The invention relates to a display system for generating a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal, comprising a light modulation device, an illumination device for illuminating the light modulation device and a control circuit for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device. Such display systems are used in particular in TV sets, (portable) computers, in-vehicle navigation systems, medical imaging viewers and in datagraphic displays in process control rooms.
The invention also relates to a method to minimize the power consumption of a display system for generating a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal, the system comprising a light modulation device, an illumination device for illuminating the light modulation device and a control circuit for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device.
Display systems of the kind set forth are well known. They belong to the so-called non-luminous display types, of which a well-known example is the Liquid Crystal Display device.
In these LCD devices the light modulation device consists of a pixilated panel comprising liquid crystal (LC) elements functioning as a variable transmission filter. The illumination device (also known as the backlight unit) comprises light source means. Generally, these are low-pressure mercury vapor discharge lamps. Recently, however, LED based backlight units have been described.
One of the technical challenges with electrical devices in general and display systems in particular is the minimization of the overall power consumption of the device.
Seetzen et al. describe in ‘High Dynamic Range Display Systems’ (Proceedings of ACM SIGGRAPH conference 2004) a display system based on the fundamental idea of using a ‘first display’, i.e. an LCD panel, as an optical filter with a programmable transparency to modulate a high intensity but low-resolution image from a ‘second display’. This ‘second display’ being an array of LEDs, the intensity of which can be programmed individually. Thus their display system generates a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal by distributing said image information over the ‘first’ and ‘second’ displays. More precisely, it is suggested that optimally the image information derived from the video signal is distributed evenly over the LCD light modulation device and the LED illumination device. This choice of a 50%/50% distribution is inspired by considerations with respect to rounding errors. A drawback of the solution described by Seetzen et al. is that the overall power consumption of the display system is still relatively high. Therefore, they do not solve the technical challenge of minimizing the overall power consumption of display systems of the kind set forth.
It is an object of the invention to provide a solution for the technical challenge to minimize the power consumption of display systems comprising a backlight unit and a light modulation device. This objective is achieved by providing a display system in accordance to claim 1 and a method in accordance to claim 5.
According to a first aspect the invention provides a display system for generating a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal, comprising a light modulation device having a multitude of pixels with variable transmission, an illumination device for illuminating the light modulation device, a control circuit, for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device, the light modulation device, when in operation, having at least one region in which a pixel PLregionmax, i exhibits the largest luminance in accordance with the image information for said region, characterized in that the control circuit is arranged to distribute the image information over the light modulation device and the illumination device by setting the transmission of pixel PLregionmax, i to its maximum, setting the luminance LBL,i of the illumination device behind said region in accordance with the luminance of pixel PLregionmax, i adjusting the transmission of the other pixels in said region in accordance with the image information and LBL,i.
The advantage of the present invention lies in the fact that the control circuit is arranged to distribute the image information over the light modulation device and the illumination device unequally. If chosen correctly, the unequal distribution of the image information can cause the combined power consumption of the light modulation device and the illumination device to be lower than with an equal distribution. The invention is based on the recognition that Seetzen et al. did not realize that the even distribution of the image information is sub-optimal from an overall system power consumption point of view.
According to an embodiment the control circuit is arranged to distribute the image information over the light modulation device and the illumination device dependent on the luminance level Lpic, regionmax, i exhibited by PLregionmax, i as defined in claim 2. Thus, in an embodiment the display system for generating a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal, comprising a light modulation device having a multitude of pixels with variable transmission, an illumination device for illuminating the light modulation device, a control circuit for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device, the light modulation device, when in operation, having at least one region in which a pixel PLregionmax, i exhibits a luminance Lpic, regionmax, i and having a pixel PLmax exhibiting the largest luminance Lpic, max of the display system in accordance with the image information, characterized in that the control circuit is arranged to distribute the image information over the light modulation device and the illumination device by (i) selecting a parameter a from the range ½<a≦1 dependent on the luminance level(s) Lpic, regionmax, i, (ii) setting the luminance LBL,i of the illumination device behind said at least one region according to the formula
(iii) adjusting the transmission of the other pixels in said region in accordance with the image information and LBL,i. This embodiment is beneficial to minimize rounding errors in very dark areas of the picture as well as for safeguarding a seamless luminance match at the border of adjacent regions of the light modulation device.
According to an embodiment the control circuit is arranged to keep the transmission of PLregionmax, i at its maximum for luminance levels Lpic, regionmax, i above a predetermined threshold as defined by claim 3.
According to an embodiment the predetermined threshold level is chosen to lie in the range 2%-10% of the maximum Lpic, max achievable on the display system.
According to a second aspect the invention provides a method to minimize a power consumption of a display system for generating a picture in accordance with image information derived from a video signal, the display system comprising a light modulation device having a multitude of pixels with variable transmission, an illumination device for illuminating the light modulation device, a control circuit, for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device, the method comprising the step of distributing the image information over the light modulation device and the illumination device by: (i) dividing the light modulation device in at least one region, (ii) determining for each of the at least one regions a pixel PLregionmax, i exhibiting the largest luminance Lpic,regionmax, i, (iii) setting the transmission of each pixel PLregionmax, i to its maximum, (iv) setting the luminance LBL,i of the illumination device behind each of said regions in accordance with Lpic,regionmax, i, (v) adjusting the transmission of the other pixels in each of said regions in accordance with the image information and LBL,i.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
In US20010035853 an assembly of the kind set forth is disclosed, wherein the backlight unit comprises an array of LEDs of at least two different colors. In order to improve the contrast of the final picture, it is disclosed that the intensity of the LEDs can be controlled on a frame-by-frame basis. Especially the contrast in dark scenes can be improved in this manner, because the lowered backlight luminance reduces the light leakage through the LCD panel. Although the power consumption of the device will be lower when the LEDs are dimmed in dark scenes compared to an un-dimmed situation, US20010035853 does not teach to solve the technical challenge of minimizing the power consumption of display systems of the kind set forth irrespective of the content of the picture to be generated by the display system.
Furthermore, US20050184952 discloses a similar apparatus wherein the backlight unit is driven in units (i.e. in sequence of individual plural light source partitive areas) and the luminance of these areas in the backlight unit is controlled in accordance with the image information derived from a video signal. One objective of this technique of controlling the luminance of the backlight unit is power consumption reduction. However, the main focus of US20050184952 lies in disclosing a technique to maintain the picture quality in combination with a reduction of the power consumption and to realize a video display apparatus and method capable of widening the display luminance range and raising the contrast ratio without degrading the picture quality. As the teachings in US20050184952 are clearly focused on maintaining a good picture quality and contrast ratio when the image information is distributed over the backlight unit and the light modulation device, it does not teach anything on the achievable reduction in power consumption, let alone that US20050184952 solves the technical challenge of minimizing the power consumption of display systems of the kind set forth irrespective of the content of the picture to be generated by the display system.
Further details, features and advantages of the invention are disclosed in the following description of exemplary and preferred embodiments in connection with the drawings.
The light modulation device 20 is conveniently chosen to be a liquid crystal (LC) panel having a multitude of pixels 21 with a variable transmission, while the illumination device 30 is conveniently equipped with an array of LEDs 31. The amount of LEDs 31 in the array depends on the power characteristics of these LEDs and the requirements for the display system set by the designer. For 1 W white LEDs 31 the array has typically a pitch distance of about 1-10 cm. Depending on the content of the picture to be displayed, the luminance of the LEDs 31 is controlled individually. As a result a display system 1 with a high dynamic range can be realized due to the fact that the light leakage that is usually present—even when the LC pixels 21 in the panel 20 are set to ‘black’, i.e. minimal transmission, the light from the backlight is not completely blocked—can be reduced in dark areas of the picture by dimming the corresponding LEDs 31 in the array of the backlight unit 30. Now that the luminance of the LEDs 31 is controlled individually, the information to the LC panel 20 has to be adjusted in order to safeguard the proper picture content presented to the viewer. The control circuit 40 achieves this through an image information distributor 41, which supplies part of the image information to the backlight controller 43 and the remainder to the LCD controller 42. The later two controllers drive the backlight unit 30 and the LC panel 20, respectively.
The algorithm applied by Seetzen et al., as schematically shown in
L
FoS
=L
BL
×T
LCD,
where LBL is the luminance of the LEDs in the backlight unit 30 and TLCD is the transmission of the elements in the LC panel 20. In order to safeguard the proper presentation of the picture to the viewer LFoS should be equal to the luminance of the picture Lpic 50 as defined by the video signal. It is clear to the person skilled in the art that this relation should hold for every pixel in the display.
Due to the fact that the number of LEDs 31 in the array of the backlight unit 30 is considerably smaller than the number of pixels 21, i.e. LC elements, in the panel 20, there is no one-to-one correspondence between a single LED and a single LC element. As an example, Seetzen et al. describe a display system 1 containing as much as 760 1 W white LumiLED Luxeon LEDs in the backlight unit 30 arranged in a hexagonal close-packed array, while their 18-inch LG-Philips LC panel 20 has a 1280×1024 resolution. This set-up results in a very high dynamic range display system, which is advantageous in f.i. medical imaging viewers. For consumer applications, a 32-inch LCD display system 1 with a typical 1368×768 resolution typically contains ˜150 1 W white LEDs 31.
However, a correspondence can be made between each pixel 21 and its nearest LED 31. Consequently, a multitude of regions can be defined in the light modulation device 20, where the ith region comprises all the pixels 21 closest to the ith LED 31. It is noted that a one-on-one correspondence of the regions and the LEDs is not essential to the invention. Therefore, alternatively, a correspondence can be made between all the pixels 21 in a region and several LEDs 31 located behind that region. The LED-drive values are consequently chosen according to the maximum luminance level Lpic, regionmax, i that is present in the ith region of the picture around the corresponding LED(s). PLregionmax, i indicates the pixel displaying this maximum luminance level in said region. This maximum luminance level is determined in block 61 of the algorithm and is indicative of the maximum amount of light that must be displayed at that specific region of the picture. Therefore it is also indicative of the drive value of the corresponding LED(s). It is noted that obviously there is at least one region exhibiting the largest luminance level Lpic, max of the entire display system, corresponding to pixel PLmax.
Considering that rounding errors should be minimal, Seetzen et al. distributed the image information over the LC panel 20 and the LED backlight unit 30 on a 50%/50% basis. Block 62 implements this distribution to obtain the luminance LBL, i 51 of the LED(s) behind the ith region in the backlight unit 30 corresponding to the region by using the formula
The algorithm relies on the LC panel 20 to compensate for any difference between the luminance of the target picture Lpic, i and LBL, i 51. To derive at the drive values of the LC elements in the panel 20, the lack of one-on-one correspondence has to be taken into account. Therefore a 2D convolution is performed in block 63 to arrive at the overall backlight unit luminance profile LBL. Basically, the luminance of the backlight at each LCD pixel position is calculated. Subsequently, LBL is divided out of the luminance profile of the original picture (block 64), to obtain the transmission characteristic TLCD 52 of (all the pixels in) the LC panel 20. In order to correct for the non-linear characteristics of the display system, degamma 60 and gamma 65 functions are applied. The display system (de-)gamma functions are conveniently implemented using a Look-Up-Table in the memory of the control circuit 40. The application of these functions ensures that the calculations determining the transmission characteristics of the LC elements can be performed in the linear luminance domain. The person skilled in the art will appreciate that the light output of the LEDs is linearly dependent on the current and therefore no gamma function has to be applied in that part of the algorithm. Finally, it should be noted that the first part of the algorithm—i.e. the upper blocks 61, 62 in FIG. 2—is applied on a LED resolution basis, while the second part of the algorithm—i.e. the lower blocks 64, 65—is applied on an LCD pixel resolution basis.
Again, it is to be stressed that the square root function applied by Seetzen et al. essentially distributes the image information equally over the illumination device and the light modulation device. A drawback of the solution is that the overall power consumption of the display system is still relatively high. As a result they do not solve the technical challenge of minimizing the overall power consumption of display systems of the kind set forth.
It is recognized that Seetzen et al. were inspired by considerations with respect to rounding errors. However, eventual rounding errors can be compensated for by proper signal processing algorithms known in the art, like dithering or error diffusion.
This invention provides a solution for the technical challenge to minimize the power consumption of display systems comprising a backlight unit and a light modulation device. This objective is achieved by providing a display system 1 for generating a picture in accordance with image information 10 derived from a video signal, comprising a light modulation device 20, an illumination device 30 for illuminating the light modulation device, a control circuit 40 for driving both the light modulation device and the illumination device, wherein the control circuit 40 is arranged to distribute the image information 10 over the light modulation device 20 and the illumination device 30 such that the overall power consumption of the display system is minimized.
It is recognized that almost all power in the display system 1 is consumed in the backlight unit 30. Compared to this, the power consumption of the LC panel 20 is relatively small. For example, in a commercially available 30-inch LCD module from LG-Philips the LC panel 20 consumes about 5 W, while the TL based backlight unit 30 consumes about 100 W. Furthermore, the LC panel power consumption is essentially independent of its transparency. Moreover, it is well noted that the absolute transparency is limited to about 3-8%, even when the LC panel 20 is switched to ‘white’, i.e. maximum transmission. From a power consumption efficiency point of view it is therefore preferable to maintain the transparency of the LC panel at its maximum level whenever possible.
Implemented in an embodiment according to the present invention is the optimized video processing algorithm as shown in
with ½≦a<1. Even more general, with 0≦a≦1. The algorithm reduces to that of Seetzen et al. in case a equals ½. Furthermore, it reduces to the classical case with no image information directed to the backlight unit 30 in case a equals 0.
The efficiency improvement becomes readily apparent when 3 display systems are considered, characterized by respectively a=0, a=½ and a˜1 (see Table 1). The first one is the classical case where no image information is directed to the backlight unit 30. This backlight unit then operates at a fixed rating, which essentially is determined by the peak brightness achievable by the display system 1 and the maximum transparency setting of the LC panel 20. A typical commercial 30-inch LCD TV equipped with 16 6.25 W narrow diameter fluorescent tubes is an example of such a system. The tubes typically have an efficacy of 60 lm/W and the backlight unit as a whole typically has a luminance of 10000 Nits, achieving an average Front-of-Screen luminance of typically 125 Nits. The (average) transparency of the LC panel 20 is then about 1.25%, equivalent to about 25% of the maximum transparency. A similar performance can be obtained when the backlight unit 30 is equipped with LEDs, which in this case (i.e. a=0) are not individually addressed. It is noted that at present commercially available 1 W white LEDs have an efficacy of about 30 lm/W. However, in view of the proclaimed technology/product roadmap of LED manufacturers, 60 lm/W white LEDs will be come available in due course. In discussing the energy efficiency improvement in comparison with the other two display systems, we assume that they are equipped with these later (more efficient) LEDs.
The second display system, characterized by a=½, is the one proposed by Seetzen et al. To achieve the same average FoS (front of screen) luminance at 125 Nits, only 50% of the amount of light needs to be generated by the backlight unit 30, as the (average) transparency of the LC panel 20 is increased on average to 2.5%. An overall power consumption reduction of 50 W, or about 48%, is obtained relative to the classical case.
This however is not the most energy efficient implementation of the distribution of the image information. When the image information derived from the video signal is distributed in such a way that the transparency of the LC panel 20 is kept at its maximum where ever possible within the target luminance profile of the picture Lpic 50, i.e. in case a=1, the power consumption of the backlight unit 30 can be reduced even further. Again, considering an average front of screen luminance LFoS of 125 Nits the average backlight unit luminance LBL can be reduced to some 2500 Nits in combination with an average 5% transparency of the LC panel 20. This results in an overall power consumption of 30 W, thus realizing a reduction of an astonishing 71%.
Although it was indicated above that the rounding errors could be compensated by proper signal processing algorithms like dithering or error diffusion, it is still possible that very dark image areas, i.e. areas that contain drive levels near ‘black’, may cause problems. The main cause of these problems lies in the fact that for such areas the luminance of the LEDs 31 is very low while the transmission of the LC elements 21 is near maximum. Rounding errors are then visible as noise, while at the same time the always-present noise level in the input video signal gets amplified. Such rounding errors are usually the largest for a near 0 or near 1.
Therefore, in an embodiment of the invention the distribution of the image information over the light modulation device 20 and the illumination device 30, i.e. the factor a, is dependent on the luminance level of the picture Lpic 50. In other words, the factor a will be different for every region, and may be determined f.i. by Lpic, regionmax, i. In an effort to minimize these residual rounding errors, it has been found that it is advantageous for Lpic 50 luminance levels above a predetermined threshold to choose the distribution factor a nearly equal—and preferably equal—to 1, while for luminance levels below this threshold a is preferably chosen to be smaller. An example of such a luminance level dependent choice of the distribution factor a is given in Table 2. Here, Lpic 50 is characterized by an 8-bit value, running from 0 (‘black’) to 255 (‘white’). It is noted that a threshold a Lpic=10 (˜4% of the largest achievable value) in fact corresponds with a Front-of Screen of about 20% of the maximum achievable by the display system due to the non-linear characteristic of the system.
A display system 1 according to the invention has been built and the attainable power consumption reduction has been measured as a function of both the number of individually addressed LEDs 31 present in the backlight unit 30 and the algorithm implemented. The result is shown in
Although the invention has been elucidated with reference to the embodiments described above, it will be evident that other embodiments may be alternatively used to achieve the same object. The scope of the invention is therefore not limited to the embodiments described above, but can also be applied to any other display device such as, for example, where the algorithm is applied to a subset of the LEDs in the backlight unit or a subset of temporally successive video frames. Alternatively, the algorithm can be applied for each color separately when red, green and blue LEDs are used in the backlight unit 20 in stead of phosphor coated white LEDs. As a result, in this later case, each color will be adjusted individually.
It should further be noted that use of the verb “comprises/comprising” and its conjugations in this specification, including the claims, is understood to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps or components, but does not exclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components or groups thereof. It should also be noted that the indefinite article “a” or “an” preceding an element in a claim does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. Moreover, any reference sign does not limit the scope of the claims; the invention can be implemented by means of both hardware and software, and several “means” may be represented by the same item of hardware. Furthermore, the invention resides in each and every novel feature or combination of features.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06123724.4 | Nov 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB07/54442 | 11/2/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/5/2009 |