This description relates to liquid crystal displays.
Liquid crystal displays (LCDs) can be used in many electronic devices, such as cell phones, personal digital assistants, laptop computers, desktop monitors, and flat panel televisions. For example, a liquid crystal display has a liquid crystal layer positioned between two crossed linear polarizers for modulating light using an electro-optic effect. A voltage applied to the liquid crystal layer changes the orientations of the liquid crystal molecules and the optical phase retardation of the liquid crystal layer, thereby changing the amount of light that passes the crossed linear polarizers. The liquid crystal display has an array of pixel circuits that can be individually addressed. The pixel circuits modulate light according to pixel data (pixel voltages), thereby generating images. Each pixel of the display can show a range of gray scale levels depending on the voltage applied to the liquid crystal layer. Use of color filters allows the display to show color images.
In one aspect, in general, a display includes pixel circuits, each pixel circuit including a first electrode to be electrically coupled to a first reference voltage, a second electrode to receive a pixel voltage corresponding to a gray scale level, the second electrode includes a conducting layer having openings, a third electrode to be electrically coupled to a second reference voltage, the second electrode being between the first and third electrodes, and a liquid crystal layer between the first and second electrodes, the liquid crystal layer being doped with a chiral material.
Implementations of the display may include one or more of the following features. The first reference voltage is equal to the second reference voltage. The first and second reference voltages are equal to a ground voltage of the pixels. The chiral material is selected to cause the liquid crystal layer to form twisted structures each having a free pitch of at least ten times a thickness of the liquid crystal layer. The first, second, and third electrodes and the chiral dopant are configured such that when the pixel voltage is applied to the second electrode, an electric field generated by the first, second, and third electrodes cause liquid crystal molecules above the openings to tilt by amounts that are more than half of those of the liquid crystal molecules above the conducting layer away from the openings, the amount of tilt being measured from initial positions of the molecules when the pixel voltage is below a threshold.
In some examples, when the pixel circuit is in a bright state, the transmissivity of portions of the pixel corresponding to the openings is at least half the transmissivity of portions of the pixel corresponding to the conducting layer away from the openings. In some examples, when the pixel circuit is in a bright state, the transmissivity of portions of the pixel corresponding to the openings is at least 90% the transmissivity of portions of the pixel corresponding to the conducting layer away from the openings. The first, second, and third electrodes and the chiral dopant are configured such that azimuth angles of liquid crystal directors vary continuously across the pixel when the pixel voltage is applied to the second electrode. The liquid crystal layer includes liquid crystal molecules that are aligned along a direction substantially normal to the surfaces of the first and second electrodes when the pixel voltage is below a threshold.
In some examples, the openings include circles having diameters in a range between 0.1 μm to 8 μm. In some examples, the openings include elongated slits each having a width in a range between 0.1 μm to 8 μm. The elongated slits have at least one of straight, curved, and piecewise linear shapes. In some examples, the third electrode includes a continuous conducting layer without openings. In some examples, the third electrode includes a conducting layer having openings. The conducting layer includes portions having shapes that correspond to the shapes of the openings of the second electrode. The second and third electrodes are configured such that liquid crystal molecules adjacent to the openings are subject to electric fields having directions from the liquid crystal layer to the third electrode. The first, second, and third electrodes are configured such that liquid crystal molecules farther away from the openings are subject to electric fields having directions from the second electrode to the first electrode.
The display includes an alignment film between the liquid crystal layer and the second electrode. The display includes an alignment film between the liquid crystal layer and the first electrode. Each pixel includes a storage capacitor having terminals that include portions of the second electrode and the third electrode. The first electrodes of different pixels are electrically connected. The third electrodes of different pixels are electrically connected. The display includes a first circular polarizer and a second circular polarizer, the liquid crystal layer being between the first and second circular polarizers. The display includes a first linear polarizer and a second linear polarizer, the liquid crystal layer being between the first and second linear polarizers.
In another aspect, in general, a display includes a first substrate, a second substrate, and pixel circuits between the first and second substrates. Each pixel circuit includes a first electrode to be electrically coupled to a ground reference voltage, a second electrode to receive a pixel voltage corresponding to a gray scale level, the second electrode includes a conducting layer having openings, a third electrode to be electrically coupled to the ground reference voltage, the second electrode being between the first and third electrodes, and a liquid crystal layer between the first and second electrodes. The display includes a first alignment layer between the liquid crystal layer and the first electrode of each pixel circuit, and a second alignment layer between the liquid crystal layer and the second electrode of each pixel circuit.
Implementations of the display may include one or more of the following features. The liquid crystal layer includes a chiral material.
In another aspect, in general, a method includes generating an electric field in a liquid crystal layer of a pixel circuit of a display, the electric field causing liquid crystal molecules in the liquid crystal layer to tilt from initial positions, the electric field having a distribution such that the liquid crystal layer forms a continuous domain in which the liquid crystal molecules at different locations tilt in different directions, and the tilt directions of the liquid crystal molecules vary continuously across the pixel circuit. The method includes providing a twisting force to the liquid crystal molecules to cause the liquid crystal molecules to tilt at along different azimuth angles across the pixel.
Implementations of the method may include one or more of the following features. Providing a twisting force includes using chiral dopants in the liquid crystal layer to provide the twisting force. Generating the electric field includes providing a first reference voltage to a first electrode, providing a pixel voltage to a second electrode, and providing a second reference voltage to a third electrode, the liquid crystal layer being between the first and second electrodes, the second electrode being between the first and third electrodes, the second electrode includes a conducting layer having openings. The method includes tilting the liquid crystal molecules above the openings by amounts that are more than half of those of the liquid crystal molecules above the conducting layer away from the openings. The method includes providing a substantially uniform transmittance across the pixel upon application of the pixel voltage, the transmittance of portions of the pixel corresponding to the openings being more than half of the transmittance of portions of the pixel corresponding to the conducting layer away from the openings. The method includes aligning liquid crystal molecules of the liquid crystal layer along directions substantially normal to substrates at two sides of the liquid crystal layer prior to generating the electric field.
In another aspect, in general, a method includes forming a first electrode on a first substrate, forming a third electrode on a second substrate, forming an insulation layer on the third electrode, forming a second electrode on the insulation layer, the second electrode includes a conducting layer having openings, positioning the first substrate parallel to and at a distance to the second substrate, and providing a liquid crystal layer between the first and second electrodes.
Implementations of the method may include one or more of the following features. The method includes adding a chiral material to the liquid crystal material of the liquid crystal layer. Adding the chiral material includes adding a chiral material having a concentration selected to cause the liquid crystal layer to form a twisted structure having a free pitch of at least ten times a thickness of the liquid crystal layer.
Advantages of the liquid crystal displays can include one or more of the following. The display can have a high light efficiency. The display can have wide viewing angle in which there is low color shift when viewing from oblique viewing directions.
A first phase retardation film 114a and a first linear polarizer 116a are laminated on an outer surface of the first substrate 102a. The phase retardation film 114a can be, e.g., a chromatic quarter-wave film or a broadband quarter-wave film, so that the combination of the phase retardation film 114a and the linear polarizer 116a forms a circular polarizer. A second phase retardation film 114b and a second linear polarizer 116b are laminated on an outer surface of the second substrate 102b. Similarly, the phase retardation film 114b can be, e.g., a chromatic quarter-wave film or a broadband quarter-wave film so that the combination of the phase retardation film 114b and the linear polarizer 116b forms a circular polarizer. The display 100 can include a color filter layer (not shown) that is placed between the second substrate 102b and the second alignment film 110b, allowing the display 100 to show color images. The color filter can also be placed between the first substrate 102a and the first alignment film 110a.
The patterned ITO layer 108 functions as a pixel electrode and is connected to a thin-film-transistor (TFT) switch 20 and a storage capacitor CST 22 (
The ITO layer 108, ITO layer 104a, and ITO layer 104b will also be referred to as the pixel electrode 108, the first common electrode 104a, and the second common electrode 104b, respectively. The pixel electrode 108, the common electrodes 104a, 104b, the liquid crystal layer 112, the thin film transistor 20, and the storage capacitor CST 22 of a pixel are collectively referred to as a pixel circuit.
As described below, the pixel electrode 108, the first common electrode 104a, and the second common electrode 104b are configured to generated electric fields having a distribution that, in combination with a twisting effect caused by the chiral dopants, facilitates the formation of a continuous domain in the liquid crystal layer 112 of the pixel 90. The liquid crystal molecules 113 at different locations in the liquid crystal layer 112 tilt in different directions that vary continuously across the pixel 90. This increases the viewing angle of the display 100 because light traveling at different angles through the liquid crystal layer 112 will experience similar phase retardation.
The substrates 102a and 102b can be made of, e.g., glass. The non-conductive planar layer 106 can be made of, e.g., silicon dioxide (SiO2) or silicon nitride (SiNx). The first and second alignment films 110a and 110b can be made of, e.g., polyimide materials. The first and second phase retardation films 114a and 114b can be made of, e.g., polycarbonate or polyvinyl alcohol (PVA). The first and second linear polarizers 116a and 116b can be, e.g., linearly oriented polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film with iodine solution imbibitions.
As described below, the pixel electrode 108, the first common electrode 104a, and the second common electrode 104b are configured to generated electric fields having a distribution that facilitates rotation of liquid crystal molecules 113 so that that the amount of tilt of the liquid crystal molecules 113 above the openings 122 are comparable to the amount of tilt of the liquid crystal molecules 113 above the conductive portion 120. The transmissivities of the portion of the liquid crystal layer 112 above the openings 122 are comparable to those above the conductive portion 120. This increases the overall light efficiency of the pixel 90, resulting in a brighter pixel for a given amount of backlight.
The electric field in the liquid crystal layer is a function of position within the liquid crystal layer 112. A Cartesian coordinate system having x, y, and z axes is used as a reference for describing the orientations of the components of the display 100. In this example, the z-axis is selected to be perpendicular to the surfaces of the substrates 102a and 102b. The x-axis and the y-axis are parallel to the surfaces of the substrates 102a and 102b.
The electric field in the liquid crystal layer 112 includes a “longitudinal electric field” 130 at a region 136 above the conductive portion 120 of the pixel electrode 108, and “fringe electric fields” 132 and 134 at a region 138 above the opening 122 of the pixel electrode 108. In the longitudinal electric field 130, the electric field lines are substantially parallel to the z-axis. In the fringe electric field 132, the electric field lines generally extend from the pixel electrode 108 toward the second common electrode 104b along directions that are not parallel to the z-axis (except near the electrodes 108 and 104b). In the fringe electric field 134, the electric field lines generally extend from the pixel electrode 108 partially into the liquid crystal layer 112, then turn toward the opening 122, pass the opening 122, and end at the first common electrode 104a.
In this example, a negative dielectric anisotropy liquid crystal material (MLC-6882 with ne=1.582 and no=1.484, available from Merck, Germany) doped with a chiral material (CB15, available from Merck, Germany) is used in the liquid crystal layer 112. The first common electrode 104a and the second common electrode 104b are connected to ground voltage (0 V), and the patterned pixel electrode 108 is connected to a pixel voltage VDATA=6V. The thickness of the liquid crystal layer 112 is 3.4 μm.
The electric field causes the liquid crystal molecules 113 to form a continuous domain that has multiple regions, e.g., 150a and 150b, within the pixel 90. The liquid crystal directors 140 tilt in different directions in which the tilt angle (e.g., θ1 or θ2) vary continuously from one location to another. For example, the liquid crystal directors 140 closer to the top and bottom boundaries 151 and 153 of the liquid crystal layer 112 are tilted down less (e.g., angle θ1 or θ2 is smaller) relative to initial vertical alignment positions (parallel to the z-axis). The liquid crystal directors 140 closer to the middle portion 155 of the liquid crystal layer 112 are tilted down more (e.g., angle θ1 or θ2 is larger) relative to the initial vertical alignment positions.
The azimuthal angles of the liquid crystal directors 140 also vary continuously along a direction parallel to the X-Y plane, gradually rotating either clockwise or counter clockwise. Here, a director 140 having a head 142 that is darker than a tail 144 indicates that the head 142 is closer to the −x direction, and vice versa. To illustrate the rotation of the liquid crystal molecules 113 within each pixel 90, a director (e.g., 148a) more parallel to the Y-Z plane is shown to be longer than a director (e.g., 148b) that is more perpendicular to the Y-Z plane.
For example, moving from a location P1 to locations P2, P3, P4, and P5 (which are all located on the same X-Y plane) in sequence, the liquid crystal directors 140 rotate continuously from pointing approximately in the −x direction to the −y, +x, +y, and +x directions, respectively. The azimuth angles of the liquid crystal molecules vary continuously from one location to another within the pixel 90. The transition from one region (e.g., 150a) to another region (e.g., 150b) in the liquid crystal layer 112 is continuous.
The twist forces imparted by the chiral dopant assist in tilting down the liquid crystal molecules 113 from their initial vertical alignment positions (parallel to the z-axis) when a pixel voltage is applied to the pixel electrode 108. The liquid crystal molecules 113 at locations (e.g., P1 and P5) directly above the openings 122 are tilted relative to initial positions by amounts comparable to (or greater than half of) those at locations (e.g., P2, P3, and P4) above the conducting portions 120.
The type of material and concentration of the chiral dopant are selected such that the liquid crystal mixture (including the liquid crystal material and the chiral dopant) has a free pitch greater than 10 times the cell gap (thickness of the liquid crystal layer 112). For example, if the cell gap is 4.5 μm, the chiral dopant is selected such that the liquid crystal mixture has a free pitch of more than 4.5 μm×10=45 μm. In the example of
The graph 160 shows that the transmittance drops slightly in the regions above the openings 122. This is because the liquid crystal molecules 113 in regions above the openings 122 have tilt angles (the angle between the liquid crystal director direction and the z-axis) slightly smaller than those in regions above the conducting portions 120. The overall accumulated phase retardation by the liquid crystal layer 112 in the region above the opening 122 is slightly smaller than that in the region above the conducting portion 120. Thus, when circular polarizers are laminated on both sides of the display 100, the transmittances in the regions above the openings 122 are slightly lower than those in the regions above the conducting portion 120.
For comparison,
When the widths of the openings 122 is reduced, the fringe fields (132 and 134 in
In some examples, the first node 26 is connected to the pixel electrode 108 (
A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Other implementations are also within the scope of the following claims. For example, the first common electrode 104a can be connected to a first reference voltage, and the second common electrode 104b can be connected to a second reference voltage. The first and second reference voltages do not necessarily have to be equal to the ground voltage. The first and second reference voltages can be the same or different. Additional passivation layers, alignment layers, and compensation films can be used in the displays described above. The components of the displays, such as the liquid crystal layer and the polarization films can use materials and have parameters different from those described above. The retardation values of the films can be different from those described above.
The orientations of the liquid crystal molecules described above refer to the directions of directors of the liquid crystal molecules. The molecules may tend to point more in one direction (represented by the director) over time than other directions. For example, the phrase “the liquid crystal molecules are substantially aligned along a direction normal to the substrates” means that the average direction of the directors of the liquid crystal molecules are generally aligned along the normal direction, but the individual molecules may point to different directions.