Time-multiplexed optical shutter
Time multiplexed optical shutter is a flat panel display technology developed, patented and commercialized by Uni-Pixel Displays, Inc. TMOS is based on the principles of total internal reflection, frustration of TIR and field sequential colour generation. This combination of features make it suitable for applications such as mobile phones, televisions and signalling systems.
Components
A TMOS display system consists of a group of sub-systems- the illumination system; colour generation is based on the conventional tristimulus model, so the system comprises a group of red, green and blue LEDs
- a Light guide , of high quality optical glass. The illumination system is attached to one of its edges and the other three edges are covered with mirrors to keep the reflective light inside the guide.
- a drive control at the individual pixel level, a simple variable capacitor architecture that works as an optical shutter for each pixel in the system. The capacitor consists on two conductive parallel planes: a transparent conductor on the light guide and a thin continuous layer of conductive material placed inside the active layer.
- the Opcuity active layer, the characteristic part of TMOS technology. It includes a base carrier film, a conductor and micro-optic structures that define the light output performance of the display system. These structures are facing the light guide and there are so small that there are hundreds for each pixel. of them.
- the Drive control circuitry system. The initial prototype has all of the control logic programmed in a FPGA processor.
Operating principle
- The illumination system emits periodically red, green and blue light, each colour cycles for an equal period of time in a very high frequency.
- The coloured light enters inside de guide light, the mirrored edges cause a continual TIR reflections producing a highly uniform of light energy within the light guide.
- The light is trapped in the light guide until a voltage differential is created between the two conductive layers of the capacitor at any pixel area. When it happens the two conductive planes attract each other via Coulomb attraction.
- The Opcuity active layer is the only moving part of TMOS and it is pulled down until it touches the light guide. Then, the specific pixel is activated and the light escaped through it due to the phenomenon frustration of total internal reflection.
- When the voltage differential disappears, the active layer returns to its initial position and the light is trapped again in the light guide.
Colour generation
Traditional displays use three part pixel, each pixel is created by displaying different intensities of three dots so close together that the human eye perceives them as a single colour. This technique takes advantage of the spatial additive colour. However, TMOS technology is based on temporal additive colour, it exploits the temporal resolving power of the human visual system. Red, green and blue light bursts are emitted at sufficiently high frequency that the human eye only perceive a single colours. Different durations of each burst, create different colours.In TMOS the emitting duration of each burst is the same for the three colors, but the amount of time that each pixel stays open or closed can be only a percentage of the total time controlled by the quantity of the TFT charge. Therefore, each coloured pixel is generated combining the precise time that each pixel is kept open for each colour burst.
Depending on the combination, a million of colours can be created. For instance:
General features
Brightness: 1400 cd/m2 in a 12.1-inch display with 176° viewing angle at 13.2 watts. Even, it can achieve values of 3.430 cd/m2 at 30 watts.Night vision: Because the red LED is controlled independently, there is no necessity to add any infrared filter to achieve night vision compatibility.Resolution: TMOS can achieve mm dot pitch due to its unicellular pixel structure.Viewing angle: Without additional steering optics angles as narrow as 25° × 12° can be achieved.Grey levels: 24 bits or 36 bits for special inherent systems. The grey levels for monochromatic infrared are three times the primary colour gray scale for visible operation.Dimming range: 34 dBVideo Capability: 60 frames/secondShock and vibration: TMOS has important resistance to mechanical stresses during operation as the applied forces are distributed globally and not locally at the individual pixels. The low mass and the lamination structure of the active layer mitigate the resonances and modes.Mean time between failures: The first components it is expected to fail in a TMOS technology is the illumination system. LEDs usually have 100,000 hours' MTBF under continuous operation; as TMOS uses LEDs at duty cycle, the maximum expected MTBF is 300,000 hours.Advantages
TMOS technology offers many advantages over other popular technologies like LCD, plasma and OLED.Disadvantages
The main disadvantage is the necessity of a very high velocity; if it is insufficient a rainbow effect could appear at blink.Future developments
In the future, it aims to improve efficiency and features of that kind of screens. Some of these improvements are going to be a new guide light material, polycarbonate or flexible polymer, and the enlargement of the LED's gamut. What is more, the TFTs structure is going to be eliminated and a system of a stripes called Simple Matrix will provide individual pixel control.The following features are being investigated for TMOS displays: