This invention relates generally to electronic systems and more specifically to a method and system for providing a single pulse for driving a pixel.
Display units, such as a computer monitor or television, are commonly used to display an image. A display unit displays the image on a screen having rows and columns of pixels. After receiving signals indicating information concerning an image, a logic unit of the display unit excites the pixels according to the image information to recreate the image. The process of exciting the pixels is also referred to as “driving” the pixels.
Most conventional display units use analog signals to drive the pixels. For example, a particular color shade may be displayed using a signal having a particular level of voltage to drive a pixel. The voltage level used is indicative of the color or shade of gray intended to be represented. However, the range of voltage levels for an analog signal is narrow. Thus, analog signals may not be suitable for displaying numerous color shades because the voltage difference between the analog signals may become too small to accurately display an image.
To generate a more realistic image, digital signals may be used to drive pixels. During a given time frame, a pixel is excited by one or more pulses, with the fraction of the time frame in which the pixel is excited being indicative of the color or shade of gray to be displayed. However, pixels of some display units may not be digitally driven because some binary numbers may initiate pulses that are spaced apart, causing image errors. For example, pixels of a liquid crystal display unit may be difficult to drive with digital signals because the time period required by liquid crystal to assume a relaxed state after an excitation is longer than the time periods that separate the pulses. Thus, if the liquid crystal is excited by a pulse before completely relaxing from an excitation by a previous pulse associated, the actual brightness of the pixel may be brighter than the actual color shade intended to be represented.
According to one embodiment of the invention, a method for displaying N-bit color on a plurality of pixels on a monitor includes, for each pixel, receiving a value indicative of one of a plurality of possible values for the level of intensity desired to be displayed on the pixel. The value is representable by N binary bits including a least significant bit. During a given time frame, the method includes providing an on state for the pixel for a continuous fractional portion of the given time frame. The fractional portion is indicative of the received value. The given time frame includes a fixed portion followed by a variable portion. For any of the possible values for the level of intensity, the time at which the pixel is turned on during the fixed portion, if at all, is independent of the least significant bit.
Some embodiments of the invention provide numerous technical advantages. Other embodiments may realize some, none, or all of these advantages. For example, according to one embodiment, the brightness of a pixel may be adjusted by digitally modulating a pulse width. According to another embodiment, a plurality of pixels may be digitally driven without using a counter or a comparator for each pixel. According to another embodiment, a pixel of visual display units, such as a liquid crystal display unit, may be digitally driven by providing a continuous pulse for each binary number that indicates a particular brightness for the pixel.
Other advantages may be readily ascertainable by those skilled in the art.
Reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numbers represent like parts, in which:
Embodiments of the invention are best understood by referring to
TV station 24, cable company 28, and DSS company 30 may be operable to transmit image information to pixel driver 20 over a communications network 40. Image information may comprise information concerning the brightness, color, and/or shape of an image. Image information may indicate scenes from TV programs, movies, news, or sporting events, for example. Communications network 40 may be any information conduit or a combination of information conduits. Examples of information conduit include a wire network, wireless network, cable network, and fiber optic network. Any structure or method suitable for carrying digital and/or analog signals may be a part of communications network 40. Camera 34 may capture the image of an object, convert the image into image information, and transmit the image information to pixel driver 20. Image information from TV station 24, cable company 28, and DSS company 30 may have been obtained using cameras, such as camera 34. Computer system 38 may transmit image information stored in its memory and/or downloaded from internet 44 to pixel driver 20. Regardless of the source of image information, the image information is transmitted to pixel driver 20 in order to display image 48 according to the image information. Where a plurality of images 48 are displayed one after another by display unit 14, as is often the case with movies and TV programs, pixel driver 20 receives a virtually constant stream of image information and displays the indicated image 48 using display screen 18.
Pixel driver 20 is a device operable to receive image information and drive the pixels using logic unit 22. Logic unit 22 converts the received image information into a plurality of corresponding signals indicating various brightness levels and transmits the signals to each pixel of screen 18. Depending on the particular design of pixel driver 20 and display screen 18, the signals indicating the various brightness levels may be either analog or digital. Pixel driver 20 is shown as a component that is separate from display unit 14 for illustrative purposes. However, in most cases, pixel driver 20 is an internal component of display unit 14 and the image information received by pixel driver 20 may be initially received and processed by other components of display unit 14 before reaching pixel driver 20. Depending on the particular design of display unit 14, pixel driver 20 may be implemented as a single component or multiple components.
Display unit 14 may be any device operable to display an image, such as image 48. Examples of display unit 14 include a computer monitor, a regular TV set, and a high definition TV set. Screen 18 may be any suitable type, such as a wide screen, flat screen, plasma screen, cathode ray tube (“CRT”) screen, liquid crystal (“LC”) screen, digital mirror device (“DMD”) screen, or other suitable types of screens. Referring to
Referring to
Referring again to
Conventionally, display units fall into one of three categories; transmissive, reflective and emissive. The dominant display technology is emissive, an example of which is CRT. Newer technologies include flat panel transmissive liquid crystal displays which are used with most portable products and are currently replacing CRTs in non-portable applications such as desktop computer monitors and TVs. Plasma display technology is the leading flat panel emitting technology with organic light emitting diodes (“OLED”)entering high volume production. Plasma technology traditionally involves emissive displays and utilizes a high voltage to excite a gas and react it with phosphors to produce an image. OLED utilizes lower voltages from about 12 to 20 volts.
Reflective technologies may be characterized as mechanical devices or liquid crystal devices. Mechanical devices, such as a digital mirror display (“DMD”), modulate the light by changing the direction of the reflective mirror surface directing the light at the target image or reflecting the light away from the target. A reflective liquid crystal device often uses a CMOS substrate with a mirrored surface upon which the liquid crystal is sandwiched between the mirrored surface of the CMOS and glass anode. An example of such a device is shown in
As described above, a flat panel display screen, an example of which is shown as screen 18 of
Similar pixel operation occurs with the reflective LCD where the CMOS substrate embodies the pixel control electronics and the reflective pixel surfaces are set on top the CMOS electronics. A field between the CMOS and the glass anode rotate the light striking the surface and reflects a rotated light ray.
Referring back to
There are two fundamental pixel drive schemes used for displaying digital images stored on a Digital Versatile Disk (“DVD”), computer, digital TV or other electronic image sources. Analog or amplitude modulation converts a pixel's binary color value to an instantaneous voltage amplitude. The voltage amplitude in turn controls the degree of light transmitted, emitted or reflected from the pixel. The alternative is digital time division commonly referred to as Pulse Width Modulation (“PWM”), which converts a digital pixel value into a time based pulse where the width of the pulse in units of time controls the pixel's on and off time. The fraction of the time a pulse is on or off is indicative of the color to be represented.
Analog, or amplitude modulation, has its shortcomings. Analog, or amplitude modulation, uses a voltage representation for a digital value. For example, a 4-bit digital value is represented by 16 discrete voltage levels where 00002 (010) has the pixel off or blocking the transmission or reflection of light through the polarizer. 11112 (1510) has the pixel full on to reflect or transmit maximum light representing full brightness. Assuming zero volts represents black and 5 volts represents white, the step between each gray level is 0.3125 volts. Current display products advertise 8-bits of color or intensity that would be represented by 256 discrete voltage values with each step 0.0195 volts for a 5-volt display.
Image transmission of the amplitude-modulated data is often inside an envelope with synchronization data identifying the beginning of a row and the pixel rate. Timing circuitry addresses the display rows and transfers the appropriate pixel voltage value to the corresponding pixel. Some of these methods depend heavily on timing accuracy. An analog voltage often must be sampled and transferred to the corresponding pixel in less than 21.2 nanoseconds for XGA resolution displays. A calculation of pixel time is shown below,
Pixel Rate=rows*columns*fps
Pixel rate=768*1024*60=47,185,020 pixels per second
Pixel time=1/pixel rate=21.2 nanoseconds
A pixel voltage value generally should remain constant during the transfer from the column input to the pixel transistor output. Any noise in the column circuitry is often transferred to the pixel introducing color errors.
Analog displays often deal with very small variances in signal levels. A five-volt liquid crystal operation requires the pixel circuit to control the applied voltage to plus or minus 0.0097 (½ LSB) volts for values from zero to five volts. For example, a color value of 142 requires 2.7734 volts across the liquid crystal pixel in order to achieve accurate light output. Signal variances greater than plus or minus 0.0097 result in a color value in the range of 141 to 143. In order to achieve an accurate color at the pixel, the display circuitry must transfer the input voltagen,m to pixeln,m with virtually no loss or distortion due to noise and timing variances.
Additional problems with analog display recognized by the teachings of the invention include high development costs for an analog display, which may be three to four times that of a digital display. Further, the development of an analog display may take at least twice the time as that needed for a digital display. Manufacturing costs may be four to five times higher than a digital display due to tight tolerances and the lack of redundancy for signal pixel failures.
Digital drive is considered to be much more difficult to design when compared to analog design due to the complex circuits required to convert a binary number to a pulse width and the problems involved with controlling hundreds of thousands of pulses simultaneously. An 8-bit pulse width generator for converting an 8-bit per pixel color value into a time domain pulse for XGA (1024×768 pixel array) display is generally not believed feasible with the currently existing technology. Various pseudo-PWM techniques have been developed to reduce the pixel control from a PWM generator to a few bits of memory. These pseudo-PWM techniques often either introduce image artifacts and/or create problems with input/output (“I/O”) bandwidth where the data transfer to the display is a function of the least significant bit (“LSB”) display time. For the above example, the data rate required would be:
Data Rate=fps*color-bits*columns*rows
It is difficult to design an I/O interface to run at 12 gigabits per second using the technology required for certain screen types, such as the liquid crystal. Liquid crystal currently requires three volts or more to operate, which generally requires a 0.25-micron CMOS technology or 0.35 CMOS micron technology. The state of the art design using 0.18 microns delivers 2.5 gigabits, roughly one-fifth the 12 gigabits. A challenging design for 0.25 micron technology is 100 megabits per second which translates into an I/O interface with 120 data pins plus power, ground, control and clocks. High pin count I/O is also a significant design challenge to overcome because of the need to maintain signal integrity while minimizing emissions. In short, PWM is difficult.
According to the teachings of the invention a special form of the digital drive approach is utilized to display pixels that result in a plurality of continuous pulses, which as described in greater detail below, addresses disadvantages of some prior systems.
In this sense, the most significant bit of binary number 110 corresponds to about the first eight-fifteenths of time frame 105, the second MSB corresponds to the time from about eight-fifteenths through time frame 105 to about twelve-fifteenths of the way through time frame 105, the next bit corresponds to about twelve-fifteenths of the time through about fourteen-fifteenths of the time frame 105, and the least significant bit corresponds to about the one-fifteenth of time frame 105. Generally, utilizing this approach, the fraction of time frame 105 of any bit within number 110, or bit length, is defined by about 2n/[21−1], where n is the bit location where the LSB is position zero and the MSB is in location i−1 and i is the number of bits of gray scale (or color), e.g., in this example the bit number of the MSB is three and the bit number of the least significant bit is zero. For example, the value 13, or binary 1101, is represented as follows: During the first half of time frame 105 the pixel is turned on, corresponding to a MSB value of one; then the pixel remains on, corresponding to a LSB+2 of one; then at twelve-fifteenths of the way through time frame 105 the pixel is turned off, corresponding to a LSB+1 of zero; then at fourteen-fifteenths of the way through time frame 105 the pixel is turned on, corresponding to a least significant bit of one. Thus the total duration of the time the pixel is on is equal to (13/15)×100 percent of the time, and the particular times at which the pixel is turned on are illustrated in
For each binary number 110 having more than one pulse, a particular chain 122 of pulses is formed. Some chains essentially form a continuous pulse because no time space exists between pulses. For example, pulse chain 122 associated with binary number “1100” may be considered a continuous pulse. However, pulse chain 122 associated with binary number “1010” may be considered a non-continuous pulse.
As shown in the 4-bit color scheme timing diagram 100 of
Another disadvantage with the digital pulse position drive of
The teachings of the invention recognize that a reason for this is because binary number “1010” is associated with a non-continuous chain 122 of pulses. As described above, as pulses are turned on and turned off, there is a time delay before which the actual value desired is attained. For example, with respect to pixel display corresponding to “1010”, before the liquid crystal display is allowed to assume a completely relaxed state from the excitation during the first half of the time frame 105, excitation of the pixel corresponding to the LSB+1 excites the liquid crystal display again, which may result in a brightness that is higher than the one actually represented by “1010” because the brightness accounts for both excitation corresponding to the LSB+1 and the residual energy from the previous excitation corresponding to the MSB. Thus, the actual brightness resulting from “1010” may be higher than the actual brightness resulting from “1100” due to device limitations even though the value of “1010”is lower than the value of “1100.”
In addition to non-monotonic intensity, the teachings of the invention recognize that some pulse position drive LCs create image artifacts that may be classified as a dislocation. The visible results of the “dislocation” are fine lines in the image resembling a noisy CRT TV image. Referring again to
Referring back to the timing diagram of
The teachings of the invention recognize that some of the disadvantages described above may be substantially reduced by driving pixels 50 using pulse width modulation (“PWM”). As used herein, PWM refers to providing a single pulse (or a continuous chain of pulses) to represent each particular color, rather than a series of discontinuous pulses. Such an approach is illustrated in
Although driving pixels 50 using a single pulse is desirable, the technology likely required to drive the liquid crystal to 3.3 volts or 5.0 volts would likely preclude using 0.20 micron or more advanced technology that would allow the engineer to implement a full PWM per pixel, as illustrated in
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a method and system are provided that allow pixels to be digitally driven using single pulses by creating continuous pulse chains. This is advantageous in some embodiments of the invention because display units may benefit from PWM without using a comparator or counter in each pixel, although such comparators or counters may also be used. In another embodiment, monotonic intensity may be attained for pixels that are digitally driven. In another embodiment, images that are brighter and free of errors may be displayed by driving each pixel using a continuous pulse. In another embodiment, a pixel of visual display units, such as a liquid crystal display unit, may be digitally driven by providing a continuous pulse for each binary number that indicates a particular brightness for the pixel. Additional details of example embodiments of the invention are described in greater detail below.
In general, in response to receiving any number representing a color or shade of gray, logic unit 22 generates fixed time pulses (“FTPs”) corresponding to the bits preceding a reference time 120 (
The teachings of the invention recognize that the desirable continuous pulses, such as those illustrated for a four-bit color example in
The above example involved display of pixels according to four bits of data; however, the teachings of the invention are applicable to any suitable number of bits. The division of pulses 220 into fixed pulses and variable pulses, as described above may occur in suitable manners determined by the implementation constraints. Two example implementations involving eight bit and ten bit color schemes are described in greater detail below. However, in one embodiment, time slots for the LSB and the LSB+1 may be modified to reflect the specification of the liquid crystal material used in the micro-display. Slow materials may require a longer LSB time slot than a faster liquid crystal. In one embodiment, the pulse width may be controlled to match the characteristics of the liquid crystal materials. It should be understood that for any given number of bits used to represent color or shades of gray, the selection of the number of these bits allocated to the fixed portion of time frame 105 and the number allocated to the variable portion of time frame 105 may vary depending on implementation. Additional details are described below in conjunction with
The method begins at step 302. At step 304, a number indicative of a color or shade of gray is received. Such a number may be represented in binary form with a plurality of bits, including a most significant bit and a least significant bit. At a step 306 the most significant bits corresponding to the fixed portion of time frame 105 are received by a particular portion of, in this example logic unit 22. It should be understood that such receipt may also include receipt of the least significant bits; however, the value of the least significant bits are not relevant to calculations within the fixed portion of time frame 105. As described above, it should be understood that the number of the most significant bits devoted to the fixed portion of time frame 105 may vary depending upon implementation. For example, n one implementation in which five bits of storage are available for each pixel, those five bits are devoted to the variable time period and the remaining bits of a number are addressed in the fixed time period. Thus, 8-bit color has five variable and three fixed bits; 10-bit color has five variable and five fixed; and 12-bit color utilizes five variable and seven fixed.
At step 308, based on the received most significant bits and programmed logic (described in greater detail below), fixed time pulses for responding to the number received at 304 are generated for the fixed portion of time frame 105. At step 310 the least significant bits corresponding to the variable period of time frame 105 are displayed. Such display may involve conventional logic, such as that described above in conjunction with
Logic for implementing the most significant bit pairs received by inputs 502 and 504 and the desired outputs 506 may be readily programmed in software or hardware according to conventional techniques, and may be implemented in logic unit 22. The above example is provided for example purposes only, and the invention is not limited to a four-bit color scheme, but rather may utilize any suitable number of bits to represent color or shades of gray on a pixel.
A second example is provided in
In
In one embodiment, at a given time segment within a time frame, FTPs 124, 128, and 130 (
Logic unit 22 continues to rotate the display of each of the pulses 124, 128, 130, and 132 through sectors 400, 404, 408, and 410 for each binary number it receives, which allows logic unit 22 to perform VTP calculations for, in this example, one quarter of the pixels at a time. More importantly, bandwidth limitations might otherwise prevent access of the pixels in the time frame required for accurate resolution if it was attempted to update all pixels in the array at the same time. The fixed time pulses do not suffer this difficulty, so these bandwidth constraints may be overcome by time multiplexing and rotating calculation and loading of the VTP 132, as described above. It will be appreciated that, if rotation is employed, time frames 105 for each sector will appear to be somewhat shifted with respect to different sectors, but that the pulses 220 remain continuous. This is advantageous in some embodiments where memory space for each pixel 50 is limited. For example, a pixel of a flat panel screen having only one bit of memory available may rotate the display of pulse segments to avoid overloading the memory.
Method 150 starts at step 154. At step 158, pulses 116, 126, 131, and/or 136 (
At step 160, reference time 120 is determined for all binary numbers 110. For example, as shown in
At step 164, in one embodiment, pulses preceding reference time 120 in
The table above shows a re-mapping of the pulses of
At step 168, some FTPs 124, 128, and/or 130 are located within time frame 105 to time periods different from those of
At step 170, respective pulses that follow reference time 120 are combined to form VTP 132 for each binary number. The particular VTP 132 of each binary number may not be equal in duration to those of other VTPs 142. For some binary numbers, such as binary numbers “0100,” “1000,” “1100,” and “0000,” VTP 132 may not exist. Additional details regarding one implementation of calculating VTP 132 are provided below in conjunction with
In one embodiment, method 150 also includes steps 178 through 180; however, steps 178 through 180 may be omitted in some embodiments. At step 178, each of segments 124, 128, 130, and 132 for a given pixel is displayed in only a particular sector of screen 18 depending upon the time within time frame 105. Then at step 180, segments 124, 128, 130, and 132 are continuously rotated in this manner so that each sector displays a particular segment only one quarter of the time. This is advantageous in some embodiments because VTP 132, the formation of which requires calculations, is performed only a fraction of the time. Thus, bandwidth is saved. Additional details concerning steps 178 and 180 are described in conjunction with
Although some embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions, and alterations can be made hereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of the filing date of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/331,956, filed Nov. 21, 2001 entitled Precision Pulse Technology, which is incorporated herein by reference.
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