GB2087583A - Bistable liquid crystal twist cell - Google Patents

Bistable liquid crystal twist cell Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2087583A
GB2087583A GB8131068A GB8131068A GB2087583A GB 2087583 A GB2087583 A GB 2087583A GB 8131068 A GB8131068 A GB 8131068A GB 8131068 A GB8131068 A GB 8131068A GB 2087583 A GB2087583 A GB 2087583A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
liquid crystal
cell
state
voltage
switching
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB8131068A
Other versions
GB2087583B (en
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Western Electric Co Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Western Electric Co Inc filed Critical Western Electric Co Inc
Publication of GB2087583A publication Critical patent/GB2087583A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2087583B publication Critical patent/GB2087583B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/13Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
    • G02F1/137Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells characterised by the electro-optical or magneto-optical effect, e.g. field-induced phase transition, orientation effect, guest-host interaction or dynamic scattering
    • G02F1/139Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells characterised by the electro-optical or magneto-optical effect, e.g. field-induced phase transition, orientation effect, guest-host interaction or dynamic scattering based on orientation effects in which the liquid crystal remains transparent
    • G02F1/1391Bistable or multi-stable liquid crystal cells

Abstract

A bistable liquid crystal twist cell has two states ("up" and "down") which are stable in the presence of a single holding voltage in the range Vdown to Vup. Raising the voltage temporarily above Vup causes the cell to enter the "up" state and lowering the voltage below Vdown causes it to enter the "down" state. In an example employing liquid crystal material E7 (BDH) doped with cholesteryl nonanoate a cell thickness of 13.95 microns and a 360 DEG twist, Vdown was 1.5V and Vup 1.8V. A suitable holding voltage was 1.7V. For faster switching times, switching voltages considerably higher than Vup and lower than Ydown can be used, such as 3V and 0V for switching up and down times of 0.055s and 0.075s respectively in the example.

Description

SPECIFICATION Bistable liquid crystal twist cell This invention involves liquid crystal twist cells which have at least two stable states and which may be switched back and forth between the stable states.
In the late 1880's, Reinitzer and Lehman discovered that certain liquids may display ordering on a molecular level in a manner analogous to the ordering found in solid crystals (see for example, 0. Lehman, Z. Phys. Chem., 4, 462 (1889)). The ordering is generally manifested by a roughly parallel alignment between the various liquid crystal molecules. For example, liquid crystal molecules which are rod-like in shape may align roughly parallel to one another in a manner similar to the "ordering" found in a school of fish. Many liquid crystal molecules are rod-like in shape, and some may be disc-like in shape, but all have anisotropic physical and optical properties. The significance of this anisotropy lies in the fact that as a result of the anisotropy the ordering of the liquid crystal may be altered by exposure to appropriate electric fields.Such a change in ordering may have associated with it a change in the transmission characteristics of the liquid crystal because of the liquid crystal's anisotropic optical characteristics. (While in this discussion "transmission characteristics" refers to transmission of any electromagnetic radiation, primary applications will be in the field of optical transmission, that is, transmission of visible electromagnetic radiation, usually designated to be of wavelength from approximately 4500 to approximately 8000 Angstroms).
Although characteristics of liquid crystal were well known by the beginning of the 20th century, and practical application for display devices may have been considered, it was not until the 1960's that liquid crystal devices were constructed in a manner which permitted controlled alteration of the liquid crystal orientation so as to vary the transmission characteristics of the cell. These devices were the first liquid crystal cells with significant potential for use as display elements.
Initial devices operated on the basis of a phenomenon known as dynamic scattering. Liquid crystal cells associated with such devices are characterized by at least two different states. In one of these states the liquid crystal is ordered. In the other state, which is induced by the presence of an electric field, the liquid crystal is disordered.
Since the transmission characteristics of the cell are different in the ordered state than in the disordered state, the cell may be used as a display device. In such a device the disordered region for example, may look light while the ordered region may look dark. Alphanumeric characters may be formed by appropriately selective application of an electric field.
In contradistinction to early liquid crystal display devices which made use of the dynamic scattering phenomenon, other early fabricated liquid crystal cells did not depend on the existence of disordered states. Such devices are characterized by the work of Schadt and Helfrich (see, M. Schadt and W. Helfrich, Appl. Phys. Lett., 18,127(1971)). Such Schadt-Helfrich cells, as they are commonly called, have associated with them at least two states both of which are ordered, but which have different molecular orientations. The transmission characteristics of such cells are dependent upon the particular state of the liquid crystal. Consequently, a display device may be fabricated by taking advantage of the difference in transmission characteristics of the cell from one state to the other.
A typical Schadt-Helfrich cell involves a liquid crystal cell in which the liquid crystal in at least one of the states is oriented in a helical configuration, with the helical axis approximately perpendicular to the bounding surface and the helix extending from one surface of the cell to the other. Such cells are commonly referred to as liquid crystal "twist" cells. Operation of twist cells depends upon the effect that the liquid crystal has on the polarization of electromagnetic radiation transmitted through the cell. In the twisted state the polarization of the electromagnetic radiation entering the cell approximately parallel to the axis of the helix is rotated during its transversal of the cell as a result of the helical variation in the orientation of the liquid crystal molecule from one surface of the cell to the other.The different orientation of the liquid crystal in the second state results in a quantitatively different effect of the second state on the polarization of the incident light.
Use of appropriate polarizers and analyzers allows one to take advantage of this difference in polarization to obtain different transmission characteristics between the two states. In such devices the liquid crystal cell may be switched from a transmitting state to a nontransmitting state by application of appropriate fields whose influence on the liquid crystal results in a change in the orientation of the liquid crystal and a resultant change in its optical transmission characteristics.
In some circumstances, the optical anisotropy of the liquid crystal is not sufficient to result in optical discrimination between the two states. In such situations "guest" materials may be added whose orientation follows the orientation of the liquid crystal and whose optical characteristics are sufficiently anisotropic to yield the required discrimination between the two states. Guest material may also be used in other situations to avoid the use of polarizers and/or analyzers. Such devices are known generically as guest-host cells (see, G.H. Heilmeier, J.A. Castellano and L.A.
Zanoni, Mol. Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 8, 293 (1969), and G.H. Heilmeier and L.A. Zanoni, Appl. Phys. Lett., 13,91(1968)).
In the cells described above, the particular states are stable only when an appropriate field (which may be a zero field) is applied across the cell. This field must differ depending upon the state. While such designs yield practical devices, shortcomings inherent in the requirement that a field be applied to maintain the cell in a given state, and particularly that a different field be applied depending upon the particular state, necessitates the use of an impracticably large number of contacts to the cell in order to display a complex image. The requirement of a large number of contacts is related to the need for continually addressing the cells with proper fields in order to maintain each cell in its proper state.
Such problems, although they will not be entered into in detail here, fall within the generic term of "multiplexing", and have iimited the application of liquid crystal twist cells to relatively simple display devices (see A.R. Kmetz and F.K. von Willisen, eds., "Matrix Addressing of Non-Emissive Displays", in Non-Emissive Electrooptic Displays, Plenum, New York, 1976).
Recently, the present inventors invented a liquid crystal twist cell which has stable states that require the application of a field only during switching, and which does not require the application of a field to maintain the cell in a particular state (see European patent application, publication no. 18 180-Al, and D.W. Berreman and W.R. Heffner, Appl. Phys. Lett., 37, 109 (1980)). Such cells, referred to as bistable liquid crystal twist cells, have, for the first time, rendered practical the application of liquid crystal cells to large-scale display devices.
This invention as claimed is a bistable liquid crystal twist cell in which the at least two stable states are maintained by application of the same holding voltage -- hence differing from previously known cells which require the application of different voltages to maintain different states (Schadt-Helfrich cells) and from our own previously invented cells which do not require a holding voltage at all. Switching between the at least two stable states is effected by application of a perturbing field for the short period of time necessary to convert the liquid crystal from one state to another. Subsequent to switching, the field is returned to the holding voltage value and the cell remains stable in its new configuration.
The use of a holding voltage permits operation of a bistable cell over a wider range of cell parameters.
Characteristic of this new class of cells is the fact that the switching may occur adiabatically, i.e.
without appeal to any dynamic properties of the liquid crystal.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawing in which: FIG. 1 is an exemplary representation of the energy characteristics of a liquid crystal twist cell according to the invention and FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of the liquid crystals in various states associated with the cell of FIG. 1.
In FIG. 1 , voltage applied to a cell is displayed on the horizontal axis and energy associated with the cell is displayed on the vertical axis. Two states, described by the figure, are the "down" state extending from point a to point d, and the "up" state extending from point f to point j. (The portion of the curve extending from point d to point f represents an unstable state).
Behaviour of the states as the voltage is raised from zero illustrates the operation of the cell. For voltages less than Vdown only down states exist. As the voltage is increased from zero to Vdown, a region is reached where either the up state of the down state can exist (i.e., the voltage region from Vdown to Vup). However, the cell, being in the down state, tends to remain in the down state, since the upper state requires greater energy. As the voltage is increased to Vintersect, a point is reached where the two states are degenerate in energy. However, once again, since the cell is in the down state, it continues to exist in the down state. For values greater than Vintersect, the up state has less energy.
However, the cell tends to remain in the down state in this region, because change in molecular configuration from the down state to the up state would require overcoming an energy barrier between the two states. (The line d-f represents the energy value of the barrier which must be exceeded before switching will occur). As the voltage is increased beyond Vup, the cell can no longer exist in the down state and, consequently switches to the up state. When the cell has switched to the up state the voltage may be returned to Vjntersect and the cell will remain in the up state. Lowering the voltage below Vdown will, once again, result in switching of the cell - in this instance, from the up state to the down state.
Return of the voltage to Vintersect will then leave the cell in the down state. Practical operation of the cell then involves application of a holding voltage to all active regions of the cell, and variation of the voltage only when switching is desired.
Alternative operational characteristics may be utilized in practical devices. For example, operation of a cell of approximately constant thickness may involve an operating region where voltage is applied, surrounded by a region where no voltage is applied. In such embodiments when the operating region is in the up state, the use of a holding voltage defined by the intersection of the up and down states will result in instability of the operating region, and its ultimate decay to the down state. This is so, since for the conditions defined the energy of the up and down states at the holding voltage are degenerate and the operating region which is in the up state is surrounded by a region which is in the energetically degenerate down state.
Under such circumstances, the surrounding region which is in the down state will ultimately grow into the operating region through a "wall".
Consequently, practical embodiments benefit from the use of a holding voltage which is above Vintersecr Typically, holding voltage values will be greater than Vintersect by an amount greater than 10 percent of the difference in voltage between Vintersect and Vup. Such a holding voltage will impede the decay of the up state to the down state since at this holding voltage the up state has lower energy than the down state, i.e., transformation of the up state to the down state requires additional energy which is not available.
Needless to say, the holding voltage should, however, never approach the value of Vup since for these values the down state switches to the up state. Alternatively, the surrounding regions may be of different thickness, with an applied voltage.
The discussion of the preferable values for the holding voltage is predicated upon the use of a liquid crystal with positive dielectrical anisotropy.
A liquid crystal with negative dielectric anisotropy would have similar considerations where, however, the up and down labels in FIG. 1 are reversed.
Characteristic of some of the inventive cells is the fact that the switching phenomenon need not rely on the dynamics associated with the motion of the liquid crystals. Rather, switching may occur even if the switching points f and d are approached slowly. This is distinguished from switching which occurs only when the dynamics associated with the motion of the liquid crystal molecules is considered. The class of liquid crystal cells which need not rely on liquid crystal dynamics for switching are characterized somewhat loosely as "adiabatically switchable".
However, despite the fact that such cells need not rely on the dynamics of the liquid crystal molecules for switching, advantage may be taken of such dynamics to yield more rapid switching characteristics. So, for example, switching may be effected by altering the holding voltage to a point beyond the points d or f. Under these circumstances, proper mathematical description of the cell behaviour requires consideration of energy contributions due to the dynamic characteristics associated with the motion of the liquid crystal molecules. Within the terminology adopted here the liquid cyrstal twist cell would still be referred to as "adiabatically switchable" insofar as the practitioner using this cell need not inherently appeal to the fluid dynamic characteristics of the liquid crystal for switching.
Within the broad definition of this invention is included cells for which only one switching point is adiabatically switchable, whereas the other switching point may be only dynamically switchable.
While it has been assumed that regions which are not being switched are maintained at a given holding voltage value, practical utilization of multiregion cells may include variation of voltage applied to all addressable regions during switching, even those regions which are not being switched. Such circumstances would occur by alteration of the voltage applied to regions being switched in magnitudes necessary for switching, and alteration of voltage to regions not being switched in magnitudes less than that necessary for switching. The significance of such alternative embodiments lies in the relative simplification obtained in multiplexing when a varying voltage is applied to all addressable regions, with only those regions which are to be switched exposed to voltage alteration sufficient for switching.
FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules in a specific embodiment of the inventive cell. Note that the representation of FIG. 2 is consistent with the energy curve of FIG. 1. The up state is so designated since in this state liquid crystal molecules near the center of the cell are oriented relatively perpendicular to the cell surface. In the down state, and in the no field state which is a down state, the molecules near the center of the cell are oriented relatively parallel to the cell surface. Optical discrimination between these two states may be obtained through the use of a polarizer, polarization analyzer or guest material.
In the down state the polarization of the impinging radiation will be rotated by an amount different than in the up state thereby permitting optical discrimination between the two states.
In both the up state and the down state the active region (as opposed to non-addressed regions and boundaries) is substantially free from disclinations and walls, and switching occurs without the passage of a disclination through the active region.
Design Considerations The complexity of liquid crystal devices has, in the recent past limited the development of liquid crystal technology when such development depended exclusively on experimental analysis of various cell configurations. The multiplicity of such configurations makes their study in the laboratory so time consuming that advances cannot be expected with any degree of certainty, and such a mode of investigation is thereby rendered impractical. Consequently, recent practitioners in this field have begun to analyze various cell configurations using computer techniques and have thus made significant advances. The results of these analyses are used to direct experimental efforts.The present invention arose in this manner out of the realization that within the infinite number of mathematical descriptions of liquid crystal twist cell configurations there exists a class of cells which may be described by energy curves that have associated with them at least two states which are stable when a single appropriate holding voltage is applied. These states may be switched back and forth between each other adiabatically and without passing a disclination through the active region of the liquid crystal twist cell.
Computation of liquid crystal configurations which fall within this description uses techniques easily taught to the practitioner in the art. The calculation involves consideration of energy contributions due to the elastic strain and applied fields. The elastic strain field is due to the straining of the liquid crystal resulting from the boundary conditions and the applied electric field. Such elastic strain energy was first applied to the description of liquid crystal twist cells by Oseen and Frank (see, C. W. Oseen, Trans, Discuss.
Faraday Soc., 29, 883 (1933) and F.C. Frank, Discuss. Faraday Soc., 25, 1 7 (1958)). The electric static field contribution has been described by Gruler, Scheffer and Meir (see, H. Gruler, T.J.
Scheffer and G. Meier, Zeit. Naturforsch, 27A, 966-976 (1972), "Elastic Constants of Nematic Liquid Crystals I. Theory of the Normal Deformation"). The characteristics of the liquid crystal formulation by means of appropriate elastic and dielectric constants. The equations are solved by the known Euler-Lagrange techniques to ultimately yield descriptions of particular cell configurations in terms of an energy vs. voltage curve. Solution of the Euler-Lagrange equations yields particular cell configurations for which the energy may be calculated. Clearly, numerous curves may be obtained depending upon the boundary conditions and constants selected.
Within this large number of solutions we have discovered solutions with the required characteristics.
characteristics.
On the basis of the calculations described above, plots are obtained for voltage vs.
displacement field assuming various starting parameters. Numerical techniques are then used to determine the behaviour of the applied voltage as a function of the displacement field at equilibrium, given the assumed parameters of the system. In practice, the equations are solved by assuming a given displacement field and calculating the resulting voltage. Solutions are then selected which are triple valued in displacement as a function of voltage. Such solutions will generally have associated with them the general Gibbs free energy vs. voltage behaviour shown in Fig. 1 and hence will be bistable with a given holding voltage as described above.
Preferable starting parameters for the numeric calculation involve liquid crystals with dielectric anisotropies greater than 5 and cell thicknesses of approximately one twist length. The cells generally involve liquid crystals which are twisted in at least one of the stable states, and which in another of the stable states may be constrained to be either untwisted, or to have a twist other than its unconstrained value. Usually the net twist in the two states will either be the same or differ by an integral number of turns. In at least one of the stable states the liquid crystal may be subject to a zero torque about an axis perpendicular to the surface. However, in at least one other of the stable states the liquid crystal will have torque about an axis perpendicular to the surface.Unlike the pitch associated with the liquid crystal directors, the tilt of the directors associated with the liquid crystal molecules will always have a value other than that which would be assumed by the directors in the absence of the boundaries, i.e., the tilt will always have a value other than 90 that the representation of FIG. 2 is consistent with the energy curve of FIG. 1. The up state is degrees from normal at one or both of the boundaries.
While the numerical technique for constructing the cell is perhaps the most efficient, requiring less than a half an hour's computer time on simple computers, experimental techniques may be also utilized to construct the cell. Such techniques may involve, for example, fabricating a wedge in which a twisted liquid crystal under study is placed. The wedge surface would include means to align adjoining liquid crystal molecules. As an increasing voltage difference is applied between the two surfaces of the wedge-shaped cavity, a "wall" traversing the wedge is found to move.
Bistability is indicated by disappearance of the wall at one location and its reappearance elsewhere, or its more rapid motion, at a given voltage. Characteristics of the wedge cell in the region where the wall has appeared and disappeared are then utilized to fabricate a cell with the required characteristics.
EXAMPLE In an exemplary cell glass slides coated with tin oxide were used to confine the liquid crystal. The slides were further coated with silicon monoxide evaporated at an angle of 5 degrees from parallel to the surface. The tin oxide is formed in an electrode pattern and is used to apply appropriate voltages to yield, for example, an alphanumeric configuration, while the evaporated silicon monoxide is used to align the directors near the cell walls (see, J.L. Janning, Appl. Phys. Lett., 21, 173 (1972)). The liquid crystal used was E7 obtained from the British Drug House doped with about 1.342 percent of cholesteryl nonanoate.
Subsequent to insertion of the liquid crystal within the cell, the cell surfaces are epoxied together about the periphery of the cell at a cell thickness of 13.95 microns. Total twist was 360 degrees in the cells. The tilt angle of the liquids near the surfaces was determined to be 55 degrees from the normal by the method of Crossland et al (Journ. Phys. D.,Appl. Phys.,9, 100(1976)). The holding voltage in this case is 1.7 volts. Switching from the down state to the up state first occurs at about 1.8 volts while switching from the up state to the down state first occurs at about 1.5 volts.
For fast switching the dynamic characteristics of the cell were also employed and dynamic switching from the up state to the down state was obtained by dropping the voltage to zero for 0.075 seconds. Dynamic switching from the down state to the up state was obtained by raising the voltage to 3 volts for 0.055 seconds. Dynamic switching of this nature depends both on the magnitude of the variation in voltage and the time for which such a variation voltage is applied. Hence, applying similar voltages for less times or less voltage variations for equal time periods is found to be ineffective for dynamic switching. Consequently, a form of matrix addressing which requires that all elements receive some voltage may be utilized even in the dynamic switching mode. A polarizer and analyser were used to obtain optical discrimination between the two states. The analyser was placed parallel to the direction of evaporation of the silicon monoxide coating and the polarizer was oriented perpendicular to that direction. The cell was oriented in an optical bench and tilted in various directions to study the contrast dependence of the impinging radiation.
Calculations indicated that a cell with total twist of 270 degrees may have useful optical characteristics if comparable tilt angles in the two states are obtainable.

Claims (4)

1. A liquid crystal twist cell comprising a liquid crystal consisting of a material which, in an unstrained state, assumes a helical configuration, bounding surfaces, at least one of which transmits electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength of interest, means to align the liquid crystal molecules adjoining the bounding surfaces and means to apply a voltage across at least a portion of the cell, the liquid crystal having at least two stable states when in the presence of a single nonzero holding voltage and being switchable from one stable state to the other without passing a disclination through the active region of the cell.
2. A cell as claimed in claim 1 wherein the liquid crystal is switched from one stable state to the other by changing the magnitude of the applied voltage.
3. A device as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the liquid crystal is adiabatically switchable.
4. A liquid crystal twist cell substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawing.
GB8131068A 1980-10-20 1981-10-15 Bistable liquid crystal twist cell Expired GB2087583B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US19829480A 1980-10-20 1980-10-20

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2087583A true GB2087583A (en) 1982-05-26
GB2087583B GB2087583B (en) 1984-06-06

Family

ID=22732773

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8131068A Expired GB2087583B (en) 1980-10-20 1981-10-15 Bistable liquid crystal twist cell

Country Status (4)

Country Link
JP (1) JPS57100412A (en)
CH (1) CH654116A5 (en)
DE (1) DE3140898A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2087583B (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0104003A2 (en) * 1982-08-26 1984-03-28 Crystalvision Incorporated Liquid crystal display
DE3423993A1 (en) * 1983-07-12 1985-01-24 BBC Aktiengesellschaft Brown, Boveri & Cie., Baden, Aargau LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY
US4596446A (en) * 1982-06-29 1986-06-24 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Liquid crystal devices with particular cholesteric pitch-cell thickness ratio

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4566758A (en) * 1983-05-09 1986-01-28 Tektronix, Inc. Rapid starting, high-speed liquid crystal variable optical retarder
US4582396A (en) * 1983-05-09 1986-04-15 Tektronix, Inc. Field sequential color display system using optical retardation
GB2162356A (en) * 1984-07-09 1986-01-29 Tektronix Inc Improved liquid crystal optical switch with reduced cross talk

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4239345A (en) * 1979-04-16 1980-12-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Bistable liquid crystal twist cell
JPS5548805A (en) * 1979-09-19 1980-04-08 Pioneer Electronic Corp Tone arm damper mechanism
US4367924A (en) * 1980-01-08 1983-01-11 Clark Noel A Chiral smectic C or H liquid crystal electro-optical device

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4596446A (en) * 1982-06-29 1986-06-24 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Liquid crystal devices with particular cholesteric pitch-cell thickness ratio
EP0104003A2 (en) * 1982-08-26 1984-03-28 Crystalvision Incorporated Liquid crystal display
EP0104003A3 (en) * 1982-08-26 1987-04-29 Crystalvision Incorporated Liquid crystal display
DE3423993A1 (en) * 1983-07-12 1985-01-24 BBC Aktiengesellschaft Brown, Boveri & Cie., Baden, Aargau LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY
GB2143336A (en) * 1983-07-12 1985-02-06 Bbc Brown Boveri & Cie Liquid crystal display
US4634229A (en) * 1983-07-12 1987-01-06 Bbc Brown, Boveri & Company Limited Liquid crystal display
US4697884A (en) * 1983-07-12 1987-10-06 Bbc Brown, Boveri & Company, Limited Liquid crystal display having degree of twist and thickness for improved multiplexing

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE3140898A1 (en) 1982-06-24
JPH0326368B2 (en) 1991-04-10
GB2087583B (en) 1984-06-06
JPS57100412A (en) 1982-06-22
CH654116A5 (en) 1986-01-31

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
KR900008064B1 (en) Liquid crystal display
US4505548A (en) Bistable liquid crystal twist cell
KR100251514B1 (en) Cholesteric liquid crystal device
US4529271A (en) Matrix addressed bistable liquid crystal display
US7430030B2 (en) Bistable nematic liquid crystal display device
JP3529434B2 (en) Liquid crystal display device
US6774977B1 (en) Liquid crystal device and display
US5677747A (en) Liquid crystal display device with compensation for viewing angle dependency and optical anisotropic element used therein
CA2020519C (en) Liquid crystal display
Scheffer et al. Supertwisted nematic (STN) liquid crystal displays
JP4942899B2 (en) Reflective bistable display device
US7791706B2 (en) Bistable nematic liquid crystal display device
US5701168A (en) Inverse twisted and super-twisted nematic liquid crystal device
Oka et al. Electro-optical characteristics and switching behavior of a twisted nematic liquid crystal device based upon in-plane switching
GB2087583A (en) Bistable liquid crystal twist cell
KR0144680B1 (en) Liquid crystal light modulation device and apparatus
US7670654B2 (en) Bistable liquid crystal display device
GB2306693A (en) Smectic liquid crystal displays
Martinot-Lagarde et al. The binem display: A nematic bistable device switched by surface anchoring breaking
Sussman Electrohydrodynamic instabilities in nematic liquids of positive dielectric ansiotropy
Maclennan et al. Switching Dynamics And Structures Of Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals In The Surface Stabilized Geometry
Belyaev et al. Optical and electrooptical properties of homeoplanar layers of cholesteric liquid crystals
JPH0792458A (en) Liquid crystal display element
JPH03154029A (en) Gray scale liquid crystal device
Kwok et al. Switching behavior in bistable twisted nematic liquid crystal displays

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20001015