The present disclosure relates to a touch sensor having a structure in which a display panel and a touch panel are superimposed on each other in the vertical direction.
There are known touch sensors that have a structure in which a touch panel for detecting the position of a finger or a pen is provided on a display panel. Among this type of touch sensors, a touch sensor in which a display panel and a touch panel are integrally formed is called an “on-cell type,” while a touch sensor in which a display panel and a touch panel are formed separately from each other is called an “out-cell type.” Hereinafter, a touch sensor of the “on-cell type” and a touch sensor of the “out-cell type” will collectively be referred to as a “touch sensor.”
In the touch sensor, apart from the parasitic capacitance generated between sensor electrodes in the touch panel, parasitic capacitance is also generated between the touch panel and the display panel. Hereinafter, the latter parasitic capacitance will be referred to as “vertical-direction parasitic capacitance.” A display driving signal supplied from a computer to the display panel also reaches the touch panel through this vertical-direction parasitic capacitance. The display driving signal that has reached the touch panel in this way becomes noise for the operation of the touch panel, deteriorating the detection accuracy of a finger or a pen.
PCT Patent Publication No. WO 2019/087332 (hereinafter referred to as “Patent Document 1”) and Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2011-222013 (hereinafter referred to as “Patent Document 2”) disclose techniques for mitigating such deterioration of the detection accuracy. Specifically, Patent Document 1 discloses a technique for reducing the noise by using the display-side processing, which changes a method of driving a plurality of pixel electrodes depending on the content of image data and on the polarity of each pixel electrode. Patent Document 2 discloses a technique for reducing the influence of the noise by applying the amount of charge corresponding to the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance to a charge amplifier of a touch sensor.
With the techniques described in Patent Documents 1 and 2, the noise can be reduced, but the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself cannot be reduced. In order to detect the position of a finger or a pen without being affected by the display as much as possible, it is preferable to reduce the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself.
Therefore, it is desirable to provide a touch sensor that can reduce the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself.
A touch sensor according to one aspect of the present disclosure includes a display panel that includes a plurality of pixel electrodes each provided in a corresponding one of a plurality of pixels and a common electrode shared by the plurality of pixels, and a touch panel that detects a position of at least either a finger or a pen. The display panel and the touch panel are superimposed on each other in a vertical direction. The common electrode includes a conductor-area-reduction portion that reduces an area of the common electrode.
Accordingly, it is possible to reduce the area of the common electrode that essentially constitutes one of the electrodes of the vertical-direction capacitance, so that the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself can be reduced.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present disclosure will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The host processor 50 is a central processing unit of the electronic device 1. Further, the memory 51 is a storage device capable of storing any data and includes a main storage device such as a dynamic random access memory (DRAM) and an auxiliary storage device such as a hard disk. The host processor 50 can execute various applications including an operating system of the electronic device 1 and a drawing application by reading and executing programs stored in the memory 51. The memory 51 functions as a work memory of the host processor 50 and also stores data generated by the host processor 50.
The sensor controller 52 is an integrated circuit that detects the positions of a finger and a pen on a touch surface 2a, which will be described later, by using a touch panel 6. Details of the processing performed by the sensor controller 52 will be described later. Although the method of detecting the positions of the finger and the pen is not limited to a particular one, the finger position detection is, for example, performed by using a capacitance method, and the pen position detection is, for example, performed by using an active capacitive method or an electromagnetic induction method. The following description assumes that the finger position detection is performed by using the capacitance method and the pen position detection is performed by using the active capacitive method.
The touch sensor 2 is a touch sensor classified into the above-described on-cell type and has a structure in which a display panel 4 and the touch panel 6 are integrally formed. More specifically, as illustrated in
The display panel 4 is an organic electroluminescence (EL) display provided on the glass substrate 3 and has a structure in which a plurality of OLED cells, each of which constitutes a pixel (sub-pixel), are arranged in a matrix. The structure of the display panel 4 will be described in more detail later. The display panel 4 individually drives each OLED cell according to a display driving signal supplied from the host processor 50, thereby displaying an image generated by the host processor 50.
The touch panel 6 is a sensor for detecting the position of at least one of a finger and a pen and is provided on the upper surface of the display panel 4 (more specifically, on the upper surface of a common electrode 32 to be described later) with the glass substrate 5 interposed between the touch panel 6 and the display panel 4. The glass substrate 5 is a transparent insulator having a predetermined permittivity ε and a thickness d2. The specific value of the thickness d2 is, for example, a value smaller than several tens of μm.
A plurality of sensor electrodes (not illustrated) each connected to the sensor controller 52 are arranged in the touch panel 6. The plurality of sensor electrodes include a plurality of first linear conductors (not illustrated) and a plurality of second linear conductors (not illustrated). The plurality of first linear conductors extend parallel to one side of the touch panel 6, which has a rectangular shape, and are arranged at equal intervals. The plurality of second linear conductors extend in the direction orthogonal to the above-described one side of the touch panel 6 and are arranged at equal intervals. Both the first and second linear conductors include transparent conductors such as indium tin oxide (ITO).
The sensor controller 52 performs bidirectional communication with a pen by using the plurality of sensor electrodes included in the touch panel 6, to perform a process of detecting the position of the pen as well as a process of receiving data transmitted from the pen. Further, the sensor controller 52 performs a process of detecting the position of a finger by supplying a finger detection signal to each of the plurality of first linear conductors and receiving the finger detection signal through each of the plurality of second linear conductors. The sensor controller 52 sequentially supplies the position of the pen or the finger detected in this way and the data received from the pen to the host processor 50. The host processor 50 performs a process of generating an image based on the position and data supplied in this way and then supplying a display driving signal for displaying the generated image to the display panel 4. The image generated by the host processor 50 includes a cursor displayed at the position corresponding to the position of the finger or the pen, stroke data indicating the trajectory of the position of the finger or the pen, and the like.
The polarizer 7 is for improving the outdoor visibility of the display panel 4 and is provided on the upper surface of the touch panel 6. The glass substrate 9 is a flat and transparent insulator and is provided on the polarizer 7 with the air gap 8 interposed therebetween. A resin layer may be used in place of or together with the air gap 8. A distance d1 between the touch panel 6 and the touch surface 2a corresponds to the total thickness of the polarizer 7, the air gap 8, and the glass substrate 9. The larger the distance d1, the larger the distance between the plurality of sensor electrodes included in the touch panel 6 and a finger or a pen, deteriorating the accuracy of the position detection by the sensor controller 52. Therefore, it is preferable that the distance d1 be as small as possible.
Here, in addition to the distance d1, the thickness d2 of the glass substrate 5 described above also affects the accuracy of the position detection by the sensor controller 52. Specifically, the display driving signal that has leaked from the display panel 4 reaches the touch panel 6 through the above-described vertical-direction parasitic capacitance (parasitic capacitance generated between the touch panel 6 and the display panel 4). Since the display driving signal reaching the touch panel 6 is superimposed as noise on signals transmitted/received between the sensor controller 52 and the pen and on the finger detection signal described above, it is preferable to reduce the intensity of the display driving signal reaching the touch panel 6 as much as possible. For this purpose, it is preferable to increase the thickness d2 and reduce the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance. However, for the purpose of height reduction of the touch sensor 2 or increasing the visibility of the display panel 4, it is preferable to reduce the thickness d2 and, therefore, the actual thickness d2 tends to be decreasing. As the thickness d2 becomes smaller, the above-described distance d1 becomes relatively large, resulting in the deterioration of the accuracy of the position detection by the sensor controller 52. Therefore, there is a need for a technique that can make the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance smaller by using a method other than the method of increasing the thickness d2.
The present disclosure devises a structure inside the display panel 4 to realize the reduction of the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance by using a method other than the method of increasing the thickness d2. The structure of the display panel 4 which realizes the reduction of the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance regardless of the thickness d2 will specifically be described with reference to
In
Further, the display panel 4 includes a plurality of gate lines GL, a plurality of source lines SL, and a plurality of power supply lines VL. Each gate line GL is shared by corresponding OLED cells PX arranged in the x-direction and is connected to each corresponding OLED cell PX. Further, each source line SL and each power supply line VL are shared by corresponding OLED cells PX arranged in the y-direction and are connected to each corresponding OLED cell PX.
The OLED cells PX are driven in units of rows in the matrix. Specifically, the host processor 50 first determines the emission intensity of each of the series of OLED cells PX arranged in the x-direction, according to an image to be displayed, and applies a potential corresponding to the determined emission intensity to each source line SL. Next, the corresponding gate line GL is activated to turn on the switching transistors Ts of the corresponding series of OLED cells PX. As a result, the potentials of the corresponding source lines SL are supplied to the gates of the corresponding driving transistors Td, thereby turning on these driving transistors Td. Each power supply line VL is connected to a power source having a predetermined voltage. When each of these driving transistors Td is turned on, the amount of current based on the potential of the corresponding source line SL is supplied to the corresponding organic light emitting diode EL. Accordingly, the organic light emitting diode EL emits light at the determined emission intensity.
The display panel 4 includes six insulating layers 10 to 15 in order from the lower side. A gate 20 of the switching transistor Ts, a gate 24 of the driving transistor Td, and the gate line GL are formed on the upper surface of the insulating layer 10. The gate 20 and the gate line GL are connected to each other via a conductor (not illustrated in
A source 22 and a drain 23 of the switching transistor Ts, a drain 26 and a source 27 of the driving transistor Td, the source line SL, and the power supply line VL are formed on the upper surface of the insulating layer 12. The source 22 is connected to one end of the channel 21 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layer 12. Further, the drain 23 is connected to the other end of the channel 21 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layer 12 and is also connected to the gate 24 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layers 11 and 12. The drain 26 is connected to one end of the channel 25 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layer 12. The source 27 is connected to the other end of the channel 25 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layer 12. The capacitor C illustrated in
A pixel electrode 30 which corresponds to the anode of the organic light emitting diode EL is formed on the upper surface of the insulating layer 14. The pixel electrode 30 is connected to the drain 26 by a via conductor penetrating the insulating layers 13 and 14. As illustrated in
The insulating layer 15 is formed thicker than the insulating layer 33. A region between two insulating layers 15 adjacent to each other in the x-direction has a valley-like structure having a bottom surface on which the pixel electrode 30 and the insulating layer 33 are alternately exposed. A light emitting layer 31 is formed with a constant thickness at the bottom of this valley. The light emitting layer 31 includes a material that emits light according to the potential difference between the corresponding pixel electrode 30 and the common electrode 32. Further, the common electrode 32, which corresponds to the cathode of the organic light emitting diode EL, is formed on the upper surface of the light emitting layer 31.
The common electrode 32 is formed on both the side surface of the valley formed by the insulating layer 15 and the upper surface of the insulating layer 15 and constitutes a rectangular solid conductor that covers the entire display panel 4 instead of covering each pixel. Accordingly, the common electrode 32 constitutes most of one of the electrodes of a vertical-direction capacitance. The reason why the common electrode 32 is formed as a solid conductor is to reduce the resistance of the common electrode 32 as much as possible. Although making one or more holes in the common electrode 32 would not be performed under normal circumstances, one or more holes H are formed in the common electrode 32 in the present embodiment. Each of the one or more holes H functions as a conductor-area-reduction portion that reduces the area of the common electrode 32, and plays a role of reducing the area of the common electrode 32 as a whole. In the touch sensor 2 according to the present embodiment, one or more holes H are provided in the solid conductor in this way to reduce the area of the common electrode 32. Accordingly, the touch sensor 2 according to the present embodiment realizes the reduction of the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance.
As illustrated in
With the arrangement of the holes H illustrated in
As described above, the touch sensor 2 according to the present embodiment realizes the reduction of the area of the common electrode 32 constituting most of one of the electrodes of the vertical-direction capacitance, thereby reducing the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself. Therefore, even if the distance d2 cannot be increased, it is possible to prevent the accuracy of the position detection by the sensor controller 52 from deteriorating due to the display driving signal. Further, it is possible to provide each hole H so as not to affect the uniformity of the transmittance of the light emitted from the light emitting layer 31, and also prevent part of the common electrode 32 from becoming a floating conductor to which the ground potential is not supplied.
Note that the positions of the holes H provided in the common electrode 32 are not limited to those illustrated in
As an example, it is preferable to arrange the holes H such that the total number T1 of holes H each arranged between a pixel corresponding to red and a pixel corresponding to green, the total number T2 of holes H each arranged between a pixel corresponding to green and a pixel corresponding to blue, and the total number T3 of holes H each arranged between a pixel corresponding to blue and a pixel corresponding to red have substantially the same value. The “substantially the same value” here means that the maximum value of the absolute value of the difference between any two numbers of T1, T2, and T3 is smaller than 50% of one third of the sum total of T1, T2, and T3. This configuration makes it possible to suppress the color difference (color unevenness) between regions.
With the present modification as well, it is possible to maintain the state in which at least a part or the whole of each of the plurality of pixels is covered with the common electrode 32. Therefore, each hole H can be provided so as not to affect the uniformity of the transmittance of the light emitted from the light emitting layer 31. Further, in the example of
The auxiliary electrode 35 is a transparent conductor provided for reducing the resistance of the common electrode 32. As illustrated in
As illustrated in
In order to prevent the generation of a portion that becomes a floating conductor in the auxiliary electrode 35 due to no supply of the ground potential to the auxiliary electrode 35, one or more holes H according to the present embodiment are formed to leave via conductors 35a intact, at least to the extent that a portion that becomes a floating conductor is not generated in the auxiliary electrode 35. The arrangement of the holes H illustrated in
As described above, the touch sensor 2 according to the present embodiment realizes the reduction of the area of the common electrode 32 and the auxiliary electrode 35, which together constitute most of one of the electrodes of the vertical-direction capacitance. Accordingly, even when the auxiliary electrode 35 is provided in the display panel 4, it is possible to reduce the vertical-direction parasitic capacitance itself. Therefore, even if the distance d2 illustrated in
Further, the touch sensor 2 according to the present embodiment can maintain the electrical connection between the auxiliary electrode 35 and the common electrode 32. Therefore, it is possible to prevent not only the common electrode 32 but also the auxiliary electrode 35 from having a portion that becomes a floating conductor due to no supply of the ground potential. Moreover, since the holes H are uniformly arranged for each of red, green, and blue, it is possible to suppress the color difference (color unevenness) between regions.
Although the embodiments of the present disclosure have been described above, the present disclosure is by no means limited to the above-described embodiments. As a matter of course, the present disclosure can be implemented in various modes without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
For example, although the disclosure is made using an example in which the touch sensor 2 includes the display panel 4, which is an organic EL display, in each of the above-described embodiments, the present disclosure may also be applied to the touch sensor 2 including the display panel 4 of a different type. For example, when the display panel 4 is a liquid crystal display as an example, each of the plurality of pixels includes a material (specifically, a liquid crystal layer) that controls the passage of light according to the potential difference between the corresponding pixel electrode and the common electrode. Further, the holes H are formed to maintain the state in which at least part of each of the plurality of pixels is covered with the common electrode. With this arrangement, as with each of the above-described embodiments, even if the distance d2 cannot be increased, it is possible to prevent the accuracy of the position detection by the sensor controller 52 from deteriorating due to the display driving signal. Further, it is possible to provide each hole H so as not to affect the uniformity of the transmittance of the light emitted from the light emitting layer 31, and also prevent part of the common electrode 32 from becoming a floating conductor to which the ground potential is not supplied.
Further, although the disclosure is made using an example of the touch sensor 2 of the on-cell type in each of the above-described embodiments, the present disclosure can similarly be applied to a touch sensor of the out-cell type.
Further, although the disclosure is made using an example in which the auxiliary electrode 35 is formed on the upper side of the common electrode 32 in the second embodiment described above, the present disclosure can also be applied to the case where the auxiliary electrode is formed on the lower side of the pixel electrode 30. In this case, as with the second embodiment, each hole H is preferably formed to penetrate the common electrode 32 while via conductors connecting the common electrode 32 and the auxiliary electrode are left intact to the extent that a floating conductor is not generated in the auxiliary electrode. In this case, it is not always necessary to form each hole H to penetrate the auxiliary electrode, but each hole H may be formed to penetrate the auxiliary electrode as well.
Further, although the disclosure is made using an example in which each hole H is used as the conductor-area-reduction portion in each of the embodiments described above, the area of the common electrode 32 (and the auxiliary electrode) may be reduced by another mechanism. For example, the conductor-area-reduction portion may be formed by increasing the resistance of part of the common electrode 32 (and the auxiliary electrode) by ion implantation of impurities.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62988708 | Mar 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17892802 | Aug 2022 | US |
Child | 18433098 | US | |
Parent | PCT/JP2021/005794 | Feb 2021 | WO |
Child | 17892802 | US |