The present invention relates to a multiplex electrophoretic display driver circuit, particularly to a driver circuit, which uses a counting circuit and at least two registers to process the data series in a multiplex way and accelerate refreshing frames of an electrophoretic display.
The electrophoretic display (also called the electronic paper or the electronic ink) is distinct from the conventional CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) or LCD (Liquid Crystal Display). In an electrophoretic display, a plurality of micro cups is arranged on a substrate, and each micro cup contains a colored dielectric solvent and charged pigment particles suspending in the colored dielectric solvent. Two electrodes are arranged outside the micro cup. When the two electrodes alter the electric potential drop in the outer rim of the micro cup, the charged pigment particles move toward the electrode charged oppositely. The movement of the charged pigment particles changes the colors presented on the electrophoretic display. For the technology of controlling the electrophoretic display, please refer to a R.O.C. patent publication No. 538263 disclosing an “Electrophoretic Display” and a R.O.C. patent publication No. 200832031 disclosing an “Electronic Paper Device and Method for Fabricating the Same”. The theories and architectures disclosed in the prior arts for controlling an electrophoretic display are essentially similar and all utilize the potential difference to alter the colors presented on the display. The prior arts had fully demonstrated the difference between the electrophoretic display and CRT/LCD. Therefore, it will not repeat herein.
Refer to
In the conventional electrophoretic display, a frame for one gray-level matrix signal must be completely refreshed before the next frame for another gray-level matrix signal begins to be refreshed, wherefore the frame refreshing rate may be decreased in facing continuous inputting of the gray-level matrix signals, and wherefore the motion pictures may become sluggish. One objective of the present invention is to provide a driver circuit to improve the problem of motion picture lag.
The present invention proposes a multiplex electrophoretic display driver circuit, which comprises a memory unit, a display controller and a voltage driving unit. The memory unit has two registers respectively storing a current gray-level matrix signal and a former gray-level matrix signal. Each of the gray-level matrix signals contains gray-level data corresponding to a plurality of electrophoretic pixels of an electrophoretic display. The display controller includes an encoding circuit and a counting circuit. According to a difference between the current gray-level matrix signal and the former gray-level matrix signal, the encoding circuit generates a difference-value matrix signal containing a plurality of difference values and then generates a voltage-difference matrix signal containing a plurality of voltage-difference signals corresponding to the electrophoretic pixels. The counting circuit receives the difference-value matrix signal and counts to generate a plurality of refreshing values corresponding to the difference values. The encoding circuit adds the refreshing values to a next-cycled difference-value matrix signal to generate a new voltage-difference matrix signal. According to the voltage-difference matrix signal, the voltage driving unit applies a plurality of voltage differences to drive the electrophoretic pixels of the electrophoretic display.
The voltage-difference matrix signal is generated via adding the refreshing values to the difference-value matrix signal. The counting circuit utilizes a plurality of counters to perform step counting respectively and generate the refreshing values. Therefore, the difference-value matrix signal and the refreshing values added to the difference-value matrix signal can drive the electrophoretic display to refresh frame by processing multiple gray-level matrix signals simultaneously, whereby the efficiency of frame refreshing rate is promoted.
Refer to
Below is stated the efficacy the abovementioned circuit architecture achieves. Initially, after obtaining the gray-level matrix signal 5, the encoding circuit 21 generates the difference-value matrix according to the present condition of the display; in other words, the encoding circuit 21 determines which electrophoretic pixel 41 needs change and the extent of the change. Then, the counting circuit 22 obtains the gray-level matrix signal 5. At the same time, the display controller 2 determines voltage and polarity respectively used to drive the specific electrophoretic pixel 41 according to the difference-value matrix, and then the display controller 2 outputs the voltage-difference matrix signal 6 to the voltage driving unit 3 for driving the electrophoretic display 4. Meanwhile, the counting circuit 22 performs step counting to obtain the refreshing values corresponding to the difference-value matrix. The counting circuit 22 obtains the refreshing values via performing step counting (step addition or step subtraction) to make the difference values reach the initial value, whereby the voltage-difference signal can be applied to the electrophoretic pixels 41 for sufficient time interval to ensure the correctness of colors. When the current gray-level matrix signal 5 is written into one of the first and second registers 11 and 12, the former gray-level matrix signal 5 is stored into the other register. The encoding circuit 21 compares the current and former gray-level matrix signals 5 to generate the difference-value matrix, whereby can be determined which electrophoretic pixel 41 will be driven to alter color by the new gray-level matrix signal 5. The encoding circuit 21 adds the refreshing values, which are output by the counting circuit 22, to the next-cycled difference-value matrix to obtain the new voltage-difference matrix signal 6. Then, the voltage driving unit 3 receives the new voltage-difference matrix signal 6 to drive the electrophoretic display 4. The refreshing values vary with the new difference-value matrix received by the encoding circuit 21. Thereby, when the display controller 2 receives the gray-level matrix signal 5, the encoding circuit 21 generates the difference-value matrix to drive the corresponding electrophoretic pixels 41 to change color, and the counting circuit 22 performs step counting until one of the difference values reaches the initial value to ensure that the corresponding electrophoretic pixels 41 have sufficient time interval to complete the change. The other gray-level matrix signal 5 also drives the corresponding electrophoretic pixels 41 to change color, and the counters of the counting circuit 22 respectively performs step counting of the difference values independently, whereby the two different gray-level matrix signals simultaneously drive different electrophoretic pixels 41 to change color without mutual interference. Thus is achieved a multiplex process. The electrophoretic display 4 may be a touch-control type electrophoretic display, and the touch control circuit thereinside is triggered by user's pressing to generate the gray-level matrix signal 5. The touchscreen includes the capacitive type, the resistive type, the infrared type, etc. The technology of the touchscreen is not the focus of the present invention but has been the prior art presented in many documents. Therefore, it will not repeat herein.
Refer to
The numbers inside the difference-value matrix denote the required number of the gray-level changes of the corresponding electrophoretic pixels 41. “0” is the initial value of the counters. The electrophoretic pixels 41 corresponding to the left three columns in Table.1 will perform three cycles of gray-level changes. As shown in
By performing step counting, the difference values generated in the former cycle gradually return to the initial value. Meanwhile, the second gray-level matrix signal 5 has been inputted and varies part of the difference values in the difference-value matrix. As each of the counters of the counting circuit 22 operates independently, they do not interfere with each other. In the second cycle, the display controller 2 controls the voltage driving unit 3 to drive the electrophoretic display 4 to present the pattern shown in
It can be seen in Table.3 that the third set of difference values is added to the difference-value matrix. By continuously performing step counting, the difference values added in the former two cycles gradually return to the initial value. The display controller 2 continues to control the voltage driving unit 3 to drive the electrophoretic display 4 according to the difference-value matrix. In the third cycle, the electrophoretic pixels 41 corresponding to the first gray-level matrix signal 5 have completed the process to change gray levels from full white to full black. In the third cycle, the electrophoretic pixels 41 corresponding to the second and third gray-level matrix signals 5 are still changing gray levels.
The difference-value matrix after the third cycle is shown in Table.4.
It can be seen in Table.4 that the step counting makes the difference values to reach the initial value. The time interval of the step counting take to reach the initial value determines the time interval for which the voltage-difference signal is applied to the corresponding electrophoretic pixel 41. Therefore, the difference value determines the time interval for applying the voltage-difference signal and the numbers of the gray-levels of the corresponding electrophoretic pixels 41 moves. The numbers, which have not yet returned to the initial value in the difference-value matrix of Table.4, continue to step count, and the electrophoretic display 4 continue to change gray levels, as shown in
In conclusion, the difference-value matrix and the refreshing values are combined to generate the voltage-difference matrix signal 6. The counting circuit 22 utilizes the counters to respectively perform step counting independently to generate the refreshing values. The refreshing values are added to the difference-value matrix to drive the electrophoretic display 4. Thereby, the electrophoretic display 4 can simultaneously perform the frame refreshings demanded by several gray-level matrix signals 5. Thus is achieved a multiplex process. Accordingly, the present invention can promote the frame refreshing efficiency and rate, especially the frame refreshing rate of a touch-control type electrophoretic display 4.
The embodiments described above are only to exemplify the present invention but not to limit the scope of the present invention. Any equivalent modification or variation according to the spirit of the present invention is to be also included within the scope of the present invention, which is based on the claims stated below.
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