Title: Examples of flat-panel liquid crystal displays
1Examples of flat-panel liquid crystal displays
2Display design
3Light efficiency of flat-panel TN LCDs
Display element Efficiency ()
individual cumulative lamp reflector
in-coupling 80 80 backlight waveguide
70 56 diffuser air gap 90 50 back
polarizer 40 20 display aperture 80 16
color filters 28 5 effective area for
color 33 2 front polar 95 1
4Optical films for LCDs
5Polymers in LCD displays
- Polarizers
- Color Filters
- Viewing angle compensation
- Prism films
- Multi-layer optical films
- Specular reflectors
- Liquid crystal alignment layers
6Ceramics in LCD displays
- Display quality glass
- Transparent conductive oxides
- Spacers
- Viewing angle compensation
- Prism films
- Multi-layer optical films
- Specular reflectors
7Indium oxide
- Bixbyite crystal structure c-type rare earth
sesquioxide - Ia3 with 80 atom unit cell consisting of InO6
structural units
Quenched-in misorientation of InO6 structural
units leads to amorphous films
8Transparent Conducting Oxides
Sputter Target Qualification
Sputter Deposition Challenges
- Compositional analysis
- standard test conditions
- Sputter system
- Power density
- Voltage
- Sputter gas
- Film thickness
- Film purity
- Film properties
- Step coverage
- System throughput
- Uniformity of deposition
- Target integrity ( utilization)
- Process repeatability
Time dependence of...
- Resistivity (film)
- Surface asperities (nodules)
- Sputter rate
9Magnetron Sputter Deposition
reflected ions and neutrals
secondary electrons
incident ion
sputtered atom
sputtered atoms
substrate
erosion center
target
Target
implanted ion
Sequence of collisions results in ejection of
target atom (sputtering)
DC Power supply
10Crystalline and wtSnO2 Indium Oxide
Crystallinity
Wt SnO2
11Sputter target characterization
- Erosion profile
- Surface profile
- Nodule formation
- Composition
- Toughness
Sputter target removed from service
12TFT Foils
- Flexible polyimide substrates
- On surface minimum radius of curvature depends on
TFT strain to failure - Inside substrate minimum radius of curvature
depends on substrate
TFT Structure
13Liquid crystal alignment
- By an external field
- electrical field (e.g. 1 V/mm)
- magnetic field (e.g. 5 kG)
- mechanical field (e.g. flow)
E
form anisotropy anisotropic molecular
properties
- At an oriented surface
- buffed substrate for planar alignment
- surfactants for homeotropic alignment
combined action of sterical and dispersive
interfacial interactions
14Twisted nematic displays
Rubbing directions and chiral dopants determines
rotation direction
15Tilt, twist and rubbing directions
Pretilt and chiral additives to prevent domain
formation
Rubbing direction in accordance with twist sense
rubbing
?
Tilt angle ? by selection of alignment material
and rubbing
90o twist by adding chiral dopant
16Rubbing of polyimide provides liquid crystal
orientation
n
- Alignment mechanism
- at nano grooves by excluded volume effects of
rod-like molecules at interface - at preferentially orientated chain segments by
anisotropic dispersive interactions with LC
molecules - apolar side/end groups provide pre-tilt control
17Recent development photo-alignment
- Use polarized UV light to modify polymer surface
in order to control liquid-crystal alignment
18Why photoalignment ?
- Problems with mechanical rubbing
- static electricity
- dust formation
- uniform rubbing of large surface area
- uniform rubbing of irregular surface
Photo-alignment is a non-contact method that
avoids these problems !
19Photo-alignment using polyvinylcinnamates
n
C
O
O
O
LP-UV
C
O
- Orientation perpendicular to polarization
direction - No or small pretilt
n
20Coumarin-based photoalignment (Rolic)
21LC mixtures for displays contain many components
- Multi-component mix for
- low melting temperature
- high nematic to isotropic transition temperature
- optimized optical anisotropy
- small dispersion of refractive indices
- low viscosity for fast response
- small elastic constants
- high dielectric anisotropy / low threshold
voltage - low conductivity
22Example of LC mixture
23Drive Schemes
Column electrodes
Row electrodes
Passive matrix LCD (STN) - row and column
electrodes - LC responds to RMS voltage
Direct addressing
Active matrix LCD (TN)
switch at each pixel
Passive plate with counter electrode
24Electro-optic response of TN and STN LCDs
twist angle
TN STN for ? polars (Super Twisted Nematic)
90o twist 180o-270o twist white off
state colored on/off state black-on
state compensation foil for B/W for //
polars (poor) black off white on state
24-04-01
home
macroorganisch 6C275 / kernkeuze college 6C270
25Other liquid crystal display effects
- Polarizer-based LC effects
- Twisted-nematic
- In-plane switching of nematics
- Vertically aligned nematics
- Ferroelectric (SC)
- Supertwisted-nematic
- Polarizer-free LC effects
- Polymer dispersed liquid crystals
- LC gels
- surface or polymer-stabilized cholesterics
- guest-host LCs
active matrixhigh end computer monitors, video
emissive by back light
??
passive matrix simpler displays
paper-white reflective effects
passive matrix, bistable effect, reflective
color simpler displays, extremely low power
consumption
26Polymer stabilized liquid crystals
h?
transparent
E
scattering
27Polymeric liquid crystals and liquid crystal
networks
- Schematic representation of different types of
liquid crystal polymers - Network formation by photo-initiated
polymerization - Formation of ordered networks by
photopolymerization of liquid-crystalline
monomers - Example of photo-initiated polymerization in the
liquid-crystalline state - Typical processing sequence
- Reactive liquid crystals
- Influence of functional moiety on mesomorphism of
reactive liquid crystals - Refractive indices before and after
polymerization - Order parameter of LC diacrylates before and
after polymerization - Liquid crystalline networks for advanced optics
- Three-dimensional polymer architectures
- Combination of different alignment principles
- Photopolymerization of a chiral monomer
- Pitch of the helix can be freely chosen by
blending chiral with nematic monomers - Reflection band of sample containing 62 chiral
diacrylate - Photo-induced diffusion in z-direction
- Gradient in UV light by strong absorbing dye
- Modulation of properties in z-direction
- Cholesteric network with a pitch gradient
28Schematic representation of different types of
liquid crystal polymers
29Formation of LC networks by photopolymerization
of LC monomers
h?
aligned LC monomer
30Contrast and grey-scale inversion as function of
viewing angle
Iso-contrast lines
Grey scale inversion
31Viewing angle of TN-LCDs
high contrast
low contrast
low
low contrast
high
dDn gtgt 0
dDn 0
low V medium V high V
32Compensation foils to improve on viewing angle
towards homeotropic orientation at air interface
planar orientation at rubbed substrate
33Tilted discotic networks to improve on viewing
angle
Fuji film
34Non-absorbing polarizer improves on
light-efficiency
Reflecting polarizer, e.g. wide-band cholesteric
film
100 polarized light instead of 50 by recycling
principle
Depolarizing or polarization converting
reflector
35Display partly provided with wide-band
cholesteric polarizer
wideband cholesteric polarizer
36Cholesteric color filters color generation
without absorption improves LCDs on light
efficiency
monomer
- monomer with steep temperature dependence
- polymer with flat temperature dependence
polymer 1
polymer 2
polymer 3