Learn
About LCD TV and TFT LCD Displays
TFT LCD TV - What is TFT LCD?
History of TFT LCD
Liquid crystal was
discovered by the Austrian botanist Fredreich Rheinizer in 1888. "Liquid
crystal" is neither solid nor liquid (an example is soapy water).
In the mid-1960s,
scientists showed that liquid crystals when stimulated by an external
electrical charge could change the properties of light passing through the
crystals.
The early prototypes
(late 1960s) were too unstable for mass production. But all of that changed
when a British researcher proposed a stable, liquid crystal material
(biphenyl).
Today's color LCD TVs
and LCD Monitors have a sandwich-like structure (see figure below).
What is TFT LCD?
TFT LCD (Thin Film
Transistor Liquid Crystal Display) has a sandwich-like structure with liquid
crystal filled between two glass plates.
TFT Glass has as many
TFTs as the number of pixels displayed, while a Color Filter Glass has color
filter which generates color. Liquid crystals move according to the
difference in voltage between the Color Filter Glass and the TFT Glass. The
amount of light supplied by Back Light is determined by the amount of
movement of the liquid crystals in such a way as to generate color.
TFT LCD - Electronic Aspects
of LCD TVs and LCD Monitors
Electronic Aspects
of AMLCDs
The most common
liquid-crystal displays (LCDs) in use today rely on picture elements, or
pixels, formed by liquid-crystal (LC) cells that change the polarization
direction of light passing through them in response to an electrical
voltage.
As the polarization
direction changes, more or less of the light is able to pass through a
polarizing layer on the face of the display. Change the voltage, and the
amount of light is changed.
There are two ways to
produce a liquid-crystal image with such cells: the segment driving method
and the matrix driving method.
The segment driving method displays characters and pictures with cells
defined by patterned electrodes.
The matrix driving
method displays characters and pictures in sets of dots.
Direct vs.
multiplex driving of LCD TVs.
The segment drive
method is used for simple displays, such as those in calculators, while the
dot-matrix drive method is used for high-resolution displays, such as those
in portable computers and TFT monitors.
Two types of drive
method are used for matrix displays. In the static, or direct, drive method,
each pixel is individually wired to a driver. This is a simple driving
method, but, as the number of pixels is increased, the wiring becomes very
complex. An alternative method is the multiplex drive method, in which the
pixels are arranged and wired in a matrix format.
To drive the pixels of
a dot-matrix LCD, a voltage can be applied at the intersections of specific
vertical signal electrodes and specific horizontal scanning electrodes. This
method involves driving several pixels at the same time by time-division in
a pulse drive. Therefore, it is also called a multiplex, or dynamic, drive
method.
Passive and Active
Matrix LCDs
There are two types of
dot-matrix LCDs.
Passive-matrix
vs. active-matrix driving of LCD Monitors.
In passive-matrix LCDs
(PMLCDs) there are no switching devices, and each pixel is addressed for
more than one frame time. The effective voltage applied to the LC must
average the signal voltage pulses over several frame times, which results in
a slow response time of greater than 150 msec and a reduction of the maximum
contrast ratio. The addressing of a PMLCD also produces a kind of crosstalk
that produces blurred images because non-selected pixels are driven through
a secondary signal-voltage path. In active-matrix LCDs (AMLCDs), on the
other hand, a switching device and a storage capacitor are integrated at the
each cross point of the electrodes.
The active addressing
removes the multiplexing limitations by incorporating an active switching
element. In contrast to passive-matrix LCDs, AMLCDs have no inherent
limitation in the number of scan lines, and they present fewer cross-talk
issues. There are many kinds of AMLCD. For their integrated switching
devices most use transistors made of deposited thin films, which are
therefore called thin-film transistors (TFTs).
The most common
semiconducting layer is made of amorphous silicon (a-Si).
a-Si TFTs are amenable to large-area fabrication using glass substrates in a
low-temperature (300°C to 400°C) process.
An alternative TFT
technology, polycrystalline silicon - or polysilicon or p-Si-is costly to
produce and especially difficult to fabricate when manufacturing large-area
displays.
Nearly all TFT LCDs
are made from a-Si because of the technology's economy and maturity, but the
electron mobility of a p-Si TFT is one or two orders of magnitude greater
than that of an a-Si TFT.
This makes the p-Si
TFT a good candidate for an TFT array containing integrated drivers, which
is likely to be an attractive choice for small, high definition displays
such as view finders and projection displays.
Structure of Color
TFT LCD TVs and LCD Monitors
A TFT LCD module
consists of a TFT panel, driving-circuit unit, backlight system, and
assembly unit.
Structure of a
color TFT LCD Panel:
|
- LCD Panel
- TFT-Array Substrate
- Color Filter Substrate
- Driving Circuit
Unit
- LCD Driver IC (LDI) Chips
- Multi-layer PCBs
- Driving Circuits
- Backlight &
Chassis Unit
- Backlight Unit
- Chassis Assembly
|
It is commonly used to
display characters and graphic images when connected a host system.
The TFT LCD panel consists of a TFT-array substrate and a color-filter
substrate.
The vertical
structure of a color TFT LCD panel.
The TFT-array
substrate contains the TFTs, storage capacitors, pixel electrodes, and
interconnect wiring. The color filter contains the black matrix and resin
film containing three primary-color - red, green, and blue - dyes or
pigments. The two glass substrates are assembled with a sealant, the gap
between them is maintained by spacers, and LC material is injected into the
gap between the substrates. Two sheets of polarizer film are attached to the
outer faces of the sandwich formed by the glass substrates. A set of bonding
pads are fabricated on each end of the gate and data-signal bus-lines to
attach LCD Driver IC (LDI) chips
Driving Circuit
Unit
Driving an a-Si TFT
LCD requires a driving circuit unit consisting of a set of LCD driving IC (LDI)
chips and printed-circuit-boards (PCBs).
The assembly of
LCD driving circuits.
A block diagram
showing the driving of an LCD panel.
To reduce the
footprint of the LCD module, the drive circuit unit can be placed on the
backside of the LCD module by using bent Tape Carrier Packages (TCPs) and a
tapered light-guide panel (LGP).
How TFT LCD Pixels
Work
A TFT LCD panel
contains a specific number of unit pixels often called subpixels.
Each unit pixel has a TFT, a pixel electrode (IT0), and a storage capacitor
(Cs).
For example, an SVGA color TFT LCD panel has total of 800x3x600, or
1,440,000, unit pixels.
Each unit pixel is connected to one of the gate bus-lines and one of the
data bus-lines in a 3mxn matrix format. The matrix is 2400x600 for SVGA.
Structure of a
color TFT LCD panel.
Because each unit
pixel is connected through the matrix, each is individually addressable from
the bonding pads at the ends of the rows and columns.
The performance of the TFT LCD is related to the design parameters of the
unit pixel, i.e., the channel width W and the channel length L of the TFT,
the overlap between TFT electrodes, the sizes of the storage capacitor and
pixel electrode, and the space between these elements.
The design parameters associated with the black matrix, the bus-lines, and
the routing of the bus lines also set very important performance limits on
the LCD.
In a TFT LCD's unit
pixel, the liquid crystal layer on the ITO pixel electrode forms a capacitor
whose counter electrode is the common electrode on the color-filter
substrate.
Vertical
structure of a unit pixel and its equivalent circuit
A storage capacitor
(Cs) and liquid-crystal capacitor (CLC) are connected as a load on the TFT.
Applying a positive pulse of about 20V peak-to-peak to a gate electrode
through a gate bus-line turns the TFT on. Clc and Cs are charged and the
voltage level on the pixel electrode rises to the signal voltage level (+8
V) applied to the data bus-line.
The voltage on the
pixel electrode is subjected to a level shift of DV resulting from a
parasitic capacitance between the gate and drain electrodes when the gate
voltage turns from the ON to OFF state. After the level shift, this charged
state can be maintained as the gate voltage goes to -5 V, at which time the
TFT turns off. The main function of the Cs is to maintain the voltage on the
pixel electrode until the next signal voltage is applied.
Liquid crystal must be
driven with an alternating current to prevent any deterioration of image
quality resulting from dc stress.
This is usually implemented with a frame-reversal drive method, in which the
voltage applied to each pixel varies from frame to frame. If the LC voltage
changes unevenly between frames, the result would be a 30-Hz flicker.
(One frame period is normally 1/60 of a second.) Other drive methods are
available that prevent this flicker problem.
Polarity-inversion driving methods.
In an active-matrix
panel, the gate and source electrodes are used on a shared basis, but each
unit pixel is individually addressable by selecting the appropriate two
contact pads at the ends of the rows and columns.
Active
addressing of a 3x3 matrix
By scanning the gate
bus-lines sequentially, and by applying signal voltages to all source
bus-lines in a specified sequence, we can address all pixels. One result of
all this is that the addressing of an AMLCD is done line by line.
Virtually all AMLCDs
are designed to produce gray levels - intermediate brightness levels between
the brightest white and the darkest black a unit pixel can generate. There
can be either a discrete numbers of levels - such as 8, 16, 64, or 256 - or
a continuous gradation of levels, depending on the LDI.
The optical
transmittance of a TN-mode LC changes continuously as a function of the
applied voltage.
An analog LDI is capable of producing a continuous voltage signal so that a
continuous range of gray levels can be displayed.
The digital LDI produces discrete voltage amplitudes, which permits on a
discrete numbers of shades to be displayed. The number of gray levels is
determined by the number of data bits produced by the digital driver.
Generating Colors
The color filter of a
TFT LCD TV consists of three primary colors - red (R), green (G), and blue
(B) - which are included on the color-filter substrate.
How an LCD Panel
produces colors.
The elements of this
color filter line up one-to-one with the unit pixels on the TFT-array
substrate.
Each pixel in a color LCD is subdivided into three subpixels, where one set
of RGB subpixels is equal to one pixel.
(Each subpixel consists of what we've been calling a unit pixel up to this
point.)
Because the subpixels
are too small to distinguish independently, the RGB elements appear to the
human eye as a mixture of the three colors.
Any color, with some qualifications, can be produced by mixing these three
primary colors.
The total number of
display colors using an n-bit LDI is given by 23n, because each subpixel can
generate 2n different transmittance levels.
The content shown
above was provided by
Samsung Electronics.