This application claims priority to and the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2004-0096825 filed in the Korean Intellectual Property Office on Nov. 24, 2004, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a plasma display and a method of driving the plasma display.
2. Description of the Related Art
A plasma display is a flat panel display that uses plasma generated by gas discharge to display characters or images. It includes, depending on its size, more than several scores to millions of pixels arranged in a matrix pattern.
One frame of the plasma display is divided into a plurality of subfields, and each subfield has a reset period, an address period, and a sustain period. The reset period is for initializing the status of each discharge cell so as to facilitate an addressing operation on the discharge cell. The address period is for selecting turn-on/turn-off cells (i.e., cells to be turned on or off) and accumulating wall charges to the turn-on cells (i.e., addressed cells).
In the sustain period, a sustain pulse is alternately applied to pairs of scan electrodes and sustain electrodes. When the wall charges are formed between the scan electrode and the sustain electrode by the address discharge in the address period, an image is displayed since a sustain discharge is generated between the scan electrode and the sustain electrode by the sustain pulse and wall charges.
Since the plasma display uses a high level voltage for firing a discharge, power consumption is increased when a screen load ratio is great (i.e., when a lot of discharge cells are turned on). Accordingly, a control method for controlling the power consumption is used in the plasma display such that the power consumption is not increased over a predetermined value. Such is conventionally accomplished by controlling the number of the sustain pulses according to a screen load ratio for one frame. Such a power consumption control method is for controlling the power consumption according to the screen load ratio for one frame regardless of discharge efficiency.
The present invention advantageously provides a plasma display and a method of controlling its power consumption such that the power consumption is minimized. In one exemplary embodiment, the frequency of a sustain pulse is varied according to a screen load ratio in a subfield.
An exemplary embodiment of a plasma display according to the present invention includes a plasma display panel (PDP), a driver, and a controller. The PDP includes a number of first electrodes and a number of second electrodes for performing a display operation in cooperation with the first electrodes. The driver applies a sustain pulse to the first electrode or the second electrode such that a voltage obtained by subtracting a voltage at the second electrode from a voltage at the first electrode may alternately be a positive voltage and a negative voltage in a sustain period. The controller divides each frame into a number of subfields, each having a weight value, and controls a frequency of the sustain pulse by calculating a screen load ratio of each subfield or frame.
The controller may cause a frequency of the sustain pulse in a first subfield having a first screen load ratio to be different from a frequency of the sustain pulse in a second subfield having a second screen load ratio. Also, the second screen load ratio may be greater than the first screen load ratio. The controller may also cause the frequency of the sustain pulse in the second subfield to be higher than the frequency of the sustain pulse in the first subfield. In addition, the controller may cause a voltage variation time of the sustain pulse in the second subfield to be shorter than a voltage variation time of the sustain pulse in the first subfield.
The controller may cause a frequency of the sustain pulse in a first frame having a first screen load ratio to be different from a frequency of the sustain pulse in a second frame having a second screen load ratio. Also, the second screen load ratio may be greater than the first screen load ratio. The controller may cause the frequency of the sustain pulse in the second frame to be higher than the frequency of the sustain pulse in the first frame. In addition, the controller may control a voltage variation time of the sustain pulse in the second frame to be shorter than a voltage variation time of the sustain pulse in the first frame.
In an exemplary embodiment of a driving method for driving a plasma display, the plasma display includes a number of first electrodes and a number of second electrodes for performing a display operation with the first electrodes. The plasma display is driven by each frame divided into a number of subfields, each having a weight value. According to the driving method, screen load ratios are determined in each subfield from input image data. Frequencies of a sustain pulse are determined in each subfield according to the determined screen load ratio. And an image is displayed by applying the sustain pulse to at least one of the first and second electrode according to the determined frequency of the sustain pulse in each subfield.
In another exemplary embodiment of a driving method for driving a plasma display, the plasma display includes a number of first electrodes and a number of second electrodes for performing a display operation with the first electrode. According to the driving method, screen load ratios are determined in each subfield from input image data. Frequencies of a sustain pulse are determined in each subfield according to the determined screen load ratios. And an image is displayed by applying the sustain pulse to at least one of the first and second electrode according to the determined frequency of the sustain pulse in the each subfield.
In another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, a plasma display includes a controller. The controller drives by each frame, which is divided into a number of subfields, each having a weight value. The controller determines a frequency of the sustain pulse in the subfield that allows a sum of active power and reactive power caused by the sustain pulse to be minimized.
Referring to
The PDP 100 includes a number of address electrodes A1 to Am (hereinafter referred to as “A electrodes”), each A electrode extending in a column or direction, and a number of sustain electrodes and scan electrodes X1 to Xn and Y1 to Yn (hereinafter referred to as “X electrodes” and “Y electrodes”, respectively), each extending in a row direction by pairs. The X electrodes X1 to Xn are formed in correspondence to the Y electrodes Y1 to Yn, and a display operation is performed by the X and Y electrodes in the sustain period. The Y and X electrodes Y1 to Yn and X1 to Xn are arranged perpendicular to the A electrodes A1 to Am. A discharge space formed at an area where the A electrodes A1 to Am cross the X electrodes X1 to Xn and the Y electrodes Y1 to Yn forms a discharge cell, D.
The controller 200 outputs X electrode, Y electrode, and A electrode driving control signals after receiving an image signal. In addition, the controller 200 operates on each frame, which is divided into a number of subfields, each having a weight value.
In the address period, the scan electrode driver 500 applies a sustain pulse to the Y electrodes Y1 to Yn according to an order for selecting the Y electrodes Y1 to Yn (e.g., in sequence), and the address electrode driver 300 receives the address driving control signal from the controller 200 and applies an address voltage for selecting turn-on cells to the respective A electrodes when a scan pulse is applied to the respective Y electrodes. That is, in the address period, discharge cells defined by the Y electrodes and the A electrodes are selected as the turn-on discharge cells. The scan pulse is applied to the Y electrodes and the address voltage is applied to the A electrodes when the scan pulse is applied to the Y electrodes.
In the sustain period, the sustain electrode driver 400 and the scan electrode driver 500 alternately apply the sustain pulse to the X electrodes X1 to Xn and the Y electrodes Y1 to Yn upon receiving the control signals from the controller 200.
Referring to
Since the sustain discharge voltage Vs is lower than the discharge firing voltage, a predetermined wall voltage is required to be formed between the Y and X electrodes to maintain the sustain discharge by the sustain pulse that is alternately applied to the Y and X electrodes. That is, while negative wall charges are accumulated on the Y electrodes and positive wall charges are accumulated on the X electrodes since the sustain discharge voltage Vs is applied to the Y electrode and the ground voltage is applied to the X electrodes, a subsequent sustain discharge may be generated when the sustain discharge voltage Vs is applied to the X electrodes and the ground voltage is applied to the Y electrodes. Therefore, the sustain discharge voltage Vs of the sustain pulse is required to be maintained for a predetermined time in order to form wall charges on the electrodes.
In addition, since the Y and X electrodes operate as capacitive loads i.e., capacitors, when the sustain pulse is applied, the power consumption is increased because reactive power for injecting charges to the capacitive loads is consumed to apply the sustain pulse to the Y or X electrodes. The plasma display usually applies the sustain pulse to the Y and X electrodes by using a power recovery circuit for recovering and reusing the reactive power. The power recovery circuit recovers energy and charges the energy to an external capacitor while discharging the capacitive load by using resonance between an inductor and the capacitive load formed by the Y and X electrodes. The power recovery circuit then uses the energy charged in the external capacitor when the capacitive load is charged by using the resonance. The power recovery circuit is formed on the sustain electrode driver 400 and/or the scan electrode driver 500.
A voltage at the Y electrode is increased from 0 volts (V) to the Vs voltage or is decreased from the Vs voltage to 0V in order to apply the sustain pulse to the Y electrode by using the power recovery circuit. The voltage at the Y electrode may not vary immediately. It takes a predetermined time (hereinafter referred to as “rising time”) for the voltage at the Y electrode to be increased from 0V to the Vs voltage by the resonance. In a like manner, it takes another predetermined time (hereinafter referred to as “falling time”) for the voltage at the Y electrode to be decreased from the Vs voltage to 0V by the resonance.
Referring to
Referring back to
Referring back to
Because the rising time and falling time of the sustain pulse are determined by capacitive and inductive components forming the resonance, and the capacitive component is determined according to characteristics of the PDP, the rising time and falling time may be controlled by controlling a size of the inductor used in the power recovery circuit. That is, the rising time and falling time of the sustain pulse may be decreased by decreasing the size of the inductor.
The X and Y electrodes are coupled with the sustain electrode driver 400 and the scan electrode driver 500, respectively, through a flexible printed circuit (FPC) pattern, which involves a parasitic inductance component. However, when the size of the inductor is decreased, the power recovery rate of the power recovery circuit is also decreased since the effect of the parasitic inductor component is increased when the resonance is formed in rising and falling times. As shown in
Referring back to
The reactive power is constant regardless of the number of the turn-on discharge cells since the reactive power is determined by the rising and falling times of the sustain pulse, but the active power is affected by the number of the turn-on discharge cells since the active power is generated by the sustain discharge. That is, when a greater number of discharge cells are to be turned on, the active power becomes higher, and accordingly, the decrease of the active power becomes more rapid as the frequency of the sustain pulse is increased. That is, when the number of the turn-on discharge cells is greater than the measurement conditions of
According to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the frequency of the sustain pulse causing the increase of the discharge efficiency varies according to the number of the turn-on discharge cells, and therefore the frequency of the sustain pulse is controlled according to the number of the turn-on discharge cells.
Referring to
Referring to
The screen load ratio calculator 210 determines the screen load ratios of corresponding subfields by adding the numbers of the discharge cells turned on in each subfield. The number of discharge cells are added after determining whether the discharge cell is turned on or off in the subfield based on the image data corresponding to the discharge cells. For example, assuming that one frame is divided into eight subfields SF1 to SF8, respectively having 1, 2, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 weight values, subfield data corresponding to image data of a grayscale 139 are “11010001” in an order of subfield arrangement. At this time, “1” indicates a discharge cell turned on in a subfield, and “0” indicates a discharge cell turned off in the subfield. As described, since the image data corresponding to discharge cells indicate whether the discharge cells are turned on or off in each subfield, the screen load ratio of each subfield may be calculated.
The screen load ratio calculator 210 also calculates the ASL as shown in Equation 1. The screen load ratio of a frame is greater when the ASL is great, and is lower when the ASL is low.
where Rn, Gn, and Bn denote signal levels of R, G, and B image data, respectively, V denotes one frame, and 3N denotes the number of the R, G, and B image data input for one frame.
The sustain discharge controller 220 determines a total number of sustain pulses allocated to one frame according to the screen load ratio of one frame. That is, the sustain discharge controller 220 decreases the total number of the sustain pulses when the screen load ratio of the frame is great since the power consumption is increased, and increases the total number of the sustain pulses when the screen load ratio of the frame is low since the number of discharge cells is small and the power consumption is decreased.
The relation between the number of the sustain pulses and the screen load ratio may be stored as a lookup table in a memory. The determined sustain pulses are allocated to the respective subfields in proportion to weight values of the respective subfields.
The sustain discharge controller 220 determines the frequency of the sustain pulse according to the screen load ratio of each subfield. As described above, the decrease of the active power consumption is also increased according to the increase of the frequency of the sustain pulse since the active power is increased when the screen load ratio is great. Accordingly, compared to a case where the screen load ratio is relatively low, an optimum frequency is set to be higher when the screen load ratio is great. The frequencies of the sustain pulses according to the screen load ratio may be stored for each subfield as a lookup table in a memory of the sustain discharge controller 220.
The subfield controller 230 controls the sustain electrode driver 400 and the scan electrode driver 500 so as to apply the sustain pulse to the X and the Y electrodes according to the frequency of the sustain pulse of each subfield determined by the sustain discharge controller 220. The subfield controller 230 also controls the address electrode driver 300 according to subfield data indicating whether the discharge cells are turned on or off in each subfield.
That is, in a subfield having subfield data of a discharge cell equal to “1,” the address electrode driver 300 applies an address pulse to the A electrode of the discharge cell when the sustain pulse is applied to the Y electrode of the discharge cell. In a subfield having subfield data of a discharge cell equal to “0,” the address electrode driver 300 applies a non-address voltage to the A electrode of the discharge cell when the scan pulse is applied to the Y electrode of the discharge cell.
Alternately, referring to
Referring to both
A method for determining the frequency of the sustain pulse according to the screen load ratio will be described with reference to
Then, as shown in
The frequencies of the sustain pulses of the respective subfields according to the screen load ratio are determined by performing the above-described operation for all the screen load ratios and subfields. Values of the frequencies are stored in a lookup table in a memory. The sustain discharge controller 220 determines the frequency of the sustain pulse in a corresponding subfield by reading the lookup table stored in the memory according to the screen load ratio. As described above, the frequency of the sustain pulse is increased as the screen load ratio of the subfield is increased.
While the sustain pulse has been described as the pulse type shown in
As shown in
While a three electrode PDP having the X, Y, and A electrodes has been described in exemplary embodiments of the present invention, various PDP types for firing the sustain discharge with the described sustain pulse may be applied in exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
In addition, while the frequency of the sustain pulse is determined by calculating the screen load ratio for each subfield according to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the frequency of the sustain pulse for each frame may be determined by calculating the screen load ratio for each frame. That is, the frequency of the sustain pulse in a frame having a greater screen load ratio may be controlled to be greater than the frequency of the sustain pulse in a frame having a lower screen load ratio. A voltage variation time of the sustain pulse in the frame having the greater screen load ratio may be controlled to be decreased to be shorter than a voltage variation time, the sustain pulse in the frame having the lower screen load ratio.
According to exemplary embodiments of the present invention, the power consumption determined by the active power and the reactive power may be minimized since the frequency of the sustain pulse varies according to the screen load ratio of the subfield or the frame.
While exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been described, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments, but, on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
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