The present invention generally relates to visual displays for electronic devices; and relates more specifically to a power-efficient liquid-crystal display (LCD) system and method of operating the same.
Various types of visual displays are used in connection with electronic devices. A television, for example, uses a cathode-ray tube (CRT), where a directed beam of electrons selectively excites phosphors in the screen, producing a multitude of variously-colored picture elements (pixels), that collectively form an image. Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are also common, though far more limited in their ability to display complex images. Although somewhat more difficult to manufacture, liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) are gaining popularity because of their image-producing versatility and low-power consumption.
In general, LCDs are composed of a liquid-crystal layer sandwiched between transparent light-polarizing materials, along with electrical conductors and electrodes that enable a bias voltage to be applied across a specific small area (that is, a pixel) of the liquid-crystal layer. Applying the voltage difference to the pixel electrode alters the light-polarizing characteristics of the liquid crystal material proximate to the electrode. Light waves that are polarized when passing through one polarizing layer will typically not pass through the other, cross-polarized layer, unless the phase angle of the polarized light is changed as it passes through the liquid-crystal layer between them. Liquid crystals are substances that flow like liquids, but whose molecules nevertheless maintain a definite orientation with respect to each other. This orientation may be changed from one that causes the needed phase-angle change to one that does not, through the application of an electrical charge, as described above. The liquid-crystal orientation, therefore, determines whether the pixel will appear light or dark.
In an LCD, the light that produces the image itself is not created by the liquid crystals, but is supplied by separate light-sources such as LEDs or reflected ambient light. LCDs create images by determining where light will be allowed to pass through the LCD assembly and where it will be absorbed. In this sense, it is more appropriate to say that a portion of the liquid-crystal material is “activated” by the applied voltage, rather than illuminated. The amount of this light that is allowed through can be controlled very specifically by adjusting the level of the applied voltage. This means that the pixel can be adjusted to one of many finely varying levels of brightness. Color LCDs operate by employing three independently-controllable sub-pixels for each display pixel. Depending on the individually applied voltage, the sub-pixels filter out varying amounts of red, green, and blue light, respectively, to produce the different-colored portions of a displayed image. The color of each image pixel is determined by the intensity of light permitted to pass through its colored sub-pixels.
The liquid-crystal activating voltage potential can be supplied to the pixel in different ways. The simplest uses a transparent, conductive backplate (or plane). Smaller appropriately-shaped electrodes on the transparent front plate form the opposite charge plates that can be selectively turned on and off. This arrangement is satisfactory for calculator displays and the like where only a limited number of shapes and letters such as numerals or letters will need to be formed by combining the individual elements, such as numerals or letters.
More advanced LCDs use a grid of conductor rows and columns to activate selected pixels or sub-pixels. More than one pixel may be simultaneously activated by this row and column matrix, although a complete image cannot usually be created in this way. Multiplexing may be used, however, to create the proper combination of light and dark pixels. In this case, a pre-determined number of pixels are activated in each of a number of sequential steps. The speed at which alternating pixel groups are activated should be sufficient to produce an image detectable by the human eye. In addition, a capacitor may be associated with each pixel, allowing it to retain some charge even when it is not actively connected to the voltage source.
LCDs can now be found on many electronic devices. For example, modern video camera-recorders (camcorders) often include an integrated LCD video display. Many camcorders include an optical or electronic viewfinder as well, although many users prefer to watch the LCD while they are recording because it provides the most representative image of what is being captured.
Camcorders, being portable, are usually battery-powered (although they may be able to use other power sources when available). The batteries are of a type, for example nickel-cadmium, that can be repeatedly recharged. An actual “change” of batteries is, therefore, not regularly required under normal operating conditions. The amount of time that a user can operate the camcorder between battery recharges is of some importance, however. Since the camcorder is portable it is often carried to locations remote from alternate power sources. Once the batteries are discharged, the camera is inoperable until they can be recharged. One or more extra charged batteries can be carried, of course, but doing so imposes somewhat of an inconvenience. And, of course, any extra batteries will eventually discharge below operating power levels as well.
In the future, (and even to some extent in the present) complex LCDs will also be found on mobile telephones and personal digital assistants (PDAs). Such devices are and will continue to be used to provide wireless access to public and private communications networks such as the Internet. Through one of these devices, a user can connect to the network and download various text and graphic files from, for example, Web servers. The files' content can then be viewed on the LCD. These portable wireless devices create even more severe power-consumption restrictions because of their small size. No mobile phone the size of a camcorder would today be commercially accepted, and so ever-smaller batteries are being required to function for an ever-increasing time between charges.
It is, therefore, advantageous to design as many power-conservation features as possible into battery-powered devices, such as mobile phones, PDAs, and camcorders. Several such features already exist. Perhaps the most simple is an on/off switch, which allows the user to select a mode that consumes no power (or almost none). The device also may automatically shut itself off, or, alternately, turn off only selected power-consuming operations, after a certain pre-determined period of non-use.
The LCD display, in spite of its power-consumption advantage, still consumes a significant amount of power. One way to conserve display power, of course, is by shutting down the display itself when it is not in use—even if other (non-display) operations are continuing. This may even be done automatically, for example by turning on the display only when a motion detector detects the user's presence, or turning it off when a low-power state is detected. Other power-saving approaches make use of ambient light when available to back light the LCD and produce a brighter image without consuming extra battery power.
What is needed, however, is a power-conservation feature that can be selectively used to reduce LCD power consumption in battery-powered devices such as mobile phones and camcorders, regardless of available ambient light, and yet allow the user to continue utilizing the display for its intended function. The present invention provides just such a solution.
In one aspect, the present invention is a liquid crystal display (LCD) system that includes a display having a plurality of pixels, pixel-control circuitry for controlling the illumination of each of the pixels to form an image, and a power-supply for routing power from a power source such as a battery to the LCD driver circuitry, and eventually to the pixels themselves. The LCD driver circuitry enables an LCD display power-conservation mode in which a selected subset of the LCD-display pixels are not energized. The pixel-control circuitry may also determine, according to pre-determined criteria, which pixels to turn off based on the image being displayed and thereby affect the image-quality as little as possible.
In another aspect, the present invention is a method for conserving power in an LCD system that includes the steps of determining when power-conservation mode has been selected, or alternately entering power conservation mode automatically based on predetermined criteria, and then selectively reducing activation power to a subset of the pixels making up the LCD display. The method may further include the step of changing the subset of omitted pixels. This may include shutting down power to fifty percent of the pixels, then switching to the other fifty percent. This change may be done abruptly or by reactivating only a selected portion of the powered-down pixels and shutting down only a corresponding portion of these previously illuminated.
Another, similar device for Web access is a wireless personal digital assistant (PDA) such as PDA 140 shown in FIG. 1C. Descended from small portable computers with only enough memory and processing power to function as an electronic address book and calendar, many of these devices now incorporate a large number of applications, even including wireless communication. In any form, PDA 140 generally includes LCD 145 and touch-entry screen 146. If equipped for wireless communications, antenna 142 and keypad 148 may be present as well. PDA 140 may also permit attachment of a connector allowing wireline communication. In either instance, web pages are then accessible for display on LCD 145.
Note that the image-producing process is described in general terms for the purpose of illustration. The conventional process of driving an LCD to create a desired image is known in the art, and the present invention is intended to serve as an improvement thereon. In other words, it is applicable to produce a reduction in the power used to drive an LCD regardless of the specific method adopted for production of an unmodified image.
In more advanced LCD displays, another activation scheme may be used. For example in passive matrix displays pixels are arranged in rows and columns. An exemplary portion 260 of such a display is shown in FIG. 2B. Each pixel in a given column (the illustrated columns of LCD portion 260 are enumerated Col. 1 through Col. 6) is associated with a common ground conductor that can be selectively activated and deactivated. In other words, there is no continuous back plate (common-plane) serving as ground for all pixels. Correspondingly, electrodes positioned on the other side of the liquid crystal cell are connected to the same conductor by row (the illustrated rows of LCD portion 260 are enumerated Row 1 through Row 6). In
Row driver and column driver circuits are used to select the proper rows and columns, respectively, at the appropriate moment when a bias voltage is being applied. The row and column drivers, in turn, are directed by an appropriately programmed microprocessor. Using directed row and column drivers does not typically produce an entire image simultaneously, but rather in a series of steps; in each step a portion of the pixels making up the image are activated. Activated liquid crystal cells, however, take some time to return to an unactivated state, so as long as a rapid refresh rate is used (that is, pixels are activated again before completely relaxing to an unactivated state) the image appears continuously.
In an active matrix LCD (not shown), each pixel is associated with a thin film transistor (TFT). As the directed row and column drivers are selectively activated, TFTs at intersections allow an amount of charge through to an associated capacitor, which, in many cases, retains a charge sufficient to sustain pixel activation until the next refresh cycle.
Input image data is received in LCD drive circuit 320 through selector 340. Selector 340 is used where image data may be received from a variety of sources. For example, in a camcorder (see FIG. 1A), image data may come directly from the charge-coupled device capturing and digitizing the image for storage, or it may be from the storage medium (videotape, for example) itself. In the case of a mobile phone or PDA device (see FIGS. 1B and 1C), the image data may be received from a device storage medium, but also may be received from the communications network through a wireless connection as well. Typically, the user will manually select the input source, but in some cases automatic operation may also be desired. For example, a camcorder set to “recording mode” may automatically select the image captured through lens 121 as the LCD input. In
Note that the LCD system configuration of
As the alternate activation procedure will result in a modified visual display—one that is either brighter or darker than normal depending on the specific LCD. Although the user may well have themselves selected the power-conservation mode causing display alteration, they may also wish to temporarily return the image to its normal state when viewing a particular image. A selector switch, such as the example illustrated in
In any of these implementations, the power-conservation mode pattern or mask may take several forms or variation in degree. In one mode, the number of activated pixels is reduced by a certain percentage. In a fifty-percent reduction, every other active pixel may be skipped in the activation sequence. (This may be applied to LCDs with every pixel directly powered, or not as the case may be, and to multiplexed LCDs where it may be implemented as a lower than normal refresh rate, or as a normal refresh rate applied to only every other pixel.) A different pattern may also be implemented, for example by activating only one of every third or fourth pixels that would otherwise be activated in the border (outer) region of an image, while omitting the activation of only one in three in the central image region. Or a mode may be selected in which none of the border pixels are activated and the image is resized to fit in the now-smaller display region.
In one embodiment, the omitted pixels are alternated to reduce or even eliminate visible image degradation. This alteration may take the form of arbitrary alteration, for example in a mode having fifty percent of pixels omitted, in the next charge application the other fifty percent of pixels are omitted. The alteration pattern may also depend on the image itself with, for example, pixels in lighter (or darker) areas being omitted more often than those in darker (or lighter) areas.
Finally, note that the phrase, “power-conservation mode” refers herein to a device setting or configuration in which the image displayed on an LCD is to be formed using fewer energized (activated) pixels than would otherwise be utilized in non-power-conservation mode according to an embodiment of the present invention. Power-conservation mode may be entered and exited manually (in direct response to a user input commanding it to do so) or automatically. An automatic mode change is usually, but not necessarily responsive to the detection of a certain condition, such as low-battery power indication or, alternately, a network signal if the device is capable of network communication. In one embodiment, for example, a communications network signals the device to enter power-conservation mode when it receives a device transmission signal falling below a predetermined signal-strength threshold. In another embodiment, when the network-communications enabled device is manually set in a power-conservation mode, it automatically transmits a request with selected transmissions to return content that has already been modified to effect an image that uses less than full power for display, compared to an unaltered image. The above definition is for convenience and employed notwithstanding that other measures can also be taken to reduce power consumption, such as simply shutting the device off when not in use. In other words, as used herein, the phrase “power-conservation mode” refers only to the reduction of the device's power consumption through the reduction (and preferably elimination) of electrical power to selected LCD pixels according to a predetermined, and usually dynamic, matter. Further, “reduction” in power to individual pixels is simply reduced relative to the power level that would be used (“full power”) absent implementation of the power-conservation scheme of the present invention—full power does not herein refer to the absolute maximum power that could be supplied or sustained by the device in question.
The preferred descriptions are of preferred examples for implementing the invention, and the scope of the invention should not necessarily be limited by this description. The scope of the present invention is defined by the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030043096 A1 | Mar 2003 | US |