U.S. patent application number 12/811495 was filed with the patent office on 2010-11-18 for parallax reduction.
This patent application is currently assigned to DOLBY LABORATORIES LICENSING CORPORATION. Invention is credited to Vincet Kwong, Helge Seetzen, Gregory John Ward, Lorne Whitehead.
Application Number | 20100289836 12/811495 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 40459751 |
Filed Date | 2010-11-18 |
United States Patent
Application |
20100289836 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
Whitehead; Lorne ; et
al. |
November 18, 2010 |
PARALLAX REDUCTION
Abstract
Parallax in an optical device is reduced by apply one or a
combination of several disclosed techniques, including reduced
solid angle or increased collimation of light sources, increased
diffusion/scattering at an output of the device, and/or reflective
structures for collimation and containment of reflected light. The
techniques are advantageously applied to a backlight LCD display,
and particularly to high dynamic range dual modulation
displays.
Inventors: |
Whitehead; Lorne;
(Vancouver, CA) ; Kwong; Vincet; (Vancouver,
CA) ; Seetzen; Helge; (Westmount, CA) ; Ward;
Gregory John; (Berkeley, CA) |
Correspondence
Address: |
Dolby Laboratories Inc.
100 Potrero Avenue
San Francisco
CA
94103-4938
US
|
Assignee: |
DOLBY LABORATORIES LICENSING
CORPORATION
San Francisco
CA
|
Family ID: |
40459751 |
Appl. No.: |
12/811495 |
Filed: |
December 22, 2008 |
PCT Filed: |
December 22, 2008 |
PCT NO: |
PCT/US2008/088024 |
371 Date: |
July 1, 2010 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
|
|
61019803 |
Jan 8, 2008 |
|
|
|
Current U.S.
Class: |
345/690 |
Current CPC
Class: |
G02F 1/133606 20130101;
G02F 1/133605 20130101; G02F 1/133603 20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
345/690 |
International
Class: |
G09G 5/10 20060101
G09G005/10 |
Claims
1. A display, comprising a backlight comprising an array of light
sources and an array of substantially labertian reflectors wherein
each reflector surrounds one of the light sources.
2. The display according to claim 1, wherein the reflectors
comprise a flower structured reflector.
3. The display according to claim 1, wherein the reflectors
comprise a 6 sided flower reflectors.
4. The display according to claim 1, wherein the reflectors are
configured to re-reflect light originating from a light source
surrounded by the reflector and reflected back toward the backlight
from a panel of the display.
5. A display, comprising a locally dimmed LED backlight array and a
set of lenses configured to collimate light.
6. The display according to claim 5, wherein the lenses are mounted
directly to the LED backlights.
7. A high dynamic range high definition display, comprising a
locally dimmed LED backlight and a textured diffuser configured to
reduce parallax.
8. The high dynamic range high definition display according to
claim 7, wherein the textured diffuser is a surface textured
diffuser.
9. The high dynamic range high definition display according to
claim 8, wherein the surface texture is a sandblast type pattern
texture.
10. The high dynamic range high definition display according to
claim 8, wherein the textured diffuser is configured to cause
increased diffusion with less absorption than an equivalently
diffuse but thicker diffuser.
11. The high dynamic range high definition display according to
claim 8, wherein the textured diffuser is an acrylic diffuser that
has been textured by sandblasting.
12. A reduced parallax display, comprising a collimated backlight
structure with substantially lambertian reflectors.
13. The reduced parallax display according to claim 12, further
comprising a sandblast patterned textured diffuser.
14. The reduced parallax display according to claim 12, wherein the
collimated backlight structure comprises an array of light sources
each comprising a collimating lens.
15. The reduced parallax display according to claim 12, wherein the
collimated backlight structure comprises a locally dimmed LED
array.
16. The reduced parallax display according to claim 12, wherein the
reflectors comprise flower reflectors.
17. A locally dimmed high dynamic range display comprising a
backlight with a reduced solid angle and an increased diffusion and
scatter diffuser at an output of the display.
18. The locally dimmed high dynamic range display according to
claim 17, wherein the reduced sold angle is achieved via optics
configured to collimate light emitted from the backlight.
19. The locally dimmed high dynamic range display according to
claim 17, wherein the display has a contrast ratio that exceeds
1000:1.
20. The locally dimmed high dynamic range display according to
claim 17, wherein the backlight comprises an array of LEDs where
each LED is surrounded by a lambertian reflector configured to
re-reflect light originating from the surrounded LED and reflected
back towards the surrounded LED in a direction toward a front
panel.
Description
COPYRIGHT NOTICE
[0001] A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains
material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright
owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of
the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the
Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise
reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] 1. Field of Invention
[0003] The present invention relates to Parallax reduction.
[0004] 2. Discussion of Background
[0005] Dynamic range is the ratio of intensity of the highest
luminance parts of a scene and the lowest luminance parts of a
scene. For example, the image projected by a video projection
system may have a maximum dynamic range of 300:1.
[0006] The human visual system is capable of recognizing features
in scenes which have very high dynamic ranges. For example, a
person can look into the shadows of an unlit garage on a brightly
sunlit day and see details of objects in the shadows even though
the luminance in adjacent sunlit areas may be thousands of times
greater than the luminance in the shadow parts of the scene. To
create a realistic rendering of such a scene can require a display
having a dynamic range in excess of 1000:1. The term "high dynamic
range" means dynamic ranges of 800:1 or more.
[0007] Modern digital imaging systems are capable of capturing and
recording digital representations of scenes in which the dynamic
range of the scene is preserved. Computer imaging systems are
capable of synthesizing images having high dynamic ranges. However,
current display technology is not capable of rendering images in a
manner which faithfully reproduces high dynamic ranges.
[0008] Blackham et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,978,142 discloses a system
for projecting an image onto a screen. The system has first and
second light modulators which both modulate light from a light
source. Each of the light modulators modulates light from the
source at the pixel level. Light modulated by both of the light
modulators is projected onto the screen.
[0009] Gibbon et al., PCT application No. PCT/US01/21367 discloses
a projection system which includes a pre modulator. The pre
modulator controls the amount of light incident on a deformable
mirror display device. A separate pre-modulator may be used to
darken a selected area (e.g. a quadrant).
[0010] Whitehead et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,891,672, and related
patents and patent applications describe many techniques,
including, among others, the implementation and refinement of dual
modulated displays, wherein a modulated backlight (aka local
dimming) projects onto a front modulator (e.g., LCD) of a
display.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The present inventors have realized the need for a reduction
in parallax in displays and related optical equipment. Roughly
described, the invention comprises reducing parallax in a display
via a reduction in solid angle of a backlight and/or an increase in
diffusion/scattering at an output of the display. Various
alternatives for each are provided.
[0012] In one embodiment, the present invention comprises a display
comprising a backlight comprising an array of light sources and an
array of substantially labertian reflectors wherein each reflector
surrounds one of the light sources. The reflectors may comprise,
for example, a flower structured reflector (e.g., 6 sided flower
reflectors). The reflectors may comprise a structure that, for
example, is configured to re-reflect light originating from a light
source surrounded by the reflector and reflected back toward the
backlight from a panel of the display.
[0013] In another embodiment, the invention may comprise a display
comprising a locally dimmed LED backlight array and a set of lenses
configured to collimate light. The lenses may, for example, be
mounted directly to the LED backlights.
[0014] In another embodiment, the invention may comprise a high
dynamic range high definition display, comprising a locally dimmed
LED backlight and a textured diffuser configured to reduce
parallax. The textured diffuser may comprise, for example, a
surface textured diffuser. The surface texture may comprise, for
example, a sandblast type pattern texture. The textured diffuser
may be configured, for example, to cause increased diffusion with
less absorption than an equivalently diffuse but thicker diffuser.
Alternatively, the textured diffuser may comprise, for example, an
acrylic diffuser that has been textured by sandblasting.
[0015] In yet another embodiment, the present invention comprises a
reduced parallax display comprising a collimated backlight
structure with substantially lambertian reflectors. The invention
may further comprise a sandblast patterned textured diffuser. The
collimated backlight structure may comprise, for example, an array
of light sources each comprising a collimating lens. In one
exemplary alternative, the collimated backlight structure comprises
a locally dimmed LED array. In one embodiment, the reflectors
comprise flower reflectors.
[0016] In still yet another embodiment, the present invention
comprises a locally dimmed high dynamic range display comprising a
backlight with a reduced solid angle and an increased diffusion and
scatter diffuser at an output of the display. The reduced sold
angle may be achieved, for example, via optics configured to
collimate light emitted from the backlight. In one embodiment, the
display has a contrast ratio that exceeds 1000:1. In another
embodiment, the backlight comprises an array of LEDs where each LED
is surrounded by a lambertian reflector configured to re-reflect
light originating from a surrounded LED reflected back towards the
surrounded LED in a direction toward a front panel.
[0017] In other embodiments, the display or optical devices
accordin got the present invention may include electronics,
processors, or other devices for driving the light sources and
panels (e.g., LCD panels) so as to create images for display. Such
driving includes, for example, providing signals to drive the
display in a manner that efficiently produces the images without or
with reduced artifacts caused by either any source, including, for
example, a structure of the display and a scheme used to drive the
display.
[0018] The present invention in any of the forms described herein
may be embodied in one or more of a device, apparatus, method,
process, algorithm, apparatus, mechanism, or other forms.
[0019] In addition, various components of the present invention
including backlight or front modulator drive electronics may
represented in a computer program, data sequences, and/or control
signals, etc. and may be embodied as instructions stored by a
computer readable media or as instructions contained in an
electronic signal broadcast (or transmitted) at any frequency in
any medium including, but not limited to, wireless broadcasts, and
transmissions over copper wire(s), fiber optic cable(s), and co-ax
cable(s), etc.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of
the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the
same becomes better understood by reference to the following
detailed description when considered in connection with the
accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0021] FIG. 1 is an illustration of parallax;
[0022] FIG. 2 is an illustration of a reduction of parallax by
reducing the solid angle of the light source;
[0023] FIG. 3 is an illustration of a reduction of parallax by
additional diffusion;
[0024] FIG. 4 is an illustration of a reduction of parallax by
reducing the solid angle of the light source and by additional
diffusion;
[0025] FIG. 5 is an illustration of an LED Reflector Array; and
[0026] FIG. 6 is an illustration of using the LED reflector to
collimate the LED output.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0027] The present invention comprises a new process which improves
the viewing quality of certain devices by reducing parallax.
Preferably, the invention is applied to individually modulated,
direct-lit backlight display units which can greatly benefit from a
minimization of the amount of parallax they exhibit. The invention
may be embodied in any of the methods and structures described
herein which can be used individually, or in combination, to reduce
parallax.
[0028] Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference
numerals designate identical or corresponding parts, and more
particularly to FIG. 1 thereof, there is illustrated an LED light
source being viewed. As shown in FIG. 1, Parallax in a direct lit
backlight occurs when light from the light source exits the LCD in
areas where it is unwanted, due to line of sight effects.
[0029] The present invention relates to solutions for reducing
parallax, including two described now. The first involves reducing
the solid angle of the outgoing light from the light source. By way
of example, as shown in FIG. 2, a solid angle of outgoing light 210
is reduced to a reduced outgoing solid angle 220, that tends to
collimate the outgoing light. The amount of reduction of parallax
will depend on how much the solid angle is reduced (i.e. how much
the light source is collimated).
[0030] The second solution reduces parallax by removing the
directionality of light emitted at the exit surface of the
backlight unit. By way of example, as illustrated in FIG. 3, a
reduction of parallax by additional diffusion. Light passing
through LCD diffusers and films 310 in conventional backlight
displays still contain a significant amount of directionality upon
exiting the backlight unit. By adding more diffusion to the film
stack (e.g., additional diffusion diffuser 320), more scattering
will occur, leading to a reduction in parallax.
[0031] Ideally, a combination of the two solutions would provide
the best reduction of parallax. As shown in FIG. 4, an example of a
reduced outgoing solid angle 220 combined with additional diffusion
diffuser 320.
[0032] The inventors have experimentally determined three inventive
structures and methods for these two solutions. All three help
reduce parallax to varying degrees without substantially reducing
the efficiency of the backlight unit. Reducing parallax without
increasing light absorption is very important for maintaining the
brightness of the backlight unit. These three methods, when
combined, provide the best means of reducing parallax in a
direct-lit backlight unit.
[0033] The first solution involves collimation of the LED light
source. One possible method would be to use a collimation lens of
some sort mounted directly to the LED. A collimated LED (e.g., Cree
XRE7090) will help to reduce any parallax effects, simply due to
the fact that the solid angle of the output of the LED is reduced
for a collimated light source. It is this solid angle that is
responsible for parallax. The more collimated the LED, the more of
a reduction in parallax occurs. However, there is a practical limit
to the amount of collimation. If the source is too collimated, then
you will not get a uniform LED backlight for a given LED density.
Also, a completely collimated light source may not be the best
solution if brightness enhancement film (BEF) is present in the LCD
film stack. This is because BEF does not allow collimated light to
pass through.
[0034] The second solution involves the surface texturing of both
sides of the standard, thick, bulk scattering diffuser found in all
conventional direct CCFL backlight units. This surface texturing
provides additional diffusion and scattering, eliminating the
directionality component of the outgoing light. Because it is this
directionality that is responsible for parallax, eliminating or
reducing this directionality will correspondingly reduce
parallax.
[0035] A similar reduction in directionality could be accomplished
by using a thicker diffuser with more bulk scattering. However,
this thicker diffuser would substantially decrease the brightness
of the backlight unit because of increased absorption effects. The
textured diffuser (e.g., a standard acrylic diffuser which had been
textured by sandblasting) adds the extra diffusion necessary for
the reduction of parallax without such a significant added cost of
increased absorption.
[0036] The third solution uses a reflector structure surrounding
the LED. FIG. 5 illustrates one variation of an array 500 of such a
reflector structure 510.
[0037] The reflective surfaces of this structure are substantially
Lambertian in nature. It was observed that if the reflective
surfaces were substantially specular, then the edges of the
reflector could be clearly seen through the LCD films, which
negatively affect the visual uniformity of the display. The purpose
of these reflective surfaces is to collimate the light leaving the
LED.
[0038] It is also helpful to contain and re-collimate any light
that is reflected back by the LCD films. The net effect is to
reduce parallax by containing the light within a specific solid
angle relative to the light source, with the angle of the reflector
walls controlling the solid angle. This idea is demonstrated in the
FIG. 6 (which includes a side cut-away view of an individual
flower/flowered reflector 510). As shown in FIG. 6, an LED 610
without a reflector structure exhibits reflections 620. However,
FIG. 6 also illustrates an LED with a lambertian reflector 510 (one
side of the lambertian reflector is referenced by 640). In the
reflector, light output 630 does not show diffusion/scattering
associated with diffuser films both on transmission and reflection,
and does not show the scattering associated with the Lambertian
surface of the flower.
[0039] The present invention may be applied to LCD type High
Definition Televisions (HDTVs) and displays, any of which may also
be configured to produce High Dynamic Range (HDR) with contrast
ratios of greater than, for example, 1000:1. The invention may be
suitably adapted for LED or other backlight devices that
incorporate local dimming or any type of backlight modulation.
[0040] In describing preferred embodiments of the present invention
illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for
the sake of clarity. However, the present invention is not intended
to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to
be understood that each specific element includes all technical
equivalents which operate in a similar manner. For example, when
describing surface texturing via sand blasting, any other
equivalent process for texturing or materials having an equivalent
type of texture, function, or capability, whether or not listed
herein, may be substituted therewith. Furthermore, the inventors
recognize that newly developed technologies not now known may also
be substituted for the described parts and still not depart from
the scope of the present invention. All other described items,
including, but not limited to reflector structures (including
flower like structures), collimated LEDs (white or colored),
diffusers, light sources, etc should also be considered in light of
any and all available equivalents.
[0041] The present invention may suitably comprise, consist of, or
consist essentially of any of the elements, parts, or features as
described herein (e.g., more diffusion in stacked layers, textured
and/or collimated light sources, reflectors, reflector arrays), and
their equivalents. Further, the present invention illustratively
disclosed herein may be practiced in the absence of any element,
whether or not specifically disclosed herein. Obviously, numerous
modifications and variations of the present invention are possible
in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood
that within the scope of claims to be appended in a soon to be
filed utility patent application, the invention may be practiced
otherwise than as specifically described herein.
* * * * *