1. Field of the Disclosure
The present disclosure relates to an optical compensator for enhancing the viewing angle of a liquid crystal display.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, various liquid crystal display (LCD) modes and compensation films have been proposed to enhance the viewing angle of LCDs. Vertically-aligned (VA) LCD is a typical example of LCDs with wide viewing angle. Vertically-aligned (VA) LCD is a mode using a negative liquid crystal material and vertical alignment film. When no voltage is applied, liquid crystal molecules are aligned in a vertical direction and black display appears. When a predetermined voltage is applied, the liquid crystal molecules are aligned in a horizontal direction and white display appears. Comparing to the twisted nematic (TN) LCD, the vertically-aligned (VA) LCD provides higher contrast, higher response speed, and excellent viewing angle characteristics. However, the VA LCD still has problems of color shift or narrow viewing angle due to a dark-state light leakage at large viewing angles which reduces the contrast. Typically, these problems can be reduced by introducing compensation films.
However, the performance of conventional compensation films are not acceptable since all of them are optimized for a single wavelength of light while not considering other wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum which are visible by human eyes.
It is therefore an object of embodiments of the present disclosure to provide an optical compensator for a liquid crystal display, which overcomes, or at least reduces the above-mentioned problems of the prior art.
A liquid crystal display suitable for use with embodiments of the present disclosure generally includes an LCD cell and two polarizers respectively provided on outer surfaces of the LCD cell. Usually, the polarizer is made by a PVA (Poly-vinyl Alcohol) layer laminated between two protective layers, e.g., triacetate cellulose (TAC) films. The TAC film may also be replaced by other kinds of compensation films.
To achieve the above listed and other objects, one embodiment, among others, of the present disclosure provides an optical compensator including an A-plate and a C-plate, which respectively acts as the protective film of each inner side of the polarizer. An A-plate optimized for blue light (450 nm) has in-plane retardation R0=(nx−ny)×d at wavelengths of 450 nm and 550 nm satisfying the following formula (1):
0.644<R0(450)/R0(550)<1 (1)
Moreover, a C-plate optimized for blue light (450 nm) has retardation satisfying the following formula (2):
1<Rth(450)/Rth(550)<1.35 (2)
Rth(450) and Rth(550) are the values calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]xd (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the C-plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the thickness of the C-plate) for the C-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm and 550 nm, respectively.
An A-plate optimized for red light (650 nm) has in-plane retardation at wavelengths of 650 nm and 550 nm satisfying the following formula (3):
1<R0(650)/R0(550)<1.36 (3)
Moreover, a C-plate optimized for red light (650 nm) has retardation satisfying the following formula (4):
0.874<Rth(650)/Rth(550)<1 (4)
Rth(650) and Rth(550) represent Rth values for the C-plate at wavelengths of 650 nm and 550 nm, respectively.
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized A-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (1) and (3), and Rth values for an optimized C-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (2) and (4).
To achieve the above listed and other objects, one embodiment, among others, of the present disclosure further provides another optical compensator including two biaxial plates, which respectively acts as the protective film of each inner side of the polarizer. A biaxial plate optimized for blue light (450 nm) has retardation satisfying the following formulae (5) and (6):
82.38<R0(450)+0.41×Rth(450)<107.35 (5)
−910.5<R0(450)−5.5×Rth(450)<−690.5 (6)
R0(450) represents the in-plane retardation of the biaxial plate at a wavelength of 450 nm, and Rth(450) is the value calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]xd (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the biaxial plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the thickness of the biaxial plate) for the biaxial plate at a wavelengths of 450 nm.
When the optimization is performed for red light (650 nm), the retardation of an optimized biaxial plate satisfies the following formulae (7) and (8):
180.872<R0(650)+0.975×Rth(650)<206.681 (7)
−295.241<R0(650)−2.51×Rth(650)<−206.537 (8)
R0(650) represents the in-plane retardation of the biaxial plate at a wavelength of 650 nm, and Rth(650) is the Rth value for the biaxial plate at a wavelengths of 650 nm.
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the retardation of the optimized biaxial plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (5) to (8).
In one embodiment of a liquid crystal display for use with the present disclosure, the polarizer may further include a protective layer, e.g., a triacetate cellulose (TAC) film. Since the triacetate cellulose film also has phase retardation effect, their contribution to compensation should be taken into consideration.
When an LCD having one more 80 μm thick triacetate cellulose film additive on one inner side of the protective TAC film and a single biaxial plate additive on the other polarizer's inner side, is optimized for blue light (450 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized biaxial plate at a wavelength of 450 nm satisfies the following formulae (9) and (10):
−1914<R0(450)−7.56×Rth(450)<−1311.7 (9)
51.17<R0(450)+0.12×Rth(450)<93.07 (10)
When optimized for red light (650 nm), a biaxial plate having retardation satisfying the following formulae (11) and (12) provides preferred compensation.
157.5<R0(650)+0.576×Rth(650)<200.7 (11)
−143.988<R0(650)−1.34×Rth(650)<−68.14 (12)
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the retardation of an optimized biaxial plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (9) to (12).
When an LCD, having one more 80 μm thick TAC film on one inner side of the protective TAC film and adopting a single-sided compensation structure using an A-plate plus a C-plate laminated together on the other side, is optimized for blue light (450 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized A-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm and 550 nm satisfies the following formula (13):
0.5<R0(450)/R0(550)<1.198 (13)
Moreover, the retardation of the C-plate satisfies the following formula (14):
1.125<Rth(450)/Rth(550)<1.583 (14)
When the optimization is performed for red light (650 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized A-plate at wavelengths of 650 nm and 550 nm satisfies the following formula (15):
1.03<R0(650)/R0(550)<1.468 (15)
Moreover, the retardation of the C-plate satisfies the following formula (16):
0.72<Rth(650)/Rth(550)<0.995 (16)
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized A-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (13) and (15), and Rth values for an optimized C-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (14) and (16).
The optical compensators provided in one embodiment of the present disclosures (A plate/C-plate and biaxial plate) are optimized for lights of three primary colors (450 nm, 550 nm, 650 nm) such that the dark-state light leakage is reduced at most viewing angles which results in a better contrast.
This patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present disclosure will be more fully understood by reading the following detailed description of the embodiments, with reference made to the accompanying drawings as follows:
An A-plate and a C-plate are respectively inserted between the polarizers 110 and 120 and the liquid crystal display cell 100 to reduce dark-state light leakage and increase the contrast, wherein the optic axis of the A-plate is arranged at an angle of 90 degrees to the absorbing axis of the polarizer located on the same side. In this embodiment, since the polarizer only consists of an absorbing layer, the liquid crystal display 10 is not provided with any other compensation plate except the A-plate 130 and the C-plate 140. Conventional A-plates and C-plates are typically optimized only for green light (550 nm) because human eyes are most sensitive to green light.
In some embodiments, simulation programs (LCDBench Ver 5.3 and Mathematica Ver 6.0) are used to calculate the optical parameters of a conventional A-plate (e.g., a 73.5 μm thick film of norbornene resin (Arton made by JSR, Co., Ltd.) and a C-plate (e.g., a 6.73 μm thick film of PLC (polymer liquid crystal)). The result is shown in Table 1.
This simulation is performed on a structure of the liquid crystal display 10 shown in
R0(λ) represents the in-plane retardation ([nx−ny]×d) of the A-plate at wavelength λ, and Rth(λ) is the value calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]×d (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the C-plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the thickness of the C-plate) for the C-plate at wavelength λ.
Thereafter, the optical parameters of optimized C-plate (6.73 μm thick) and A-plate (73.5 μm thick) are determined by a Poincare sphere method. The result is shown in Table 2 wherein R0(λ) and Rth(λ) are defined the same as above.
When an LCD having the structure of
0.644<R0(450)/R0(550)<1 (1)
Moreover, the retardation of an optimized C-plate satisfies the following formula (2):
1<Rth(450)/Rth(550)<1.35 (2)
Rth(450) and Rth(550) are the values calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]×d (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the C-plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the thickness of the C-plate) for the C-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm and 550 nm, respectively.
When an LCD having the structure of
1<R0(650)/R0(550)<1.36 (3)
Moreover, the retardation of an optimized C-plate satisfies the following formula (4):
0.874<Rth(650)/Rth(550)<1 (4)
Rth(650) and Rth(550) represent Rth values for the C-plate at wavelengths of 650 nm and 550 nm, respectively.
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the in-plane retardation of an optimized A-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (1) and (3), and Rth values for an optimized C-plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (2) and (4).
In this embodiment, if the triacetate cellulose film has a thickness of 80 μm, the optical parameters of optimized C-plate (4.93 μm thick) and A-plate (51.9 μm thick) are determined by a Poincare sphere method as shown in Table 3.
As is clear from Table 3, when optimized for blue light (450 nm), an A-plate having a retardation ratio R0(450)/R0(550) of 0.842 and a C-plate having a retardation ratio Rth(450)/Rth(550) of 1.292 provide superior compensation for the liquid crystal display 20 having 80 μm triacetate cellulose films. When optimized for red light (650 nm), an A-plate having a retardation ratio R0(650)/R0(550) of 1.205 and a C-plate having a retardation ratio Rth(650)/Rth(550) of 0.861 provide superior compensation for the liquid crystal display 20 having 80 μm thick triacetate cellulose films.
In this embodiment, if the triacetate cellulose film has a thickness of 40 μm, the optical parameters of optimized C-plate (4.93 μm thick) and A-plate (51.9 μm thick) are determined by a Poincare sphere method as shown in Table 4.
As is clear from Table 4, when optimized for blue light (450 nm), an A-plate having a retardation ratio R0(450)/R0(550) of 0.826 and a C-plate having a retardation ratio Rth(450)/Rth(550) of 1.21 provide superior compensation for the liquid crystal display 20 having 40 μm triacetate cellulose films. When optimized for red light (650 nm), an A-plate having a retardation ratio R0(650)/R0(550) of 1.195 and a C-plate having a retardation ratio Rth(650)/Rth(550) of 0.9 provide superior compensation for the liquid crystal display 20 having 40 μm thick triacetate cellulose films.
In some embodiments, simulation programs (LCDBench Ver 5.3 and Mathematica Ver 6.0) are used to calculate the optical parameters of a biaxial plate (e.g., a 86.8 μm thick film formed by modifying and stretching a TAC substrate). The result is shown in Table 5. This simulation is performed on a structure of the liquid crystal display 30 shown in
R0(λ) represents the in-plane retardation ([nx−ny]×d) of the biaxial plate at wavelength λ, and Rth(λ) is the value calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]xd (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the biaxial plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the plate thickness) for the biaxial plate at wavelength λ.
Thereafter, we have determined the optical parameters of an optimized biaxial plate (86.8 μm thick) by a Poincare sphere method. The result is shown in Table 6 wherein R0(λ) and Rth(λ) are defined the same as above.
The ranges of the optical parameters of a biaxial plate optimized for blue light (450 nm) have also been determined, as discussed below.
The retardation of the optimized biaxial plate satisfies the following formulae (5) and (6):
82.38<R0(450)0.41×Rth(450)<107.35 (5)
−910.5<R0(450)−5.5×Rth(450)<−690.5 (6)
R0(450) represents the in-plane retardation of the biaxial plate at a wavelength of 450 nm, and Rth(450) is the value calculated by Rth=[[nx+ny]/2−nz]×d (where nx, ny and nz represent the three-dimensional refractive indexes of the biaxial plate as the refractive indexes in the direction of the x-axis, y-axis and z-axis, respectively, and d represents the thickness of the biaxial plate) for the biaxial plate at a wavelengths of 450 nm.
When the optimization is performed for red light (650 nm), the retardation of an optimized biaxial plate satisfies the following formulae (7) and (8):
180.872<R0(650)+0.975×Rth(650)<206.681 (7)
−295.241<R0(650)−2.51×Rth(650)<−206.537 (8)
R0(650) represents the in-plane retardation of the biaxial plate at a wavelength of 650 nm, and Rth(650) is the Rth value for the biaxial plate at a wavelengths of 650 nm.
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the retardation of the optimized biaxial plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (5) to (8).
In some embodiments, simulation programs (LCDBench Ver 5.3 and Mathematica Ver 6.0) are used to calculate the optical parameters of a 100 μm thick conventional biaxial plate. The result is shown in Table 7. This simulation is performed on a structure of the liquid crystal display 40 shown in
Thereafter, the optical parameters of an optimized biaxial plate (100 μm thick) are determined by a Poincare sphere method. The result is shown in Table 8 for R0(A) and Rth(A).
When an LCD having the structure of
−1914<R0(450)−7.56×Rth(450)<−1311.7 (9)
51.17<R0(450)+0.12×Rth(450)<93.07 (10)
When optimized for red light (650 nm), a biaxial plate having a retardation satisfying the following formulae (11) and (12) provide superior compensation.
157.5<R0(650)+0.576×Rth(650)<200.7 (11)
−143.988<R0(650)−1.34×Rth(650)<−68.14 (12)
It should be understood that, when the optimization is performed for both blue light (450 nm) and red light (650 nm), the retardation of an optimized biaxial plate at wavelengths of 450 nm, 550 nm and 650 nm should satisfy the formulae (9) to (12).
In some embodiments, simulation programs (LCDBench Ver 5.3 and Mathematica Ver 6.0) are used to calculate the optical parameters of a conventional A-plate (e.g., a 80 μm thick film of norbornene resin (Arton made by JSR, Co., Ltd.) and a C-plate (e.g., a 6.73 μm thick film of PLC). The result is shown in Table 9. This simulation is performed on a structure of the liquid crystal display 50 shown in
Thereafter, the optical parameters of optimize d C-plate and A-plate are determined by a Poincare sphere method. The result is shown in Table 10.
When a LCD having the structure of
0.5<R0(450)/R0(550)<1.198 (13)
Moreover, the retardation of the C-plate satisfies the following formula (14):
1.125<Rth(450)/Rth(550)<1.583 (14)
When a LCD having the structure of
1.03<R0(650)/R0(550)<1.468 (15)
Moreover, the retardation of the C-plate satisfies the following formula (16):
0.72<Rth(650)/Rth(550)<0.995 (16)
It should be understood that, when an LCD having the structure of
The optical compensators provided in the present disclosure (A plate/C-plate and biaxial plate) are optimized for lights of three primary colors (450 nm, 550 nm, 650 nm) such that the dark-state light leakage is reduced at most viewing angles which results in a better contrast.
Although the disclosure has been explained in relation to various embodiments, it is to be understood that many other possible modifications and variations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure as hereinafter claimed.
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