US3913090A - Direct current electroluminescent panel using amorphous semiconductors for digitally addressing alpha-numeric displays - Google Patents

Direct current electroluminescent panel using amorphous semiconductors for digitally addressing alpha-numeric displays Download PDF

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US3913090A
US3913090A US419827A US41982773A US3913090A US 3913090 A US3913090 A US 3913090A US 419827 A US419827 A US 419827A US 41982773 A US41982773 A US 41982773A US 3913090 A US3913090 A US 3913090A
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layer
vitreous
electroluminescent
islands
electrodes
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US419827A
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Albert G Fischer
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US Department of Army
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N3/00Scanning details of television systems; Combination thereof with generation of supply voltages
    • H04N3/10Scanning details of television systems; Combination thereof with generation of supply voltages by means not exclusively optical-mechanical
    • H04N3/14Scanning details of television systems; Combination thereof with generation of supply voltages by means not exclusively optical-mechanical by means of electrically scanned solid-state devices
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09FDISPLAYING; ADVERTISING; SIGNS; LABELS OR NAME-PLATES; SEALS
    • G09F13/00Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising
    • G09F13/20Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising with luminescent surfaces or parts
    • G09F13/22Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising with luminescent surfaces or parts electroluminescent
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/20Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters
    • G09G3/22Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters using controlled light sources
    • G09G3/30Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes for presentation of an assembly of a number of characters, e.g. a page, by composing the assembly by combination of individual elements arranged in a matrix no fixed position being assigned to or needed to be assigned to the individual characters or partial characters using controlled light sources using electroluminescent panels
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L21/00Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L27/00Devices consisting of a plurality of semiconductor or other solid-state components formed in or on a common substrate
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09FDISPLAYING; ADVERTISING; SIGNS; LABELS OR NAME-PLATES; SEALS
    • G09F13/00Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising
    • G09F13/20Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising with luminescent surfaces or parts
    • G09F13/22Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising with luminescent surfaces or parts electroluminescent
    • G09F2013/222Illuminated signs; Luminous advertising with luminescent surfaces or parts electroluminescent with LEDs
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2300/00Aspects of the constitution of display devices
    • G09G2300/08Active matrix structure, i.e. with use of active elements, inclusive of non-linear two terminal elements, in the pixels together with light emitting or modulating elements
    • G09G2300/0809Several active elements per pixel in active matrix panels
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2300/00Aspects of the constitution of display devices
    • G09G2300/08Active matrix structure, i.e. with use of active elements, inclusive of non-linear two terminal elements, in the pixels together with light emitting or modulating elements
    • G09G2300/0809Several active elements per pixel in active matrix panels
    • G09G2300/0842Several active elements per pixel in active matrix panels forming a memory circuit, e.g. a dynamic memory with one capacitor
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2300/00Aspects of the constitution of display devices
    • G09G2300/08Active matrix structure, i.e. with use of active elements, inclusive of non-linear two terminal elements, in the pixels together with light emitting or modulating elements
    • G09G2300/088Active matrix structure, i.e. with use of active elements, inclusive of non-linear two terminal elements, in the pixels together with light emitting or modulating elements using a non-linear two-terminal element
    • G09G2300/0885Pixel comprising a non-linear two-terminal element alone in series with each display pixel element
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2310/00Command of the display device
    • G09G2310/02Addressing, scanning or driving the display screen or processing steps related thereto
    • G09G2310/0243Details of the generation of driving signals
    • G09G2310/0245Clearing or presetting the whole screen independently of waveforms, e.g. on power-on
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2310/00Command of the display device
    • G09G2310/02Addressing, scanning or driving the display screen or processing steps related thereto
    • G09G2310/0264Details of driving circuits
    • G09G2310/0267Details of drivers for scan electrodes, other than drivers for liquid crystal, plasma or OLED displays
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2310/00Command of the display device
    • G09G2310/02Addressing, scanning or driving the display screen or processing steps related thereto
    • G09G2310/0264Details of driving circuits
    • G09G2310/0275Details of drivers for data electrodes, other than drivers for liquid crystal, plasma or OLED displays, not related to handling digital grey scale data or to communication of data to the pixels by means of a current

Definitions

  • the electrodes 14, 1975 positioned in the center of the electrodes and isolated therefrom are vapor deposited through a photoetched mask on each side of the vitreous material, or vitreous switching layer.
  • the electrodes and islands are in exact registration on opposite sides of the vitreous switching layer.
  • An electrically conductive layer is vapor deposited on one side of a glass substrate.
  • the electroluminescent layer is contiguous with one side of the vitreous switching layer on one side and is contigous with the electrically conductive layer on the opposite side.
  • the matrix of amorphous semiconductors are connected to a voltage source, ground, and to bucket brigade shift registers, such that a display is generated according to video information transmitted to the read-outand matrix.
  • the electrodes on the rear of the vitreous switching layer are connected to a positive direct current voltage source.
  • the electrically conductive layer is connected to ground.
  • the rear metal islands are connected to row shift registers, and the front metal islands are connected to the column shift registers.
  • the column shift register has an overriding video signal thereon.
  • the vitreous layer is biased close to, but less than, the amount required for conduction such that an increased voltage potential across the vitreous layer provided by the combination of the shift register and video signals causes the amorphous semiconductor to conduct and, therefore, the electroluminescent layer to luminesce providing a display at that element.
  • Horizontal and vertical clock pulses, from the column and row shift registers synchronously switch voltages to the rear and front metal islands until the entire panel has been scanned.
  • the electroluminescent layers remain on, thus displaying an alpha-numeric read-out, until the direct current voltage source is removed from the rear electrode.
  • This invention is in the field of large flat panel electroluminescent diode read-out displays using amorphous semiconductors with vitreous material for switching video signals across electroluminescent elements.
  • display panels Previously, the development of display panels was directed toward gas discharge elements, solid breakdown voltage devices, etc. which were triggered by alternating current (a.c.) voltage. More recently, display panels using miniaturized electroluminescent elements for transmittal of light are used wherein the elements are turned on" by a d.c. voltage.
  • the present invention comprises a predictable and efficient breakdown amorphous semiconductor having a-vitreous switching layer that switches on" by coincident voltages at the rear and front metal islands on each side thereof. These coincident voltages are produced as horizontal and vertical clock pulses at the output of shift registers.
  • a positive d.c. voltage source is applied to the rear electrode on the vitreous switching layer and sets up an electric field in the vitreous and electroluminescent layers between the positively charged rear electrode and a grounded electrically conductive layer, which is contiguous with the electroluminescent layer and the glass substrate.
  • the vitreous switching layer When output clock pulses from both shift registers are coincident at their respective islands in any one element, the vitreous switching layer will break down in the area between the metal islands and start conducting current therethrough if a video signal is also present.
  • the electric field provided by the d.c. voltage source applied to the rear electrodes will sustain conduction in the vitreous and electroluminescent layers, thus holding the electroluminescent layer in a luminescent condition even after the video signal is removed, and can only be stopped by removal of the d.c. voltage source.
  • the d.c. voltage source is simply switched off for removal of the alpha-numeric display and switched back on again to establish the electric field for the subsequent display.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic circuit showing bucket-brigade type scanners, feeding rows and columns of the amorphous semiconductor electroluminescent elements;
  • FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of a single element amorphous semiconductor electroluminescent element
  • FIG. 3 is a V-1 curve of the electrical characteristics of the vitreous switching element within the amorphous semiconductor.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a partial schematic of a multi shamelectroluminescent display panel.
  • a typical element 10 (shown in the upper right) is biased by d.c. voltage source 12 when switch SW1 is closed, thus placing an electric field across element 10.
  • Element 10 is addressed by clock pulses from column and row bucket brigade shift registers, respectively, arriving on column Y and row X.
  • the column bucket brigade shift register is comprised of horizontal clocks A and B, represented by numerals 6 and 8, and horizontal synchronizing pulse generating circuit 20.
  • the row bucket brigade shift register is comprised of vertical clock 22 and vertical synchronizing pulse generating circuit 21.
  • Horizontal clocks 6 and 8 produce square waves 6a and 8a that are out of phase with each other.
  • Square waves 6a and 8a are applied to alternate gates of column shift register MOSs to hand off, in a bucket brigade manner, the horizontal synchronizing pulses from circuit 20 along the column shift register MOSs O10, O12, O14, O16, Q18, and others (not shown).
  • the outputs from the column shift register MOSs are applied to the gates of video MOSs Q20, O22, O24, Q26, and others (not shown) totalling the number of columns in the matrix.
  • Video signals are applied to terminal 28. Terminal 28 is connected to all of the source terminals of the video gate MOSs O20, O22, O24, O26, etc.
  • the video signal When a video signal is present at terminal 28 and the video MOSs are gated on by display information from horizontal clocks 6 and 8, the video signal willbe transmitted to islands 24a of elements 10.
  • This display information present at clocks 6 and 8 may be transmitted on a high frequency carrier wave, such as a laser beam or a VHF channel, into the horizontal clocks of the column bucket brigade shift register.
  • display information present at vertical clock 22 hands off the vertical signal pulses from circuit 21 along row shift register MOSs Q40, Q28, and others (not shown) totalling the number of rows in the matrix.
  • This display information is first received, amplified, and decoded using circuitry similar to a television receiver (with such circuitry not being a part of this invention) and is produced as digitalized information at the output of the column and row shift registers.
  • the shift registers operate similar to deflected coils of a television, while the video gate MOSs operate as modulation devices.
  • the video signal addresses an electroluminescent element 18.
  • the horizontal shift register operator typically at 5 kilocycles for an element 18 addressing time of 200 microseconds.
  • Element 10 is an amorphous semiconductor that comprises a vitreous switching element layer 26, an electroluminescent element 18 made of layered p-n material, an electrically conductive layer 16, and a glass substrate 32.
  • Rear electrode 14 and rear metal islands 14a are vapor deposited on the rear side of layer 26.
  • Front electrode 24 and front metal island 24a are vapor deposited on the front side of layer 26.
  • An external d.c. voltage source 12 is connected to rear electrode 14 when switch SW1 is closed.
  • Layer 16 is connected to ground terminal 30.
  • Electrical leads from a column and a row, represented as column Y and row X, are shown connected to front metal island 24a and rear metal island 14a, respectively. Islands14a and 24a are positioned directly opposite each other on layer 26. Also, rear electrode 14 and front electrode 24 are positioned directly opposite each other on layer 26. Operation of the amorphous semiconductor will be explained in more detail later with reference to FIG. 2.
  • the display panel is prepared by the process as explained hereinbelow.
  • an electrically conductive layer 16 of transparent material, such as tin oxide, is evaporated on one side thereof.
  • a direct current electroluminescent layer 18 is then vapor deposited on conductive layer 16.
  • Layer, 18 may be a polycrystalline heterjunction sandwich structure made of group II-VI materials, or alternately a layer composed of many single crystalline light emitting diodes. In either case, layer 18 will become operative at a few volts and milliamperes of dc power, e.g., 8 volts at] milliamperes.
  • an embodiment of a panel made in this manner has 250,000 elements in a panel having 500 rows and 500 columns
  • layer 18 is polycrystalline heterjunction sandwich structure
  • metallized square electrodes 24 and small metal islands 24a enclosed by and insulated from electrodes 24 are vapor deposited through a photoetched mask onto the back side of electroluminescent layer 18.
  • electrodes 24 and islands 24a are separated by an insulator mate rial, which is deposited by photoresist techniques, such that electrodes 24, but not front islands 24a, are insulated from column leads.
  • the insulator material may be aluminum oxide.
  • Vitreous switching layer 26 is deposited over the electroluminescent layer 18, the insulator material layer, and the column leads deposited thereon. Layer 26 is from 1 to 10 microns in thickness. Layer 26 may be vacuum deposited, rf sputtered, etc. A greatvariety of materials are known to exhibit the switching effect needed for layer 26. Some of these materials are germanium, sulfur, selenium silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, etc.
  • layer 26 On top of this vitreous material layer 26 are deposited the rear electrodes and rear islands in the same manner that the front electrodes and front meta] islands were deposited on layer 18, i.e., by vapor depositing through a photoetched mask. The electrodes and islands deposited on each side of layer 26 are in exact registration. A layer of insulator material is deposited by photoresist techniques such that the rear electrodes 14, but not the rear metal islands 14a, are insulated from row leads. The row leads are connected to the rear metal islands. Rear electrode 14 is in intimate contact with layer 26. Lead wires from all of the rear electrodes 24 are connected to power supply 12.
  • the row leads are connected to the rear metal islands at one end and to the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs O28, O30, O32, O34, Q36, Q38, Q40, etc., at the other end.
  • the vitreous switching layer 26, which these islands are connected across conducts through the area between the particular metal islands 14a and 24a being pulsed.
  • the conducting area between islands 14a and 24a forms a generally cylindrical aisle through layer 26.
  • the cylindrical aisles extending through the electroluminescent layer may simply be the electroluminescent layer 18 left uncovered, or grooves etched all the waythrough to conductive layer 16. These grooves are needed for optical separation suchthat light from one element cannot be scattered into the next element.
  • the grooves may also be filled with black resin by simply rubbing the resin therein.
  • a typical IV characteristic curve for the vitreous material of layer 26 is shown in FIG. 3. These characteristics are discussed below with reference to the voltages existing between electrodes 14 and 24.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a partial schematic of the overall scanning system with the matrix of amorphous semiconductor attached to voltage source 12 and to the var,-
  • pulse 8a from clock 8 is negative, and vice versa.
  • Video information, applied at terminal 28 is connected to the source terminals of the video MOSs. Electrical leads from the drain terminals of the video MOSs areconnected to column leads which are, inturn, connected to metal islands 24a of the semiconductors.
  • a horizontal synchronizingpulse circuit represented by block 20, produces synchronous pulses that are moved along the bucket brigade horizontal shift register MOSs Q10, Q12, Q14, Q16, and Q18 by alternate pulses 6a and 8a.
  • Vertical clock 22 applies positive voltage pulses to alternate gates of the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs Q28, Q30, Q32, O34, O36, Q38, and Q40.
  • a vertical synchronizing pulse produced, through resistor R5, at the output of vertical synchronizing pulse circuit 21 is also moved along the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs. More specifically, video information .is stored in one of, the two storage registers, or horizontal clocks A and B, rep resented by blocks 6 and 8, while the vertical shift register 22 discharges its previously stored information into all elements of one column simultaneously. Storage and discharge of the registers are out of phase with each other as shown by the output waves 6a and 8a therefrom in FIG. 1.
  • the video input signals to the matrix at terminal 28 is the actual source of information that is displayed on the various electroluminescent elements of the matrix.
  • the bucket brigade verticalshift register MOSs gate the various video MOSs on such that when the video information is present at the source terminal of the video MOSs the information is passed to the drain terminal and on to the islands 24a of the elements.
  • the column scanner is a slow shift register that scans, say for exam ple, the right column.
  • the fast register scans all of the rows in a sequential manner. Therefore, while the extreme right column has a voltage applied to the middle metal islands 24a, all of the vertical synchronizing pulses from 21 are applied to the rear metal islands 14a. Only at the addressing coincidence of the column Y and row X elements along this extreme right column will the video signal, present at terminal 28 and at the source terminal of the video MOSs, switch the vitreous layer 26 on, causing luminescence of that element.
  • An important alternative to erasing the image over the entire panel is that of erasing one line at a time by inserting a switch in each line (row and column) and selectively opening these switches after the entire panel has been scanned. Also, selective erasure of single lines of the alpha-numeric read out on the panel may be controlled from the broadcasting station by coded signals to which the receiver is sensitive.
  • the strongly positive pulse video signal at the source terminal of video MOS Q26, is passed through MOS Q26 to front metal island 24a of element 10.
  • the video signal sets up a high electric field in the small area between the rear metal island 14a and front metal island 24a.
  • the video signal voltage is greater than the threshold voltage that has been established acrosslayer 26 by applying dc. voltage source 12 to rear electrode 14. Therefore, when the video signal is applied the small area of layer 26 that is between islands 14a and 240 will break-down and begin conducting.
  • the differential voltage between the positive dc voltage applied to electrode 14 and the floating voltage on electrode 24 is sufficient to break-down the entire area of layer 26 when the area between islands 14a and 24a has brokedown.
  • Conduction is sustained through layer 26 by dc. voltage source 12 even after the video signal has been removed. That is, the unswitched vitreous material of layer 26 has high impedance until the video signal is applied and the low impedance after the video signal is applied. After the column and row shift registers have scanned the entire panel, the alpha-numeric read-out will remain on the display panel until the panel is readdressed. When conduction begins through layer 26 this conduction extends through layer 18 and into layer 16. The electroluminescent material in layer 18 will luminesce when conduction is taking place therein.
  • An electroluminescent display panel comprising:
  • a transparent electrically conductive layer contiguous with one side of said substrate; layer of electroluminescent material contiguous with said transparent electrically conductive layer; a plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands with said front electrodes contiguous with said layer of electroluminescent material, said front electrodes and said front islands insulated from each other; plurality of column leads connected to said plurality of front islands; a layer of vitreous material contiguous with said plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands and said layer of electroluminescent material; plurality of metallized rear electrodes and rear islands contiguous with said layer of vitreous material; a plurality of row leads connected to said plurality of rear islands; positive direct current power supply, said power supply connected to said plurality of metallized rear electrodes for establishing a voltage differential across said layers of vitreous material and electroluminescent material such that the voltages differential between said rear and front metallized electrodes is close to the breakdown voltage of said layer of vitreous material; bucket brigade column shift register having two

Abstract

An alpha-numeric display panel with a matrix of amorphous semiconducters mounted on a substrate. Each of the semiconductors comprises a vitreous material layer contiguous with an electroluminescent material layer. Metal electrodes with small metal islands positioned in the center of the electrodes and isolated therefrom are vapor deposited through a photoetched mask on each side of the vitreous material, or vitreous switching layer. The electrodes and islands are in exact registration on opposite sides of the vitreous switching layer. An electrically conductive layer is vapor deposited on one side of a glass substrate. The electroluminescent layer is contiguous with one side of the vitreous switching layer on one side and is contigous with the electrically conductive layer on the opposite side. The matrix of amorphous semiconductors are connected to a voltage source, ground, and to bucket brigade shift registers, such that a display is generated according to video information transmitted to the read-out and matrix. The electrodes on the rear of the vitreous switching layer are connected to a positive direct current voltage source. The electrically conductive layer is connected to ground. The rear metal islands are connected to row shift registers, and the front metal islands are connected to the column shift registers. The column shift register has an overriding video signal thereon. The vitreous layer is biased close to, but less than, the amount required for conduction such that an increased voltage potential across the vitreous layer provided by the combination of the shift register and video signals causes the amorphous semiconductor to conduct and, therefore, the electroluminescent layer to luminesce providing a display at that element. Horizontal and vertical clock pulses, from the column and row shift registers, synchronously switch voltages to the rear and front metal islands until the entire panel has been scanned. The electroluminescent layers remain ''''on'''', thus displaying an alpha-numeric read-out, until the direct current voltage source is removed from the rear electrode. This is a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 310,736, filed 30 Nov. 1972, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,807,036.

Description

United States Patent Fischer [75] Inventor: Albert G. Fischer, Pittsburgh, Pa.
[73] Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Army, Washington, DC.
[22] Filed: Nov. 28, 1973 [21] Appl. No.: 419,827
Related US. Application Data [62] Division of Ser. No. 310,736, Nov. 30, I972, Pat. No.
[52] U.S. Cl. 340/324 M; 340/166 EL [51] Int. Cl. G06F 3/14 [58] Field of Search... 340/324 A,'324 AD, 166 EL, 340/168 SR; 357/2, 24
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,877,371 3/l959 Orthuber et a1. 357/2 3,715,607 2/1973 Fleming 357/2 3,789,240 l/l974 Weimer 357/24 3,792,465 2/1974 Collins et al. 340/324 R Primary ExaminerMarshall M. Curtis Attorney, Agent, or FirmMax L. Harwell; Nathan Edelberg; Robert P. Gibson 7 1 ABSTRACT An alpha-numeric display panel with a matrix of amorphous semiconducters mounted on a substrate. Each of the semiconductors comprises a vitreous material layer contiguous with an electroluminescent material layer. Metal electrodes with small metal islands Oct. 14, 1975 positioned in the center of the electrodes and isolated therefrom are vapor deposited through a photoetched mask on each side of the vitreous material, or vitreous switching layer. The electrodes and islands are in exact registration on opposite sides of the vitreous switching layer. An electrically conductive layer is vapor deposited on one side of a glass substrate. The electroluminescent layer is contiguous with one side of the vitreous switching layer on one side and is contigous with the electrically conductive layer on the opposite side. The matrix of amorphous semiconductors are connected to a voltage source, ground, and to bucket brigade shift registers, such that a display is generated according to video information transmitted to the read-outand matrix.
The electrodes on the rear of the vitreous switching layer are connected to a positive direct current voltage source. The electrically conductive layer is connected to ground. The rear metal islands are connected to row shift registers, and the front metal islands are connected to the column shift registers. The column shift register has an overriding video signal thereon. The vitreous layer is biased close to, but less than, the amount required for conduction such that an increased voltage potential across the vitreous layer provided by the combination of the shift register and video signals causes the amorphous semiconductor to conduct and, therefore, the electroluminescent layer to luminesce providing a display at that element. Horizontal and vertical clock pulses, from the column and row shift registers, synchronously switch voltages to the rear and front metal islands until the entire panel has been scanned. The electroluminescent layers remain on, thus displaying an alpha-numeric read-out, until the direct current voltage source is removed from the rear electrode.
7 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures HORIZONTAL 4 CLOCK A HORIZONTAL iioz.
{E026 VERTICAL 22 CLOCK Patent Oct. 14, 1975 DIRECT CURRENT ELECTROLUMINESCENT PANEL USING AMORPHOUS SEMICONDUCTORS FOR DIGITALLY ADDRESSING ALPI-IA-NUMERIC DISPLAYS This is a divisional of prior application Ser. No. 310,736, filed 30 Nov. 1972, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,807,036.
BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION This invention is in the field of large flat panel electroluminescent diode read-out displays using amorphous semiconductors with vitreous material for switching video signals across electroluminescent elements.
Previously, the development of display panels was directed toward gas discharge elements, solid breakdown voltage devices, etc. which were triggered by alternating current (a.c.) voltage. More recently, display panels using miniaturized electroluminescent elements for transmittal of light are used wherein the elements are turned on" by a d.c. voltage.
The present invention comprises a predictable and efficient breakdown amorphous semiconductor having a-vitreous switching layer that switches on" by coincident voltages at the rear and front metal islands on each side thereof. These coincident voltages are produced as horizontal and vertical clock pulses at the output of shift registers. A positive d.c. voltage source is applied to the rear electrode on the vitreous switching layer and sets up an electric field in the vitreous and electroluminescent layers between the positively charged rear electrode and a grounded electrically conductive layer, which is contiguous with the electroluminescent layer and the glass substrate. When output clock pulses from both shift registers are coincident at their respective islands in any one element, the vitreous switching layer will break down in the area between the metal islands and start conducting current therethrough if a video signal is also present. The electric field provided by the d.c. voltage source applied to the rear electrodes will sustain conduction in the vitreous and electroluminescent layers, thus holding the electroluminescent layer in a luminescent condition even after the video signal is removed, and can only be stopped by removal of the d.c. voltage source. For the panel to accept a subsequent display, the d.c. voltage source is simply switched off for removal of the alpha-numeric display and switched back on again to establish the electric field for the subsequent display.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a schematic circuit showing bucket-brigade type scanners, feeding rows and columns of the amorphous semiconductor electroluminescent elements;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of a single element amorphous semiconductor electroluminescent element; and
FIG. 3 is a V-1 curve of the electrical characteristics of the vitreous switching element within the amorphous semiconductor.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT FIG. 1 illustrates a partial schematic of a multielementelectroluminescent display panel. A typical element 10 (shown in the upper right) is biased by d.c. voltage source 12 when switch SW1 is closed, thus placing an electric field across element 10. Element 10 is addressed by clock pulses from column and row bucket brigade shift registers, respectively, arriving on column Y and row X. The column bucket brigade shift register is comprised of horizontal clocks A and B, represented by numerals 6 and 8, and horizontal synchronizing pulse generating circuit 20. The row bucket brigade shift register is comprised of vertical clock 22 and vertical synchronizing pulse generating circuit 21. Horizontal clocks 6 and 8 produce square waves 6a and 8a that are out of phase with each other. Square waves 6a and 8a are applied to alternate gates of column shift register MOSs to hand off, in a bucket brigade manner, the horizontal synchronizing pulses from circuit 20 along the column shift register MOSs O10, O12, O14, O16, Q18, and others (not shown). The outputs from the column shift register MOSs are applied to the gates of video MOSs Q20, O22, O24, Q26, and others (not shown) totalling the number of columns in the matrix. Video signals are applied to terminal 28. Terminal 28 is connected to all of the source terminals of the video gate MOSs O20, O22, O24, O26, etc. When a video signal is present at terminal 28 and the video MOSs are gated on by display information from horizontal clocks 6 and 8, the video signal willbe transmitted to islands 24a of elements 10. This display information present at clocks 6 and 8 may be transmitted on a high frequency carrier wave, such as a laser beam or a VHF channel, into the horizontal clocks of the column bucket brigade shift register. Similarly, display information present at vertical clock 22 hands off the vertical signal pulses from circuit 21 along row shift register MOSs Q40, Q28, and others (not shown) totalling the number of rows in the matrix. This display information is first received, amplified, and decoded using circuitry similar to a television receiver (with such circuitry not being a part of this invention) and is produced as digitalized information at the output of the column and row shift registers. The shift registers operate similar to deflected coils of a television, while the video gate MOSs operate as modulation devices. When there is coincidence of the digitalized information, the video signal addresses an electroluminescent element 18. The horizontal shift register operator typically at 5 kilocycles for an element 18 addressing time of 200 microseconds.
Referring to FIG. 2, a typical display element 10 of this invention is shown. Element 10 is an amorphous semiconductor that comprises a vitreous switching element layer 26, an electroluminescent element 18 made of layered p-n material, an electrically conductive layer 16, and a glass substrate 32. Rear electrode 14 and rear metal islands 14a are vapor deposited on the rear side of layer 26. Front electrode 24 and front metal island 24a are vapor deposited on the front side of layer 26. An external d.c. voltage source 12 is connected to rear electrode 14 when switch SW1 is closed. Layer 16 is connected to ground terminal 30. Electrical leads from a column and a row, represented as column Y and row X, are shown connected to front metal island 24a and rear metal island 14a, respectively. Islands14a and 24a are positioned directly opposite each other on layer 26. Also, rear electrode 14 and front electrode 24 are positioned directly opposite each other on layer 26. Operation of the amorphous semiconductor will be explained in more detail later with reference to FIG. 2.
The display panel is prepared by the process as explained hereinbelow. Starting with glass substrate 32, an electrically conductive layer 16 of transparent material, such as tin oxide, is evaporated on one side thereof. A direct current electroluminescent layer 18 is then vapor deposited on conductive layer 16. Layer, 18 may be a polycrystalline heterjunction sandwich structure made of group II-VI materials, or alternately a layer composed of many single crystalline light emitting diodes. In either case, layer 18 will become operative at a few volts and milliamperes of dc power, e.g., 8 volts at] milliamperes. Typically, an embodiment of a panel made in this manner has 250,000 elements in a panel having 500 rows and 500 columns If layer 18 is polycrystalline heterjunction sandwich structure, metallized square electrodes 24 and small metal islands 24a enclosed by and insulated from electrodes 24 are vapor deposited through a photoetched mask onto the back side of electroluminescent layer 18. In further developing element 10 for use as a display element, electrodes 24 and islands 24a are separated by an insulator mate rial, which is deposited by photoresist techniques, such that electrodes 24, but not front islands 24a, are insulated from column leads. The insulator material may be aluminum oxide. These column leads are deposited over the insulator material and are connected toeach of the front islands such that the column leads are insulated from front electrode 24. However, the remainder of front electrode 24 not insulated from the column lead is in intimate contact with layer 18. The column, leads are connected at their opposite end to the drain terminal of the various video MOSs O20, O22, O24, Q26, etc. Vitreous switching layer 26 is deposited over the electroluminescent layer 18, the insulator material layer, and the column leads deposited thereon. Layer 26 is from 1 to 10 microns in thickness. Layer 26 may be vacuum deposited, rf sputtered, etc. A greatvariety of materials are known to exhibit the switching effect needed for layer 26. Some of these materials are germanium, sulfur, selenium silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, etc. On top of this vitreous material layer 26 are deposited the rear electrodes and rear islands in the same manner that the front electrodes and front meta] islands were deposited on layer 18, i.e., by vapor depositing through a photoetched mask. The electrodes and islands deposited on each side of layer 26 are in exact registration. A layer of insulator material is deposited by photoresist techniques such that the rear electrodes 14, but not the rear metal islands 14a, are insulated from row leads. The row leads are connected to the rear metal islands. Rear electrode 14 is in intimate contact with layer 26. Lead wires from all of the rear electrodes 24 are connected to power supply 12. The row leads are connected to the rear metal islands at one end and to the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs O28, O30, O32, O34, Q36, Q38, Q40, etc., at the other end. With pulses on row leads from the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs and pulses on the bucket brigade horizontal shift register MOSs connected, respectively, to rear metal islands and front metal islands, the vitreous switching layer 26, which these islands are connected across, conducts through the area between the particular metal islands 14a and 24a being pulsed. The conducting area between islands 14a and 24a forms a generally cylindrical aisle through layer 26. The cylindrical aisles extending through the electroluminescent layer may simply be the electroluminescent layer 18 left uncovered, or grooves etched all the waythrough to conductive layer 16. These grooves are needed for optical separation suchthat light from one element cannot be scattered into the next element. The grooves may also be filled with black resin by simply rubbing the resin therein. A typical IV characteristic curve for the vitreous material of layer 26 is shown in FIG. 3. These characteristics are discussed below with reference to the voltages existing between electrodes 14 and 24.
FIG. 1 illustrates a partial schematic of the overall scanning system with the matrix of amorphous semiconductor attached to voltage source 12 and to the var,-
ious column and row leads. When switch SW1 is. closed, the positive terminal of voltage source 12 :is connected to rear electrodes 14 on all the. semiconduc-. tors, establishing a potential gradient through all of the elements between rear electrode 14 and layer 16 that is connected to ground 30. Front electrode 24 is, therefore, at some floating potential between the positive voltage from voltage source 12 and the ground potential on layer 16. The voltage differential between electrodes 14 and 24 is close to, but under, the amount needed to initiate conduction through the area of the vitreous switching layer 26 thatis between rear electrode 14 and front electrode 24. When layer 26 com ducts there is also conduction through layer 18 between front electrode 24 and layer 16,thus causing electroluminescent layer 18 to luminesce. Scanner,
' ister MOSs in bucket brigade hand off fashion. These.
hand off horizontal synch pulses are applied to the gates of video MOSs Q26, Q24, Q22, Q20, and others (not shown). When pulse 6a from clock 6 is positive,
pulse 8a from clock 8 is negative, and vice versa. Video information, applied at terminal 28 is connected to the source terminals of the video MOSs. Electrical leads from the drain terminals of the video MOSs areconnected to column leads which are, inturn, connected to metal islands 24a of the semiconductors. In operation, a horizontal synchronizingpulse circuit, represented by block 20, produces synchronous pulses that are moved along the bucket brigade horizontal shift register MOSs Q10, Q12, Q14, Q16, and Q18 by alternate pulses 6a and 8a. Vertical clock 22 applies positive voltage pulses to alternate gates of the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs Q28, Q30, Q32, O34, O36, Q38, and Q40. A vertical synchronizing pulse produced, through resistor R5, at the output of vertical synchronizing pulse circuit 21 is also moved along the bucket brigade vertical shift register MOSs. More specifically, video information .is stored in one of, the two storage registers, or horizontal clocks A and B, rep resented by blocks 6 and 8, while the vertical shift register 22 discharges its previously stored information into all elements of one column simultaneously. Storage and discharge of the registers are out of phase with each other as shown by the output waves 6a and 8a therefrom in FIG. 1. The video input signals to the matrix at terminal 28 is the actual source of information that is displayed on the various electroluminescent elements of the matrix. The bucket brigade verticalshift register MOSs gate the various video MOSs on such that when the video information is present at the source terminal of the video MOSs the information is passed to the drain terminal and on to the islands 24a of the elements.
In the shift register addressing method, the column scanner is a slow shift register that scans, say for exam ple, the right column. During the time that the slow register scans this one column, the fast register scans all of the rows in a sequential manner. Therefore, while the extreme right column has a voltage applied to the middle metal islands 24a, all of the vertical synchronizing pulses from 21 are applied to the rear metal islands 14a. Only at the addressing coincidence of the column Y and row X elements along this extreme right column will the video signal, present at terminal 28 and at the source terminal of the video MOSs, switch the vitreous layer 26 on, causing luminescence of that element. lnstantaneously, only the element 10 in the extreme upper right has the full voltage applied across the rear metallic island 14a and the middle metallic island 24a. If the video signal is present at the video input terminal 28, this signal switches the element which has the voltages coincidence thereacross and the element in this case element 10 will luminesce. The slow column scanner will then switch to the next column and the fast scanner will switch on all the rows sequentially before the slow column scanner switches again. The video signal has a larger voltage peak than the column and row scanner voltages, and consequentially switches the coincidence address elements on. After the entire panel has been scanned, the scanners may be switched off and the image retained. The image may be erased by opening switch SW1 to the external d.c. voltage source 12. The panel may then be readdressed. An important alternative to erasing the image over the entire panel is that of erasing one line at a time by inserting a switch in each line (row and column) and selectively opening these switches after the entire panel has been scanned. Also, selective erasure of single lines of the alpha-numeric read out on the panel may be controlled from the broadcasting station by coded signals to which the receiver is sensitive.
In operation, assume that the extreme right column is pulsed, the strongly positive pulse video signal, at the source terminal of video MOS Q26, is passed through MOS Q26 to front metal island 24a of element 10. The video signal sets up a high electric field in the small area between the rear metal island 14a and front metal island 24a. The video signal voltage is greater than the threshold voltage that has been established acrosslayer 26 by applying dc. voltage source 12 to rear electrode 14. Therefore, when the video signal is applied the small area of layer 26 that is between islands 14a and 240 will break-down and begin conducting. The differential voltage between the positive dc voltage applied to electrode 14 and the floating voltage on electrode 24 is sufficient to break-down the entire area of layer 26 when the area between islands 14a and 24a has brokedown. Conduction is sustained through layer 26 by dc. voltage source 12 even after the video signal has been removed. That is, the unswitched vitreous material of layer 26 has high impedance until the video signal is applied and the low impedance after the video signal is applied. After the column and row shift registers have scanned the entire panel, the alpha-numeric read-out will remain on the display panel until the panel is readdressed. When conduction begins through layer 26 this conduction extends through layer 18 and into layer 16. The electroluminescent material in layer 18 will luminesce when conduction is taking place therein.
I claim:
1. An electroluminescent display panel comprising:
a light translucent substrate;
a transparent electrically conductive layer contiguous with one side of said substrate; layer of electroluminescent material contiguous with said transparent electrically conductive layer; a plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands with said front electrodes contiguous with said layer of electroluminescent material, said front electrodes and said front islands insulated from each other; plurality of column leads connected to said plurality of front islands; a layer of vitreous material contiguous with said plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands and said layer of electroluminescent material; plurality of metallized rear electrodes and rear islands contiguous with said layer of vitreous material; a plurality of row leads connected to said plurality of rear islands; positive direct current power supply, said power supply connected to said plurality of metallized rear electrodes for establishing a voltage differential across said layers of vitreous material and electroluminescent material such that the voltages differential between said rear and front metallized electrodes is close to the breakdown voltage of said layer of vitreous material; bucket brigade column shift register having two horizontal clock pulse circuits and horizontal synchronizing circuit as inputs and a plurality of column shift register metallic oxide semiconductors as outputs; bucket brigade row shift register having a vertical clock pulse circuit and vertical synchronizing circuit as inputs and a plurality of row shift register metallic oxide semiconductors as outputs wherein said two horizontal clock pulse circuits and said vertical clock pulse circuit are adapted for receiving display information; video terminal; plurality of video metallic oxide semiconductors having a gate electrode, a drain electrode, and a source electrode wherein said video terminal is connected to said source terminal of the plurality of video metallic oxide semiconductors and wherein the outputs of said plurality of column shift register metallic oxide semiconductors is connected to said gate terminal of the video metallic oxide semiconductors for switching video invormation through the video metallic oxide semiconductors to the rear metal islands for breaking down said layers of vitreous material and electroluminescent material to provide a display on said electroluminescent material according to the input display information to said column and row shift registers. 2. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is sulfur.
6. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is selenium silicon oxide. 7 a
7. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is alumi-

Claims (7)

1. An electroluminescent display panel comprising: a light translucent substrate; a transparent electrically conductive layer contiguous with one side of said substrate; a layer of electroluminescent material contiguous with said transparent electrically conductive layer; a plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands with said front electrodes contiguous with said layer of electroluminescent material, said front electrodes and said front islands insulated from each other; a plurality of column leads connected to said plurality of front islands; a layer of vitreous material contiguous with said plurality of metallized front electrodes and front islands and said layer of electroluminescent material; a plurality of metallized rear electrodes and rear islands contiguous with said layer of vitreous material; a plurality of row leads connected to said plurality of rear islands; a positive direct current power supply, said power supply connected to said plurality of metallized rear electrodes for establishing a voltage differential across said layers of vitreous material and electroluminescent material such that the voltages differential between said rear and front metallized electrodes is close to the breakdown voltage of said layer of vitreous material; a bucket brigade column shift register having two horizontal clock pulse circuits and horizontal synchronizing circuit as inputs and a plurality of column shift register metallic oxide semiconductors as outputs; a bucket brigade row shift register having a vertical clock pulse circuit and vertical synchronizing circuit as inputs and a plurality of row shift register metallic oxide semiconductors as outputs wherein said two horizontal clock pulse circuits and said vertical clock pulse circuit are adapted for receiving display information; a video terminal; a plurality of video metallic oxide semiconductors having a gate electrode, a drain electrode, and a source electrode wherein said video terminal is connected to said source terminal of the plurality of video metallic oxide semiconductors and wherein the outputs of said plurality of column shift register metallic oxide semiconductors is connected to said gate terminal of the video metallic oxide semiconductors for switching video invormation through the video metallic oxide semiconductors to the rear metal islands for breaking down said layers of vitreous material and electroluminescent material to provide a display on said electroluminescent material according to the input display information to said column and row shift registers.
2. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said light translucent substrate is glass.
3. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said transparent electrically conductive layer is tin oxide.
4. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is germanium.
5. An electroluminescenT display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is sulfur.
6. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is selenium silicon oxide.
7. An electroluminescent display panel as set forth in claim 1 wherein said layer of vitreous material is aluminum oxide.
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US4072937A (en) * 1976-01-15 1978-02-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated MOS transistor driver circuits for plasma panels and similar matrix display devices
US4322754A (en) * 1976-08-31 1982-03-30 Kenneth Mason Holdings Limited Systems for processing printed data
US4368467A (en) * 1980-02-29 1983-01-11 Fujitsu Limited Display device
US4688030A (en) * 1983-08-26 1987-08-18 Ise Electronics Corporation Fluorescent display device
US4823126A (en) * 1985-04-12 1989-04-18 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. Display device and a display method
US5550066A (en) * 1994-12-14 1996-08-27 Eastman Kodak Company Method of fabricating a TFT-EL pixel
US5559553A (en) * 1994-10-28 1996-09-24 Eastman Kodak Company Clock control circuit with independent timing adjustments for image sensing devices
US5684365A (en) * 1994-12-14 1997-11-04 Eastman Kodak Company TFT-el display panel using organic electroluminescent media

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US2877371A (en) * 1955-08-16 1959-03-10 Itt Information display device
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US3789240A (en) * 1970-10-26 1974-01-29 Rca Corp Bucket brigade scanning of sensor array
US3792465A (en) * 1971-12-30 1974-02-12 Texas Instruments Inc Charge transfer solid state display

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4072937A (en) * 1976-01-15 1978-02-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated MOS transistor driver circuits for plasma panels and similar matrix display devices
US4322754A (en) * 1976-08-31 1982-03-30 Kenneth Mason Holdings Limited Systems for processing printed data
US4368467A (en) * 1980-02-29 1983-01-11 Fujitsu Limited Display device
US4688030A (en) * 1983-08-26 1987-08-18 Ise Electronics Corporation Fluorescent display device
US4823126A (en) * 1985-04-12 1989-04-18 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. Display device and a display method
US5559553A (en) * 1994-10-28 1996-09-24 Eastman Kodak Company Clock control circuit with independent timing adjustments for image sensing devices
US5550066A (en) * 1994-12-14 1996-08-27 Eastman Kodak Company Method of fabricating a TFT-EL pixel
US5684365A (en) * 1994-12-14 1997-11-04 Eastman Kodak Company TFT-el display panel using organic electroluminescent media

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