This application claims priority of Taiwanese application no. 098140595, filed on Nov. 27, 2009.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a display device, more particularly to a transflective display device.
2. Description of the Related Art
Transflective display devices provide improved visibility in bright and dark ambient conditions. Typically, a transflective display device includes a plurality of pixel regions each of which is constituted by a liquid crystal display structure and an emissive display structure. For displaying an image, the liquid crystal display structure in each pixel region is controlled to operate at a reflective mode or a transmissive mode. The emissive display structure in each pixel region is controlled to operate at an emissive state to emit light, or at a non-emissive state to not emit light.
Such kind of the transflective display device is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,440,071. In this patent, the liquid crystal display structures and the emissive display structures are disposed side by side, and operate at the same time for displaying an image.
However, when the ambient condition is dark (for example, dark indoor environment), the reflective light from the liquid crystal display structures is relatively weak. When the ambient condition is bright (for example, daylight environment), the light emitted from the emissive display structures is hard to produce clear image against the ambient light. Therefore, the transflective display device in the patent has poor ambient contrast ratio and aperture ratio (a ratio of area in which active display actually occurs to the entire area of the transflective display).
Therefore, an object of the present invention is to provide a transflective display device with power saving and a high ambient contrast ratio (A-CR).
Another object of the present invention is to generate an electrical power by itself through photoelectric effect to feedback and drive the transflective display device.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a transflective display device that has a vertical integrated stack structure of a liquid crystal display structure, an emissive display structure, and a photovoltaic structure, such that the high aperture ratio of the transflective display device can be achieved.
Accordingly, a transflective display device of the present invention comprises:
upper and lower substrates; and
a plurality of pixel regions, each of which includes a liquid crystal display structure, an emissive display structure, and a photovoltaic structure, all of which are disposed one over the other to form a stack between the upper and lower substrates.
The photovoltaic structure is capable of absorbing light to generate an electrical power for driving the liquid crystal display structure and the emissive display structure.
Each of the pixel regions is controllable to switch between a bright state and a dark state.
The liquid crystal display structure is controllable between a transmissive mode and a reflective mode.
The emissive display structure is controllable to emit light or to not emit light.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent in the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Before the present invention is described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying preferred embodiments, it should be noted herein that like elements are denoted by the same reference numerals throughout the disclosure.
Referring to
The lower and upper substrates 51 and 52 are made of a light-transmissive material, for example, quartz, glass, fibers, semiconductor materials, polymers, etc., based on the actual requirement of the transflective display device.
Each of the pixel regions 10 is a pixel or a subpixel based on the design of the transflective display device. For the sake of simplicity, only one pixel region 10 is described below.
The pixel region 10 is controllable to operate at a bright state (ON state) as shown in
Each pixel region 10 includes a liquid crystal display structure 1, an emissive display structure 2, and a photovoltaic structure 3, all of which are disposed one over the other to form a stack between the upper and lower substrates 51, 52.
It should be noted that, the liquid crystal display structure 1 and the emissive display structure 2 in each pixel region 10 are stacked one over the other, and not disposed side by side. Thus, the transflective display device according to the present invention has a higher aperture ratio.
In this embodiment, the stack is arranged, from top to bottom, in the order of the liquid crystal display structure 1, the emissive display structure 2, and the photovoltaic structure 3.
The liquid crystal display structure 1 in each pixel region 10 is disposed between the upper substrate 52 and the emissive display structure 2, and is controlled to switch between a transmissive mode (T-mode) and a reflective mode (R-mode). The liquid crystal display structure 1 has electrode layers 12, 13. The electrode layer 12 is disposed between the upper substrate 51 and the liquid crystal display structure 1, and is a transparent conductive film made of indium tin oxide (or IZO, IGZO, conductive polymer, etc). The electrode layer 13 is a mutual electrode for the liquid crystal display structure 1 and the emissive display structure 2, and is used as a first anode electrode 20 for the emissive display structure 2.
In this embodiment, the liquid crystal display structure 1 is a polymer-dispersed liquid crystal layer (PDLC layer), and includes a plurality of liquid crystal particles 11 dispersed in a monomer with a concentration of 40% by weight.
Specifically, the PDLC layer consists of a UV-curable monomer NOA65 in a nematic LC host (E48, Δn=0.231 at λ=589 nm). The concentration of NOA65 is 40% by weight. The LC host/monomer mixture was injected into an empty 90° twisted cell in the isotropic state, followed by UV exposure at an intensity of I=60 mW/cm2 for 15 min at T=20° C.
When the liquid crystal display structure 1 operates in the T-mode, an external voltage from the electrode layers 12 and 13 is applied to the liquid crystal display structure 1. In this case, director axes of the liquid crystal particles 11 are parallel to an electrical field in the liquid crystal display structure 1, and thus, as shown in
When the liquid crystal display structure 1 operates in the R-mode, a different voltage from the electrode layers 12 and 13 is applied to the liquid crystal display structure 1. In this case, the director axes of the liquid crystal particles 11 are perpendicular to the electrical field in the liquid crystal display structure 1. Thus, as shown in
In other embodiments, the liquid crystal display structure 1 is a cholesteric liquid crystal layer or other liquid crystal layers that can also switch between T- and R-modes by controlling the applied voltage. However, the liquid crystal display structure 1 should not be limited to the aforementioned liquid crystal layers and the control method described above. For example, some liquid crystal layers can switch between T- and R-modes by controlling thickness of the liquid crystal particles 11.
The emissive display structure 2 is disposed between the liquid crystal display structure 1 and the photovoltaic structure 3, and is controllable to emit light or to not emit light. In this embodiment, the emissive display structure 2 is an organic light emitting diode (OLED) layer. As shown in
The provision of the electron injection layer 24 is to facilitate injection of electrons from the first cathode layer 25 into the electron transporting layer 23. Accordingly, the driving voltage for the emissive display structure 2 can be reduced.
Preferably, the hole transport layer 21 is made of N,N-bis (naphthalene-1-yl)-N,N-bis(phenyl)benzidine (NPB) and has a thickness of 50 nm, approximately. The light emitting layer 22 and the electron transport layer 23 are made of tris-(8-hydroxyquinoline) aluminum (Alq3) and have a total thickness of 40 nm, approximately. The electron injection layer 24 is made of LiF and has a thickness of 0.5 nm, approximately. The first anode layer 20 and the first cathode layer 25 are made of aluminum, each of which has a thickness of 2.5 nm, approximately. The thickness and material of each layer 20˜25 should not be limited to this embodiment and can be varied based on the actual requirement. Note that, since each of the first anode layer 20 and the first cathode layer 25 has a thickness in nano scale, they are semi-transparent and light transmissive. Otherwise, each of the first anode layer 20 and the first cathode layer 25 can be replaced by one made of other transparent alloy such as ITO.
The photovoltaic structure 3 is disposed between the lower substrate 51 and the emissive display structure 2, and is capable of absorbing the ambient light 73 (see
The photovoltaic structure 3 includes, from top to bottom, a second cathode layer 30, a photovoltaic layer 31 and a second anode layer 32, as shown in
Besides, the photovoltaic structure 3 is capable of sensing an ambient condition from the light passing through the liquid crystal display structure 1 and the emissive display structure 2. The liquid crystal display structure 1 and the emissive display structure 2 can be controlled based on the ambient condition. Especially, the emissive display structure 2 can be controlled to adjust luminance thereof by emitting graded light based on the ambient condition sensed by the photovoltaic structure 3 and to thereby reduce energy consumption thereof.
Preferably, the photovoltaic layer 31 is made of N,N′-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-1,7-bis(4-methoxyphenyl)perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxydiimide, and has a thickness of 75 nm, approximately. The second cathode layer 30 is made of silver and has a thickness of 2.5 nm, approximately. The second anode layer 32 is made of aluminum and has a thickness of 150 nm, approximately. In this embodiment, since the first and second cathode layers 25 and 30 are respectively made of aluminum and sliver, the combined first and second cathode layers 25 and 30 can provide a higher light transmission compared to other nano scale metal layers made of other metals.
When the photovoltaic structure 3 detects that the ambient condition is dark, the operation of the pixel region 10 is shown in
When the photovoltaic structure 3 detects that the ambient condition is bright, the emissive display structure 2 does not emit light, and the operation of the pixel region 10 is shown in
Furthermore, as the photovoltaic structure 3 can absorb the ambient light 73, undesirable light scattered and reflected from the pixel region 10 after the ambient light 73 enters the pixel region 10 can be reduced, thereby increasing ambient contrast ratio (A-CR) when the pixel region 10 operates at its bright state. The ambient contrast ratio is expressed by the following equation:
Lmax is a maximum luminance of the pixel region 10, Lmin is a minimum luminance of the pixel region 10 when the pixel region 10 itself does not emit light, and Lambient is luminance of a reflective light that is reflected by the photovoltaic layer 3. It is noted that the lower the Lambient is, the higher A-CR will be obtained. Thus, if the photovoltaic structure 3 of the pixel region 10 in the dark state absorbs a large amount of the ambient light 73 (i.e., there is almost no reflective light from the photovoltaic layer 3), an image displayed by the pixel regions 10 of the transflective display device can be observed more clearly.
In practice, a process for forming the liquid crystal display structure 1 is incompatible with vapor deposition processes for forming the emissive display structure 2 and the photovoltaic structure 3. If the liquid crystal display structure 1 is not isolated from the emissive display structure 2, the liquid crystal in semi-liquid state will contact the organic materials of the emissive display structure 2 and degrade the photoelectrical properties of the emissive display structure 2. Thus, as shown in
Furthermore, in this embodiment, the first and second cathode layers 25 and 30 are not contiguous, but the first and second anode layer 20 and 32 are contiguous to each other to form a composite metal layer. On the other hand, the first and second anode layer 20 and 32 can be simplified as one anode layer.
Besides, in order to further increase the ambient contrast ratio (A-CR), the liquid crystal display structures 1 and the emissive display structures 2 of the third embodiment can both work for displaying the image, regardless of whether the ambient condition is dark or bright.
Moreover, the photovoltaic structure 3 can be used as an anti-reflection black background when the pixel region 10 operates at its dark state (OFF state) and as a photo sensor to detect the ambient brightness.
While the present invention has been described in connection with what are considered the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is understood that this invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments but is intended to cover various arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the broadest interpretations and equivalent arrangements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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098140595 | Nov 2009 | TW | national |