The present invention relates to flat panel displays.
Solid-state organic light emitting diode (OLED) displays are of great interest as a superior flat-panel display technology. These displays utilize current passing through thin films of organic materials to generate light. The color of the light emitted and the efficiency of the energy conversion from current to light are determined by the composition of the organic thin film material. Different organic materials emit different colors of light.
As the display is used, however, the organic materials in the display age and become less efficient at emitting light. This reduces the lifetime of the display, and causes image sticking and loss of color balance. The OLED materials used for generating the various colors age at different rates. For example, the blue OLED material usually ages faster that the red and the green OLED materials, and the white balance drifts to pink and yellow due to lack of blue light.
The rate at which the OLED materials age is related to the amount of current that passes through the display. The amount of current that passes through the display is representative of the amount of light emitted by the display. One technique to compensate for this aging effect in polymer light emitting diodes is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,456,016 issued Sep. 24, 2002 to Sundahl et al. This approach relies on a controlled reduction of current provided at an early stage of use followed by a second stage in which the display output is gradually decreased. This solution requires that the operating time of the display be tracked by a timer within the controller, which then provides a compensating amount of current. Moreover, once a display has been in use, the controller must remain associated with that display to avoid errors in display operating time.
The Sundahl technique applies a correction to the display on a global basis rather on a pixel by pixel basis and therefore, does not account for excessive aging in pixels that are used more frequently than other pixels. This is a problem for laptop computers running software that display menu bars and corporate logos that will rapidly age the pixels that are constantly being used. Another example is the signal indicator in a cellular telephone. As the phone display is used the bars representing signal strength will burn into the display and eventually always indicate full signal strength. The Sundahl technique will not prevent the burn-in (image sticking).
U.S. Pat. No. 6,414,661 B1 issued Jul. 2, 2002 to Shen et al. describes a method and associated system that compensates for long-term variations in the light-emitting efficiency of individual diodes (pixels) in an OLED display, by calculating and predicting the decay in light output efficiency of each pixel based on the accumulated drive current applied to the pixel and derives a correction coefficient that is applied to the next drive current for each pixel. This technique requires the measurement and accumulation of drive current applied to each pixel, requiring a stored memory that must be continuously updated as the display is used, requiring complex and extensive circuitry. The total amount of current does not always predict aging since high current for a short time causes the OLED materials to age faster than a low current for a longer time even though the total accumulation of current may be the same in both cases.
U.S. Patent Application Publication nos. 2003/0071821 A1 and 2004/0212573 A1 (both publications being the same document) describe measuring the currents through pixels and measuring voltage changes across the pixels, and making corrections to the drive voltages of the pixels based on the total amount of the measured current and/or the voltage changes. The total current flow and voltage changes are used to estimate the age of a pixel, and the corrections are based on the age estimates for each pixel. This technique is similar to the technique described in the preceding paragraph for the Shen patent. The documents do not explain how the currents and voltages are measured. Therefore, even though measurement systems are mentioned, none are described to enable someone trained in the art to produce a working model based on the information in the two publications.
U.S. Patent Application 2002/0167474 A1 by Everitt, published Nov. 14, 2002, describes a pulse width modulation driver for an OLED display. One embodiment of the video display in Everitt comprises a voltage driver for providing a selected voltage to drive an organic light emitting diode in a video display. The voltage driver may receive voltage information from a correction table that accounts for aging, column resistance, row resistance, and other diode characteristics. In one embodiment of the invention, the correction tables are calculated prior to and/or during normal circuit operation. Since the OLED output light level is assumed to be linear with respect to OLED current, the correction scheme is based on sending a known current through the OLED diode for a period sufficiently long to allow the transients to settle out and then measuring the corresponding voltage with an analog-to-digital converter (A/D) residing on the column driver. A calibration current source and the A/D can be switched to any column through a switching matrix. This design requires the use of an integrated, calibrated current source and A/D converter, greatly increasing the complexity of the circuit design. Furthermore, the voltage measured in such a system can only be across the OLED in a passive matrix display. For active matrix displays the observed voltage would be across both the OLED and the drive transistor, thereby obscuring the actual voltage across the OLED.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,504,565 B1 issued Jan. 7, 2003 to Narita et al., describes a light-emitting display which includes a light-emitting element array formed by arranging a plurality of light-emitting elements, a driving unit for driving the light-emitting element array to emit light from each of the light-emitting elements, a memory unit for storing the number of light emissions for each light-emitting element of the light-emitting array, and a control unit for controlling the driving unit based on the information stored in the memory unit so that the amount of light emitted from each light-emitting element is held constant.
Narita also discloses an exposure display employing the light-emitting display, and an image forming apparatus employing the exposure display. This design requires the use of a calculation unit responsive to each signal sent to the each pixel to record usage, thereby greatly increasing the complexity of the circuit design. Furthermore, the Narita technique attempts to measure the age of a pixel by its history of on time, i.e. the amount of current flowing through the pixel. The Narita technique is flawed due to the fact that both the amount of current flowing through the pixel and the rate of current flow through the pixel contribute to the pixel's aging. Simply measuring the amount of current flow is not good enough to make the corrections to the pixel drive voltage.
JP 2002278514 A by Numeo Koji, published Sep. 27, 2002, describes a method in which a prescribed voltage is applied to organic EL elements by a current-measuring circuit and the current flows are measured. Also, a temperature measurement circuit estimates the temperature of the organic EL elements. The measured values are then compared with corresponding values of similarly constituted elements determined beforehand to determine changes due to aging. Then, the total sum of the amount of currents being supplied to the elements is changed, for the interval during which display data are displayed, so as to obtain the originally desired luminance based on the estimated values of the current-luminance characteristics, the values of the current flowing in the elements, and the display data.
This design presumes a predictable relative use of pixels and does not accommodate differences in actual usage of groups of pixels or of individual pixels. Hence, the correction for color or spatial groups (image sticking) is likely to be inaccurate over time. Moreover, the integration of temperature and multiple current sensing circuits within the display is required. This integration is complex, reduces manufacturing yields, and takes up space within the display.
U.S. Patent Application 2003/0122813 A1 entitled “Panel Display Driving Display and Driving Method” to Ishizuki et al., published Jul. 3, 2003, discloses a display panel driving device and driving method for providing high-quality images without irregular luminance over a long period of use of the display. According to the Ishizuki technique, the value of the light-emission drive current flow causing each light emission element bearing each pixel to independently emit light in succession is measured. Then, the luminance is corrected for each input pixel datum based on the above light-emission drive current values associated with the pixels corresponding to the input pixel datum. According to another aspect of Ishizuki, the value of the drive voltage is adjusted in such a manner that one value among each measured light-emission drive current value becomes equal to a predetermined reference current value. According to a further aspect of Ishizuki, the current value is measured while an off-set current component corresponding to a leakage current of the display panel is added to the current outputted from the drive voltage generator circuit, and the resultant current is supplied to each of the pixel portions.
The Ishizuki design presumes an external current detection circuit that is sensitive enough to detect the relative current changes in a display due to a single pixel's power usage. Such circuits are difficult to design and expensive to build. Moreover, the Ishizuki method uses current alone to correct the OLED aging, and ignores the fact that the light emission from OLED material decays even if constant current is fed to the material.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,995,519 B2, issued Feb. 7, 2006 to Arnold et al., describes an apparatus comprising an organic light emitting diode (OLED) display, comprising:
a) an array of OLED display light-emitting elements, each OLED display light-emitting element having two terminals;
b) a voltage sensing circuit for each OLED display light-emitting element in the display array including a transistor in each circuit connected to one of the terminals of a corresponding OLED display light-emitting for sensing the voltage across the OLED display light-emitting element, and to produce feedback signals representing the voltage across the OLED display light-emitting elements in the display array; and
c) a controller responsive to the feedback signals for calculating a correction signal for each OLED display emitting-emitting element and applying the correction signal to data used to drive each OLED display light-emitting element to compensate for the changes in the output of each OLED display light-emitting element.
This design requires a custom pixel design having an additional thin film transistor included within the pixel area. That lowers production yield, increases cost and reduces the emission area of the pixel, thereby requiring the OLED material to be driven harder to make up for the loss of emission area which will cause the OLED material to age faster. Moreover, the integrated circuits used to drive the system will only operate with the custom pixel design, therefore limiting the available market for the driver ICs. Moreover, the design only measures the voltage change as the pixel ages and disregards the reduction in quantum efficiency.
Moreover, the circuit used by Arnold et al., to measure the voltage on the OLED, applies the voltage at the anode of the OLED to the gate of a thin film transistor, which causes the thin film transistor to pass current through a resistor 15 as shown in prior art
When current is passed through resistor 15, a voltage is developed that is proportional to the voltage on the gate of transistor 12 (which is the voltage on the OLED). One problem with doing this is that the amount of current passed by transistor 12 in one pixel is not the same as the current passed through transistor 12 in another pixel, or even in an adjacent pixel due to process variances in the manufacturing process. Therefore, the voltage reading is subject to a high degree of error. Moreover, resistor 15 in
There is a need, therefore, for an improved aging compensation approach for organic light-emitting diode displays. The techniques cited above variously use current as the light emission controlling agent, or use the amount of current passing through the OLED material to gauge aging. In the active matrix display there are two main issues: 1) how to deal with non-uniform emissions due to the irregularities in the active matrix drive system, and 2) how to deal with the aging of the OLED materials. The following disclosure shows both the methods and the apparatus to produce both initial uniformity in the display and how to correct for aging of the display. The present invention provides solutions without adding components to or changing the display. Therefore, the invention can be applied to any OLED display regardless of design.
A method of measuring the current and voltage across the OLED drive transistor and the OLED without having to add circuitry to the pixel is described. The method entails scanning gate voltages of the drive transistor in the linear and saturated regions to obtain the threshold voltage and electron mobility for the drive transistor. The threshold and electron mobility are used to calculate the source/drain voltage across the transistor for a range of currents so that voltages across the OLED for a range of currents can be calculated.
In order to use the measured data, the OLED material is thoroughly characterized in the laboratory to determine its aging characteristics in terms of voltage and current values required to obtain various levels of light emissions from the OLED. The life of the OLED (time to half brightness) is divided into a number of periods. The greater the number of age periods the more accurate the aging correction. At the end of each aging period, two curves are developed: the voltage versus luminance curve and the voltage versus current curve. These curves are called the LIV curves for Luminance, current (I) and Voltage. If there are 64 periods, for example, there will be 64 sets of LIV curves.
By knowing which voltage versus current curve the OLED is currently on, the age period of the OLED is known. By knowing the age period of the OLED, the proper voltage versus luminance curve is known. These curves are stored in memory with the first curve set (the Tzero LIV curve set) being assigned to each sub-pixel in the display. As the pixel passes through each of the 64 age periods to the end of its life, the assigned LIV curve set number is increased from 0 to 63. The voltage and current measurements are used to determine when the pixel has passed from one age period to another. The age determining process can be done when the display system is not being used. For example, in a cellular phone, the display is not used most of the time when the phone is in use or on standby. It is during this time that the age calibration process can be done.
The above and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
a illustrates a prior art embodiment of a voltage measuring circuit in an OLED display pixel;
b illustrates another prior art embodiment of a voltage measuring circuit in an OLED display pixel;
a is a graph illustrating the change in OLED voltage over time at constant current;
b is a graph illustrating the change in OLED luminance over time at constant current;
a illustrates an OLED drive circuitry in the pixel;
b illustrates measured versus calculated OLED voltage curve over time;
a illustrates the position of the pertinent switches of the circuitry
b illustrates the position of the pertinent switches of the circuitry
c illustrates the position of the pertinent switches of the circuitry
d illustrates the position of the pertinent switches of the circuitry
The Development of the Luminance/Current/Voltage (LIV) Curves
This invention is based on the aging properties of the organic light-emitting diode materials. The voltage/current characteristics of the OLED change as it ages.
At any point in the age of the OLED material, the luminance output can be plotted against the applied voltage and a graph curve plotted.
According to an aspect of the present invention, at any age of the OLED, a set of luminance/voltage/current curves can be plotted.
L=0.0031V6−0.1165V5+2.3794V4−13.538V3+27.037V2−15.993V
Note that this is a 6th order equation which provides more accuracy than may be needed for a particular application. The actual order would be determined by the desired accuracy and the amount of memory reserved for the data. In one embodiment, in order to store this equation in memory, only the numerical coefficients (0.0031, −0.1165, 2.379, −13.538, 27.037, and 15.993), would be stored. The number of curve sets to be stored can be any number. Accuracy increases as the time period between curves decreases. For a 6 bit system, 64 sets of curves would be determined in the lab and saved in the system memory.
It can be seen that if a specific luminance is desired from the OLED, then it must be first established which age curve the OLED is on or nearest to. This is accomplished by taking the drive voltage and current measurements of the OLED and determining the curve equation using regressing mathematics. The coefficients of the measured curve are compared to the coefficients stored in memory and the curve in memory closest to the measured curve is used to determine the proper current required to give the desired luminance. The technique for using that current for rendering the image on the display is explained below.
Initial Uniformity Correction
Correcting the initial non-uniformity in the OLED display requires that each driver transistor be calibrated for its gate voltage and output current. This is called as the Transistor Gate Voltage versus Drain Current Curve. From the LIV curves, the OLED current required to produce a desired emission level from the pixel is found. The drive transistor produces the desired current, if the correct gate voltage is applied to the drive transistor.
The drive transistors for the pixels in the display are made from thin film semiconductor processes well known in the industry. Thin films are known to have non-uniform or unstable electrical properties. Since there are literally millions of sub-pixels in high resolution displays, it is impossible to make all the transistors uniform over the large glass substrates used to make lap tops, computer monitors and television sets. Therefore, the current produced by a particular drive transistor for a specific gate voltage is not necessarily the same as the current produced by the drive transistor with the identically applied gate voltage in the next pixel. It is, therefore, necessary to develop the gate voltage/drain current curve for each transistor in the display. These transistor voltage/current curves are stored in memory in the identical manner as the LIV curves.
ID=k·(VGS−VT)2 Equ. 1
ID is the drive transistor current
k is a constant that includes the electron mobility of the transistor
VGS is the gate to source voltage
VT is the threshold voltage
Equation 1 is the model for the thin film transistor when it is biased in the saturation region in order to make it a current source independent of the load provided by the OLED. The following is the steps for developing a voltage/current curve for the OLED, and finding the values for k and VT.
The display operating voltage, Vdd, places the TFT in the saturated region. By taking the current at two data values for ID1 and ID2, equation 2 (below) can be used to obtain VT. VT can be substituted into equation 3 (below) to obtain k.
Equation 4 is derived from equation 1. It is used to obtain the Gate voltage, VGS, for a desired current, ID, which is required to provide the desired emission level from the pixel.
In one embodiment, VT and k for each drive transistor in each pixel are stored in memory. Then equation 4 is used to calculate the gate voltage VGS required to produce the required OLED currents which are derived from the LIV curves. In another embodiment, a voltage to current curve is produced for each transistor and the coefficients of the curves stored in memory. The difference between the two embodiments is that storing the coefficients of actual curves may be more accurate that the use of a mathematical model.
The following describes how to develop the voltage to current curves. This operation is done when the display is not in use. Gray levels are numbered from darkest to brightest. The number of gray levels depends on the bit level used when digitizing the gray level for use by the logic system of the display controller. For example, a 6-bit gray level has 64 levels ranging from 0 to 63. An 8-bit gray level has 256 levels ranging from 0 to 255. The following is an example using a 6-bit system.
1. Set up Mode (performed to calibrate the power TFTs).
Dithering (Floyd-Steinberg) is a well know technique in the industry to solve the bit quantization problem. The quantization problem is that any system that divides a range of values into discrete steps such as the gray scale system used in displays must always pick one of the levels even though an intermediate value may be more suitable. Therefore, the light emission values of the pixels around the pixel being corrected are adjusted to higher or lower digital numbers (DNs) to produce an average brightness that is closer to the ideal value.
The above described method assigns a voltage to current curve to each pixel that will result in uniform currents being delivered to each pixel. This corrects the initial non-uniformity of the active matrix.
The Apparatus to Measure Current
The technology of the present invention measures the current through a single pixel. This current may be small compared to the background current, which is the current through the display when all pixels are turned off. The background current is made of the leakages of transistors and OLEDs in the active matrix. In one embodiment, the background current can be as high as 100 milliamps and the current in one turned on OLED pixel may only be 100 nanoamps (1000 times smaller). The circuitry described herein automatically zeros out the background current and then measures the current from one pixel and converts it to a digital number, for example, a 12 bit digital number. The circuit diagram in the
According to one aspect of the present invention, the circuit in
According to one aspect of the present invention, the first part of the initialization operation includes the reset operation. In one embodiment, the reset operation period is 3 μs long: it begins at T=0 μs and ends at T=3 μs. This operation resets C3 to have the equilibrium charge on it with the background current flowing though T3.
Transistor T3 is a current source controlled by a voltage applied to its gate (if it is a FET) or its base (if it is a bipolar junction transistor). With SW1 and SW2 open, the only path to ground is through T3. This means that if T3 does not pass enough current to satisfy the background current from the OLED, the voltage will rise as charge piles up in the parasitic capacitances around the circuit. Since SW3 is closed, the rise in voltage is applied to N1, but N1 cannot rise in voltage because OA2 is forcing N1 to be 0.5V; therefore, the voltage at N2 will decrease. Since N2 is connected to the inverting input to OA3 it will cause a rise in the voltage on the output of OA3, which is connected to N3 through closed SW4. N3 is connected to the gate or base of T3 and the feedback path is completed; therefore, as the voltage rises at N3 the current increases in T3 until it accommodates the background current. At that point everything is in equilibrium. That is, the current through T3 equals the background current from the OLED display (pixels off), the voltage at N1 is 0.5V, the voltage at N2 is 3V and the voltage at N3 is the right voltage to T3 to produce the background current.
According to one aspect of the present invention, the reset operation is followed by the data settling operation. The data settling operation lasts for 2 μs: it begins at T=3 μs and ends at 5 μs.
The data settling period is followed by the integration operation. The integration operation lasts for 100 μs. It begins at T=5 μs and ends at T=105 μs.
The integration operation is followed by the convert operation. The integration operation lasts for 20 μs. It begins at T=105 μs and ends at T=125 μs.
Pixel 1, 1 is the first pixel in column 1. The pixel currents will be read sequentially starting with pixel 1, 1 and ending with the last pixel in the last row of the display. The initiate operation is identical to the pixel read operations except that no pixel is turned on. The time for the operation is 125 μs. Therefore, a wide QVGA display having 1,440 columns and 240 rows=345,600 pixels can be read in 43.2 seconds. Each pixel can be read ten times in about 7.5 minutes. The operations to read a pixel are the same as those above:
Measuring OLED Voltage in Order to Track Aging
a shows the driver transistor in series with the OLED. From the outside world, the only part of the circuit that is accessible is the voltage on the gate, Vg, and the current through the OLED, I_OLED. Therefore, in order to know the V_OLED without adding a transistor and another metal line as in the prior art a means and a method are required to obtain V_OLED using the access points noted above.
The Method for Measuring V OLED
The equation that models the field effect MOS transistor when it is in the linear region is:
Where: ID=Drain current (I_OLED)
Since k and VT were determined from the equations use in the uniformity correction above we are able extract the actual voltage across the OLED using equation 6. The drain current ID is the current obtained when the drive transistor T2 is in the linear region. In order to put transistor T2 in the linear region the voltage drop across transistor T2, and the gate voltage VG minus the threshold voltage VT must exceed VSD the voltage across the transistor (see equation 5 above). Using a methodology similar to the uniformity measurements V_OLED versus I_OLED curves are developed. These curves are compared to the LIV curves saved in memory of which one of the curves is assigned to each pixel. Initially, the first LIV curve is assigned to each pixel, but as the display ages each pixel will age at a rate determined by the pixels usage and the LIV will progress through the 64 stored curves (for a 6-bit system) until the end of life.
How the Display Operates Using the Correction Curves
The Apparatus
The apparatus for using the above described aging correction method is the same 20 apparatus used in the uniformity correction method described above with the following usage modification: In the capture apparatus described in
Although preferred illustrative embodiments of the present invention are described above, it will be evident to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention. The respective embodiments described above are concrete examples of the present invention; the present invention is not limited to these examples alone. The claims that follow are intended to cover all changes and modifications that fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application claims priority from the U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/792,266, filed on Apr. 13, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60792266 | Apr 2006 | US |