This application claims priority to and the benefit of Korean Patent Applications No. 10-2004-0038298 filed on May 28, 2004; No. 10-2004-0038966 filed on May 31, 2004; and No. 10-2004-0038987 filed on May 31, 2004, all filed in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for driving a plasma display panel and to a plasma display device, and in particular to a driving voltage scheme that eliminates a need for separate driving boards for the different driving electrodes.
2. Description of the Related Art
A plasma display panel (PDP) is a flat panel display that uses plasma generated by gas discharge in discharge cells to display characters or images. Depending on its size, a PDP includes more than several tens to millions of pixels arranged in a matrix pattern. One frame of the PDP is defined as a period of time during which all of the pixels in the panel are addressed. One frame is divided into a plurality of subfields, and each subfield includes 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, that are the cells that must be turned on or turned off to display the intended image, and for accumulating wall charges on the turn-on cells that are addressed to be turned on. The sustain period is for causing the cells to either continue discharge for displaying an image on the addressed cells or remain inactive.
In order to perform the above operations and to display an image, sustain pulses are alternately applied to scan electrodes and sustain electrodes during the sustain period, and reset waveforms and address waveforms are applied to the scan electrodes during the reset period and the address period. Therefore, a scan driving board for driving the scan electrodes and a sustain driving board for driving the sustain electrodes are separately needed. Mounting the two separate driving boards on a chassis base may generate problems and increase the overall cost of the device.
For combining the two driving boards into a single combined board, schemes of coupling the single combined board to the scan electrodes and extending the sustain electrodes to reach the combined board have been proposed. However, when the two driving boards are combined as such, the impedance component created at the extended sustain electrodes is increased.
The present invention provides a plasma display device having a single integrated board for driving a scan electrode and a sustain electrode. The present invention also provides a driving waveform for the single integrated board. A driving waveform is applied to an electrode while another electrode is biased at a constant voltage. An exemplary embodiment of this invention presents a method for driving a PDP. A PDP typically includes a scan electrode, a sustain electrode, and an address electrode, the scan electrode and the sustain electrode forming a parallel pair and the address electrode extending perpendicular to the parallel pair, the method driving the plasma display panel during frames, each frame having subfields, each subfield having a reset period followed by an address period followed by a sustain period, the reset period including a rising period and a falling period.
The exemplary method for driving a PDP includes maintaining the sustain electrode biased at a first voltage, during each subfield; gradually increasing a voltage of the scan electrode from a second voltage to a third voltage, during the rising period; decreasing the voltage of the scan electrode from the third voltage to a fourth voltage; gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrode from the fourth voltage to a fifth voltage, during the falling period; selecting a discharge cell by applying a scan voltage and a non-scan voltage to the scan electrode and applying an address pulse to the address electrode, during the address period; and sustain-discharging the selected discharge cell by applying a pulse alternately having a sixth voltage and a seventh voltage lower than the sixth voltage to the scan electrode, during the sustain period. The address electrode may be biased at an eighth voltage during the falling period and a portion of the address period. In a variation, the address electrode may be biased at a ninth voltage more positive than the eighth voltage during the entire rising period. In another variation, the address electrode may be biased at a ninth voltage more positive than the eighth voltage during a portion of the rising period. In yet another variation, the voltage of the address electrode may be gradually increased to a voltage more positive than the eighth voltage during a portion of the rising period. In a further variation, the address electrode may be floated during the rising period.
In the method disclosed for driving the PDP, the ninth voltage may be equal to an address pulse voltage. The first voltage may be a ground voltage. The fourth voltage may be a ground voltage. The sixth voltage may be equal to the fourth voltage. The eighth voltage may be a ground voltage. The third voltage may be a positive voltage, the fifth voltage a negative voltage with an absolute value greater than the third voltage, and the fourth voltage lower than the ground voltage and higher than a sum of the third voltage and a voltage twice the fifth voltage. In one embodiment the voltage of the scan electrode may be decreased from the third voltage to the sixth voltage and from the sixth voltage to the ground voltage, between the rising period and the falling period, and then gradually decreased from the ground voltage to the fifth voltage, during the falling period.
The subfields may be set up such that the reset period of a first subfield includes a rising period and a falling period, and reset periods of subsequent subfields include a falling period only. In that case the voltage of the scan electrode may be gradually decreased from the fourth voltage to the fifth voltage, during the falling period of a subsequent subfield. Gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrode from the fourth voltage to the fifth voltage, during the falling period of a subsequent subfield, may include first decreasing the voltage of the scan electrode from the fourth voltage to ground and then gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrode from ground to the fifth voltage.
A plasma display device is also presented that includes a PDP, a control board for dividing a frame into a plurality of subfields, and a driving board for applying a driving waveform, for displaying an image on the plasma display panel, to the scan electrodes and to the address electrodes, and for biasing the sustain electrodes at a first voltage during the plurality of subfields. The driving board generates a discharge for initializing a cell during a reset period of at least one subfield, the discharge generated first between the scan electrodes and the address electrodes and then between the scan electrodes and sustain electrodes. The driving board may generate a discharge by gradually increasing a voltage of the scan electrodes and subsequently gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrodes. The driving board may generate the discharge by gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrodes from the reference voltage. The driving board may generate the discharge by gradually decreasing the voltage of the scan electrodes from a voltage lower than the reference voltage. The driving board may apply a voltage to the address electrodes during a period when the driving board gradually increases the voltage of the scan electrodes, the voltage applied being more positive than a voltage applied to the address electrodes during a period when the driving board gradually decreases the voltage of the scan electrodes. The driving board may apply a pulse alternately having a voltage higher than a reference voltage and a voltage lower than the reference voltage to the scan electrodes in order to perform a sustain discharge.
A schematic configuration of a plasma display device according to an embodiment of the present invention is shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The address buffer board 100 receives an address driving control signal from a control board 400 and applies a voltage for selecting a turn-on cell to the appropriate A electrodes. The X electrodes are biased at a constant sustain voltage.
A scan driving board 200 is located to the left of the chassis base 20 and is coupled to the Y electrodes through a scan buffer board 300. During an address period, the scan buffer board 300 applies a voltage to the Y electrodes for sequentially selecting scan electrodes Y1 to Yn. The scan driving board 200 receives a driving signal from the control board 400 and applies a driving voltage to the selected Y electrode. While, in
Externally receiving an image signal, the control board 400 generates a control signal for driving the A electrodes and a control signal for driving the Y and X electrodes. The control board 400 subsequently applies the control signals to the address buffer board 100, the scan driving board 200, and the scan buffer board 300. A power supply board 500 supplies the power for driving the plasma display device. The control board 400 and the power supply board 500 are located on a central area of the chassis base 20.
As explained above, a PDP is driven during frames and frames are divided into subfields. As shown in
During the rising period of the reset period, the voltage of the Y electrode is gradually increased from a voltage of Vs to a voltage of Vset while the A electrode is maintained at the reference voltage that is represented by the 0V line in
Wall charges being described in the present invention refer to charges formed on a wall of a discharge cell 12 (
The voltage Vset is a voltage high enough to fire a discharge in cells 12 of any condition because every cell 12 (
During the falling period of the reset period, the voltage of Y electrode is gradually reduced from the voltage Vs to a voltage Vnf while the voltage of the A electrode is maintained at the reference voltage. As a result, a weak discharge is generated between the Y and X electrodes and between the Y and A electrodes while the voltage of the Y electrode is reduced, and accordingly, the (−) wall charges formed on the Y electrode and the (+) wall charges formed on the X and A electrodes are eliminated. The voltage Vnf is set to be close to a discharge firing voltage between the Y and X electrodes. Then, a wall voltage between the Y and X electrodes reaches near 0V, and therefore, a cell 12 (
Subsequently, during the address period for selecting turn-on cells 12, a scan pulse VscL and an address pulse Va are applied to Y electrode and A electrode of the turn-on cell 12 (
The scan pulse, in the form of the voltage VscL, is first applied to the Y electrode in the first row (Y1). At the same time, the address pulse, in the form of the voltage Va, is applied to the A electrode on the cells 12 to be turned on along the first row. Then, a discharge is generated between the Y electrode in the first row (Y1) and the A electrode receiving the voltage Va. Accordingly, (+) wall charges are formed on the Y electrode and (−) wall charges are formed on the A electrode and X electrode. As a result, a wall voltage, Vwxy, is formed between the X and Y electrodes with the potential of the wall adjacent the Y electrode higher than the potential of the wall adjacent the X electrode. Subsequently, while the scan voltage, in the form of the voltage VscL, is applied to the Y electrode in a second row (Y2), the address pulse, in the form of the voltage Va, is applied to the A electrodes in cells 12 to be turned on along the second row. Then, the address discharge is generated in the cells 12 crossed by the A electrodes receiving the voltage Va and the Y electrode in the second row (Y2) and accordingly, wall charges are formed in those cells 12, in the manner described above. Regarding Y electrodes in other rows, wall charges are formed in cells 12 to be turned on in the same manner as described above, i.e., by applying the address pulse, the voltage Va, to A electrodes on cells to be turned on 12 while sequentially applying a scan pulse, voltage VscL, to the Y electrodes from the first row (Y1) to the last row (Yn).
During the address period described above, the voltage VscL is usually set to be equal to or lower than the voltage Vnf, and the voltage Va is usually set to be higher than the reference voltage. Generation of address discharge by applying the voltage Va to the A electrode will now be described in connection with the case that the voltage VscL equals the voltage Vnf. When the voltage Vnf is applied in the reset period, a sum of the wall voltage between the A and Y electrodes and the external voltage Vnf between the A and the Y electrodes reaches the discharge firing voltage Vfay between the A and Y electrodes. For example, when 0V is applied to the A electrode and the voltage VscL, that is equal to Vnf in this case, is applied to the Y electrode in the address period, the voltage Vfay is formed between the A and Y electrodes, and accordingly generation of a discharge may be expected. However, in this case, the expected discharge is not generated because a discharge delay is greater than the width of the scan pulse and the address pulse. However, if the voltage Va is applied to the A electrode and the voltage VscL=Vnf is applied to the Y electrode, a voltage greater than the firing voltage Vfay is formed between the A and Y electrodes, and accordingly, the discharge delay is reduced to less than the width of the scan pulse, allowing a discharge to be generated. The voltage difference between the electrodes A and Y is increased as the magnitudes of Va and VscL are increased, because Va is positive and VscL is negative and an increase in their magnitudes means a greater voltage difference between them. Similarly, generation of the address discharge may be facilitated by setting the voltage VscL to be lower than the voltage Vnf.
Subsequently, during the sustain period, a sustain discharge is generated between the Y and X electrodes by initially applying a pulse, in the form of the voltage Vs, to the appropriate Y electrode. Just before the application of this voltage, the wall voltage Vwxy is formed such that the potential of the Y electrode is higher than the X electrode in the cells 12 having undergone the address discharge in the address period. During the sustain period, the voltage Vs is set to be lower than the discharge firing voltage Vfxy, while the sum of the voltages Vs+Vwxy is set to be higher than the voltage Vfxy. In this manner, the positive wall voltage Vwxy, from the Y electrode to the X electrode, existing before the application of Vs does not generate a discharge. At the same time, once Vs arrives, the sum of these two generally positive voltages will reach above the required firing voltage discharge between X and Y and a discharge is sustained.
As a result of the sustain discharge, the (−) wall charges are formed on the Y electrode and the (+) wall charges are formed on the X and A electrodes, such that the potential of the X electrode wall is higher than the Y electrode wall. Because the voltage Vwyx is formed such that the potential of the Y electrode itself, and not its adjacent wall, becomes higher than the X electrode itself, a pulse of a negative voltage −Vs is applied to the Y electrode to fire a subsequent sustain discharge. As a result of this discharge, once again (+) wall charges are formed on the Y electrode and (−) wall charges are formed on the X and A electrodes such that another sustain discharge may be generated by applying the positive voltage Vs to the Y electrode.
The process of alternately applying the sustain discharge pulses of Vs and −Vs to the Y electrode is repeated a number of times corresponding to a weight value of a corresponding subfield.
As described above, according to the first embodiment of the present invention shown in
As shown in
A reset period of a subsequent subfield begins while the above wall charge state is maintained in the cells 12, because the sustain discharge is not generated in cells 12 that have not undergone an address discharge.
In the above state of cell 12 (
In a PDP, the X and Y electrodes are typically covered with a material of a high secondary electron emission coefficient for increasing sustain-discharge performance, while the A electrode is covered with a phosphor for color representation. An MgO film may be used for such a material of a high secondary electron emission coefficient. The discharge in the cell 12 (
During the rising period of the reset period, the Y electrode operates as a positive electrode and the A electrode and X electrode operate as negative electrodes because a higher voltage is applied to the Y electrode.
During the rising period, however, the discharge may be delayed between the A and Y electrodes because the phosphor covered A electrode operates as the negative electrode when the voltage between the A and Y electrodes exceeds the discharge firing voltage Vfay. Due to the discharge delay, at the time that the discharge is actually generated between the Y and A electrodes, the voltage between the Y and A electrodes, Vay, is greater than the discharge firing voltage, Vfay. Accordingly, a strong discharge rather than a weak discharge may be generated between the Y and A electrodes due to the high voltage caused by the discharge delay.
Another strong discharge may be generated between the X and Y electrodes by the strong discharge between the A and Y electrodes. Therefore, more positive wall charges may be formed in the cells 12 than charges that would form during a normal rising period, and a greater number of priming particles may be generated.
Accordingly, a strong discharge may be generated during the falling period by the wall charges and the priming particles, and the wall charges between the X and Y electrodes, shown in
As shown in
While the A electrode is biased at the constant voltage Va during the rising period in the second embodiment shown in
While the A electrode is biased at the constant voltage Va during the rising period in the first and second embodiments shown in
Also, instead of increasing the voltage of the A electrode as shown in
While a weak discharge is generated by increasing the voltage of the A electrode above the reference voltage during the rising period in
As shown in
As the voltage slope of an electrode becomes gentler, the discharge is generated more weakly. Although a strong discharge is generated during the rising period, a strong discharge during the falling period is prevented because the voltage of the Y electrode is varied more slowly than in the first exemplary embodiment. In this embodiment, it is not necessary to include an additional power source to be applied to the Y electrode when the reference voltage 0V is used for the falling start voltage.
When the falling start voltage of the Y electrode is 0V, like the example shown in
While the falling start voltage of the Y electrode is set to be 0V in
Vwxy=Vset−Vfxy [Equation 1]
Vwxy−Vn<Vfxy [Equation 2]
Vn>Vwxy−Vfxy=Vset−2Vfxy [Equation 3]
Generally, the cells in all conditions are to be initialized in the reset period, and therefore a difference between the maximum voltage and minimum voltage applied in the reset period is set to be a voltage 2Vfxy or a voltage which greater than the voltage 2Vfxy. In this embodiment, the voltage Vnf is set to be a negative voltage −Vfxy of the discharge firing voltage Vfxy. Accordingly, the maximum voltage during the reset period, Vset, is given by Equation 4.
Vset>2Vfxy+Vnf≈Vfxy [Equation 4]
Accordingly, the voltage Vn may be set to be a negative voltage when the voltage Vset is set to be a voltage between the voltage Vfxy and the voltage 2Vfxy.
When the voltage Vnf is approximated as the negative voltage −Vfxy of the discharge firing voltage Vfxy, Equation 3 may be represented as Equation 5. Then, the falling start voltage Vn of the Y electrode is reduced to a voltage range that satisfies Equation 5.
Vn>Vset+2Vnf [Equation 5]
When the voltage Vn is a negative voltage and the voltage of the Y electrode is directly reduced from the voltage Vset to the voltage Vn, a self erasing discharge is generated because of a large voltage change. The self erasing discharge may be prevented by reducing the voltage of the Y electrode, from the voltage Vset to the voltage Vn, in a step by step fashion. For example, the voltage of the Y electrode may be reduced from Vset to Vs, from Vs to 0V, and then from 0V to Vn. Alternatively, the voltage of the Y electrode may be reduced from Vset to Vs and from Vs to Vn.
As explained above, embodiments of the invention don't require a board for driving the X electrode, because the reset, address, and sustain discharge operations are performed by applying the driving waveform to the Y electrode while the X electrode is biased at a constant voltage. In addition, the impedance on the path for applying the sustain discharge pulse may be controlled to be within a certain level because the pulse for the sustain discharge is supplied by the scan buffer board 300.
The respective reset periods of a plurality of subfields forming one field may each include a rising period and a falling period like the reset period shown in
The driving waveform of the first subfield in
During the sustain period of the first subfield, a sustain discharge is generated and (−) wall charges form on the Y electrode and (+) wall charges form on the X and A electrodes. As a result, a weak discharge is generated during the falling period of the reset period of the second subfield. This discharge is similar to the discharge generated during the falling period of the reset period of the first subfield when the voltage of the Y electrode is gradually reduced and exceeds the discharge firing voltage.
The wall charge condition in the cell 12 (
The wall charge condition in the cell 12 (
As described, in the case of the subfield having a falling period without rising a period during the reset period, a reset discharge is generated when the sustain discharge is generated in a previous subfield, and reset discharge is not generated when the sustain discharge is not generated in the previous subfield. Accordingly, the reset discharge (weak discharge) is generated in the reset period of a very first subfield when 0 gray scales (black gray scales) are displayed if the very first subfield is formed like the first subfield of
While the driving waveform of the first exemplary embodiment has been used to describe the eighth exemplary embodiment in
In addition, as shown in
While the driving voltage of the ninth exemplary embodiment of
When the sustain period ends and the wall voltage caused by the wall charges do not exceed the discharge firing voltage, then the wall charges form on the X and Y electrodes as shown in
While the voltage of the Y electrode is gradually reduced, discharge is generated when a sum of the wall voltage and the voltage applied to the X and Y electrodes exceeds the discharge firing voltage Vfxy. At this time, the falling voltage of the Y electrode is higher than the voltage −Vs because discharge is generated when the voltage −Vs is applied to the Y electrode as described above.
Accordingly, the falling slope of the Y electrode voltage is set to be gentle in the predetermined falling period of the Y electrode voltage, and the falling period is reduced when the falling start voltage of the Y electrode is set to be lower than 0V.
According to the exemplary embodiments of the present invention, a board for driving the sustain electrode is not required because the driving waveform is applied to the scan electrode while the sustain electrode is biased at a constant voltage. A single integrated board is sufficient for driving the electrodes and the cost is reduced.
When the Y and X electrodes have separate driving boards, the impedance formed on the scan driving board is different from the impedance formed on the sustain driving board. This difference occurs because the driving waveforms in the reset period and the address period are supplied mainly from the scan driving board. As a result, the sustain discharge pulse applied to the scan electrode in the sustain period and the sustain discharge pulse applied to the sustain electrode are different. According to the exemplary embodiments of the present invention, however, the impedance on the path for applying the sustain discharge pulse may be controlled to be within a certain level because the pulse for the sustain discharge is supplied from the scan driving board.
While this invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be practical exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments, rather, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2004-0038298 | May 2004 | KR | national |
10-2004-0038966 | May 2004 | KR | national |
10-2004-0038987 | May 2004 | KR | national |