Friday, March 29, 2013

LCD - DISPLAY - WORKING PRINCIPLES - TFT LCD - DIRECT VIEW LCD




   Projection television displays utilizing LCD technology have been around on mass production scale. During most of this time period the devices were front-type projection units. The display unit was mounted on a table or hung from a ceiling to be projected to a wall or screen. This sufficed for most commercial applications and in some home use. Recent years have seen an explosion in the number of rear-type LCD projection televisions.
   Their all-in-one design eliminates the need for unsightly equipment and wires normally found in front projection setups. Advances in screen design have allowed the new rear-projection televisions to generate bright, crisp video with improved viewing angles that rivals front projection devices.  Geometric distortion and convergence issues are virtually non-existent.
All of the items discussed can be applied to Front Projection, Rear Projection, and Direct-View LCD display units. The video process circuits and light box assemblies function the same way. The only difference between the two is how the generated image is projected. Since most homes will have the rear projection unit, the descriptions to follow will focus on them.

LIQUID CRYSTAL TECHNOLOGY
   Three items are required for and LCD display to function: A back-light source, polarizing of the light source, and liquid crystals to manipulate the polarization of this light.

LIGHT POLARIZATION
   Normal light can be transmitted anywhere along a 360-degree plane. This is especially true for scattered light being reflected off of random surfaces. This is why polarizing sunglasses are so effective.  a polarizing filter that only allows light on a vertical plane is used to filter the incoming back-light. If another filter is placed in front, allowing only horizontal phased light to pass, the light is effectively blocked. LCD devices use this basic principle to control the amount of light passing through.


POLARIZING FILTERS
LIQUID CRYSTALS
   Although liquid crystals come in many different forms, the key difference between the types is the arrangement of the crystals. Some have randomly arranged crystals while others are arranged in a specific pattern. Other differences include how they react to temperature, pressure, magnetic fields, and electrical current. The crystals used in LCD display devices are know as “chiralnematic”. As the crystals are arranged in layers, the crystals naturally twist slightly with each subsequent layer. Layers can be added until the crystals complete a 90-degree “twist”. This twist in the crystalline structure can be used to take a certain polarized light and shift
its phase accordingly. The other characteristic of a nematic-type crystal is it ability to react to an electric potential. If an electrical potential is applied to the crystal layers, the twisted crystals will begin to “un-twist” in an amount proportionate to electrical potential until, when enough potential is reached, they line up perfectly. This is how liquid crystals are used to control light and generate images on a display device.
   Figure illustrates how the naturally occurring twist in the crystalline layer rotates the incoming polarized light to match the polarized plane of the second filter. In this normal state, the crystals rotate the polarized light 90-degrees to match the plane of the outgoing polarizing filter allowing the back-light to pass through.

LIQUID CRYSTAL EFFECT ON POLARIZED LIGHT
   Figure below illustrates, an electrical potential is applied to fully “un-twist” the crystals. The polarized back-light is now perpendicular to the outgoing filter and no light will pass. By varying this electrical potential, the amount of effect on the twisted crystals can be altered to a point where linear control of light output is achieved.

VOLTAGE EFFECT ON LIQUID CRYSTALS
CREATING COLOR
   All that is required for LCD pixels to create color is to place a color filter in front of each pixel. By using red, green, and blue color filters, the required primary colors are generated to produce the millions of color variations needed for graphics and video display. Modern LCD technology uses what is known as Thin-Film Transistor (TFT) technology. Each pixel has its own transistor and capacitor, which increase the contrast rating of the LCD due to the increased retention of charge.
   This helps to dramatically increase the response time for each pixel as they are scanned. Control of each pixel is simply a matter of addressing a particular column and individually activating each pixel in that row with a properly timed address pulse on the horizontal plane. The higher the pulse level, the more the crystals align, producing a lower light output.

TFT LCD TECHNOLOGY



DIRECT VIEW LCD
   This type of display device uses the methods described previously to generate video by placing vertical columns of red, green, and blue filters over a liquid crystal layer. Thin-Film Transistors control the amount of light passing through each pixel. The light source is generated behind the LCD array. Fluorescent lamps are the most common to use. A diffuser plate distributes the light from the lamps to provide uniform brightness to all areas of the screen. A polarizing sheet is installed next to allow only one plane of light to pass. This light enters the LCD structure and is twisted 90-degrees. Another polarizing sheet is placed in front of the pixels at exactly 90 degrees. With no voltage present to “twist” the crystals into alignment, full passage of the back-lighting is allowed. Control of the light output from each pixel is now possible by scanning the matrix of pixels using carefully timed pulses at the horizontal and vertical planes of the columns and rows.

DIRECT VIEW LCD PANEL [TYPICAL]