The present invention relates generally to electronic devices, and more specifically to electronic devices that perform multiple functions in a display area of the electronic device.
Electronic devices such as smart telephones and tablet computing devices typically include a display that allows a user to view images and to interact with various components and applications running on, or connected to, the electronic device. For example, a display can include a multi-touch touchscreen that the user touches to select or interact with an object or application displayed on the display. From the perspective of the user, the display displays the object simultaneously with a touch sensing device detecting one or more touch events on the display. However, the circuitry associated with the display and the circuitry associated with the touch sensing device may or may not operate concurrently due to signal interference and noise issues that can occur when the two functions operate at the same time.
As the number of functions that use or share the display area increase, issues such as noise can also increase and interfere with the operation of at least one function. For example, a force sensing device can use the top surface of the display as an input region. In some situations, the noise produced by one function, such as the display, can overwhelm the signals produced during another operation, such as a force sensing operation. Some of the signals of the display can inject noise into the force sensing signals. The magnitude of the display signals can be much greater than the magnitude of the force sensing signals, making it difficult to discern the force sensing signals from the noise.
In one aspect, a display stack in an electronic device can include a display layer and two filters, a first filter and a second filter. The first and second filters each reduces display noise produced by the display layer. A polarizer can be disposed below the display layer. As one example, the first filter can include a conductive layer disposed below the polarizer and the second filter a filtering layer disposed between the display layer and the polarizer. As another example, the first filter can include a conductive layer disposed below the polarizer and the second filter one or more VCOM buffers operatively connected to the display layer.
In another aspect, a method of non-uniform sampling of a noise signal can mitigate the display noise in signals received from a sensing device. The method can include sampling a signal produced by the sensing device for a first time period. The signal produced by the sensing device includes noise that is produced by the display and the sampled noise has a first polarity. The sampled noise can be sampled in a positive phase (one polarity) or in a negative phase (opposite polarity) of the noise signal. When the noise is sampled for the first time period, a polarity of the noise produced by the display is switched to an opposite second polarity. The signal produced by the sensing device can then be sampled for a second time period such that noise samples having the opposite second polarity substantially cancel the noise samples having the first polarity.
In yet another aspect, a method for reducing display noise in sense signals produced by a sensing device can include sampling a display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a first display frame refresh period, inverting a phase of the sampling, and after inverting the phase, sampling the display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a second display frame refresh period. The display noise samples from the first and second display frame refresh periods can be averaged together.
In another aspect, a method for reducing display noise in sense signals produced by a sensing device can include sampling a display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a first display frame refresh period, inverting a phase of the sampling, sampling the display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a second display frame refresh period, inverting the phase of the sampling, sampling the display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a third display frame refresh period, inverting the phase of the sampling, and sampling the display noise signal and averaging the display noise samples for a fourth display frame refresh period. The display noise samples from the first, second, third, and fourth display frame refresh periods can then be averaged together.
Embodiments are better understood with reference to the following drawings. The elements of the drawings are not necessarily to scale relative to each other. Identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical features that are common to the figures.
Embodiments described herein provide an electronic device that includes a display and multiple devices that each use or share at least a portion of the display area. By way of example only, the multiple devices can include a touch sensing device and a force sensing device. The touch and force sensing devices can each use at least a portion of the top surface of the display screen as an input region.
In some embodiments, display noise can be injected into the force signals produced by the force sensing device. Various techniques are disclosed herein that reduce or cancel the display noise in the force signals. The techniques include the use of an additional conductive layer in a display stack, the use of a non-uniform sampling scheme, averaging together noise signal samples sampled over multiple display frames, and inverting a phase of the sampling of the noise signal over multiple display frames.
Directional terminology, such as “top”, “bottom”, “front”, “back”, “leading”, “trailing”, etc., is used with reference to the orientation of the Figure(s) being described. Because components of embodiments described herein can be positioned in a number of different orientations, the directional terminology is used for purposes of illustration only and is in no way limiting. When used in conjunction with layers of a display or device, the directional terminology is intended to be construed broadly, and therefore should not be interpreted to preclude the presence of one or more intervening layers or other intervening features or elements. Thus, a given layer that is described as being formed, positioned, disposed on or over another layer, or that is described as being formed, positioned, disposed below or under another layer may be separated from the latter layer by one or more additional layers or elements.
Referring now to
The touch sensing and force sensing functions can each use or share some or all of the display area. For example, in one embodiment, a user can interact with a displayed image by touching and/or by applying a force at an appropriate position on the display, with the appropriate position located anywhere on the display. In another embodiment, the display function 100 and the touch sensing function 104 can use the entire display 106 while the force sensing function 102 involves a portion of the display 106. Thus, each function can use some or all of the display 106 when in operation. The arrangement of the functions in
The electronic device 200 includes an enclosure 202 surrounding a display 204 and one or more buttons 206 or input devices. The enclosure 202 can form an outer surface or partial outer surface and protective case for the internal components of the electronic device 200, and may at least partially surround the display 204. The enclosure 202 can be formed of one or more components operably connected together, such as a front piece and a back piece. Alternatively, the enclosure 202 can be formed of a single piece operably connected to the display 204.
The display 204 can be implemented with any suitable display, including, but not limited to, a multi-touch sensing touchscreen device that uses liquid crystal display (LCD) technology, light emitting diode (LED) technology, organic light-emitting display (OLED) technology, or organic electro luminescence (OEL) technology. One of the buttons 206 can take the form of a home button, which may be a mechanical button, a soft button (e.g., a button that does not physically move but still accepts inputs), an icon or image on a display, and so on. Further, in some embodiments, some or all of the buttons 206 can be integrated as part of a cover glass of the electronic device.
Embodiments described herein perform a display operation, a touch sensing operation, and a force sensing operation in a display area or in one or more portions of a display area. The force sensing operation is performed during a display refresh period, while the touch sensing operation may or may not be performed during a display refresh operation. Other embodiments, however, are not limited to these types of sensing operations and devices. Embodiments can include any sensing device that does a periodic or non-uniform sampling of the coupled noise signals produced by the display in close synchronization with the display refresh time. Thus, a sensor using any type of sensing technology that includes a display synchronized scan and sampling scheme can use the present invention. By way of example only, a sensor can employ capacitive sensing technology, resistive sensing technology, piezoelectric or piezoresistive sensing technology, magnetic technology, optical technology, inductive technology, and ultrasonic sensing technology.
In the embodiments described herein, the force sensing device is implemented as a capacitive force sensing device that determines or estimates an amount of force applied to an input region through capacitance changes in one or more capacitive sensing elements.
Also in the embodiments described herein, the touch sensing device is implemented as a capacitive touch sensing device that determines a location of one or more touches applied to an input region through capacitance changes in one or more capacitive sensing elements.
Referring now to
The display controller 306 can include a timing controller 314 that generates timing and control signals for the display, the force sensing device, and the touch sensing device. For example, the display controller 306 can transmit one or more excitation signals to the force sensing device on signal line 316. The display controller 306 can be any suitable hardware, software, firmware, or combination thereof adapted to translate the image data into control signals for driving the pixels 318 of the display 320. The display controller can include other suitable components, such as a processing device and/or a storage device.
The processing device 302 receives sense signals from the force sensing device on signal line 322. The processing device 302 determines an amount of force, or a change in force, applied to an input region of the force sensing device based on at least one sense signal. Additionally, the processing device 302 receives the touch signals from the touch sensing device on signal line 324. The processing device 302 determines one or more touch locations on an input region of the touch sensing device based on at least one touch signal.
It should be noted that
When the display noise and sense signal will not be sampled again at block 404, the method passes to block 406 where the averaged sense and display noise signal is output from the force sensing device. In some embodiments, the averaged sense and display noise signal is received by a processing device and used to determine an amount of force applied to an input region, or to determine a change in an applied force.
A determination can then be made at block 408 as to whether or not sense and display noise signals are to be sampled during another frame. For example, sense and display noise signals can be sampled during each frame refresh period, periodically, or at select times. If sense and display noise signals are to be sampled, the process returns to block 400. The method ends when sense and display noise signals will not be sampled in another display frame refresh period.
In other embodiments, additional or different blocks can be included in the method shown in
Referring now to
An adhesive layer 506 can be disposed between the cover glass 502 and the front polarizer 504. Any suitable adhesive can be used in adhesive layer, such as, for example, an optically clear adhesive. A color filter layer 508 can be positioned below the front polarizer 504. The color filter layer 508 can provide the colors for a color display. The color filter layer 508 can be implemented in any suitable form and can include a color filter layer that is known and used in the art. By way of example only, a RGB display can include a color filter layer having filter elements that filter red, green, and blue light.
A display layer 510 can be positioned below the color filter layer 508. The display layer 510 may take a variety of forms, including a LCD display, a light-emitting diode (LED) display, and an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display. In some embodiments, the display layer 510 can be formed from glass or have a glass substrate. Embodiments described herein include a multi-touch touchscreen LCD display layer.
A conductive layer 512 can be positioned between the display layer 510 and a back polarizer 514. The conductive layer can be a solid layer as shown, or the conductive layer can be patterned into discrete electrodes (not shown). The front and back polarizers 504, 514 can be implemented in any suitable form and can include polarizers that are known and used in the art. A back light unit 516 can be positioned below the back polarizer. The back light unit 516 provides a back light for the LCD display layer 510.
A compressible gap 518 can be formed between the back light unit 516 and a sensing layer 520. The compressible gap 518 can include an air gap, a compressible substance, or a compressible structure. The sensing layer 520 can include a set of discrete electrodes 522. In some embodiments, the set of electrodes 522 can be replaced with a solid conductive layer similar to the illustrated conductive layer 512. An adhesive layer 524 can be positioned between the sensing layer 520 and a mid-plate or support structure 526.
A force sensing device can include the conductive layer 512 and the sensing layer 520. The conductive layer 512 and the first set of electrodes 522 can be made of any suitable conductive material, such as a transparent conductive material. A capacitive sensing element 528 can be formed by the conductive layer 512 and each discrete electrode in the first set of electrodes 522. The capacitive sensing elements can operate in a mutual capacitance mode or in a self-capacitance mode. In a mutual capacitance mode, the conductive layer 512 is driven with an excitation signal and the capacitance of each capacitive sensing element is measured. In a self-capacitance mode, the conductive layer 512 is connected to a reference voltage, such as ground and the capacitance of each capacitive sensing element is measured.
A distance D separates the conductive layer 512 from the first set of electrodes 522. When a force is applied to the cover glass 502 (i.e., the input region), the cover glass 502 flexes and the distance D is reduced. The display stack is pushed or otherwise moved downward by the applied force and the capacitance of one or more capacitive sensing elements may increase since the layers are moved closer to one another. This increase in capacitance can be correlated to a decrease in distance between the layers, and thus, to an amount of force needed to move the layers a given distance. Thus, the change in capacitance can be used to determine an amount of force applied to the input region, or to determine a change in an amount of applied force.
Noise produced by the display layer 510 can couple to the conductive layer 512, which results in the noise being sampled when the capacitances of the capacitive sensing elements are measured. And some visual patterns displayed on a display can introduce a step into the display noise signal. For example,
In the illustrated embodiment, the pixels 600 depict a 3×3 displayed pattern with the pixels in each 3×3 group 608 having the same color. The pixels in adjacent blocks have the opposite color. There can be several issues with the 3×3 checkerboard pattern, as well as any odd sized checkerboard pattern (e.g., 1×1, 5×5). Having an odd number of pixels in a repeating pattern along each gate select line 604 can cause an imbalance in the number of drive lines 606 transitioning to a positive polarity and the number of drive lines transitioning to a negative polarity. This imbalance can produce a “step” in the noise for a column inversion panel. Additionally or alternatively, other inversion scheme panels may have other display patterns that cause similar issues. Additionally, the noise can have an odd periodicity over time when an odd number of pixels are arranged in a repeating pattern along the drive lines 606 due to a spatially repeating visual pattern on the display for part of all of the display. In some embodiments, this periodicity can match the periodicity of the sense signal and a fair amount of noise can accumulate in the sensing signal. This periodicity and accumulation of noise can reduce the benefits of sampling a large number of samples, as described in conjunction with
Referring now to
Like the 3×3 checkerboard pattern, there can be several issues with the 3×2 checkerboard display pattern. As described earlier, having an odd number of pixels in a repeating pattern along the row lines can cause an imbalance in the number of drive lines 606 transitioning to a positive polarity and the number of drive lines transitioning to a negative polarity, which can produce a “step” in the noise charge for a column inversion panel. Other inversion scheme panels may have other display patterns that cause similar noise issues. Additionally, the noise can have an even periodicity over time when an even number of pixels are arranged in a repeating pattern along the column lines. The injected noise charge can produce a non-random periodic noise in the display that may not be mitigated with known averaging type filtering schemes.
As described earlier, the conductive layer 512 can be a solid layer or patterned into discrete electrodes. The conductive layer 512 is the first electrode (or set of electrodes) for the force sensing device, and the conductive layer produces a first level of high pass filtering. So after passing through the conductive layer 512, the display noise signal represents a first order RC high pass response that is illustrated in
In some embodiments, the injected noise charge may not be mitigated with known averaging type filtering schemes. Several techniques are disclosed herein that can reduce display noise in the signals produced by a sensing device.
Noise Filter and Sampling Point Selection
One technique for reducing display noise in the sense signals of a sensing device (e.g., force sensing device) is to filter the display noise to mitigate or cancel the noise signal. The filter can tune or shape a step response in a display noise signal. Additionally or alternatively, the sampling point of the display noise signal can be selected to minimize display noise when the samples of the force signal in the force sensing device are sampled. For example, in one embodiment, a step response from the display driver circuits can be minimized or cancelled by shaping the step response and/or by selecting an optimum sampling point for the force signals in the force sensing device.
As described previously, the conductive layer 512 can act as a first filter for the display noise. So in one embodiment, a second filter can be constructed with another conductive layer that is included in a display stack.
The display stack 1000 is similar to the display stack 500 shown in
It should be noted that a the filtering layer 1002 can be positioned at different locations in other embodiments. For example, the conductive layer 512 can be disposed under the back light unit 516 instead of between the back polarizer 514 and the back light unit 516.
Additionally, sampling point optimization can be used to reduce or cancel the step response in the noise signal shown in
Other embodiments can filter the display noise differently. For example, in one embodiment, the “filter” for the display noise can be achieved within the display drive and VCOM buffers network. Those skilled in the art will recognize the VCOM plane has certain charging and discharging behaviors due to the construction of the VCOM plane. Any first order RC discharge path on the VCOM plane may make the coupled noise signal look like a first order RC high pass filtered version of a step voltage excitation. Thus, a first order RC discharge path on the VCOM plane can have the same effect on the display noise as the additional conductive layer 1002.
As described earlier, the display layer 510 can act as a noise source and produce the display noise shown in
Embodiments that utilize the noise filter include two high pass filters. The first high pass filter is the conductive layer 512 in the display stack 1000 (
In one embodiment, the sampling point can be predicted using the following approximate equation:
Vout=Vo(exp(−t/τ2)−τ2/τ1) Equation 1
where τ1 is a time constant related to the additional conductive layer 1002 in
In other embodiments, it may be assumed τ1˜τ2. In these embodiments, in certain ranges the zeroing and optimum sampling point(s) may still occur and can be predicted. And in other embodiments, τ2 and τ1 may not be known precisely but a calibration can be performed to determine the optimum sampling point(s).
Non-Uniform Sampling
Another technique for reducing display noise in the sense signals of a force sensing device is to change the sampling scheme in various non-uniform configurations to mitigate or cancel the noise signal. Essentially, the number of positive display noise signal samples substantially equal the number of negative display noise signal samples in a display frame refresh period or over two or more display frame refresh periods.
Referring now to
And in other embodiments, multiple samples can be skipped within a display frame refresh period. The locations of the line refresh periods in which the samples are obtained can be predetermined in some embodiments, while in other embodiments the locations of the line refresh periods can be randomized. When randomized, the location of the skips can be randomized for each display frame refresh period or every N display frame refresh periods, when N is an integer greater than one. Skipping multiple samples can be suited for embodiments that experience some variation in the amount of noise between the top and bottom of the display. For example, when the refresh events for the pixels at the top of the display are noisier than the refresh events for the pixels at the bottom of the display, and there is a slowly varying gradient between the top and the bottom refresh events, having three equally spaced skips along the scan may more effectively cancel the display noise. Additionally, multiple skips can make the process more robust to changes in the display patterns that occur at different locations within the display.
The method shown in
Frame Averaging and Sample Phase Inversion
Another technique for reducing display noise in the sense signals of a force sensing device is to average the noise and force signal samples over several display frame refresh periods. Essentially, the number of positive display noise signal samples substantially equal the number of negative display noise signal samples over two or more display frame refresh periods.
After averaging the samples in frame refresh period N+1, the overall display noise sample is (−K(Vp+Vn)). Note that alternate or consecutive frame refresh periods have opposite sample phase polarities (positive or negative) due to display inversion. So when two consecutive frame refresh periods are averaged together, the display noise is cancelled or substantially cancelled due to the opposite polarities of the samples.
Unfortunately, in some embodiments, the display noise may not cancel out when the display noise has an even periodicity (e.g.,
One method for cancelling the display noise with even periodicity is to invert the starting of the excitation signal, and thereby the sampling phase of the display noise to produce alternate frames having opposite display noise components in the output (positive and negative).
Thus, when the display noise has an odd periodicity, the display inversion scheme automatically averages out the display noise contributions. But when the display noise has an even periodicity, the phase of the sampling is switched to create an inversion between two consecutive frame refresh periods.
In some embodiments, it can be difficult to determine when to invert the sampling phase.
Next, as shown in block 1602, the sampled display noise and sense signals are averaged together. In one embodiment, after averaging four frame refresh periods, both odd periodicity and even periodicity display noise add to zero.
Row 1702 depicts the overall noise samples in each frame refresh period when the display noise has an odd periodicity. As shown, the overall noise samples in frames 1 and 4 have a positive polarity, while the overall noise samples in frames 2 and 3 have a negative polarity. Note that the samples in frames 1 and 2 sum to zero, and the samples in frames 3 and 4 sum to zero. Thus, averaging the four frames together substantially cancels the display noise.
Row 1704 shows the overall noise samples in each frame when the display noise has an even periodicity. The overall noise samples in frame refresh periods 1 and 2 have a positive polarity, while the overall noise samples in frames 3 and 4 have a negative polarity. Note that the samples in frames 1 and 2 together sum the display noise, and the samples in frames 3 and 4 together sum the display noise. But the sum of frames 1+2 cancels out the sum of frames 3+4. Thus, averaging the four frames together substantially cancels the display noise.
Most periodic display patterns can be expressed as a sum of odd and even noises. Consequently, the noises can be canceled or substantially cancelled by averaging multiple frames together.
In one embodiment, each set of four frames can be averaged together. Thus, frame refresh periods 1-4 can be averaged together, frame refresh periods 5-8 averaged together, frame refresh periods 9-12 averaged together, and so on. In another embodiment, a rolling four frame scheme can be used where the four frame refresh periods are determined after each frame. Thus, frames 1-4 can be averaged together, frames 2-5 averaged together, frames 3-6 averaged together, and so on.
Frame averaging and sample phase inversion can trade off latency and response time to sudden changes in input (e.g., force input), for precise measurement with latency. Not only can frame averaging and sample phase inversion average out the noise, it can cancel out relatively large predictable components caused by repeating display patterns. In some embodiments, the trade-off between latency and response time can be dynamically changed by switching between frame averaging and sample phase inversion and no frame averaging and sample phase inversion.
Various embodiments have been described in detail with particular reference to certain features thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the disclosure. For example, a device other than a touch sensing device and/or a force sensing device can share at least a portion of the display area. By way of example only, a fingerprint sensor can use at least a portion of the top surface of the display as an input region.
Even though specific embodiments have been described herein, it should be noted that the application is not limited to these embodiments. In particular, any features described with respect to one embodiment may also be used in other embodiments, where compatible. Likewise, the features of the different embodiments may be exchanged, where compatible.
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