US20110298999A1 - Stereoscopic liquid crystal display systems - Google Patents
Stereoscopic liquid crystal display systems Download PDFInfo
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- US20110298999A1 US20110298999A1 US13/156,321 US201113156321A US2011298999A1 US 20110298999 A1 US20110298999 A1 US 20110298999A1 US 201113156321 A US201113156321 A US 201113156321A US 2011298999 A1 US2011298999 A1 US 2011298999A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04N—PICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
- H04N13/00—Stereoscopic video systems; Multi-view video systems; Details thereof
- H04N13/30—Image reproducers
- H04N13/332—Displays for viewing with the aid of special glasses or head-mounted displays [HMD]
- H04N13/337—Displays for viewing with the aid of special glasses or head-mounted displays [HMD] using polarisation multiplexing
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- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B30/00—Optical systems or apparatus for producing three-dimensional [3D] effects, e.g. stereoscopic images
- G02B30/20—Optical systems or apparatus for producing three-dimensional [3D] effects, e.g. stereoscopic images by providing first and second parallax images to an observer's left and right eyes
- G02B30/22—Optical systems or apparatus for producing three-dimensional [3D] effects, e.g. stereoscopic images by providing first and second parallax images to an observer's left and right eyes of the stereoscopic type
- G02B30/25—Optical systems or apparatus for producing three-dimensional [3D] effects, e.g. stereoscopic images by providing first and second parallax images to an observer's left and right eyes of the stereoscopic type using polarisation techniques
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- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02F—OPTICAL 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
- G02F1/00—Devices 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
- G02F1/01—Devices 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
- G02F1/13—Devices 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
- G02F1/133—Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
- G02F1/1333—Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
- G02F1/1335—Structural association of cells with optical devices, e.g. polarisers or reflectors
Definitions
- This disclosure generally relates to stereoscopic liquid crystal display (LCD) systems and, more particularly, relates to system assemblies that are compatible with suitable eyewear.
- LCD liquid crystal display
- Stereoscopic, or stereo, 3-D displays enhance the perception of images presented on a 2-D screen by presenting different images to each eye of the viewer.
- the viewer's visual system fuses these disparate images in such a way as to create a sensation of depth.
- conventional approaches have used eyewear to determine which image data goes to the left or right eye.
- One conventional 3-D system is the RealD cinema system that uses passive circularly polarized glasses to separate time-sequentially projected circularly-polarized images.
- the display includes a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light.
- the display may also include a polarization control panel positioned to receive the encoded light and operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel, wherein the polarization control panel comprises an LC modulation element and a retardation element, the LC modulation element and the retardation element operable to cooperate to transform the SOP of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light.
- SOP state of polarization
- the display further includes a polarization rotation element positioned to receive the left- and right-eye image encoded light incident from the LCD panel and operable to rotate a polarization axis of the encoded light.
- the retardation element and the LC modulation element are configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave.
- the display may include a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light and a polarization control panel positioned to receive the encoded light.
- the polarization control panel may be operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel.
- the polarization control panel may include an LC modulation element and a retardation element, the LC modulation element and the retardation element operable to cooperate to transform the SOP of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light.
- the LC modulation element may include an electrically controlled cell operable to switch between first and second states, the cell having first and second retardations when the cell is in the first and second states, respectively, and the polarization axes of the LC modulation element and the retardation element are substantially orthogonal to each other, and the retardation element and the LC modulation element are configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave.
- a method of providing stereoscopic imagery may include providing left- and right-eye image encoded light from a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel and receiving the encoded light at a polarization control panel.
- the method may further include selectively transforming, with the polarization control panel, the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light to substantiantially circularly polarized light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel.
- the polarization control panel comprises an LC modulation element and a retardation element.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of the top view of a conventional LCD display system
- FIG. 2A is a schematic diagram of the frontal view of a general cinema-eyewear-compatible, time-sequential stereoscopic LCD system, in accordance with the present disclosure
- FIG. 2B is a schematic diagram of the exploded side view of the LCD system shown in FIG. 2A ;
- FIG. 3 is a graph of polarization integrity of a single film 45 degree polarization transformation, in accordance with the present disclosure
- FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a cost efficient embodiment, in accordance with the present disclosure.
- FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of a second durable embodiment, in accordance with the present disclosure.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating a conventional stereoscopic liquid crystal display system 100 comprising a liquid crystal display (LCD) 102 located proximate to a polarization control panel (PCP) 104 .
- the LCD 102 may alternate left- and right-eye images that are selectively polarized with the liquid crystal PCP 104 .
- Passive polarizing eyewear 104 worn by a viewer then blocks light from incorrect eye images.
- One aspect of the present disclosure is directed to display system that may be compatible with circularly polarized, passive cinema eyewear whose lenses may comprise a single, orthogonally oriented quarter wave retarder films coupled to a neutral horizontal polarizer.
- This prescription may be used to analyze particular stereoscopic polarization states from a compatible display for optimal performance.
- Such stereoscopic polarization states may be encoded, in an embodiment, by first launching linear, vertically polarized light into modulating retardation elements oriented orthogonally, such as at ⁇ 45°. This may be distinguishable from using the twisted nematic liquid crystal modulators cited in A Novel Polarizer Glasses - Type 3 D Displays with an Active Retarder , p.
- Twisted liquid crystal modulators provide complex output polarization states that are only approximately analyzed by untwisted components.
- twisted nematic LCD panels have output linear polarization oriented at ⁇ 45° to the vertical. Altering this orientation to a vertical orientation to match the eyewear may be achieved using one or more retarder films. In some embodiments, such an approach provides insufficient polarization fidelity.
- a vertical, highly transmitting, ‘clean-up’ polarizer may be used prior to the polarization control panel.
- FIG. 2A illustrates a frontal view of an exemplary display 200 .
- the display 200 is operable to display stereoscopic imagery, and a top 202 and a bottom 204 of the display 200 are defined by a viewer frame of reference.
- a vertical orientation is defined by a line 206 extending from the top 202 to the bottom 204 of the display 200 , and is perpendicular to a top edge 208 and a bottom edge 210 of the display 200 .
- Orientation angles are defined from the vertical when looking toward the display.
- clockwise rotation is a positive angle
- counterclockwise rotation is described as a negative angle from the vertical.
- FIG. 2B is an exploded side view of the display 200 shown in FIG. 2A .
- the display 200 may include a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel 220 operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light.
- the LCD panel 220 may be a twisted nematic liquid crystal display (TNLCD) panel that is operable to provide light having a polarization axis that is not parallel to the vertical.
- the light provided by the LCD panel 220 has a polarization axis oriented at +45° or ⁇ 45° with respect to the vertical.
- the display 200 may further include a polarization rotation element 222 positioned to receive the left- and right-eye image encoded light incident from the LCD panel 220 and operable to rotate the polarization axis of the incident light to a substantially vertical orientation.
- the display 200 may also include a polarization control panel element 224 positioned to receive the light incident from the polarization rotation element 222 and operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel 220 .
- SOP state of polarization
- the LCD panel 220 may comprise a low cost twisted nematic liquid crystal display (TNLCD), such as those used in most laptop computers and desktop monitors.
- TNLCD twisted nematic liquid crystal display
- the polarization axis of the light exiting the TNLCD panel 220 may be oriented at ⁇ 45° with respect to the vertical.
- this single film may not completely correctly transform polarization for all visible wavelengths outside of the design wavelength of 520 nm, and a vertically oriented ‘clean-up’ polarizer 226 may therefore be used to filter out unwanted light having a polarization axis that is not parallel to the vertical and transmit light only along the vertical orientation.
- a polarizer 226 having a vertical polarization axis may be positioned between the polarization rotation element 222 and the polarization modulation element 224 .
- the polarization rotation element 222 may be configured in a variety of ways to rotate the polarization axis of the incident light to a vertical orientation.
- the retarder(s) used in the polarization rotation element 222 may be a negative dispersion compensation film in some embodiments.
- the polarization rotation element 222 may include a single half wave retarder oriented at approximately ⁇ 22.5°.
- polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack of two or more half wave retarders.
- polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack having a first half wave retarder oriented at ⁇ 32.5° and a second half wave retarder oriented at ⁇ 10.5°.
- polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack having a first half wave retarder oriented at ⁇ 38.3°, a second half wave retarder oriented at ⁇ 21.6°, and a third half wave retarder oriented at ⁇ 5.7°.
- the polarization rotation element 222 may include a biaxially stretched retarder film. It should be appreciated that other embodiments that perform the function of rotating the light from the LCD panel to the oplarizatio nmodulation element 224 may have different combinatios of retardances, orientations, and number of layers. Design considerations to make such retarder stacks may be found in the commonly-authored book, Robinson et al., Polarization Engineering for LCD Projection (Wiley 2005), herein incorporated by reference.
- FIG. 3 is a graph 300 illustrating a normalized transmission profile for the single half wave film embodiment described above.
- Graph 300 shows the polarization integrity of the 45 degree light transformation for a range in the visible spectrum through polarization rotation element 222 .
- the transmission is at a maximum around the design wavelength of 520 nm, but as wavelengths increase and decrease from this design wavelength, less light is transmitted
- the spectral transmission through an ideal neutral polarizer is then a measure of the polarization integrity of the transformation and is shown for this cost effective single polycarbonate film approach in FIG. 3 .
- the polarization control panel 224 may be positioned to receive the encoded light either directly or indirectly from the LCD panel 220 .
- the polarization control panel 224 is operable to receive and modulate vertically polarized light provided by the polarization rotation element 222 .
- the polarization control panel 224 is operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel 220 .
- the polarization control panel 224 may include an LC modulation element 228 and a retardation element 230 , which in cooperation, may be operable to transform the SOP of the received light to circularly polarized light.
- the LC modulation element 228 comprises a zero-twist liquid crystal modulating cell operable to switch between first and second states, the cell having first and second retardations when the cell is in the first and second states, respectively.
- the modulating cell may be a fast electrically controlled birefringent (ECB) mode (anti-parallel aligned), or a pi-cell mode (parallel aligned).
- ECB fast electrically controlled birefringent
- complexity and cost reduction may favor the use of a single half-wave (HW) modulating cell, such as a pi-cell for switching speed purposes.
- HW half-wave
- the orientation of the LC modulation element 228 may be set at +45°, which in some instances, directs the lowest cross-talk, best viewing angle image at the right eye.
- the polarization axes of the LC modulation element 228 and the retardation element 230 may be aligned at substantially orthogonal orientations, and the LC modulation element 228 and the retardation element 230 may be configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave.
- the LC modulation element 228 comprises a zero to half-wave pi cell
- the retardation element 230 comprises a quarter wave retarder film. Configured as such, the polarization control panel 224 has a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave, and switching the cell of the LC modulation element 229 between the first and second states provides encoded light having first and second circular poplarizations, respectively.
- LC modulation element 228 and the retardation element 230 may be used to provide a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave.
- a retardation value of ⁇ may be added to both LC modulation element 228 and the retardation element 230 while still maintaining a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave.
- the quality of the field of view may be optimized by minimizing ⁇ .
- the LC modulation element 228 may be aligned at substantially +45° or ⁇ 45°, and the retardation element 230 may be aligned at an orthogonal orientation relative to the LC modulation element 228 .
- the LC modulation element 228 may be aligned at +45° and the retardation element 230 may be aligned at 45°. While the alignment of the LC modulation element 228 and the retardation element 230 may deviate from +45° or ⁇ 45°, it is to be appreciated that the amount of deviation is inversely proportional to the quality of the 3D perception by the viewer.
- wide angle compensation films 232 may be attached to the polarization control panel 224 to improve polarization fidelity at non-normal viewing angles.
- the compensation may be provided by two matching films 232 placed on either side of the cell 228 .
- the matching films may be made of continuously bent, negative birefringent materials such as polymerized discotic liquid crystal materials. Matching the bend profile to that of the pi-mode liquid crystal in its half switched (quarter wave) state provides one solution for wide angle fidelity.
- Such films exist and are commercialized by Fuji film.
- An alternative solution uses more widely available vertically aligned negative birefringent films. In low cost systems where the LCDs themselves compromise wide angle viewing, compensation films may be removed altogether.
- the wide angle compensation films 232 may include a biaxially stretched film, which allows for manipulation of the out of plane birefringence.
- the polarization control panel 224 may include a retardation element 230 crossed with the half-wave electrically controlled birefringent (ECB) modulator (i.e. oriented at)-45°.
- the retardation element 230 may be a quarter-wave (QW) retarder film for providing output circular polarization used by the eyewear. In an embodiment, its retardance is close to that of the eyewear ( ⁇ 125 nm) plus the high voltage residual retardance of the LC cell ( ⁇ 20 nm).
- the retardation element 230 may include a biaxially stretched quarter wave film, which allows for manipulation of the out of plane birefringence. For optimal off-axis viewing performance, it is desirable to use a biaxial retarder film for the QW retarder, where R th is around 300 nm, where
- nx, ny, and nz are the refractive indices of the stretched film in the orthogonal x, y, and z directions, and d is the film thickness.
- the order of the various components that make up the polarization control panel 224 is flexible.
- the compensation films are typically adjacent the LC cell but the order of the films in relation to the viewer may vary.
- rigorous simulation of the optical output under the assumption of good index matching bonds and low front surface reflection slightly favor having the retardation element 230 being closest to the viewer.
- FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of a display 400 having a twisted nematic (TN) laptop-like panel 420 .
- TN twisted nematic
- One thing to note about the embodiment of FIG. 4 is its exposure of the front surface retarder element 430 , which is typically a polymeric film to possible environmental degradation and mechanical abuse. Humidity may attack polymeric films resulting in swelling and delamination. Additionally, such polymeric films are easily physically damaged through touching. For practical purposes, it is therefore be desirable to encapsulate all polymer films by the glass making up the LC modulating element 428 of the polarization control panel 424 .
- FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment including a modification to the embodiment of FIG. 4 .
- the display 500 of FIG. 5 includes a polarization control panel 524 that has an LC modulation element 528 following the retardation element 530 in the light path; such an embodiment is more durable.
- edge portions of the display 500 may be separated from the environment by a hermetic seal.
- Another possible advantage to the system in FIG. 5 is the improved (i.e. lower) cross-talk performance when the front surface has significant back reflections. This is the case when either low cost or no anti-reflection (AR) coating is applied to the external surface of an assembled display.
- AR anti-reflection
- the most reflective surfaces of the embodiments of FIG. 4 and FIG. 5 may be the internal indium tin oxide (ITO) surfaces of the LC modulator and the external surface. Reflections from the LCD may be re-polarized correctly by the ‘clean up’ polarizer 426 , 526 and do not cause leakage while other surface reflections are negligible from index matched bonding.
- a practically desirable feature shown in the embodiment of FIG. 5 is that it has both highly reflecting surfaces one side of the retardation element 530 .
- Another advantage of placing the LC modulation element 528 outermost and facing the viewer is to potentially detect touch through cell deformation. Striping the LC conducting substrates' indium tin oxide (ITO) orthogonally could allow for accurate positional touch sensing often used by modern computer interfacing. Striped indium tin oxide (ITO) may be used for a scrolling stereoscopic display operation (see e.g., U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2008/0316303, which is herein incorporated by reference). Touch and stereoscopic display capability with a single modulating element may be attractive.
- ITO indium tin oxide
- the polarization control panel 524 may include a single quarter wave (QW) film 530 and electrically controlled birefringent (ECB) LC modulation element 528 oriented at 0° (i.e. vertical) and 90° respectively.
- QW quarter wave
- EBC electrically controlled birefringent
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Abstract
Description
- This application relates and claims priority to commonly-assigned U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/352,773, filed Jun. 8, 2010, and entitled “Stereoscopic liquid crystal display systems” which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
- This disclosure generally relates to stereoscopic liquid crystal display (LCD) systems and, more particularly, relates to system assemblies that are compatible with suitable eyewear.
- Stereoscopic, or stereo, 3-D displays enhance the perception of images presented on a 2-D screen by presenting different images to each eye of the viewer. The viewer's visual system fuses these disparate images in such a way as to create a sensation of depth. To create 3-D effects, conventional approaches have used eyewear to determine which image data goes to the left or right eye. One conventional 3-D system is the RealD cinema system that uses passive circularly polarized glasses to separate time-sequentially projected circularly-polarized images.
- In an exemplary embodiment of a flat panel display operable to display stereoscopic imagery, the display includes a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light. The display may also include a polarization control panel positioned to receive the encoded light and operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel, wherein the polarization control panel comprises an LC modulation element and a retardation element, the LC modulation element and the retardation element operable to cooperate to transform the SOP of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light. In an embodiment, the display further includes a polarization rotation element positioned to receive the left- and right-eye image encoded light incident from the LCD panel and operable to rotate a polarization axis of the encoded light. In an embodiment, the retardation element and the LC modulation element are configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave.
- In another exemplary embodiment of a flat panel display for providing stereoscopic imagery, the display may include a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light and a polarization control panel positioned to receive the encoded light. The polarization control panel may be operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel. The polarization control panel may include an LC modulation element and a retardation element, the LC modulation element and the retardation element operable to cooperate to transform the SOP of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light. Further, the LC modulation element may include an electrically controlled cell operable to switch between first and second states, the cell having first and second retardations when the cell is in the first and second states, respectively, and the polarization axes of the LC modulation element and the retardation element are substantially orthogonal to each other, and the retardation element and the LC modulation element are configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave.
- Also disclosed herein is a method of providing stereoscopic imagery, which may include providing left- and right-eye image encoded light from a liquid crystal display (LCD) panel and receiving the encoded light at a polarization control panel. The method may further include selectively transforming, with the polarization control panel, the state of polarization (SOP) of the received encoded light to substantiantially circularly polarized light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by the LCD panel. In an embodiment, the polarization control panel comprises an LC modulation element and a retardation element.
-
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of the top view of a conventional LCD display system; -
FIG. 2A is a schematic diagram of the frontal view of a general cinema-eyewear-compatible, time-sequential stereoscopic LCD system, in accordance with the present disclosure; -
FIG. 2B is a schematic diagram of the exploded side view of the LCD system shown inFIG. 2A ; -
FIG. 3 is a graph of polarization integrity of a single film 45 degree polarization transformation, in accordance with the present disclosure; -
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a cost efficient embodiment, in accordance with the present disclosure; and -
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of a second durable embodiment, in accordance with the present disclosure. -
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram illustrating a conventional stereoscopic liquidcrystal display system 100 comprising a liquid crystal display (LCD) 102 located proximate to a polarization control panel (PCP) 104. TheLCD 102 may alternate left- and right-eye images that are selectively polarized with theliquid crystal PCP 104. Passive polarizingeyewear 104 worn by a viewer then blocks light from incorrect eye images. - This approach is similar in concept to a 3D cinema system, but the projector in a 3D cinema system is replaced by an LCD. However, LCDs are typically slow to update and are addressed line by line in a continuous scroll. It is thus difficult to view or polarize correctly an entire settled frame in isolation without modifying certain aspects of this conventional approach. U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2008/0316303, which is herein incorporated by reference, is directed to providing a scrolling segmented polarization control panel with optional alternate panel addressing and temporal and spatial control of the back light illumination.
- One aspect of the present disclosure is directed to display system that may be compatible with circularly polarized, passive cinema eyewear whose lenses may comprise a single, orthogonally oriented quarter wave retarder films coupled to a neutral horizontal polarizer. This prescription may be used to analyze particular stereoscopic polarization states from a compatible display for optimal performance. Such stereoscopic polarization states may be encoded, in an embodiment, by first launching linear, vertically polarized light into modulating retardation elements oriented orthogonally, such as at ±45°. This may be distinguishable from using the twisted nematic liquid crystal modulators cited in A Novel Polarizer Glasses-Type 3D Displays with an Active Retarder, p. 348•
SID 09DIGEST as part of the polarization control panel element. Twisted liquid crystal modulators provide complex output polarization states that are only approximately analyzed by untwisted components. For viewing angle purposes, twisted nematic LCD panels have output linear polarization oriented at ±45° to the vertical. Altering this orientation to a vertical orientation to match the eyewear may be achieved using one or more retarder films. In some embodiments, such an approach provides insufficient polarization fidelity. Thus, a vertical, highly transmitting, ‘clean-up’ polarizer may be used prior to the polarization control panel. - As discussed above, one aspect of this disclosure is directed to rotating the polarization axis of the light provided by an LCD panel to match the cinema eyewear.
FIG. 2A illustrates a frontal view of anexemplary display 200. Thedisplay 200 is operable to display stereoscopic imagery, and atop 202 and abottom 204 of thedisplay 200 are defined by a viewer frame of reference. A vertical orientation is defined by aline 206 extending from thetop 202 to thebottom 204 of thedisplay 200, and is perpendicular to atop edge 208 and abottom edge 210 of thedisplay 200. Orientation angles are defined from the vertical when looking toward the display. As used herein, clockwise rotation is a positive angle, and counterclockwise rotation is described as a negative angle from the vertical. -
FIG. 2B is an exploded side view of thedisplay 200 shown inFIG. 2A . As shown inFIG. 2B , thedisplay 200 may include a liquid crystal display (LCD)panel 220 operable to provide left- and right-eye image encoded light. In an exemplary embodiment, theLCD panel 220 may be a twisted nematic liquid crystal display (TNLCD) panel that is operable to provide light having a polarization axis that is not parallel to the vertical. In some embodiment, the light provided by theLCD panel 220 has a polarization axis oriented at +45° or −45° with respect to the vertical. - The
display 200 may further include apolarization rotation element 222 positioned to receive the left- and right-eye image encoded light incident from theLCD panel 220 and operable to rotate the polarization axis of the incident light to a substantially vertical orientation. Thedisplay 200 may also include a polarizationcontrol panel element 224 positioned to receive the light incident from thepolarization rotation element 222 and operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by theLCD panel 220. - As discussed above, the
LCD panel 220 may comprise a low cost twisted nematic liquid crystal display (TNLCD), such as those used in most laptop computers and desktop monitors. Here, the polarization axis of the light exiting theTNLCD panel 220 may be oriented at −45° with respect to the vertical. An exemplary polarization rotation may be accomplished usingpolarization rotation element 222 that includes a single half wave retarder (Γ=Δn. d≈260 nm@ λ=520 nm) oriented at ≈−22.5°. In such an embodiment, this single film may not completely correctly transform polarization for all visible wavelengths outside of the design wavelength of 520 nm, and a vertically oriented ‘clean-up’ polarizer 226 may therefore be used to filter out unwanted light having a polarization axis that is not parallel to the vertical and transmit light only along the vertical orientation. In an embodiment, apolarizer 226 having a vertical polarization axis may be positioned between thepolarization rotation element 222 and thepolarization modulation element 224. - It is to be appreciated that the
polarization rotation element 222 may be configured in a variety of ways to rotate the polarization axis of the incident light to a vertical orientation. The retarder(s) used in thepolarization rotation element 222 may be a negative dispersion compensation film in some embodiments. As discussed above, thepolarization rotation element 222 may include a single half wave retarder oriented at approximately −22.5°. In another exemplary embodiment,polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack of two or more half wave retarders. In an embodiment,polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack having a first half wave retarder oriented at −32.5° and a second half wave retarder oriented at −10.5°. In another embodiment,polarization rotation element 222 may comprise a stack having a first half wave retarder oriented at −38.3°, a second half wave retarder oriented at −21.6°, and a third half wave retarder oriented at −5.7°. In some embodiments, thepolarization rotation element 222 may include a biaxially stretched retarder film. It should be appreciated that other embodiments that perform the function of rotating the light from the LCD panel to the oplarizatio nmodulationelement 224 may have different combinatios of retardances, orientations, and number of layers. Design considerations to make such retarder stacks may be found in the commonly-authored book, Robinson et al., Polarization Engineering for LCD Projection (Wiley 2005), herein incorporated by reference. -
FIG. 3 is agraph 300 illustrating a normalized transmission profile for the single half wave film embodiment described above.Graph 300 shows the polarization integrity of the 45 degree light transformation for a range in the visible spectrum throughpolarization rotation element 222. As may be seen, the transmission is at a maximum around the design wavelength of 520 nm, but as wavelengths increase and decrease from this design wavelength, less light is transmitted The spectral transmission through an ideal neutral polarizer is then a measure of the polarization integrity of the transformation and is shown for this cost effective single polycarbonate film approach inFIG. 3 . - Referring back to
FIG. 2 , thepolarization control panel 224 may be positioned to receive the encoded light either directly or indirectly from theLCD panel 220. In an embodiment, thepolarization control panel 224 is operable to receive and modulate vertically polarized light provided by thepolarization rotation element 222. Thepolarization control panel 224 is operable to selectively transform the state of polarization (SOP) of the received light to substantially circularly polarized light in synchronization with the left- and right-eye image encoded light provided by theLCD panel 220. Thepolarization control panel 224 may include anLC modulation element 228 and aretardation element 230, which in cooperation, may be operable to transform the SOP of the received light to circularly polarized light. In an embodiment, theLC modulation element 228 comprises a zero-twist liquid crystal modulating cell operable to switch between first and second states, the cell having first and second retardations when the cell is in the first and second states, respectively. The modulating cell may be a fast electrically controlled birefringent (ECB) mode (anti-parallel aligned), or a pi-cell mode (parallel aligned). In an exemplary embodiment, complexity and cost reduction may favor the use of a single half-wave (HW) modulating cell, such as a pi-cell for switching speed purposes. In an embodiment, the orientation of theLC modulation element 228 may be set at +45°, which in some instances, directs the lowest cross-talk, best viewing angle image at the right eye. - To provide circularly polarized light, the polarization axes of the
LC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 may be aligned at substantially orthogonal orientations, and theLC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 may be configured to provide a net retardation substantially equal to a quarter wave. In an embodiment, theLC modulation element 228 comprises a zero to half-wave pi cell, and theretardation element 230 comprises a quarter wave retarder film. Configured as such, thepolarization control panel 224 has a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave, and switching the cell of the LC modulation element 229 between the first and second states provides encoded light having first and second circular poplarizations, respectively. It is to be appreciated that the embodiments provided herein are merely exemplary, and a variety of combinations of theLC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 may be used to provide a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave. For example, starting with the exemplary embodiment discussed above, a retardation value of δ may be added to bothLC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 while still maintaining a net retardation of approximately a quarter wave. However, it is to be appreciated that the quality of the field of view may be optimized by minimizing δ. - It is to be further appreciated that a variety of alignments of the
LC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 may be used. In an embodiment, theLC modulation element 228 may be aligned at substantially +45° or −45°, and theretardation element 230 may be aligned at an orthogonal orientation relative to theLC modulation element 228. For example, theLC modulation element 228 may be aligned at +45° and theretardation element 230 may be aligned at 45°. While the alignment of theLC modulation element 228 and theretardation element 230 may deviate from +45° or −45°, it is to be appreciated that the amount of deviation is inversely proportional to the quality of the 3D perception by the viewer. - In an embodiment, wide
angle compensation films 232 may be attached to thepolarization control panel 224 to improve polarization fidelity at non-normal viewing angles. In the case of pi-cells, as shown in the illustrated embodiment, the compensation may be provided by two matchingfilms 232 placed on either side of thecell 228. The matching films may be made of continuously bent, negative birefringent materials such as polymerized discotic liquid crystal materials. Matching the bend profile to that of the pi-mode liquid crystal in its half switched (quarter wave) state provides one solution for wide angle fidelity. Such films exist and are commercialized by Fuji film. An alternative solution uses more widely available vertically aligned negative birefringent films. In low cost systems where the LCDs themselves compromise wide angle viewing, compensation films may be removed altogether. In an exemplary embodiment, the wideangle compensation films 232 may include a biaxially stretched film, which allows for manipulation of the out of plane birefringence. - As discussed above, the
polarization control panel 224 may include aretardation element 230 crossed with the half-wave electrically controlled birefringent (ECB) modulator (i.e. oriented at)-45°. In an embodiment, theretardation element 230 may be a quarter-wave (QW) retarder film for providing output circular polarization used by the eyewear. In an embodiment, its retardance is close to that of the eyewear (≈125 nm) plus the high voltage residual retardance of the LC cell (≈20 nm). In an exemplary embodiment, theretardation element 230 may include a biaxially stretched quarter wave film, which allows for manipulation of the out of plane birefringence. For optimal off-axis viewing performance, it is desirable to use a biaxial retarder film for the QW retarder, where Rth is around 300 nm, where -
- and is a figure commonly supplied by substrate manufacturers in the display industry. nx, ny, and nz are the refractive indices of the stretched film in the orthogonal x, y, and z directions, and d is the film thickness.
- The order of the various components that make up the
polarization control panel 224 is flexible. The compensation films are typically adjacent the LC cell but the order of the films in relation to the viewer may vary. In some embodiments, rigorous simulation of the optical output under the assumption of good index matching bonds and low front surface reflection slightly favor having theretardation element 230 being closest to the viewer. -
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of adisplay 400 having a twisted nematic (TN) laptop-like panel 420. One thing to note about the embodiment ofFIG. 4 is its exposure of the frontsurface retarder element 430, which is typically a polymeric film to possible environmental degradation and mechanical abuse. Humidity may attack polymeric films resulting in swelling and delamination. Additionally, such polymeric films are easily physically damaged through touching. For practical purposes, it is therefore be desirable to encapsulate all polymer films by the glass making up theLC modulating element 428 of thepolarization control panel 424. -
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment including a modification to the embodiment ofFIG. 4 . Thedisplay 500 ofFIG. 5 includes apolarization control panel 524 that has anLC modulation element 528 following theretardation element 530 in the light path; such an embodiment is more durable. To further protect theretardation element 530, edge portions of thedisplay 500 may be separated from the environment by a hermetic seal. Another possible advantage to the system inFIG. 5 is the improved (i.e. lower) cross-talk performance when the front surface has significant back reflections. This is the case when either low cost or no anti-reflection (AR) coating is applied to the external surface of an assembled display. Reflections that enable light to pass through the quarter wave (QW) layer and back reduce contrast and increase stereoscopic crosstalk. Analyzing eyewear may leak this reflected light into the wrong eye as it is orthogonal to the desired state. The most reflective surfaces of the embodiments ofFIG. 4 andFIG. 5 may be the internal indium tin oxide (ITO) surfaces of the LC modulator and the external surface. Reflections from the LCD may be re-polarized correctly by the ‘clean up’ polarizer 426, 526 and do not cause leakage while other surface reflections are negligible from index matched bonding. A practically desirable feature shown in the embodiment ofFIG. 5 is that it has both highly reflecting surfaces one side of theretardation element 530. - Another advantage of placing the
LC modulation element 528 outermost and facing the viewer is to potentially detect touch through cell deformation. Striping the LC conducting substrates' indium tin oxide (ITO) orthogonally could allow for accurate positional touch sensing often used by modern computer interfacing. Striped indium tin oxide (ITO) may be used for a scrolling stereoscopic display operation (see e.g., U.S. Pat. Pub. No. 2008/0316303, which is herein incorporated by reference). Touch and stereoscopic display capability with a single modulating element may be attractive. - This underlying concept of placing the
LC modulation element 528 on the outside of the LCD polarization control panel assembly for durability and performance reasons can also apply to other related stereoscopic display systems. These might include those using TV LCD panels, whose vertical output polarization minimizes or substantially eliminates the need for rotation and clean-up films. Other systems might utilize alternative quarter-wave analyzing eyewear having 45° rotated cinema circularly polarized lenses that match the native output polarization of twisted nematic LCDs. In such embodiments, thepolarization control panel 524 may include a single quarter wave (QW)film 530 and electrically controlled birefringent (ECB)LC modulation element 528 oriented at 0° (i.e. vertical) and 90° respectively. - Related embodiments to those above may include those with extra films for improved polarization control especially in off-normal directions.
- While various embodiments in accordance with the disclosed principles have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and are not limiting. Thus, the breadth and scope of the invention(s) should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the claims and their equivalents issuing from this disclosure. Furthermore, the above advantages and features are provided in described embodiments, but shall not limit the application of such issued claims to processes and structures accomplishing any or all of the above advantages.
- Additionally, the section headings herein are provided for consistency with the suggestions under 37 C.F.R.1.77 or otherwise to provide organizational cues. These headings shall not limit or characterize the invention(s) set out in any claims that may issue from this disclosure. Specifically and by way of example, although the headings refer to a “Technical Field,” such claims should not be limited by the language chosen under this heading to describe the so-called technical field. Further, a description of a technology in the “Background” is not to be construed as an admission that technology is prior art to any invention(s) in this disclosure. Neither is the “Summary” to be considered as a characterization of the invention(s) set forth in issued claims. Furthermore, any reference in this disclosure to “invention” in the singular should not be used to argue that there is only a single point of novelty in this disclosure. Multiple inventions may be set forth according to the limitations of the multiple claims issuing from this disclosure, and such claims accordingly define the invention(s), and their equivalents, that are protected thereby. In all instances, the scope of such claims shall be considered on their own merits in light of this disclosure, but should not be constrained by the headings herein.
Claims (20)
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US13/156,321 US20110298999A1 (en) | 2010-06-08 | 2011-06-08 | Stereoscopic liquid crystal display systems |
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KR20130084288A (en) | 2013-07-24 |
WO2011156531A3 (en) | 2012-04-12 |
CN103080814A (en) | 2013-05-01 |
WO2011156531A2 (en) | 2011-12-15 |
KR20130107265A (en) | 2013-10-01 |
WO2011156530A3 (en) | 2012-04-12 |
US9946088B2 (en) | 2018-04-17 |
CN103080813A (en) | 2013-05-01 |
WO2011156530A2 (en) | 2011-12-15 |
CN103080814B (en) | 2015-11-25 |
US20110298998A1 (en) | 2011-12-08 |
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