This invention relates to a method of fast addressing of a full color AC plasma display panel, that allows one to use an increased number of subfields (in one picture field), and respectively to have better image quality, and/or to use a single-scan driving scheme even for a full high definition panel (1080 and more lines), and/or increase brightness since significantly more time will be left for sustaining
Plasma display (or gas discharge) panels (PDPs) are well known in the art and, in general, comprise a structure including a pair of substrates (101 and 105) supporting column and row electrodes respectively, each coated with a dielectric layer, as shown in
In more details, the operation of AC cell is based on a cell's capability to hold a wall charge after the previous discharge. If one initially placed a large charge on the cell's walls so that in the absence of external voltage the conditions in the cell are close to, but below the breakdown conditions, and then applies to the cell the external voltage that doubles the electric field in the cell, then a strong pulse discharge occurs. This discharge results in another wall charge distribution which compensates the external field, and thus is close to the initial wall distribution, but distributed in the opposite direction with respect to the sustain electrodes of a given cell (see
The addressing speed is critical for the operation, quality, and cost of the PDP, especially for high definition displays. Indeed, for 60 Hz operation, the total time available for displaying a full color image is 16.67 ms. To display all colors (8 bit or 256 grey levels for each color) one has to have at least 8 subfields, where each subfield has a relative brightness (number of sustain pulses) proportional to 2N−1, where N is a subfield's number. In order to eliminate the motion picture distortions, one uses different, less optimized bit-wise scheme, which has at least 10 rather than 8 sub-fields. It is obvious that the more time one spends for addressing, the less time is left for actual sustaining, and if addressing of one subfield (with resetting) took more than 1.67 ms, then no time would be left for sustaining, since every subfield requires resetting and addressing. With about 1000 lines to address (780 lines for HDTV, 1080 lines—for full HDTV) the addressing time of just 1.5 us per row will take almost all the time available for displaying. In this case to address the panel within the required time one has to use a double scan scheme (when the screen is divided into two parts, each one has its own address electrodes), which is much more expensive, because it requires twice as many address drivers, and special alighning. But even with a double scan when using the current addressing schemes, the time left for actual sustaining is still too low for a high quality full HDTV panel. To keep the panel bright enough companies use interlacing, complex algorithms and different addressing schemes which often results in new artifacts. While newer panels do not have moving distortions that older 8-subfield panels had, the quality of a static image of new HD and especially Full HD panels are often worse than that of older ones with a lower number of subfields. So, if one could reliably address a line in less than 1 us, it would make single scan addressing possible for a full HDTV PDP without introducing new image distortions.
Independently of the specifics of a particular addressing scheme every one of them uses the effect of the wall charge memory. In order to place a memory charge in selected cells, quite a few schemes have been proposed. The most popular of them, which provides reliable addressing and contrast necessary for high quality panel is the ADS (Address Display Separated) scheme (U.S. Pat. No. 5,541,618, U.S. Pat. No. 5,724,054, U.S. Pat. No. 5,745,086, U.S. Pat. No. 5,446,344, U.S. Pat. No. 6956331, etc.), where the addressing and sustaining of the panel are separated. It has however some flaws that we describe below.
There are basically two schemes for ADS addressing. To keep higher contrast (a “must” for high quality displays) one turns the selected cells ON, and nothing is applied to the OFF cells. The disadvantage of this method is a large addressing time (˜1.5-2 us per row). So to address the entire high definition panel one has to use double scan addressing (one for the upper half, and the other for the lower half of the display), which requires twice as many address drivers and very precise aligning. In the other version one first turns ALL cells ON (which takes about 2-5 us for the whole panel), and then selectively turns some of them OFF in a way described above (sequentially row by row, with selective addressing in each row). Since it takes less time to turn the cell OFF than to turn it ON, this scheme allows one to address the row in about 1 us. The disadvantage of this method is a low dynamic range and a contrast ratio that is unacceptable for high quality TV, since even, dark cells experience at least one strong discharge in addition to the setup discharge per every subfield. Some versions of the ADS scheme use additional measures to speed up the addressing (priming pulses and/or additional electrodes),—they ALL fit the same scheme: “unlock the row-->selective address ON (or OFF)-->lock the row-->go to the next row”.
An object of the present invention is to shorten the time necessary for addressing the panel. Another object is to reduce the voltage controlled by the address drivers, which strongly affects the cost of the panel. The present invention exploits the possibility of having addressing discharges in more than one row simultaneously, thus achieving the high speed of addressing of the whole panel rather than of a single line. As will be explained below, in order to realize this scheme, one has to use two level (ON and OFF) addressing, with a fast OFF discharge, which imposes some restrictions on geometric parameters of the PD? cell. However, the version of the two-level and “one-line-at-a-time” addressing scheme can be used with more common geometrical parameters resulting in low voltage addressing, and/or higher speed.
A plasma panel, incorporating the invention, includes circuitry for applying row signals sequentially to a plurality of row electrodes. Each row signal includes a set-up period, address period and sustain period. The set-up period creates standardized wall potentials at each pixel site along each row electrode. Address circuitry applies, during the address period, data pulses to a plurality of column electrodes to enable selective discharge of the pixel sites in accordance with data pulses and in synchronism with the row signals. The new addressing technique utilizes addressing with discharges in both ON and OFF cells, by initiating different discharge modes for ON and OFF cells, so that ON cells experience a strong write discharge pulse, and the OFF cells—a much weaker erase discharge. This new scheme does not necessarily use or require the locking of the line after addressing it and its ultimate realization can be described as “unlock the line-->selective addressing with discharges in both ON and OFF cells-->go to the next line”, which is shown in the
In the end of the setup period (see
At the selected moment the scan voltage removing “the lock” from selected row is applied to the selected scan electrode to allow addressing of the appropriate row. Data voltages Vaddr (on top of previously applied voltage VOFF) are applied to selected ON cells, so the total addressing voltage applied to the ON cells is VON=VOFF+Vaddr, and to the OFF ones is VOFF. After the weak discharge in the OFF cell is ended the negative scan voltage can be applied to the next line and the next selected row is being addressed, even if the plasma density in the ON cell is still large. The scan electrode stays unlocked as the addressing moves to the next line—it may stay constant up to the end of the whole addressing period (as in
The cells, that are addressed OFF may experience up to two weak ERASING discharges—one when this particular line is being addressed, and another one when later on a cell of the same column, is addressed ON, as shown in the
Locking the row back is advantageous if due to geometrical parameters of the cell one can not complete the OFF discharge faster than Tscan, min. In this case the new addressing scheme follows the structure “unlock the row-->selective address with discharges in both ON and OFF cells-->lock the row-->go to the next row” (as in
The magnitude of VXlock voltage depends on the geometrical parameters of the cell. When the cell has large separation between X and Y sustain electrodes (Sustain Gap) and small Plate Gap, so that there are no electric field lines connecting the X and Y electrodes without crossing the dielectric on the opposite wall this voltage may be zero or even positive.
“Next” row or line in the description of the new scheme means “next in sequence” rather than the adjacent row. It fact, it may be the most advantageous to use a row sequence similar to dual or triple scan sequences: (1, N/2+1, 2, N/2+2, 3, N/2+3, . . . ) or (1, N/3+1, 2N/3+1, 2, N/3+2, 2N/3+2, 3, N/3+3, 2N/3+3, . . . ), where N is the total number of rows controlled by a particular scan driver.
In order to understand the underlying principle of the new method, one has to understand how the process of addressing of a three electrode system actually works, and what limits its speed. At the end of the reset period (using for example ramp setup U.S. Pat. No. 5,745,086, and our presentation at the SID'2000, Digest of SID '00, pp. 114-117) in the prior schemes (
Our investigations have shown that while one cannot change the voltage of the scan electrode until the plasma density has decayed, one can safely change or even completely remove (ground) the voltage applied to the address electrode immediately after the peak of the Sustain-Gap discharge (or later). In fact, the memory charge may even increase.
This method allows one to choose the time for addressing the line between the time required to finish the OFF discharge (as shown in
The advantages of the proposed scheme come in one of three ways: 1) If the parameters of a PDP cell allow one to achieve a fast OFF discharge (TOFF<Tscan,min) then, one can use the ultimate scheme and have address (ON) discharges in more than one line simultaneously; 2) If one cannot achieve fast OFF discharge (TOFF>Tscan,min), then one can either use a lower voltage for the address drivers (Vaddr=VON−VOFF) or 3) achieve a higher speed for the ON discharge (and shorter Taddr) by combining conventional address drivers with VOFF bias.
Compared to existing addressing schemes, which are all designed to ease the initiation of the Sustain-Gap discharge, and sometimes even increase the voltage between the X and Y electrodes (as in U.S. Pat. No. 6,525,486 B2, quoted above) this scheme actually uses the opposite the obstruction of such premature initiation (VXlock in
A high value of VOFF lowers the operational voltage for address drivers (see below) and makes the plate gap discharge faster. In order to have the memory charge in the ON cell as high as with conventional driving, the voltage applied to X electrodes during the ramp is higher, than in conventional schemes, so that after applying VXlock to it, it is still as high as or higher than in conventional schemes. Ideally, the initiation of the Sustain-Gap discharge in the new scheme occurs only if and when the voltage VON is high enough to start a strong rather than weak Plate-Gap discharge. In this case, high density plasma fills the gap above the scan electrode, which results in reconfiguration of electric field lines, and fast development of the Sustain-Gap discharge. Since it takes only a few extra Volts across the gap to change conditions from weak to strong discharge, the difference between VON (strong discharge) and VOFF (weak discharge) can be small (10-20V). While the magnitude of VON may be large, the actual addressing voltage (Vaddr) controlled by address drivers is only VON-VOFF (as seen on
Although the proposed scheme can be applied to every PDP cell, its effectiveness and simplicity may depend on geometrical parameters of a PDP cell. For example it may not be as effective (speed-wise) in a cell with a large plate gap and narrow sustain gap. However, if the plate gap in the vicinity of the sustain electrodes is small and sustain gap is large it has significant advantage over currently existing addressing schemes, since the speed of the OFF discharge (inverse time) depends on the plate gap size L as 1/L2. Our 3-D kinetic simulations of the address discharge in the cell with the plate gap of 70 um and sustain gap of 260 um showed that using the proposed scheme one can easily achieve T of only 650-800 ns, with Vaddr of only about 10-20V (Voltages used in simulations: VOFF˜40-50V, and VON=60V).
Although the practice of this invention is described herein with each pixel or sub-pixel defined by a three-electrode surface discharge structure, this invention may also be used with surface discharge structures having more than three distinct electrodes, for example more than two distinct electrodes on the top substrate and/or more than one distinct electrode on the bottom substrate. In the literature, some surface discharge structures have been described with four or more electrodes including three or more electrodes on the front substrate.
Both the Y row scan and the X bulk sustain electrodes may be of a transparent material such as tin oxide or indium tin oxide (ITO) with a conductive thin strip, ribbon or bus bar along one edge. Split or divided electrodes connected by cross-overs may also be used for X, Y and column data electrodes. The electrode arrays on either substrate are shown in
The prior art has also described surface discharge structures where there is a sharing of electrodes between pixels or sub-pixels on the front substrate. Fujitsu has described this structure in a paper by Kanazawa et al published on pages 154 to 157 of the 1999 Digest of the Society for Information Display. Fujitsu calls this “Alternating Lighting on Surfaces” or ALIS. Fujitsu has used ALIS with ADS. Shared electrodes may be used is the practice of the present invention.
The prior art has also described a counter-electrode PDP structure where the sustain electrodes (both scan and bulk) are facing each other and placed not on the front plate, but rather between front and back plates. This structure is described in the Proceedings of the SID' 2005 Conference (H. Asai, et al., “Discharge characteristics of a new structure AC-PDP using Thick Film Ceramic Sheet technology” Digest of SID'05, pp. 210-213, 2005), and in the Proc. of the IDW 2003 Conference (H. Asai, et al., “Development of new Structure AC-PDP using Thick Film Ceramic Sheet Technology”, IDW'03, pp. 401-406, 2003). The present invention can be used in this kind of structure.
The prior art has also described the ramp setup with only one ramp designed in such a way that it results in positive wall charges on the surface near sustain electrodes, and negative charges on the dielectric surface near the address electrode (J.-G. Bae, J.-Y. Kim, “New driving method for AC PDPs employing new ramp reset”, Digest of SID'05, pp. 610-611, 2005). In their case the addressing required opposite polarity positive scan pulse, and negative data pulse. The present invention can be used in this kind of setup, and only the polarity of applied voltages has to be adjusted.
The advantages of the proposed scheme come in one of three ways: 1) If the parameters of a PDP cell allow one to achieve a fast OFF discharge (TOFF<Tscan,min) then, one can use the ultimate scheme and have address (ON) discharges in more than one line simultaneously; 2) If one cannot achieve fast OFF discharge (TOFF>Tscan,min), then the scan time is limited to Tscan,min and one can either use a lower voltage for the address drivers (Vaddr=VON−VOFF) or 3) achieve a higher speed for the ON discharge (and shorter Taddr) by combining conventional address drivers with VOFF bias.
A pixel or sub-pixel is defined by the three electrodes 102, 108A, and 108B. Distance between inner edges of sustain electrodes 108A and 108B is called Sustain Gap. Distance between the phosphor on the bottom of the channel 109 of the back plate and magnesium oxide 107 on the front plate is called the Plate Gap. The address discharge is initiated by voltages applied between a bottom column data electrode 102 and a top Y row scan electrode 108A. The sustain discharge is done between pair of the front Y row scan electrode 108A and a top X bulk sustain electrode 108B. Each pair of the Y and X electrodes is a row.
a. New Art: New driving waveform (realization—version 1). Reset period in new driving scheme is the same as in
b. New Art: New driving waveform (realization—version 2). The same as in
c. New Art: New driving waveform (realization—version 3). Same as in
d. New Art: New driving waveform (realization—version 4). Same as in
e. New Art: New driving waveform (realization for TOFF>Tscan,min). Same as in
a. Effect of the variation of the address voltage during the ON discharge (conventional addressing). Typical address discharge in a PDP cell with close Sustain Gap, with VA=70V.
b, Effect of the variation of the address voltage during the ON discharge (conventional addressing). Same discharge as in
a. Result of 3-D kinetic simulations of the address OFF discharge in the cell with the plate gap of 70 um and sustain gap of 260 um. Figure shows currents through electrodes in that cell. With only VOFF=50V applied, the Plate Gap discharge ends in less than 700 ns, and there is no discharge activity between sustain electrodes.
b. Result of 3-D kinetic simulations of the address ON discharge in the same cell. When VON=60V (Vadd=10V) was applied to the cell, the strong discharge connecting sustain electrodes developed in less than 330 ns. Figures show distribution of the electric potential in the mid-plane crossing the channel in the middle (bottom and top substrates are in the bottom and top of the figure), ion density in the same plane, and average ion density if one looks at the cell from the front plate through scan electrodes. Thick lines in the bottom of each plot and on the side of the last one indicate position of electrodes.
The most benefits come from the possibility to have as high as possible VOFF and short Plate Gap, since the speed of the OFF discharge (inverse time) depends on the plate gap size L as 1/L2, and proportional to VOFF, Large VOFF additional benefit of having lower voltage controlled by address drivers, which affects the cost of the panel.
We tested (numerically) different plasma display cells. In the cells with large Plate Gap (105-130 um) and short Sustain Gap (˜80 um) the main advantage was the possibility of the high voltage (40-70V) of the OFF discharge, thus making possible low data voltage (only 20-30V) and fast addressing. The best results were obtained when using cell with large Sustain gap (260 um) and short Plate gap (70 um), where we obtained Taddr of only 650-800 ns, with Vaddr of only about 10-20V (voltages used in simulations: VOFF˜40-50V, and VON=60V).
The method has industrial applicability for plasma displays.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11577279 | Apr 2007 | US |
Child | 14992316 | US |