1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a light emitting diode array, and relates more particularly to a light emitting diode array for a liquid crystal display.
2. Description of the Related Art
Cold cathode fluorescent lamps have traditionally been used as the light sources of liquid crystal displays. Due to their inclusion of mercury, the cold cathode fluorescent lamps are known to cause environmental pollution. In addition, cold cathode fluorescent lamps have issues of slow response rate and poor color reproducibility, and limit the reduction of weight and volume of liquid crystal displays. Moreover, cold cathode fluorescent lamps need high activation and operating voltage, and the light sources in the backlight modules of liquid crystal displays consume most of the display power. Therefore, as the power usage becomes strictly limited, cold cathode fluorescent lamps have gradually been replaced by light emitting diodes.
Compared to cold cathode fluorescent lamps, light emitting diodes are environmentally friendly and have shorter response times in the range of several nanoseconds so that they can transmit video signals more efficiently. In addition, light emitting diodes can be driven using pulse signals and have total or near-total color reproducibility. Moreover, the light emission of red, green and blue light emitting diodes can be adjusted for the change of luminosity and color temperature. Light emitting diodes have also an advantage of reduction of the weight and volume of a crystal liquid display. Therefore, light emitting diodes are progressively adopted as the light source of the backlight module of a liquid crystal display.
Light emitting diodes are droved by electric current, and their brightness is proportional to the forward current flowing thereto. Two methods can be used to drive light emitting diodes.
In the first method, light emitting diodes are driven based on their V-I characteristic curve. Generally, a power supply and a rectifiable resistor are used to provide light emitting diodes with desired voltage. However, the method has some drawbacks. For example, the variation of the forward voltage changes the current flowing to light emitting diodes.
Assuming that voltage is 3.6 volts and current is 20 mini-amps, the current may vary 30% due to the temperature or manufacturing variations causing specific change in voltage when the voltage is 4.0 volts. Greater changes in forward voltage cause greater change in forward current. Further, voltage drop and power consumption may waste power and reduce the life span of light emitting diodes.
In the second method, light emitting diodes can be driven using constant current. Using constant current can avoid the current change caused by the change in forward voltage, and therefore, the brightness of light emitting diodes can be maintained. Constant current can be supplied by adjusting the voltage of a current detection resistor device, and the output voltage of a power supply need not be adjusted. The power supply voltage and the resistance of the current detection resistor device determine the current supplied to light emitting diodes. When multiple light emitting diodes are driven, the constant current can be obtained by serially connecting the multiple light emitting diodes.
Additionally, the backlight modules of most liquid crystal displays need the adjustment of brightness thereof. Two methods, an analogous method and a pulse-width modulation method, can be applied for this purpose. It is well known that the analogous method can increase brightness by 50 percent by increasing current flowing to light emitting diodes by 50 percent. However, the analogous method has drawbacks in that light emitting diodes may exhibit color shift and need analogous control signals. Thus, this method is rarely adopted.
The pulse-width modulation method is more popular and is a preferred method for the brightness adjustment of light emitting diodes. The pulse-width modulation method becomes more popular as the use of digital control logic circuits increases. The pulse-width modulation method is simple and can be adopted to be similar to the analogous method using digital control logic circuits.
If the time period during which the circuit is turned on is reduced, light emitting diodes become dimmer. As shown in
The main concern for the use of the pulse-width modulation method for adjustment of brightness is that the frequency of the pulse-width modulation has to be greater than 100 MHz to ensure that the effects of the pulse-width modulation method are invisible to users.
As mentioned above, many publications have provided different pulse-width modulation technologies to control the brightness of the light emitting diodes used in a backlight module for increasing the light output efficiency and maintaining the illumination uniformity of the backlight module. In addition, some methods, as disclosed in U.S. Patent Publication No. 2007/0,091,057 and European Patent Publication No. 1,780,701, can lower temperature and reduce energy consumption of a backlight module.
Further, Chinese Patent Publication No. 101,013,559 discloses a circuit for controlling the brightness of light emitting diodes. The method drives at least one pair of light emitting diodes using pulse-width modulated signals independently without affecting the brightness of other light emitting diodes.
However, the pulse-width modulation method requires pulse-width modulation integrated circuits to adjust brightness of light emitting diodes, and as the number of light emitting diodes increases, the number of the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits also increases, resulting in high manufacturing cost and complex design of driving system of a backlight module.
According to the discussion in the Description of the Related Art and to meet the requirements of the industry, the present invention provides a liquid crystal display including a light emitting diode array to solve the above-mentioned issues.
One objective of the present invention is to provide a light emitting diode array configured for a liquid crystal display. The light emitting diode array comprises a plurality of first light emitting diodes driven by pulse-width modulated signals and a plurality of second light emitting diodes driven by constant direct current, wherein at least one light emitting diode is included in an adjusting light module to adjust the brightness of the liquid crystal display, and at least one second light emitting diode is included in a constant light module to constantly emit light for the liquid crystal display. The adjusting light module and the constant light module are arranged in an interlacing manner.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a light emitting diode driving system configured for a liquid crystal display. The light emitting diode driving system comprises a plurality of channels of adjusting light area, a plurality of channels of constant light area, a plurality of pulse-width modulation integrated circuits, and a constant current source. Each channel of adjusting light area includes a plurality of serially connected adjusting light modules and each channel of constant light area includes a plurality of serially connected constant light modules, wherein the plurality of adjusting light modules and the plurality of constant light modules are arranged in an alternating manner. Each pulse-width modulation integrated circuit is configured to supply pulse-width modulated signals to a portion of said one or more channels of adjusting light area so as to adjust the brightness of said first light emitting diode. The constant current source supplies stable current to the plurality of channels of constant light area for maintaining constant brightness of the at least one second light emitting diode.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a liquid crystal display, which comprises a liquid crystal panel and the above-mentioned light emitting diode driving system, wherein the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits supply pulse-width modulated signals in response to brightness adjustment signals to adjust the brightness of the first light emitting diode so as to achieve uniform brightness of the liquid crystal panel.
To better understand the above-described objectives, characteristics and advantages of the present invention, embodiments, with reference to the drawings, are provided for detailed explanations.
The invention will be described according to the appended drawings in which:
One aspect that the present invention discusses is a light emitting diode array. In order to thoroughly understand the present invention, detailed descriptions of method steps and components are provided below. Clearly, the implementations of the present invention are not limited to the specific details that are familiar to persons skilled in the art related to a light emitting diode array. In addition, components or method steps which are well known are not described in detail. A preferred embodiment of the present invention is described in detail. However, in addition to the preferred detailed description, other embodiments can be broadly employed, and the scope of the present invention is not limited by any of the embodiments, but should be defined in accordance with the following claims and their equivalent.
In order to adjust and maintain the basic brightness of a liquid crystal display, the present invention proposes a light emitting diode array for a liquid crystal display 100 as shown in
In order to adjust the illumination uniformity of a liquid crystal display, the adjusting light module 140 and the constant light module 150 are arranged in an interlacing manner as shown in
The light emitting diode array can further comprise one or more pulse-width modulation integrated circuits 160, wherein each pulse-width modulation integrated circuit 160 is configured to supply pulse-width modulated signals to one or more channels of adjusting light area 120, and each adjusting light area 120 comprises one or more serially connected adjusting light modules 140. If one light emitting diode in serially connected adjusting light modules 140 fails, the design of the present invention can locally blur a bright band.
In addition to the embodiment of
Referring to
Each channel of constant light modules 130 comprises a plurality of serially connected constant light modules 150, each of which comprises at least one second light emitting diode 152, wherein the constant current source 170 constantly supplies current to the plurality of channels of constant light module 130 so as to maintain constant brightness of the at least one second light emitting diode 152. Furthermore, the plurality of adjusting light modules 140 and the plurality of constant light modules 150 can be alternately arranged for different light adjustment purposes.
As mentioned above, if the backlight module of a liquid crystal display uses a plurality of serially connected light emitting diodes, a driving circuit is required to supply the light emitting diodes with constant current. Specifically, when a user wishes to adjust brightness and color temperature or make temperature compensation, an adjusting light circuit is required for adjusting brightness. A DC-DC converter usually uses a pulse-width modulation mechanism to control a conductive element. Such a technique may change a loading cycle, namely, the ratio of the on to off time of a transistor, in conjunction with an inductance, which is capable of storing electrical power, so that the output voltage can be fixed within a limited range of input voltage and loading current.
When the switch 13 is turned on, the direct current source Vin supplies current to the light emitting diode array 11 through the inductance L. Simultaneously, the inductance L accumulates energy. When the switch 13 is turned off, the energy accumulated in the inductance L is supplied to the light emitting diode array 11. According to the voltage, which the voltage detection resistor Rs supplies to the light emitting diode array 11, the pulse-width modulation driving device 12 adjusts the duty ratio for the switch 13.
When the switch 13 is turned on, the current supplied by the direct current source Vin flows through the inductance L and the switch 13, and energy is stored in the inductance L. When the switch 13 is turned off, the energy accumulated in the inductance L is supplied with the energy in the direct current source Vin to the light emitting diode array 11 through the diode D. Herein, the smooth capacitor C smoothes the voltage to the light emitting diode array 11, and the smoothed voltage is greater than or equal to the input voltage Vin.
In such a light emitting diode driving circuit, adjusting the resistance of the voltage detection resistor Rs to change the voltage across the voltage detection resistor Rs can adjust the duty ratio for the switch 13 so as to change the brightness of the light emitting diodes.
U.S. Patent Publication No. 2008/0,002,102 provides a liquid crystal display backlight driving system with light emitting diodes. The system includes a switch mode power supply, which includes an AC-DC converter for converting an externally inputted AC voltage to a DC voltage and DC-DC converters for converting the DC voltage to a predetermined magnitude of DC voltage for driving LED arrays.
Moreover, Japanese Patent Publication No. JP2007013183 provides an LED drive circuit for a backlight with constant current control function. A PWM controls the on/off of the switch, and outputs a switching pulse to a MOSFET according to a duty ratio determined by prearranged internal reference voltage and detection voltage detected by the voltage detecting resistor using a comparator.
Referring to
When the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits 160 receive brightness adjustment signals 190, the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits 160 supplies pulse-width modulated signals to a portion of the plurality of channels of adjusting light module 120 to adjust the brightness of the at least one first light emitting diode 142. For example, when a user wishes to adjust the brightness of a liquid crystal display, the liquid crystal display sends a brightness control signal to the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits.
When the pulse-width modulation integrated circuits 160 adjust the brightness of the at least one first light emitting diode 142, the constant current source 170 supplies stable current to the at least one second light emitting diode 152 so that the plurality of channels of constant light module 130 maintain constant brightness. Therefore, the ratio of the number of the first light emitting diodes 142 to the number of the second light emitting diodes 152 determines the lowest brightness of the liquid crystal display 100 while adjusting.
For example, when the ratio of the first light emitting diodes 142 to the second light emitting diodes 152 is 1:1 and if the first light emitting diodes 142 are turned off using the pulse-width modulation integrated circuit 160, the remaining second light emitting diodes 152 emit light and the brightness level of the liquid crystal display 100 is reduced to 50%.
Furthermore, the first light emitting diodes 142 and the second light emitting diodes 152 illuminate the liquid crystal panel 180. The adjusting light module 140 and the constant light module 150 can be arranged in alternating manner for uniform illumination of the liquid crystal panel 180.
Generally, the liquid crystal display 100 can include an edge-type backlight module or a direct-type backlight module. The former has a light source disposed beside an edge of a light guide for illuminating the display panel of the liquid crystal display 100, while the later has a surface light source having a size similar to that of the display panel and disposed beneath the display panel for illuminating the display panel. The light emitting diode array preferably is for a direct-type liquid crystal display.
The above-described embodiments of the present invention are intended to be illustrative only. Numerous alternative embodiments may be devised by persons skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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097141534 | Oct 2008 | TW | national |