1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a liquid crystal display device and a driving method for the same, and more particularly relates to a liquid crystal display device suitably used for display of moving images and a driving method for the same.
2. Description of the Related Art:
In recent years, liquid crystal display devices (LCDs) have increasingly come into widespread use. Among various types of LCDs, mainstream has been a TN LCD in which a nematic liquid crystal material having positive dielectric anisotropy is twisted. The TN LCD however has a problem of being large in viewing angle dependence that results from the alignment of liquid crystal molecules.
To improve the viewing angle dependence, alignment- divided vertical alignment LCDs have been developed, and use of these LCDs is expanding. For example, Japanese Patent Gazette No. 2947350 (Literature 1) discloses an MVA LCD as one of the alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs. The MVA LCD, which includes a vertically aligned liquid crystal layer placed between a pair of electrodes to present display in the normally black (NB) mode, is provided with domain regulating means (for example, slits or protrusions) to enable liquid crystal molecules in each pixel to fall (tilt) in a plurality of different directions during application of a voltage.
Recently, needs for displaying moving image information have rapidly increased, not only in LCD TVs, but also in PC monitors and portable terminal equipment (such as mobile phones and PDAs). To display moving images with high definition on LCDs, it is necessary to shorten the response time (increase the response speed) of the liquid crystal layer, so that a predetermined grayscale level can be reached within one vertical scanning period (typically, one frame).
As for the MVA LCD, Literature 1 mentioned above, for example, discloses that the black-to-white response time can be shortened to 10 msec or less. Literature 1 also describes that regions different in the distance between protrusions are provided in each pixel to give regions different in response speed, to thereby attain improvement in apparent response speed without reducing the aperture ratio (see FIGS. 107 to 110 of Literature 1, for example).
As a driving method that can improve the response characteristic of LCDs, known is a method in which a voltage higher than a voltage (grayscale voltage) corresponding to the grayscale level to be displayed (this voltage is called an “overshoot (OS) voltage”) is applied (this method is called “overshoot (OS) driving”). With application of an OS voltage, the response characteristic in grayscale display can be improved. The “overshoot voltage” and the “overshoot driving” are also called an “overdrive voltage” and “overdrive driving”, respectively, in some cases.
For example, Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2000-231091 (Literature 2) discloses an MVA LCD adopting the OS driving. Literature 2 however describes that an OS voltage should not be applied when a shift is made from the black display state to a high-luminance grayscale display state (see
However, as a result of examinations done by the inventors of the present invention, it has been found that a new problem arises when the OS driving is adopted for alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs such as the MVA LCD described above. This problem will be described with reference to
When no OS driving is adopted, the response speed of the alignment-divided vertical alignment LCD is low. Therefore, as diagrammatically shown in
The present inventors have examined the cause of the above problem in various ways, and found that the above phenomenon is a new problem that has never occurred as long as the OS driving is adopted for conventional TN LCDs, and results from the alignment division done with the alignment regulating means (domain regulating means) placed linearly (in a stripe shape) in each pixel in alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDS.
In view of the above, a main object of the present invention is providing an alignment-divided vertical alignment LCD permitting high-definition moving image display.
The liquid crystal display device of the present invention has a plurality of pixels each having a first electrode, a second electrode facing the first electrode, and a vertically aligned liquid crystal layer placed between the first and second electrodes, the device including: first alignment regulating means in a stripe shape having a first width placed in the first electrode side of the liquid crystal layer; second alignment regulating means in a stripe shape having a second width placed in the second electrode side of the liquid crystal layer;, and liquid crystal regions having a third width defined between the first and second regulating means, wherein the third width is in a range between 2 μm and 14 μm, and the liquid crystal regions include at least one each of a liquid crystal region A in which liquid crystal molecules tilt in a first azimuth direction when at least a predetermined voltage is applied, a liquid crystal region B in which liquid crystal molecules tilt in a second azimuth direction different from the first azimuth direction by 180°, a liquid crystal region C in which liquid crystal molecules tilt in a third azimuth direction different from the first azimuth direction by 90°, and a liquid crystal region D in which liquid crystal molecules tilt in a fourth azimuth direction different from the third azimuth direction by 180°, and the relationship |((a+c)−(b+d))/(a+b+c+d)|<0.25 is satisfied where a, b, c and d are the total areas of the liquid crystal regions A, B, C and D, respectively, in each of the plurality of pixels.
In one embodiment, |((a+c)−(b+d))/(a+b+c+d)|<0.2 is satisfied.
In another embodiment, the third width is 12 μm or less.
In yet another embodiment, the third width is 8 μm or less.
In yet another embodiment, the first alignment regulating means are ribs and the second alignment regulating means are slits formed in the second electrode.
In yet another embodiment, the first width is in a range between 4 μm and 20 μm, and the second width is in a range between 4 μm and 20 μm.
In yet another embodiment, the first electrode is a counter electrode, and the second electrode is a pixel electrode.
In yet another embodiment, the thickness of the liquid crystal layer is less than 3 μm.
In yet another embodiment, the second width/thickness of the liquid crystal layer is 3 or more.
In yet another embodiment, the third width/second width is 1.5 or less.
In yet another embodiment, the device further includes a pair of polarizing plates placed to face each other with the liquid crystal layer therebetween, transmission axes of the pair of polarizing plates are orthogonal to each other, one of the transmission axes extends in a horizontal direction in the display plane, and the first and second alignment regulating means are placed to extend in a direction about 45° from the one of the transmission axes.
The electronic equipment of the present invention includes the liquid crystal display device described above.
In one embodiment, the equipment further includes a circuit for receiving television broadcast.
According to the present invention, an alignment-divided vertical alignment LCD that can present high-definition moving image display when OS driving is adopted is provided. In addition, the alignment-divided vertical alignment LCD of the present invention can suppress occurrence of a difference in display luminance when viewed in right and left slanting directions that may result from the improvement in moving image display performance. The LCD of the present invention is suitably usable as an LCD TV by being provided with a circuit for receiving television broadcast. Also, the LCD of the present invention is suitably applicable to electronic equipment used for display of moving images, such as personal computers and PDAs.
Other features, elements, processes, steps, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the present invention with reference to the attached drawings.
Hereinafter, LCDs of embodiments of the present invention and driving methods for the LCDs will be described with reference to the relevant drawings.
First, basic configurations of alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs of embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to
The LCDs of the embodiments of the present invention include a plurality of pixels each having a first electrode 11, a second electrode 12 facing the first electrode 11, and a vertical alignment liquid crystal layer 13 placed between the first electrode 11 and the second electrode 12. The vertical alignment liquid crystal layer 13 includes liquid crystal molecules having negative dielectric anisotropy that are aligned roughly vertically (for example, at an angle in the range between 87° and 90°) with respect to the plane of the first and second electrodes 11 and 12 during non-voltage application. Typically, this alignment is attained by providing a vertical alignment film (not shown) on each of the surfaces of the first and second electrodes 11 and 12 facing the liquid crystal layer 13. Ribs (protrusions) and the like may be provided as alignment regulating means. In this case, liquid crystal molecules are aligned to roughly vertically with respect to the surfaces of the ribs and the like facing the liquid crystal layer.
First alignment regulating means (21, 31, 41) are provided in the first electrode 11 side of the liquid crystal layer 13, while second alignment regulating means (22, 32, 42) are provided in the second electrode 12 side of the liquid crystal layer 13. In each of liquid crystal regions defined between the first and second alignment regulating means, liquid crystal molecules 13a are under alignment regulating force applied from the first and second alignment regulating means. Once a voltage is applied between the first and second electrodes 11 and 12, the liquid crystal molecules 13a fall (tilt) in the directions shown by the arrows in
The first alignment regulating means and the second alignment regulating means (hereinafter, these may be collectively called “alignment regulating means” in some cases) are placed in a stripe shape in each pixel.
Specifically, an LCD 10A shown in
An LCD 10B shown in
An LCD 10C shown in
As described above, an arbitrary combination of ribs and/or slits can be used as the first and second alignment regulating means. The first and second electrodes 11 and 12 may be electrodes facing each other with the liquid crystal layer 13 therebetween. Typically, one electrode is a counter electrode, and the other is a pixel electrode. Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described taking, as an example, an LCD having a counter electrode as the first electrode 11, a pixel electrode as the second electrode 12, ribs 21 as the first alignment regulating means, and slits 22 formed in the pixel electrode as the second alignment regulating means (that is, an LCD corresponding to the LCD 10A in
The present inventors have found, from examinations in various ways, that the problem discussed above with reference to
First, the basic configuration of the LCD of the embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to
1. Common Components are therefore Denoted by the Same Reference Numerals.
The LCD 100 has a vertically aligned liquid crystal layer 13 between a first substrate (for example, glass substrate) 10a and a second substrate (for example, glass substrate) 10b. A counter electrode 11 is formed on the surface of the first substrate 10a facing the liquid crystal layer 13, and ribs 21 are formed on the counter electrode 11. A vertical alignment film (not shown) is formed covering substantially the entire surface of the counter electrode 11 including the ribs 21 facing the liquid crystal layer 13. The ribs 21 extend in a stripe shape as shown in
Gate bus lines (scanning lines) and source bus lines (signal lines) 51, as well as TFTs (not shown), are formed on the surface of the second substrate lob facing the liquid crystal layer 13, and an interlayer insulating film 52 is formed to cover these components. A pixel electrode 12 is formed on the interlayer insulating film 52. The interlayer insulating film 52, which has a flat surface, is made of a transparent resin film having a thickness in the range between 1.5 μm and 3.5 μm, to thereby enable overlap placement of the pixel electrode 12 with the gate bus lines and/or the source bus lines. This is advantageous in improving the aperture ratio.
Stripe-shaped slits 22 are formed in the pixel electrode. 12, and a vertical alignment film (not shown) is formed covering substantially the entire surface of the pixel electrode 12 including the slits 22. As shown in
A stripe-shaped liquid crystal region 13A having a width W3 is defined between the adjacent stripe-shaped rib 21 and slit 22 extending in parallel with each other. In the liquid crystal region 13A, the alignment direction is regulated with the rib 21 and the slit 22 placed on both sides of the region. Such liquid crystal regions (domains) are formed on the opposite sides of each of the ribs 21 and the slits 22, in which liquid crystal molecules 13a tilt in the directions different by 180° from each other. As shown in
A pair of polarizing plates (not shown) are placed on the outer surfaces of the first and second substrates 10a and 10b so that the transmission axes thereof are roughly orthogonal to each other (in the crossed-Nicols state). If the polarizing plates are placed so that the transmission axes thereof form 45° with the alignment directions of all the four types of liquid crystal layers 13A that are different by 90° from one another, a change in retardation with the liquid crystal regions 13A can be used most efficiently. That is, the polarizing plates should preferably be placed so that the transmission axes thereof form roughly 45° with the directions of extension of the ribs 21 and the slits 22. In display devices in which observation is often moved in a direction horizontal to the display plane, such as TVs, the transmission axis of one of the polarizing plates preferably extends in a horizontal direction in the display plane for suppression of the viewing angle dependence of the display quality.
The MVA LCD 100 having the configuration described above can present display excellent in viewing angle characteristic. When OS driving is adopted for this LCD, however, the phenomenon shown in
A change in luminance distribution in a pixel of the LCD 100 observed in OS driving was measured with a high-speed camera.
Specific cell parameters of the LCD 100 used in the illustrated example are as follows. The thickness d of the liquid crystal layer is 3.9 μm, the inter-rib pitch P is 53 μm, the width W1 of the ribs 21 is 16 μm (including the width of the side faces 4 μm×2), the width W2 of the slits 22 is 10 μm, and the width W3 of the liquid crystal regions 13A is 13.5 μm. The black voltage (V0) is 1.2 V, the white voltage (V255) is 7.1 V, and the voltage (V32) and the OS voltage (OSV32) for grayscale level 32 (transmittance 1.04%) are 2.44 V and 2.67V, respectively, when the γ value is 2.2. The OS voltage (OSV32) was set so that the entire pixel could give the luminance (transmittance) of grayscale level 32 in 16 msec after the black state (V0-applied state).
As is found from
In the LCD 100 described above, the three LC portions different in response speed from one another were provided because the first alignment regulating means (rib 21) and the second alignment regulating means (slit 22) give different degrees of influence on the response speed. If the first and second alignment regulating means give the same degree of influence, there will be provided two LC portions (R1 and R2) high in response speed roughly equally and one LC portion (R3) lower in response speed than the other portions.
Change of the entire transmittance of the pixel portion 100a with time is then described with reference to
Curves 5A-1 and 5A-2 in
As is apparent from
From comparison between
From the above, it has been recognized that the dark belt 92b shown in
Liquid crystal molecules in the first LC portion R1 located near the rib 21 are already in a tilted state under the influence of the side face 21a of the rib 21 when a voltage is applied, and thus the response speed of this portion is high. Once an OS voltage (OSV32), set to ensure the shift of the transmittance of the entire pixel from 0 to 32 in grayscale level within one frame period, is applied, the transmittance of the first LC portion R1 exceeds at least a transmittance value that is obtained when V32 is normally applied (transmittance value represented by the curve of t=500 msec in
In the subsequent frame periods (t>16.7 msec) in which V32 is applied, the transmittance of the first LC portion R1 monotonously decreases to the transmittance value corresponding to V32. On the contrary, the transmittances of the second and third LC portions R2 and R3 monotonously increase to the transmittance value corresponding to V32.
Even when the transmittance of the entire pixel reaches the transmittance value corresponding to V32 within the frame period during which OSV32 is applied, this transmittance includes a component having an excessively high response speed (transmittance component exceeding the transmittance value corresponding to V32). Therefore, when the application of OSV32 is stopped and a predetermined grayscale voltage V32 is applied, the transmittance of the entire pixel temporarily decreases because the component having an excessively high response speed decreases to the predetermined transmittance at a rate higher than the rate at which components having a low response speed (transmittance components of the second and third LC portions R2 and R3) increases. Thereafter, with increase of the components having a low response speed, the transmittance of the entire pixel increases. This explains the details of the change of transmittance with time in the pixel portion shown in
The OS driving is also applied to TN LCDs, but the horn response described above is not observed in TN LCDs. The reason is that, in TN LCDs, the alignment division is attained by regulating the alignment directions of liquid crystal molecules in respective liquid crystal regions (domains) with alignment films rubbed in different directions. Since the alignment regulating force is given to the entire of each liquid crystal region from a planar (two-dimensional) alignment film, no response speed distribution arises in each liquid crystal region. On the contrary, in alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs, the alignment division is made with the linear (one-dimensional) alignment regulating means provided. Therefore, portions having different response speeds are formed depending on, not only the difference in the alignment regulating force of the alignment regulating means, but also the distance from the alignment regulating means.
To find a configuration permitting suppression of the horn response characteristic, that is, the occurrence of the phenomenon that the transmittance has a minimum after application of an OS voltage described above, various MVA LCDs having the basic configuration shown in
As a result, the followings were found. It was confirmed that the response speed increased by reducing the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer as described above with reference to
From
From the results of
Prototypes of 13-inch VGA LCDs were actually fabricated, and subjective evaluation was conducted by 25 persons on the effect of improvement of the response characteristic of the LCD. The results are shown in
In the graphs shown in
As is found from
As described above, the minimum transmittance can be 85% or more by setting the LC region width W3 at about 14 μm or less, or the minimum transmittance can be 90% or more by setting the LC region width W3 at about 12 μm or less. With such a minimum transmittance, the resultant MVA LCD is excellent in moving image display characteristics in which a dark belt is less or hardly recognizable even when OS driving is done.
In the currently available 12 models of MVA LCDs (including PVA LCDs shown in
The reason why the response characteristic is improved by reducing the LC region width W3 will be described with reference to
Herein, the third LC portion R3 is defined as follows to enable quantitative expression of the width of the portion R3. That is, the third LC portion R3 is defined as a portion of the liquid crystal region in which the transmittance reached in one frame after application of an OS voltage (OSV32) with which the state of display of grayscale level 0 (black display state) is shifted to grayscale level 32 is twice or less the transmittance in the black display state. A change in transmittance distribution with time was measured as in
The graph of
As is found from
In the results obtained at 5° C. shown in
As described above, by reducing the LC region width W3, the response characteristic can be improved, and thus the minimum transmittance in horn response (see
It is difficult to fabricate an LCD having an LC region width W3 below 2 μm. Therefore, the LC region width W3 is preferably 2 μm or more, and also, for the same reason, the rib width W1 and the slit width W2 are preferably 4 μm or more.
The OS driving method adopted for the LCD of the invention is not specifically limited, but any known OS driving method may be adopted. Setting of the OS voltage may be made as follows, for example. While the OS voltage is set so that a predetermined transmittance is reached within one vertical, scanning period in the shift of the display grayscale level every 32 levels (for example, from V0 to V32) as described above, the OS voltage to be applied in a shift of the grayscale level by less than 32 levels may be determined by interpolation using OS voltage values determined for the shift every 32 grayscale levels. The OS voltage may be changed according to the grayscale levels before and after the shift. Otherwise, as described in Literature 2 mentioned above, no OS voltage may be applied for a shift between some grayscale levels.
In this embodiment, the OS voltage value with which a predetermined transmittance was reached after one frame period was determined every 32 grayscale levels, and an OS voltage value corresponding to each shift of grayscale levels within each 32 levels was obtained by interpolation using the determined OS voltage values. Using the thus-obtained OS voltages, the MVA LCD of this embodiment having an LC region width W3 of 14 μm or less was driven. As a result, good moving image display was attained.
Next, the aperture ratio and transmittance of the MVA LCD of this embodiment will be described. As is found from
According to the basic configuration of the LCD of the embodiment of the present invention shown in
Moreover, it was clarified from the examinations conducted in relation to the present invention that the MVA LCD of this embodiment could keep its display luminance from lowering despite the reduction of the LC region width W3 from the width conventionally used. This is thanks to an unexpected effect that the transmittance per unit area of a pixel (hereinafter, called the “transmission efficiency”) improves by reducing the LC region width W3 from the conventional width. The transmission efficiency is determined by actually measuring the transmittance of a pixel and dividing the measured value by the aperture ratio. Herein, the transmission efficiency is expressed by a value somewhere between 0 and 1.
The results of transmission efficiency obtained for the LCDs of the embodiment having various cell parameters described above with reference to
As is found from
The reason why the transmission efficiency improves by reducing the LC region width W3 as shown in
From examinations in various ways, it has been found that the effect of stabilizing the alignment (effect of improving the transmission efficiency) obtained by reducing the LC region width W3 is exhibited significantly when the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer is small, for example, as small as less than 3 μm. The reason is considered to be as follows. As the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer is smaller, the action of the tilt electric field from the slit 22 is more intense. However, at the same time, the liquid crystal layer is more influenced by the electric field from gate bus lines and source bus lines placed in the vicinity of the pixel electrode 12, or the electric field from adjacent pixel electrodes. These electric fields act to disturb the alignment of the liquid crystal molecules 13a in the liquid crystal layer 13A. Therefore, it can be said that the alignment stabilizing effect described above is exhibited significantly in the case that the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer is small in which the alignment of the liquid crystal molecules 13a tend to be disturbed.
The LCD exemplified in this embodiment includes the comparatively thick interlayer insulating film 52 covering the gate bus lines and the source bus lines, and the pixel electrode 12 is formed on the interlayer insulating film 52, as shown in
As shown in
On the contrary, as diagrammatically shown in
As is apparent from comparison between
In the embodiment described above, the combination of the rib 21 and the slit 22 was used as the combination of the first and second alignment regulating means. Substantially the same effect can also be obtained by the rib-rib combination and the slit-slit combination. Alternatively, to intensify the alignment regulating force of the slit 22, an electrode having a different potential from the electrode through which the slit 22 is formed (for example, a storage capacitor electrode when the slit is formed through the pixel electrode) may be placed on the lower face of the slit 22 (face opposite to the liquid crystal layer 13).
From the standpoint of the response characteristic, the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer 13 is preferably small (see
The reason why the response characteristic is improved by reducing the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer 13 will be described with reference to
In the graph of
As is found from
As described above, by setting the LC region width W3 at 14 μm or less and the thickness d of the liquid crystal layer at less than 3 μm, occurrence of the problem related to the horn response can be suppressed, and further the response characteristic can be improved.
A prototype of 13-inch VGA LCD was actually fabricated as described above, and the moving image display performance thereof was evaluated. The evaluation results are as follows. As the cell parameters, substantially the same values as those exemplified for the LCD 100 shown in
As is found from
Hereinafter, the specific conditions of the OS driving and the response characteristic for the LCD of the invention and the conventional LCD will be described with reference to Tables 1 to 6 below. Note that Tables 1 to 6 show the results obtained at 5° C.
In each of Tables 1 to 6, the value at the left end (start) indicates the display grayscale level in the initial state, and the values in the upper row (end) indicate the display grayscale levels after the rewrite. Herein, the case that the display grayscale level in the initial state is 0 will be described.
The OS voltage values (herein indicated by the corresponding display grayscale levels) are set as shown in Table 1 for the LCD of the invention and in Table 4 for the conventional LCD. For example, as shown in Table 1, for the shift of display from grayscale level 0 to 32, a voltage value corresponding to grayscale level 94 was applied as the OS voltage. As for grayscale levels that are not shown in Tables 1 and 4, a graph shown in
Tables 2 and 3 show the response times required when no OS driving is done and when OS driving is done, respectively, for the LCD of the invention. Likewise, Tables 5 and 6 show the response times required when no OS driving is done and when OS driving is done, respectively, for the conventional LCD. The response time used in this measurement refers to the time (unit: msec) required for a transmittance to change from 10% to 90% when the change of a predetermined transmittance in each shift in grayscale level is from 0% to 100%.
As shown in Tables 1 and 4, the OS voltage was set every 32 grayscale levels so that a predetermined grayscale level was reached within one frame period. For example, as shown in Table 1 for the LCD of the invention, the OS voltage for the shift of the grayscale level from 0 to 32 (OSV32) was set at V94 (voltage corresponding to grayscale level 94). This indicates that V94 was applied in place of V32 to be applied in the normal driving. For the conventional LCD, as shown in Table 4, the OS voltage for the shift of the grayscale level from 0 to 32 (OSV32) was set at V156 (voltage corresponding to grayscale level 156). The reason why the OS voltage value is higher in the conventional LCD is that the LCD of the invention is more excellent in response characteristic (shorter in response time) as is apparent from comparison between Tables 2 and 5. From these tables, also, it is proved that the configuration described above improves the response characteristic.
As is found from the response time shown in Table 2, in the LCD of the invention, the response time tends to be longer than one frame period (16.7 msec) in display of low grayscale levels when no OS driving is done. With OS driving, however, the response time can be made shorter than one frame period for all the grayscale levels as shown in Table 3. In addition, the problem of horn response does not occur as described above. On the contrary, when OS driving is done for the conventional LCD, the response time is greatly improved as shown in Table 6, but is still longer than one frame period in some cases, and moreover the problem of horn response occurs as described above.
As described above, the LCD of the invention exhibits excellent moving image display characteristics by adopting OS driving. Therefore, with further provision of a circuit for receiving television broadcast, the LCD can be suitably used as an LCD TV permitting high-definition moving image display. To attain the OS driving, known methods may be broadly adopted. A drive circuit adapted to apply an OS voltage higher than a grayscale voltage determined in advance to correspond to a predetermined grayscale level (or possibly apply the grayscale voltage) may further be provided. Otherwise, the OS driving may be executed by software.
In the above embodiment, the present invention was described as adopting OS driving. There is also a case that a voltage is applied in a similar way (for example, the display signal voltage is applied in the order of V0→V94→V32) although no OS driving is adopted. In such a case, also, the effect of the present invention can be obtained.
As described above, the MVA LCD of the embodiment of the present invention, in which the width of the stripe-shaped liquid crystal regions formed between the alignment regulating means (ribs or slits) is 14 μm or less, exhibits excellent moving image display performance. However, it has been found that in the MVA LCD of the embodiment, the difference in luminance observed when the device is viewed in right and left slanting directions is more eminent than in conventional MVA LCDs. This problem will be discussed with reference to
As shown in
As used herein, the “azimuth direction” of tilt of liquid crystal molecules refers to the azimuth in the plane parallel with the substrates, indicating the orientation of a line segment that corresponds to the major axis of a liquid crystal molecule 13a as projected on the substrate 10b (lower substrate as viewed by the viewer), as shown in
By dividing one pixel into the four liquid crystal regions A to D having four azimuth directions different from one another by 90° each as described above, a wide viewing angle characteristic is attained. However, as will be described later, if the total area a+c of the liquid crystal regions A and C is different from the total area b+d of the liquid crystal regions B and D, a difference arises in display luminance when the device is viewed in right and left slanting directions, and this may make the viewer feel strange.
In a grayscale display state, liquid crystal molecules 13a in the liquid crystal regions A and B tilt in azimuth directions different from each other by 180°, as shown in
The display characteristics of a pixel are the sum of the display characteristics of the liquid crystal regions A to D. Therefore, if the total area (a+c) of the liquid crystal regions A and C is different from the total area (b+d) of the liquid crystal regions B and D, a difference arises in display characteristics. In particular, in a normally black mode MVA LCD, a phenomenon called “white floating” is eminent. The “white floating” is a phenomenon that the luminance becomes more intense than the luminance corresponding to a given γ characteristic. This “white floating” differs when the device is viewed in right and left slanting directions. This will be described with reference to
As is found from
In consideration of the above, quantitative determination of the difference in white floating between the right and left slanting viewing angles at which the viewer starts to feel strange was examined.
First, assume that as the relative luminance at right and left slanting viewing angles, the values of the relative luminance corresponding to the front relative luminance (about 0.22) at the grayscale level 127, γ=2.2 are used, and the viewing angle is 60°. That is, assume that the degree of “white floating” indicated by the arrow from N to I in
White floating=relative luminance at right or left viewing angle of 60°/front luminance (1)
Prototypes of 13-inch VGA LCDs having the configuration shown in
The y-axis of the graph of
The total areas a, b, c and d of the liquid crystal regions A to D of the prototype LCDs were determined from micrographs of the pixels of the LCDs. As is found from
The effect of the difference in white floating between right and left slanting viewing angles on the display quality was examined, and the results are shown in Table 7 and
From the results of the subjective evaluation, it is found that the difference in white floating between the slanting viewing angles of 60° is not annoying for the viewers when it is less than about 0.32, and the difference in white floating is not recognized when it is less than about 0.26. From the graph of
A rib deviation, that is, |((a+c)−(b+d))/(a+b+c+d)|>0 mainly occurs due to deviation in alignment in the step of bonding the substrate 10a having the ribs 21 and the substrate 10b having the slits 22 together.
The MVA LCDs exemplified herein are designed so that the ribs 21 and the slits 22 having respective fixed widths extend in parallel with each other and that each rib 21 bisects the spacing between the two adjacent slits 22. In other words, the design is made so that the ribs 21 and the slits 22 are placed so that the width of the stripe-shaped liquid crystal regions is fixed in each pixel. However, in actual fabrication of LCDs, deviation in alignment occurs causing deviation of each rib 21 from the position bisecting the two adjacent slits 22. The deviation in alignment is about ±5 μm in the present mass-production facilities.
The minimum value of the LC region width W3 of the currently commercially available MVA LCDs (panel size: 15 inches or more) is about 15 μm. If a deviation in alignment of about 5 μm occurs, the rib deviation |((a+c)−(b+d))/(a+b+c+d)| is about 0.33 (=10/30). As is found from the results shown in
In particular, in LCDs succeeding in improving the moving picture display performance by setting the LC region width at 14 μm or less, preferably at 12 μm or less as described above, the alignment margin must be reduced. For example, in the case of an LC region width W3 of 12 μm, the deviation in alignment must be controlled to less than ±3 μm to satisfy |((a+c)−(b+d))/(a+b+c+d)|<0.25. As another cause for occurrence of rib deviation, the rib patterning precision is considered. The ribs are generally formed in a photolithographic process using a photosensitive resin. In fabrication of large-scale LCD panels (30 inches or more, for example), the rib deviation amount varies in the panel plane with a variation in exposure condition. As a result, while the rib deviation amount fall within a predetermined range in some regions of the display plane, it may fall outside the predetermined range in the other regions of the display plane. To avoid this problem, a lens scan method (see Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2002-217101, for example) is preferably adopted in the exposure step in the photolithographic process for formation of the ribs.
Although the MVA LCDs having ribs and slits (see the LCD 10A shown in
According to the present invention, the response characteristic of alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs having a large viewing angle characteristic is improved, and thus LCDs permitting high-definition moving image display are provided. In particular, OS driving can be adopted for alignment-divided vertical alignment LCDs without occurrence of degradation in display quality due to horn response, and thus LCDs permitting high-definition moving image display are provided. The LCDs of the present invention find various applications such as TVs.
While the present invention has been described with respect to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the disclosed invention may be modified in numerous ways and may assume many embodiments other than those specifically described above. Accordingly, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all modifications of the invention that fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This non-provisional application claims priority under 35 USC § 119(a) on Patent Application No. 2004-073910 filed in Japan on Mar. 16, 2004, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference. In addition, the entire contents of non-provisional application Ser. No. 10/898,688 filed on Jul. 26, 2004 are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-073910 | Mar 2004 | JP | national |