The present invention relates generally to methods for reducing visible imperfections in display devices and to methods of making glass sheets. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method for making a glass sheet with low birefringence using overflow fusion downdraw processes and to the use of such glass sheets as substrates for displays. The present invention is useful, e.g., in making glass substrates for liquid crystal displays.
Visible imperfections have been detected on certain display screens of thin film transistor liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) devices. In the display industry, these visible imperfections are labeled as mura, a Japanese word meaning unevenness or blemish. Mura appears as regions of low contrast and non-uniform brightness on the display screen. There are various types of mura, e.g., spot-mura, line-mura, and blob-mura. While many factors are believed to impact the presence and severity of mura of a LCD display, a causal relationship has been established between vertical stress bands created in glass sheets formed by fusion processes and line-mura in display screens using the glass sheets. Specifically, non-uniform thermal gradients existing across a fusion drawing machine while a glass ribbon is in the viscous or viscous-elastic state and is being drawn through the fusion drawing machine can produce vertical stress bands in the glass ribbon that can become frozen into the glass ribbon. On a display screen using a glass sheet characterized by vertical stress bands, line-mura appears as vertical bands of non-uniform light transmission. Presently, line-mura occurs mostly in twisted nematic displays. However, there is also a possibility that line-mura could occur in vertical alignment displays. The present invention addresses mura in display devices attributable to stress-induced birefringence in glass sheets used in the display devices.
In one aspect of the present invention, a method of making a glass sheet using an overflow fusion downdraw process comprises the steps of: (a) selecting a glass sheet quality metric level Q1, Q1 being a measure of allowable retardation in the glass sheet, (b) identifying a glass ribbon temperature T1 at which a potential glass ribbon thermal artifact could occur in a glass ribbon while the glass ribbon is being drawn through a drawing machine enclosure, (c) determining a thermal artifact envelope E1, E1 containing types of glass ribbon thermal artifacts allowable at T1 and Q1, (d) overflowing a glass melt from an isopipe to form a glass ribbon at the root of the isopipe, (e) drawing the glass ribbon below the root of the isopipe through the drawing machine enclosure to form the glass sheet, and (f) altering the drawing machine enclosure at a location corresponding to where the glass ribbon would be at T1 such that during step (e) the potential glass ribbon thermal artifact is not formed in the glass ribbon at T1 or, if the potential glass ribbon thermal artifact is formed in the glass ribbon at T1, the potential glass ribbon thermal artifact is within E1.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, step (c) comprises the steps of: (c1) defining a plurality of test glass ribbon thermal artifacts, each test glass ribbon thermal artifact having an absolute maximum temperature difference ΔTmax and an effective width Weff, (c2) applying the test thermal artifacts at a plurality of test glass ribbon temperatures to a plurality of test glass ribbons, (c3) obtaining a plurality of test glass sheets from the plurality of test glass ribbons, (c4) calculating a glass sheet quality metric for each of the test glass sheets, and (c5) generating a plurality of ΔTmax versus Weff curves as a function of glass sheet quality metric and glass ribbon temperature.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, step (c4) comprises the steps of: (c4)(i) measuring birefringence at a plurality of nodes on each of the test glass sheet, (c4)(ii) converting the birefringence measured at each of the nodes to light transmission intensity for a polarization-based display, (c4)(iii) calculating an average of the light transmission intensities; and (c4)(iv) designating the average as the glass sheet quality metric of the test glass sheet.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, in step (c4)(ii), the polarization-based display is a twisted nematic display.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, step (c4)(iii) comprises calculating a plurality of averages of the light transmission intensities over a plurality of groups of the nodes, and step (c4)(iv) comprises designating the maximum of the averages as the glass sheet quality metric.
The method of claim 2, wherein step (c) further comprises the steps of: (c6) selecting a ΔTmax versus Weff curve valid for T1 and Q1 from the plurality of ΔTmax versus Weff curves, and (c7) determining E1 from the selected ΔTmax versus Weff curve.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, step (f) comprises heating, cooling, or a combination of heating and cooling at the location in the drawing machine enclosure corresponding to where the glass ribbon would be at T1 during step (e).
In one embodiment of the first aspect, step (f) comprises removing a source of the potential glass ribbon thermal artifact from the drawing machine enclosure prior to step (e).
In one embodiment of the first aspect, T1 corresponds to a temperature where the glass ribbon is in the viscous or viscous-elastic state.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, T1 is in a range from 600° C. to 1000° C.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, Q1 in step (a) is correlated to a mura level of a polarization-based display.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, in step (a), Q1 is approximately 1E-6 and the allowable retardation is approximately equal to or less than 0.201 nm.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, in step (a), Q1 is approximately 1E-5 and the allowable retardation is approximately equal to or less than 0.646 nm.
In one embodiment of the first aspect, in step (a), Q1 is approximately 1E-4 and the allowable retardation is approximately equal to or less than 2.01 nm.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary of the present invention and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the present invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the present invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the present invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operation of the present invention.
The following is a description of the figures in the accompanying drawings. The figures are not necessarily to scale, and certain features and certain views of the figures may be shown exaggerated in scale or in schematic in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description that follows and, in part, will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the invention as described herein.
In one aspect of the present invention, a glass sheet is made by an overflow fusion downdraw process, a leading process developed and used by Corning Incorporated, Corning, N.Y., for making precision glass sheets for use in various opto-electronic devices such as LCDs. The center of the overflow fusion downdraw process is a forming apparatus typically called “isopipe” comprising an upper trough-shaped part on top of a lower wedge-shaped part. As illustrated in
In general, the source(s) of the thermal artifact(s) may vary from one drawing machine to another. One potential source of glass ribbon thermal artifact is the design of the drawing machine, e.g., if the drawing machine enclosure wall is not made of a single continuous material across the width of the drawing machine. Another potential source of glass ribbon thermal artifact is equipment inserted into the drawing machine, e.g., a temperature measurement device inserted into the drawing machine to measure thermal radiation in the drawing machine. Another potential source of thermal artifact is inconsistent distance between the glass ribbon and the drawing machine enclosure walls, which may be related to the design of the drawing machine or to uneven thickness of the glass ribbon due to, for example, poor temperature control within the drawing machine. If a glass ribbon thermal artifact is present in the glass ribbon while the glass ribbon is either in the viscous or viscous-elastic state, the glass ribbon thermal artifact will induce stress in the glass ribbon. The induced stress will be dragged with the glass ribbon along the drawing machine. At the glass-setting zone, the induced stress will become frozen into the glass. This frozen induced stress is what would appear as a vertical stress band in the final glass sheet. Multiple glass ribbon thermal artifacts can create multiple vertical stress bands in the final glass sheet. The severity of the vertical stress band(s) on the quality of the final glass sheet will depend on the attributes of the glass ribbon thermal artifact. A glass ribbon thermal artifact can be characterized by ΔTmax and Weff, where ΔTmax is the absolute maximum temperature difference observed in the glass ribbon thermal artifact and Weff is the effective width of the glass ribbon thermal artifact. By absolute maximum temperature difference, it is meant the absolute value of the difference between the lowest temperature and the highest temperature observed on the glass ribbon thermal artifact.
As mentioned in the background of this specification, mura appears as vertical bands of non-uniform light transmission in display devices using glass sheets characterized by vertical stress bands. In one aspect of the present invention, it is proposed to control mura in a display device by controlling stress-induced birefringence in the glass sheet used in the display device. It is also proposed to control stress-induced birefringence in the glass sheet by controlling glass ribbon thermal artifacts during production of the glass sheet. In particular, glass ribbon thermal artifacts are either reduced or eliminated to reduce or eliminate stress-induced birefringence in the glass sheet. For the purpose of controlling glass ribbon thermal artifacts, a glass sheet quality metric Q is defined. Q is sensitive to glass sheet birefringence, which is sensitive to glass sheet stress, which is sensitive to glass ribbon thermal artifact. Q can be correlated to mura level. Thus, through Q, mura can be related to glass ribbon thermal artifact. In one embodiment of the present invention, Q has a plurality of levels, e.g., Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3, with Level 3 being the most difficult to achieve in a overflow fusion downdraw process and Level 1 being the least difficult to achieve in an overflow fusion downdraw process. Level 2 is between Level 1 and Level 3 in terms of difficulty. Each Q level has a corresponding mura level.
To determine Q for any glass sheet, a grid of M×N measurement nodes are superimposed on the glass sheet, where M and N are integers and are each greater than 1.
The birefringence data for each node (i.e., retardation and azimuth values) is converted into light transmission intensity using the following equation:
In Equation (1), I is light transmission intensity, Io is intensity incident on first polarizer, R is retardation (nm), θslow is azimuth of slow axis (degrees), and λ is wavelength of the light (nm). Equation (1) is valid for twisted nematic display designs where the crossed polarizers in the display have their axes at ±45° to the sheet horizontal and vertical directions (204, 206 in
Each Q value or level has an associated retardation level, which can be approximated in the following fashion. Ignore the role of averaging in the definition of Q, or, in other words, consider that the retardation is also a similar averaged value. Next, take the worst-case value of azimuth angle in Equation (1), i.e., θslow=0. Without averaging, the Q value is just the fraction of light intensity that is transmitted through crossed polarizers, i.e., Q=I/I0. This gives the relation:
In Equation (2), R represents retardation, λ represents wavelength of the instrument used to measure retardation, and Q represents glass sheet quality metric. Equation (2) can be solved for typical values of Q. Table 1 below shows examples of Q values or levels and associated approximate retardation level. In the calculations shown in Table 1, the assumed wavelength is 633 nm. For each target level of Q, if all the retardation values were at or below the retardation associated with the target level of Q, the target level of Q would be met. For example, if all the retardation values were at or below 0.201 nm, Q level of 1E-6 would be met.
Temperature gradient across a drawing machine enclosure is driven primarily through radiation heat transfer and may be approximated as having the characteristics of a Gaussian feature. For this reason, in one embodiment of the present invention, a glass ribbon thermal artifact is represented as a Gaussian feature.
Construction of the ΔTmax versus Weff curves involves modeling an overflow fusion downdraw process with glass ribbon thermal artifacts at various glass ribbon temperatures T and measuring Q for glass sheets resulting from the overflow fusion downdraw processes. Modeling may be done numerically with a mathematical model involving the thermal environment of the glass ribbon and prediction of the resulting frozen-in stresses and the associated birefringence or may involve making actual measurements on a drawing machine. In one example, a test glass ribbon thermal artifact with a known ΔTmax and Weff is applied to a test glass ribbon at a selected glass ribbon temperature. Typically, the selected glass ribbon temperature will correspond to a temperature at which the test glass ribbon is in the viscous or viscous-elastic state. In one embodiment, the test glass ribbon temperature is between 600° C. and 1000° C. The applied test glass ribbon thermal artifact results in stress in the test glass ribbon, which would be reflected in birefringence measurements made on a test glass sheet obtained from the test glass ribbon. For the test glass sheet, Q is determined as described above. The process is repeated with another test glass ribbon thermal artifact or another glass ribbon temperature until enough data has been gathered to generate the ΔTmax versus Weff curves at the various Q levels and glass ribbon temperatures T. To generate the curves, the test glass ribbon thermal artifacts are separated into groups depending on the Q associated with each of the test glass ribbon thermal artifacts and the glass ribbon temperature at which the test glass ribbon thermal artifact was applied to a test glass ribbon. Each group is then used to generate a ΔTmax versus Weff curve.
Referring back to
The method, at 404, further involves selecting a ΔTmax versus Weff curve for a desired glass sheet quality metric Q1 from the ΔTmax versus Weff curves obtained in step 400 for each potential glass ribbon thermal artifact. For example, if the potential glass ribbon thermal artifact could occur at a glass ribbon temperature of 802° C. and a glass sheet quality metric Level 1 is desired, then the ΔTmax versus Weff curve corresponding to glass sheet quality metric Level 1 in
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
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