Method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display panel

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6720947
  • Patent Number
    6,720,947
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 19, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 13, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
A method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel in which a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines are arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs) and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines are arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines is provided. The method includes the steps of selectively shifting LCs into a ferroelectric state, keeping the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state, activating the selected LCs, and restoring the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state. In particular, a scan selection voltage is applied to a scan electrode lines to be scanned, and a display data signal is applied to all of the signal electrode lines, to selectively shift LCs into a ferroelectric state. Next, a holding voltage, which is lower than the scan selection voltage and has the same polarity, is applied to the scan electrode line for a predetermined period of time, to keep the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state. Alternating current (AC) pulses, each having opposite polarities and a voltage lower than the scan selection voltage, are applied to the scan electrode line, to activate the selected LCs. Then, ground voltage is applied to the scan electrode line to restore the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel, and more particularly, to a method for driving an anti-ferroelectric LCD panel in which a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines are arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs), and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines are arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines.




2. Description of the Related Art




Referring to

FIG. 1

, a general anti-ferroelectric LCD


1


includes an anti-ferroelectric LCD panel


11


and a driving apparatus thereof. The anti-ferroelectric LCD panel


11


has a series of parallel signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn arranged over anti-ferroelectric LCs, and a series of parallel scan electrode lines CL


1


, CL


2


, CL


3


, . . . , CLm arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, wherein the signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn are perpendicular to the scan signal electrode lines CL


1


, CL


2


, CL


3


, . . . , CLm. The signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn and the scan electrode lines CL


1


, CL


2


, CL


3


, . . . , CLm are formed of a transparent conductive material, for example, indium tin oxide (ITO).




As shown in

FIG. 1

, the driving apparatus includes a segment driver


12


, a modulation signal generator


131


and a common driver


132


. The driving apparatus receives a data signal DATA, a shift clock signal SCK, a frame signal FLM and a latch clock signal LCK from a host, for example, from a notebook computer. The segment driver


12


stores the received data signal for each of the signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn, according to the shift clock signal SCK. The segment driver


12


applies a signal voltage corresponding to the stored data signal DATA to each of the signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn according to the latch clock signal LCK.




The frame signal FLM indicates the starting point of a frame. The modulation signal generator


131


divides the frequency of the latch clock signal LCK to generate a modulation signal. The polarity of the output voltages from the segment driver


12


and the common driver


132


are controlled by the modulation signal.




The common driver


132


applies a corresponding scan voltage to each of the scan electrode lines CL


1


, CL


2


, CL


3


, . . . , CLm in succession according to the controls of the latch clock signal LCK, the frame signal FLM and the modulation signal. As a result, the orientation state of the anti-ferroelectric LCs of a pixel to be displayed is shifted, thereby transmitting light or blocking the transmission of light.





FIG. 2

illustrates the waveform of a common drive voltage applied to a scan electrode line by a conventional driving method.




Referring to

FIG. 2

, during a first selection period t


s1


corresponding to a unit slot (SL), a scanning selection voltage +V


s


is applied, and the orientation state of anti-ferroelectric LCs selected depending on a corresponding display data signal S


s


are shifted into a ferro-electric state, which allows transmission of light from the outside. During the subsequent first holding period t


H1


, a holding voltage +V


H


, which has the same polarity as the scanning selection voltage +V


s


, but its level is lower than that of the scanning selection voltage +V


s


, is applied, and the selected LCs are maintained in the ferroelectric state. During the subsequent first reset period t


R1


, ground voltage is applied and the LCs are restored to the anti-ferroelectric state from the ferroelectric state. The first reset period t


R1


is required for smooth inverse driving during the subsequent unit driving period.




During the subsequent second selection period t


S2


, a scanning selection voltage −V


S


is applied and anti-ferroelectric LCs selected depending on a corresponding display data signal S


s


are shifted into the ferroelectric state, which allows transmission of light from the outside. During the subsequent second holding period t


H2


, a holding voltage −V


H


, which has the same polarity as the scanning selection voltage −V


s


, but its level is higher than that of the scanning selection voltage −V


s


, is applied and the selected LCs are maintained in the ferroelectric state. During the subsequent second reset period t


R2


, ground voltage is applied and the LCs are restored to the anti-ferroelectric state from the ferroelectric state. The second reset period t


R2


is required for smooth inverse driving of the subsequent unit driving period.





FIG. 3

shows the change of transmittancy of the selected LCs during the first or second reset period t


R1


or t


R2


of FIG.


2


. In

FIG. 3

, reference numeral


31


indicates a circular waveform in the state where a probe voltage is not applied, and reference numerals


311


,


312


,


313


and


314


indicate interference waveforms when the probe voltage is applied. As described with reference to

FIG. 2

, during the first or second reset period t


R1


or t


R2


, the level of voltage applied to a scanning electrode line is changed from the holding voltage +V


H


or −V


H


to ground voltage, so that the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state are restored to the anti-ferroelectric state. As a result, light transmittancy of the selected LCs is lowered, as shown in FIG.


3


.




In anti-ferroelectric LCD panels, brightness increases with a rising state restoration time in the selected LCs. However, when an anti-ferroelectric LCD panel is simply driven by the conventional method as illustrated in

FIG. 2

, it takes a long period of time to restore the orientation state of LCs in the first or second reset period t


R1


or t


R2


, and thus brightness of the anti-ferroelectric LCD panel decreases.





FIG. 4

illustrates the waveform of a common drive voltage applied to a scan electrode line by another conventional driving method. In

FIG. 4

, like reference numerals are used to refer to like operations of FIG.


2


. Compared with

FIG. 2

, the driving waveform of

FIG. 4

further includes single activation periods t


B1


, and t


B2


, for which a single blanking pulse is applied, between the first holding period t


H1


and the first reset period t


R1


, and between the second holding period t


H2


and the second reset period t


R2


.





FIG. 5

illustrates the change of transmittancy of the selected LCs during the first and second reset periods t


R1


and t


R2


. In

FIG. 5

, reference numeral


51


indicates a non-active waveform that appears when applying the driving method of FIG.


2


. Reference numeral


521


indicates an active waveform that appears when applying the driving method of

FIG. 4

, and reference numerals


522


and


523


indicate interference waveforms when the probe voltage is applied. As shown in

FIG. 5

, the state restoration time becomes short due to the presence of the single activation periods t


B1 and t




B2


during each of which the signal blanking pulse is applied.




However, when the driving method of

FIG. 4

is applied, the state restoration is sensitive to temperature variations. In other words, when the neighboring temperature is higher or lower than room temperature, the single blanking pulse applied during each of the single activation periods t


B1


, and t


B2


acts as a noise component, so that the state restoration time cannot be reduced.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




To solve the above problems, it is an objective of the present invention to provide a method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel, which can consistently reduce the time required for restoring the state in liquid crystal cells, regardless of ambient temperature changes.




To achieve the objective of the present invention, there is provided a method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel in which a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines are arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs) and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines are arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines, the method comprising the steps of selectively shifting LCs into a ferroelectric state, keeping the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state, activating the selected LCs, and restoring the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state.




In particular, a scan selection voltage is applied to a scan electrode lines to be scanned, and a display data signal is applied to all of the signal electrode lines, to selectively shift LCs into a ferroelectric state. Next, a holding voltage, which is lower than the scan selection voltage and has the same polarity, is applied to the scan electrode line for a predetermined period of time, to keep the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state. Alternating current (AC) pulses, each having inverted polarity and a voltage lower than the scan selection voltage, are applied to the scan electrode line, to activate the selected LCs. Then, ground voltage is applied to the scan electrode line to restore the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state.




According to the inventive method for driving an anti-ferroelectric LCD panel, in the step of activating the selected LCs, AC pulses, each having inverted polarity and a voltage lower than the scan selection voltage, are applied to the scan electrode lines. As a result, the time required for restoring the state of LCs can be reduced with consistency regardless of temperature changes. The alternating current (AC) pulses are generated by switching DC voltages such as +V


S


, +V


H


, ground voltage, −V


S


and −V


H


. The width of each of the AC pulses corresponds to the length of time taken to switch the DC voltages.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The above objective and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent by describing in detail a preferred embodiment thereof with reference to the attached drawings in which:





FIG. 1

is a block diagram of a general anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD);





FIG. 2

illustrates the waveform of a common driving voltage applied to a scan electrode line by a conventional driving method;





FIG. 3

illustrates the change in transmittancy of selected liquid crystal-cells (LCs) in the first or second reset period of

FIG. 2

;





FIG. 4

illustrates the waveform of a common driving voltage applied to a scan electrode line by another conventional driving method;





FIG. 5

illustrates the change in transmittancy of selected LCs in the first and second reset periods of

FIG. 4

; and





FIG. 6

illustrates the waveform of a common driving voltage applied to a scan electrode line by a driving method according to the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




In an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel to which an embodiment of the inventive driving method is applied, as illustrated in

FIG. 1

, a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn are arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs), and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines CL


1


, CL


2


, . . . , CLm are arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines SL


1


, SL


2


, SL


3


, . . . , SLn.





FIG. 6

illustrates the waveform of a common driving voltage applied to a scan electrode line by a driving method according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.




As shown in

FIG. 6

, one unit driving period has the opposite polarity to the other neighboring unit driving period. The unit driving period includes a selection period t


s1


, or t


s2


, a holding period t


H1


or t


H2


, an activation period t


B1


or t


B2


, and a reset period t


R1


or t


R2


.




During the first selection period t


S1


, corresponding to one unit slot S


L


(see FIG.


2


), a scanning selection voltage +V


s


is applied to a scan electrode line. The selected anti-ferroelectric LCs are shifted to the ferroelectric state, according to the corresponding display data signal voltage S


s


(see FIG.


2


). This allows transmission of light from the outside. During the subsequent first holding period t


H1


, a holding voltage +V


H


, is applied. The holding voltage +V


H


, has the same polarity as the scanning selection voltage +V


s


, but its level is lower than the scanning selection voltage +V


s


. The selected LCs are maintained in the ferroelectric state.




During the subsequent first activation period t


B1


, alternating current (AC) pulses are applied to the scan electrode line for the first sub-activation period t


B11


, the second sub-activation period t


B12


and the third sub-activation period t


B13


, with opposite polarities, thereby activating the selected LCs. Here, the voltage level of the AC pulses applied to the scan electrode line for the first activation period t


B1


is lower than the scanning selection voltage +V


s


, and equal to the holding voltage +V


H


. The periods of each of the AC pulses, become shorter in the order of t


B11


, t


B12


and t


B13


. It has been found that, when a ratio of the pulse periods among t


B11


, t


B12


and t


B13


was 3:2:1, the state restoration characteristics were superior. In the present embodiment, three unit slots (3S


L


) are allocated for the first sub-activation period t


B11


, two unit slots (2S


L


) are allocated for the second sub-activation period t


B12


, and one unit slot (S


L


) is allocated for the third sub-activation period t


B13


.




The values of parameters applied for the first activation period t


B1


, including the three sub-activation periods t


B11


, t


B12


and t


B13


, are listed in Table 1.















TABLE 1











Parameter




Value













t


B11






3 S


L









V


B11






−V


H









t


B12






2 S


L









V


B12






+V


H









t


B13






S


L









V


B13






−V


H

















In Table 1, V


B11


indicates the voltage of a first blanking pulse for the first sub-activation period t


B11


, V


B12


indicates the voltage of a second blanking pulse for the second sub-activation period t


B12


, and V


B13


indicates the voltage of a third blanking pulse for the third sub-activation period t


B13


.




During the subsequent first reset period t


R1


, ground voltage is applied to the scan electrode line, and the LCs in the ferroelectric state are restored to the anti-ferroelectric state. The three sub-activation periods t


B11


, t


B12


and t


B13


, can reduce the time required for restoration of state in the LCs with consistency, although the temperature changes. Satisfactory results can be obtained when four unit slots 4S


L


are allocated for the first reset period t


R1


.




During the second selection period t


S2


corresponding to one unit slot S


L


, a scan selection voltage −V


s


is applied to the scan electrode line. Anti-ferroelectric LCs selected according to a corresponding display data signal voltage S


s


(see

FIG. 2

) are shifted to the ferroelectric state, which allows transmission of light from the outside. During the subsequent second holding period t


H2


, a holding voltage −V


H


is applied. The holding voltage −V


H


has the same polarity as the scanning selection voltage −V


s


, but a higher level than the scanning selection voltage −V


s


. The selected LCs are maintained in the ferroelectric state.




During the subsequent second activation period t


B2


, alternating current (AC) pulses are applied to the scan electrode line for the first sub-activation period t


B21


, the second sub-activation period t


B22


and the third sub-activation period t


B23


, with opposite polarities, thereby activating the selected LCs. Here, the voltage level of the AC pulses applied to the scan electrode line for the first activation period t


B2


is higher than the scanning selection voltage −V


s


, and equal to the holding voltage −V


H


. The periods of each of the AC pulses, becomes shorter in the order of t


B21


, t


B22


and t


B23


. In the present embodiment, three unit slots (3S


L


) are allocated for the first sub-activation period t


B21


, two unit slots (2S


L


) are allocated for the second sub-activation period t


B22


, and one unit slot (S


L


) is allocated for the third sub-activation period t


B23


.




The values of parameters applied for the first activation period t


B2


, including the three sub-activation periods t


B21


, t


B22


and t


B23


, are listed in Table 2.















TABLE 2











Parameter




Value













t


B21






3 S


L









V


B21






+V


H









t


B22






2 S


L









V


B22






−V


H









t


B23






S


L









V


B23






+V


H

















In Table 2, V


B21


indicates the voltage of a first blanking pulse for the first sub-activation period t


B21


, V


B22


indicates the voltage of a second blanking pulse for the second sub-activation period t


B22


, and V


B23


indicates the voltage of a third blanking pulse for the third sub-activation period t


B23


.




During the subsequent second reset period t


R2


, ground voltage is applied to the scan electrode line, and the LCs in the ferroelectric state are restored to the anti-ferroelectric state. The three sub-activation periods t


B21


, t


B22


and t


B23


, can reduce the time required for restoration of state in the LCs can be reduced with consistency, although the neighboring temperature changes. In the same manner as for the first reset period t


R1


, four unit slots


4


S


L


are allocated for the second reset period t


R2


.




As previously described, in the method for driving an anti-ferroelectric LCD panel according to the present invention, during the first and second activation periods t


B1


and t


B2


, AC pulses with a voltage level lower than the scan selection voltage +V


s


or −V


s


are applied to a scan electrode line alternately with opposite polarities during the sub-activation periods. As a result, the time required for restoring the state of LCs can be reduced with consistency regardless of temperature changes.




While this invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel having a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs) and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines, the method comprising steps of:applying a scan selection voltage to a scan electrode line, and display data signals to the signal electrode lines, in order to selectively shift LCs into a ferroelectric state; applying a holding voltage to the scan electrode line to keep the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state; applying alternating current (AC) pulses for consecutive periods of time to the scan electrode line in order to activate the selected LCs; and applying a ground voltage to the scan electrode line to restore the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state, wherein the periods of time for the AC pulses decrease consecutively.
  • 2. A method for driving an anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal display (LCD) panel having a plurality of parallel signal electrode lines arranged over anti-ferroelectric liquid crystal cells (LCs) and a plurality of parallel scan electrode lines arranged below the anti-ferroelectric LCs, perpendicular to the signal electrode lines, the method comprising steps of:applying a scan selection voltage to a scan electrode line, and display data signals to the signal electrode lines, in order to selectively shift LCs into a ferroelectric state; applying a holding voltage to the scan electrode line to keep the selected LCs in the ferroelectric state; applying alternating current (AC) pulses for consecutive periods of time to the scan electrode line in order to activate the selected LCs; and applying a ground voltage to the scan electrode line to restore the activated LCs to an anti-ferroelectric state, wherein the AC pulses include a first pulse having the opposite polarity to the holding voltage, a second pulse having the opposite polarity to the first pulse, and a third pulse having the opposite polarity to the second pulse, and a ratio of the periods among the first, second and third pulse is 3:2:1.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2000-31658 Jun 2000 KR
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Number Name Date Kind
5440412 Mouri et al. Aug 1995 A
5459481 Tanaka et al. Oct 1995 A
5521727 Inaba et al. May 1996 A
5838293 Kondoh Nov 1998 A
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6008787 Kondoh Dec 1999 A
6175350 Green Jan 2001 B1
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6313820 Helbing et al. Nov 2001 B1
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Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
2000-111878 Apr 2000 JP