvinyl carbazole resin, a polycarbonate resin, a polyester resin, an acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) resin, an acrylate resin, a polyimide resin, a phenol resin, an epoxy resin, a silicon resin, and a urea resin.
The optical member 106 is disposed on the planarizing layer 105. The optical member 106 may be a lens, specifically, microlenses. The microlenses may be small-diameter lenses. The microlenses can be formed using an exposure process or a developing process by means of a reflow method, an area coverage modulation method, an etch back method, or the like. Specifically, a film (a photoresist film) made of a material for microlenses is formed and is exposed to light and developed using a mask with a continuous tone change. Examples of the mask include a gray mask and an area coverage modulation mask made of a light shielding film with a resolution lower than or equal to the resolution of the exposure device and capable of light irradiation having continuous tones on an imaging plane by changing the dot density distribution.
The lens shape can be adjusted by performing etch back on the microlenses formed using the exposure and developing processes.
Another method for forming microlenses uses surface tension by patterning and reflowing resin and melting and solidifying the resin. If an organic layer is used as the functional layer 102, the reflow process is performed at a predetermined temperature or lower, for example, 120° C. or lower.
The microlenses 106 may be not only spherical microlenses but also aspherical microlenses, aspherical asymmetric microlens, or digital microlenses.
A color filter may be provided over the protective layer 104. For example, a color filter formed in consideration of the size of the light emitting elements may be provided on another substrate and may be bonded to the substrate provided with the light emitting elements, or alternatively, the color filter may be patterned on the protective layer 104 using a photolithography technique. The color filters may be composed of a polymeric material. A typical color filter includes filters that allows red, green, and blue light to pass through. In other words, the color filter includes two or more color filters, of which a first color filter and a second color filter allow light of different wavelengths to pass through. The color filter may further include a third color filter that allows light of a different wavelength from those of the first color filter and the second color filter to pass through.
The planarizing layer 105 may be provided on or under the color filter, if provided. The materials may be the same or differ. Specific examples of the material include a polyvinyl carbazole resin, a polycarbonate resin, a polyester resin, an acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) resin, an acrylate resin, a polyimide resin, a phenol resin, an epoxy resin, a silicon resin, and a urea resin.
A counter substrate may be provided on the above component. The counter substrate is disposed at a position opposite to the above-described substrate and is therefore referred to as “counter substrate”. The material for the counter substrate may be the same as that of the above-described substrate. If the above-described substrate is a first substrate, the counter substrate may be referred to as a second substrate.
The light emitting apparatus in the above embodiments may be an organic light emitting apparatus in which the functional layer is an organic compound layer. Drive Circuit
The light emitting apparatus may include a drive circuit. The drive circuit may be of an active matrix type that controls the light emissions of the first light emitting element and the second light emitting element independently. The active matrix circuit may be a voltage programing circuit or a current programing circuit. The drive circuit includes a pixel circuit for each pixel. The pixel circuit may include a light emitting element, a transistor that controls the emission luminance of the light emitting element, a transistor that controls the emission timing, a capacitor that holds the gate voltage of the transistor that controls the emission luminance, and a transistor for connecting to a ground (GND) without passing through the light emitting element.
The magnitude of the drive current may be determined according to the size of the emission area. Specifically, in causing the first light emitting element and the second light emitting element to emit light at the same luminance, the current for the first light emitting element may be smaller than the current for the second light emitting element. This is because the emission area of the first light emitting element is small, so that required current may be small.
The light emitting apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure can be used as a component of a display apparatus or an illuminating apparatus. Other applications include an exposing source for an electrophotographic image forming apparatus, a backlight of a liquid-crystal display apparatus, and a light emitting apparatus including a color filter for a white light source.
The display apparatus may be an image information processing apparatus that includes an image input unit that receives image information from an area charge-coupled device (CCD), a linear CCD, a memory card, or the like and an information processing unit for processing the input information and that displays the input image on a display.
The display of an image pickup apparatus or an ink-jet printer may include a touch panel function. A drive method for the touch panel function may be, but is not limited to, of an infrared type, a capacitive type, a resistive type, or an electromagnetic induction type. The display apparatus may be used for the display of a multifunction printer.
Next, the display apparatus according to this embodiment will be described with reference to the drawings.
The display apparatus according to this embodiment may include red, green, and blue color filters. The color filters may be arranged in a delta arrangement or a stripe arrangement of red, green, and blue.
The display apparatus according to this embodiment may be used for the display of a mobile terminal. In this case, the display apparatus may include both a display function and an operation function. Examples of the mobile terminal include mobile phones, such as a smartphone, a tablet, and a head mount display. If used in the display apparatus, the light emitting apparatus may be used together with a magnifying optical system.
The display apparatus according to this embodiment may be used for the display of an image pickup apparatus including an optical unit including a plurality of lenses and an image sensor that receives light passing through the optical unit. The image pickup apparatus may include a display that displays information that the image sensor captures. The display may be exposed out of the image pickup apparatus or disposed in the finder. The image pickup apparatus may be a digital camera or a digital video camera.
The information should be displayed as fast as possible because the best timing for image capturing is short. Accordingly, a display apparatus including the organic light emitting apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure may be used. This is because the organic light emitting element has a fast response speed. The display apparatus including the organic light emitting element can be used more suitably for apparatuses that require high display speed than liquid crystal display apparatuses.
The image pickup apparatus 1100 includes an optical unit (not shown). The optical unit includes a plurality of lenses and forms an image on an image sensor housed in the casing 1104. Adjusting the relative positions of the multiple lenses allows adjustment of the focus. This operation can be performed automatically. The image pickup apparatus may also be referred to as “photoelectric transducer”. The photoelectric transducer may adopt not a sequential image pickup method but a method of detecting the difference from the previous image and a method of clipping an image from recorded images.
The display apparatus 1300 includes a base 1303 that supports the frame 1301 and the display 1302. The shape of the base 1303 is not limited to the shape shown in
The frame 1301 and the display 1302 may be curved. The radius of curvature may be 5,000 mm or more and 6,000 mm or less.
An example of the illumination system is a room lighting device. The illumination system 1400 may emit any of white, natural white, and blue to red light. The illumination system 1400 may include a dimmer circuit that controls the light. The illumination system 1400 may include the organic light emitting element according to an embodiment of the present disclosure and a power circuit connected thereto. The power circuit converts alternating-current voltage to direct-current voltage. The white light has a color temperature of 4,200 K. The natural white light has a color temperature of 5,000 K. The illumination system 1400 may include color filters.
The illumination system 1400 according to this embodiment may include a heat radiator. The heat radiator releases the heat in the apparatus to the outside. Examples include metal and liquid silicon with high specific heat.
The tail lamp 1501 may include the organic light emitting element according to this embodiment. The tail lamp 1501 may include a protector that protects the organic EL elements. The protector may be made of any transparent material with relatively high strength, preferably, polycarbonate. The polycarbonate may contain a furandicarboxylic acid derivative, an acrylonitrile derivative, or the like.
The automobile 1500 may include a body 1503 and windows 1502 mounted thereto. The windows 1502, if not a window for checking the front and back of the automobile 1500, may include a transparent display. The transparent display may include the organic light emitting element according to this embodiment. In this case, the components of the organic light emitting element, such as electrodes, are made of transparent materials.
The movable object according to this embodiment may be a ship, an aircraft, a drone, or the like. The movable object may include a body and a lighting fixture mounted on the body. The lighting fixture may emit light for indicating the position of the body. The lighting fixture includes the organic light emitting element according to this embodiment.
Referring to
The pair of glasses 1600 further includes a control unit 1603. The control unit 1603 functions as a power source for supplying electricity to the image pickup apparatus 1602 and the display apparatus according to each embodiment. The control unit 1603 controls the operation of the image pickup apparatus 1602 and the display apparatus. The lens 1601 is provided with an optical system for collecting light to the image pickup apparatus 1602.
The gaze of the user to the displayed image is detected from the image of the eyeball using infrared light. The gaze detection using an image of the eyeball may use any known technique. An example is an eye-gaze tracking method based on Purkinje images obtained by the reflection of illuminated light on the cornea.
More specifically, a gaze tracking process based on pupil center corneal reflection is performed. The gaze of the user is detected by calculating a gaze vector indicating the orientation (rotation angle) of the eyeball on the basis the image of the pupil contained in the image of the eyeball and Purkinje images using pupil center corneal reflection.
A display apparatus according to an embodiment of the present disclosure may include an image pickup apparatus including a light receiving element and may control an image displayed on the display apparatus on the basis of user’s gaze information provided from the image pickup apparatus.
Specifically, the display apparatus determines a first view area that the user gazes and a second view area other than the first view area on the basis of the gaze information. The first view area and the second view area may be determined by the control unit of the display apparatus or may be received from an external control unit. The display resolution of the first view area in the display area of the display apparatus may be set higher than the display resolution of the second view area. In other words, the resolution of the second view area may be set lower than the resolution of the first view area.
The display area may include a first display area and a second display area different from the first display area. A higher priority area may be determined from the first display area and the second display area on the basis of the gaze information. The first view area and the second view area may be determined by the control unit of the display apparatus or may be received from an external control unit. The resolution of a higher priority area may be set higher than the resolution of the area other than the higher priority area. In other words, the resolution of the lower priority area may be set low.
The determination of the first view area and the higher priority area may use artificial intelligence (AI). The AI may be a model configured to estimate the angle of the gaze and the distance to the object of the gaze from an image of the eyeball using the image of the eyeball and the direction in which the eyeball in the image gazes actually. The AI program may be installed in the display apparatus, the image pickup apparatus, or an external apparatus. If the AI program is installed in an external apparatus, the AI program is sent to the display apparatus via communication.
Display control based on visual recognition allows application to smartglasses that further includes an image pickup apparatus that captures an external image. Smartglasses can display captured external information in real time.
Thus, the use of an apparatus including the organic light emitting element according to this embodiment allows stable display with high image quality even for long time display.
The present disclosure provides a light emitting apparatus capable of providing stable display quality regardless of the user’s gaze position even with low power consumption using a lens.
While the present disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2020-161441 | Sep 2020 | JP | national |
This application is a Continuation of International Patent Application No. PCT/JP2021/034046, filed Sep. 16, 2021, which claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2020-161441, filed Sep. 25, 2020, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2021/034046 | Sep 2021 | WO |
Child | 18182179 | US |