Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) include micro mechanical elements, actuators, and electronics. Micromechanical elements may be created using deposition, etching, and or other micromachining processes that etch away parts of substrates and/or deposited material layers or that add layers to form electrical and electromechanical devices. One type of MEMS device is called an interferometric modulator. An interferometric modulator may comprise a pair of conductive plates, one or both of which may be transparent and/or reflective in whole or part and capable of relative motion upon application of an appropriate electrical signal. One plate may comprise a stationary layer deposited on a substrate, the other plate may comprise a metallic membrane separated from the stationary layer by an air gap. Such devices have a wide range of applications, and it would be beneficial in the art to utilize and/or modify the characteristics of these types of devices so that their features can be exploited in improving existing products and creating new products that have not yet been developed.
The system, method, and devices of the invention each have several aspects, no single one of which is solely responsible for its desirable attributes. Without limiting the scope of this invention, its more prominent features will now be discussed briefly. After considering this discussion, and particularly after reading the section entitled “Detailed Description of Certain Embodiments” one will understand how the features of this invention provide advantages over other display devices.
In one embodiment, a method of actuating a MEMS display element is provided, wherein the MEMS display element comprises a portion of an array of MEMS display elements. The method includes writing display data to the MEMS display element with a potential difference of a first polarity during a first portion of a display write process, and re-writing the display data to the MEMS display element with a potential difference having a polarity opposite the first polarity during a second portion of the display write process. Subsequently, a first bias potential having the first polarity is applied to the MEMS display element during a third portion of the display write process and a second bias potential having the opposite polarity is applied to the MEMS display element during a fourth portion of the display write process.
In another embodiment, a method of maintaining a frame of display data on an array of MEMS display elements includes alternately applying approximately equal bias voltages of opposite polarities to the MEMS display elements for periods of time defined at least in part by the inverse of a rate at which frames of display data are received by a display system. Each period of time may be substantially equal to 1/(2f) or 1/(4f), wherein f is a defined frequency of frame refresh cycles.
In another embodiment, a method of writing frames of display data to an array of MEMS display elements at a rate of one frame per defined frame update period includes writing display data to the MEMS display elements, wherein the writing takes less than the frame update period and applying a series of bias potentials of alternating polarity to the MEMS display elements for the remainder of the frame update period.
Display devices are also provided. In one such embodiment, a MEMS display device is configured to display images at a frame update rate, the frame update rate defining a frame update period. The display device includes row and column driver circuitry configured to apply a polarity balanced sequence of bias voltages to substantially all columns of a MEMS display array for portions of at least one frame update period, wherein the portions are defined by a time remaining between completing a frame write process for a first frame, and beginning a frame write process for a next subsequent frame.
The following detailed description is directed to certain specific embodiments of the invention. However, the invention can be embodied in a multitude of different ways. In this description, reference is made to the drawings wherein like parts are designated with like numerals throughout. As will be apparent from the following description, the invention may be implemented in any device that is configured to display an image, whether in motion (e.g., video) or stationary (e.g., still image), and whether textual or pictorial. More particularly, it is contemplated that the invention may be implemented in or associated with a variety of electronic devices such as, but not limited to, mobile telephones, wireless devices, personal data assistants (PDAs), hand-held or portable computers, GPS receivers/navigators, cameras, MP3 players, camcorders, game consoles, wrist watches, clocks, calculators, television monitors, flat panel displays, computer monitors, auto displays (e.g., odometer display, etc.), cockpit controls and/or displays, display of camera views (e.g., display of a rear view camera in a vehicle), electronic photographs, electronic billboards or signs, projectors, architectural structures, packaging, and aesthetic structures (e.g., display of images on a piece of jewelry). MEMS devices of similar structure to those described herein can also be used in non-display applications such as in electronic switching devices.
One interferometric modulator display embodiment comprising an interferometric MEMS display element is illustrated in
The depicted portion of the pixel array in
The fixed layers 16a, 16b are electrically conductive, partially transparent and partially reflective, and may be fabricated, for example, by depositing one or more layers each of chromium and indium-tin-oxide onto a transparent substrate 20. The layers are patterned into parallel strips, and may form row electrodes in a display device as described further below. The movable layers 14a, 14b may be formed as a series of parallel strips of a deposited metal layer or layers (orthogonal to the row electrodes 16a, 16b) deposited on top of posts 18 and an intervening sacrificial material deposited between the posts 18. When the sacrificial material is etched away, the deformable metal layers are separated from the fixed metal layers by a defined air gap 19. A highly conductive and reflective material such as aluminum may be used for the deformable layers, and these strips may form column electrodes in a display device.
With no applied voltage, the cavity 19 remains between the layers 14a, 16a and the deformable layer is in a mechanically relaxed state as illustrated by the pixel 12a in
In one embodiment, the processor 21 is also configured to communicate with an array controller 22. In one embodiment, the array controller 22 includes a row driver circuit 24 and a column driver circuit 26 that provide signals to a pixel array 30. The cross section of the array illustrated in
In typical applications, a display frame may be created by asserting the set of column electrodes in accordance with the desired set of actuated pixels in the first row. A row pulse is then applied to the row 1 electrode, actuating the pixels corresponding to the asserted column lines. The asserted set of column electrodes is then changed to correspond to the desired set of actuated pixels in the second row. A pulse is then applied to the row 2 electrode, actuating the appropriate pixels in row 2 in accordance with the asserted column electrodes. The row 1 pixels are unaffected by the row 2 pulse, and remain in the state they were set to during the row 1 pulse. This may be repeated for the entire series of rows in a sequential fashion to produce the frame. Generally, the frames are refreshed and/or updated with new display data by continually repeating this process at some desired number of frames per second. A wide variety of protocols for driving row and column electrodes of pixel arrays to produce display frames are also well known and may be used in conjunction with the present invention.
In the
The details of the structure of interferometric modulators that operate in accordance with the principles set forth above may vary widely. For example,
It is one aspect of the above described devices that charge can build on the dielectric between the layers of the device, especially when the devices are actuated and held in the actuated state by an electric field that is always in the same direction. For example, if the moving layer is always at a higher potential relative to the fixed layer when the device is actuated by potentials having a magnitude larger than the outer threshold of stability, a slowly increasing charge buildup on the dielectric between the layers can begin to shift the hysteresis curve for the device. This is undesirable as it causes display performance to change over time, and in different ways for different pixels that are actuated in different ways over time. As can be seen in the example of
This problem can be reduced by actuating the MEMS display elements with a potential difference of a first polarity during a first portion of the display write process, and actuating the MEMS display elements with a potential difference having a polarity opposite the first polarity during a second portion of the display write process. This basic principle is illustrated in
In
Frame N+1 is written in accordance with the lowermost row of
A wide variety of modifications of this scheme can be implemented. For example, Frame N and Frame N+1 can comprise different display data. Alternatively, it can be the same display data written twice to the array with opposite polarities. One specific embodiment wherein the same data is written twice with opposite polarity signals is illustrated in additional detail in
In this Figure, Frame N and N+1 update periods are illustrated. These update periods are typically the inverse of a selected frame update rate that is defined by the rate at which new frames of display data are received by the display system. This rate may, for example, be 15 Hz, 30 Hz, or another frequency depending on the nature of the image data being displayed.
It is one feature of the display elements described herein that a frame of data can generally be written to the array of display elements in a time period shorter than the update period defined by the frame update rate. In the embodiment of
During the first portion 40 of a frame update period, the frame is written with potential differences across the modulator elements of a first polarity. For example, the voltages applied to the rows and columns may follow the polarity illustrated by the center row of
During a second portion 42 of the frame update period, the same data is written to the array with the opposite polarities applied to the display elements. During this period, the voltages present on the columns are the opposite of what they were during the first portion 40. If the voltage was, for example, +5 volts on a column during time period 50, it will be −5 volts during time period 60, and vice versa. The same is true for sequential applications of sets of display data to the columns, e.g., the potential during period 62 is opposite to that of 52, and the potential during period 64 is opposite to that applied during time period 54. Row strobes 61, 63, 65 of opposite polarity to those provided during the first portion 40 of the frame update period re-write the same data to the array during second portion 42 as was written during portion 40, but the polarity of the applied voltage across the display elements is reversed.
In the embodiment illustrated in
During the next frame update period for Frame N+1, the process may be repeated, as shown in
In some embodiments, several timing variables are independently programmable to ensure DC electric neutrality and consistent hysteresis windows. These timing settings include, but are not limited to, the write+ and write− cycle times, the positive hold and negative hold cycle times, and the row strobe time.
While the frame update cycles discussed herein have a set order of write+, write−, hold+, and hold−, this order can be changed. In other embodiments, the order of cycles can be any other permutation of the cycles. In still other embodiments, different cycles and different permutations of cycles can be used for different display update periods. For example, Frame N might include only a write+ cycle, hold+ cycle, and a hold− cycle, while subsequent Frame N+1 could include only a write−, hold+, and hold− cycle. Another embodiment could use write+, hold+, write−, hold− for one or a series of frames, and then use write−, hold−, write+, hold+ for the next subsequent one or series of frames. It will also be appreciated that the order of the positive and negative polarity hold cycles can be independently selected for each column. In this embodiment, some columns cycle through hold+ first, then hold−, while other columns go to hold− first and then to hold+. In one example, depending on the configuration of the column driver circuit, it may be more advantageous to set half the columns at −5 V and half at +5 V for the first hold cycle 44, and then switch all column polarities to set the first half to +5 V and the second half to −5 V for the second hold cycle 46.
It has also been found advantageous to periodically include a release cycle for the MEMS display elements. It is advantageous to perform this release cycle for one or more rows during some of the frame update cycles. This release cycle will typically be provided relatively infrequently, such as every 100,000 or 1,000,000 frame updates, or every hour or several hours of display operation. The purpose of this periodic releasing of all or substantially all pixels is to reduce the chance that a MEMS display element that is continually actuated for a long period due to the nature of the images being displayed will become stuck in an actuated state. In the embodiment of
It will be understood by those of skill in the art that numerous and various modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the present invention. Therefore, it should be clearly understood that the forms of the present invention are illustrative only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. Section 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application 60/613,483, entitled Method and Device for Driving Interferometric Modulators, and filed on Sep. 27, 2004. The entire disclosure of this application is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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