Title of Invention

AN IMPROVED LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY DEVICE

Abstract The liquid Crystal Device which comprises (a) pair of transparent substrates held facing each other with a gap normally employed in such devices, (b) each substrate having on one of its surfaces a coating of a transparent electrically conducting material which serves as an electrode, (c) an additional layer of a coating of a polymer on the resulting substrate, (d) a dual frequency addrerssable nematic liquid crystal being filled in the gap between the coated surfaces of the substrates thereby forming a cell, and (e) the cell incorporated c c between a pair of crossed polarisers. t ~! The above device has the following advantages over the conventional TN-liquid crystal ~ display: (i) a wider and symmetric viewing angle, and (ii) a much faster response time and :" (iii) improved multiplexibility.
Full Text

An Improved Liquid Crystal Display Device
This invention pertains to an improved Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Device. More particularly the invention pertains to a dual-frequency addressed rubbing-free twisted nematic liquid crystal display device. The LCD industry is a multi-billion dollar industry with products ranging from simple watch displays to flat panel colour TV screens. At present, devices based on nematic liquid crystals (like the twisted-nematic (TN) device and its modification the super-twisted nematic (STN) device) dominate the world LCD market. The device described in the present invention has certain distinct advantages over the conventional TN device. The most important of these are (i) a much faster response time (about one to two orders faster) and (ii) a wider and more symmetric viewing angle than the usual TN device.
Nearly all commercial LCDs make use of nematic liquid crystals of rod-like molecules. (This particular invention does not relate to liquid crystals'of disc-shaped molecules, or discotic liquid crystals). The TN device consists of two parallel glass plates, separated from each other by means of spacers. The inner surfaces of the glass plates are coated with a thin
layer of transparent electrically conducting material such as indium tin oxide, with an
■ additional coating of a thin layer of polyimide. Macroscopic orientation of the liquid crystal *
director (or the preferred axis of orientation of the rod-like molecules) is achieved by prior
unidirectional rubbing of the polymide with cotton cloth or the like. The rubbing directions
are orthogonal for the two plates. The cell is then filled with a nematic liquid crystal. Owing
to the boundary conditions, the director is oriented along the rubbed direction on each glass
plate, and hence the director undergoes a twist of 90° on going from one plate to the other.
Polarizer sheets are attached to the outer surfaces of the glass plates. The axis of vibration (or

polarizing axis) of each polarizer sheet is parallel to the director axis at the plate to which it is attached. Unpolarized light is transformed into linearly polarized light by the polarizer fixed on the entrance side of the cell and emerges on the-exit side with the polarization axis rotated through 90°. The emergent light is transmitted by the second polarizer. Thus, in this configuration, the so-called "normally white mode", the display appears bright in the OFF state. The application of an electric field normal to the nematic film orients the liquid crystal molecules (of positive dielectric anisotropy, £||-ej.=Ae>0) with the director along the direction t of the applied field. In this ON state, the state of polarization of the incident light is not rotated by the liquid crystalline medium and the display appears dark. Keeping one polarizer parallel to and the second polarizer perpendicular to the rubbing direction results in a black appearance in the OFF state and bright appearance in the ON state. This is the so-called "normally black mode".
A non-contact alignment technique has been developed recently by exposing the polyimide coating to polarized UV radiation. This photoalignment technique may also be used instead of the rubbing method.
A disadvantage with the above TN device is that when it is viewed obliquely, there is a
marked loss of contrast between the ON and OFF states and even contrast inversion at higher
angle along the vertical direction. Figure 1 of the drawing accompanying this specification
*
shows a typical polar plot of the contrast ratio for a conventional TN device. Here, 9 and are referred to as the polar angle and the azimuthal angle respectively. The axes of the polarizer and analyser are normal to each other. The contrast ratio is highly asymmetric along the vertical axis.
Many methods have been proposed to improve the viewing angle, such as the use of an external retardation film [H.Mori, Jpn. 1 Appl Phys., 36, 1068-1072 (1997); H.Mori, Yoji

Itoh, Yosuke Nishiura, Taku Nakamura, Yukio' Shinaganea, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys., 36, 143-147 (1997); H.Ong, Mol. Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 320, 59-67 (1998)], a compensating LC layer [E.Wiener-Avnear, "Twisted nematic liquid crystal light valve with birefringence compensation", US Patent 4, 408, 839 (Oct. 11, 1983); E.Wiener-Avnear and J.Grinberg, US Patent 4, 466, 702 (1984); I.Kobayashi, U.Mitsuhiro, U.Ishihara, S.Yokoyama, K.Adachi, K.Fujimoto, H.Taneka, Y.Miyatake and S.Hotta, SID 1989, Digest of Technical Papers, P-l 14 (1989)], new operational modes like the multidomain, including the vertical alignment, mode [K.H.Yang, Jpn. J. Appl Phys., 31, L1603-1605 (1992) and J.Chen, P.J.Bos, D.R.Bryant, D.LJohnson, S.H.Jamal, J.P.Kelly, SID 95, Digest, 865-868 (1995)], the bend-alignment mode [PJ.Bos and K.R.Kochler/Beran, Mol. Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 113, 329-339 (1984)], the in-plane switching mode [G.Baur, R.Kiefer, H.Klausmann and F.Windseheid, Liquid Crystal Today, 5, 13-14 (1995); M-Oh-e, M.Yoneya and K.Kondo, J: Appl. Phys., 82, 528-535 (1997); S.H.Lu, H.Y.Kim, I.C.Park, B.G.Rho, J.S.Park, H.S.Park and C.H.Lu, Appl. Phys. Lett., 71, 2851-2853 (1997)] and the amorphous TN-LCD mode [Y.Toko, T.Sugiyama, K.Katoh, Y.Iimura and S.Kobayashi, SID 93 Digest, 622-625 (1993); J.Appl. Phys., 74, 2071-75 (1993); K.Katoh and S.Kobayashi, Display Devices, 26-28 (1993)].
Of these, the so-called amorphous TN-LCD is worthy of note as it involves a relatively simple fabrication process and has a wide and symmetric viewing angle. The liquid
*
crystal material used is a nematic doped with a chiral-molecule, the concentration of the dopant being adjusted to give a 90° twist of the director in the cell. A polymer film is coated on the transparent conducting substrates but no rubbing is done. The non-rubbed polymer film is optically isotropic. Thus in the OFF state the nematic director is parallel to the surface of each substrate, but randomly oriented in the plane of the substrate. In the ON state, the director is normal to the substrates. This device gives an improved viewing angle characteristic and is free from contrast inversion.

Furthermore, it can be pointed out that the traditional TN - LCDs have been fabricated by using mechanical rubbing of the polyimide layer to align LC molecules, but this technique generates dust and electrostatic charges. This is a very serious drawback as it will sometime destroy thin-film transistors (TFTs) for active matrix driven TN-LCDs. It is very essential then to adopt rubbing free technologies in order to improve the production yield and make the fabrication process simple and cost effective.
Another major disadvantage with the conventional TN device is that its electrooptic response is rather, slow. Typically, with a cell gap of about 8jim, the switch-off time, TOFF (i.e. the time required to attain 90% transmission starting from the dark state) is about 30ms. This is a serious drawback especially when one wants to use the device for rapidly addressed multiplexed displays.
Further, the present day colour TFT- LCDs run in TN mode. One of the key feature TFT-LCDs should possess is the high speed response time suitable for the motion video for it . to cut into the giant CRT market.
Therefore, there is a necessity to develop a new simple- matrix LCD with a very fast response time.
The main object of the present invention is to provide a rubbing free device which has a much faster response, and at the same time has a wide and symmetric viewing angle.
The present invention describes a dual-frequency addressable amorphous TN-LCD. It is well established that the response time of the dual-frequency addressed TN display is much faster than the conventional (single frequency) TN-LCD [M.Schadt, Mol. Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 89, 77-92 (1982); I.C.Koo and S.T.Wu, "Optics and Nonlinear Optics of Liquid Crystals", published by World Scientific Publishers Co., Singapore; W.Haase, "Side chain liquid crystal polymers", Ch.ll, Ed. By C.B.McArdle, Published by Chapman and Hall, New York; H.Kitzerow, Mol. Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 321,457-472 (1998)]. In addition, it has been shown that in dual frequency addressed TN-LCDs the multiplexibility increases by a factor of more than

30 compared with the conventional addressing* [M.Schadt, Mol Cryst. Liq. Cryst., 89, 77-92 (1982)]. In the present invention a dual frequency addressable nematic LC is used in an amorphous TN-LCD configuration. It then turns out that very fast response time as well as a wide viewing angle can be obtained.
The dual-frequency addressable nematic LC material used in the present invention has the following properties. In the nematic phase, the sign of the dielectric anisotropy (As) depends on the frequency. £or low frequencies, Ae is positive and the molecules align parallel to the direction of the applied field of sufficient strength. For high frequencies, As becomes negative and the molecules align perpendicular to the direction of the applied field. In other words, there is a cross-over frequency (fc) at which Ae changes sign. Thus it is possible to align the molecules either parallel or perpendicular to the field depending on whether ffc respectively. The device may use any material having these properties, as for example, pure compounds like the 4th, 6th and 8th members of the homologous series 4--aIkyloxybenzoyloxy-4'-cyanoazobenzene (nOBCAB with n=4, 6 and 8) and the commercially available dielectric switching materials [ZLI-2461, Ml mixture (Merck), RO-TN-2851 (Roche), EK11650 (Eastman Kodak) ].
The compound 60BCAB exhibits the following sequence of transitions in the cooling
mode Isotropic2750C Nematic1270cmectic Ax 900rystal. The cross-over
frequency fc is 200 kHz at 130°C, the temperature at which the performance of the devite has been evaluated. We have, as another example used a commercially available dielectric switching material (2F-3333, Rolic) which exhibits a room temperature nematic phase, in the present experiments to demonstrate the principle of operation of the devices. This material is a multicomponent mixture using the four- ring ester



"(c) an additional layer of a coating of a polymer on the resulting substrate
(d) a dual-frequency addressable nematic liquid crystal being filled in the gap between the coated surfaces of the substrates thereby forming a cell and
(e) the cell incorporated between a pair of crossed polarizers.
According to an embodiment of the invention transparent materials such as glass, plastic, or such other material may be used as a substrate.
According to another embodiment of the invention the resulting substrates are coated with silica for its use as a barrier layer to prevent the leaching of ions from the glass to the liquid crystal material
According to still another embodiment of the invention the resulting substrates incorporate regular pattern of red, green and blue colur filters corresponding to the pixel pattern of the colour matrix TN disply
According to still another embodiment of the invention electrically conducting material selected from Indium Tin Oxide, Tin Oxide is used.
According to still another embodiment of the invention the resulting substrates are coated with an additional layer of polymer selected from polyimides, polyamides etc.to be used as the alignment layer
According to yet another embodiment of the invention the substrates are spaced, apart by employing spacers such as polyethyleneterephthalate films, polyimide films, glass microspheres etc.
According to an embodiment of the invention the dual frequency addressable nematic material such as the pure compounds like the 4th, 6th and 8th members of the homologous series 4-alkyloxybenzoyloxy-4'-cyanoazobenzene, and commercially

available dielectric swithching materials [ZLl 2461, Ml Mixture (Merck), RO-TN 2851 (Roche), EK11650 (Eastman Kodak), mixture 2F-3333 (Rolic)] are employed.
According to still another embodiment of the invention an optical reflector may be
provided at the bottom of the device for its use in a reflecting mode.
The'device is fabricated as explained below. The surfaces of the glass plates were
coated with transparent electrically conducting material, such as Indium Tin Oxide (ITO). An
additional layer of polyimide was then coated on the ITO coated substrates. No rubbing was
done. The coated surfaces of the two substrates are held facing each other with a gap of about
8pm between them, defined by means of non-conducting spacers. The gap is then filled with either the commercially available dual-frequency mixture 2F-3333 or with the pure compound 60BCAB. In each case, the dielectric switching material is doped with the chiral dopant. The concentration of the chiral dopant is adjusted so as to be d/p = l/4, where d and p stand for the cell thickness and the chiral pitch. This gives rise to a 90° twist of the director in the cell The ' fabricated cell is positioned between crossed polarizers.
The invention is desctribed in detail in the Examples given below which are meant only to illustrate the invention and therefore should not be construed to limit the scope of the present invention.
Example 1
The surfaces of the glass plates were coated with Indium Tin Oxide (ITQ ), a transparent electrically conducting material. An additional layer of polyimide (Liquicoat ®PI ZLI -2650, Merck) is then coated on the ITO coated substrates. No rubbing was done. The coated surfaces of the two substrates are held facing each other with a gap of 8jam between them, defined by means of non-conducting spacers. The gap is then filled with the commercially available dual-frequency nematic mixture (2F-3333, Rolic) which is doped with a chiral dopant (CM-9209F, Rolic). The concentration of the chiral dopant is adjusted to

0.2% by weight to give a 90° twist of the director in the cell. The mixture is filled into the cell in the isotropic phase. The thus fabricated cell is positioned between crossed polarizers.
Example 2 The surfaces of the glass plates were coated with Indium Tin Oxide (ITO ), a transparent electrically conducting material. An additional layer of polyimide (Liquicoat ®PI ZLI -2650, Merck) is then coated on the ITO coated substrates. No rubbing was done. The
coated surfaces of the two substrates are held facing each other with a gap of 8jim between
... ^
• them, defined by means of non-conducting spacers. The gap is then filled with the dual frequency addressable compound 60BCAB doped with a chiral compound, 4-[4-(S-Methylheptyloxy)benzoyIoxy]-4-cyanoazobenzene, which exhibits the following sequence of transitions Isotropic—183 ° Cholestric ... 178 °. smectic A —77 ° Crystal. The concentration of the chiral dopant is adjusted to 1% by weight to give a 90° twist of the director in the cell. The mixture is filled into the cell in the nematic phase. The thus fabricated cell is positioned between crossed polarizers.
The two devices described in Examples 1& 2 are utilised as the test devices. The results of the investigation carried out using the device 1 fabricated according to the Example
1 which is designated as Device 1 and using the device 2 fabricated according to the Example
2 which is designated as Device 2 are given below.
Device 1 To study the electro-optic response time, an AC voltage of constant amplitude, either sine or square in shape was applied to the sample, and the frequency switched between flow-1 kHz and fhjgh=20kHz (As
during this switching is shown in figure 3. The time required for this switching, xon (i.e. the time required to reach 10% of transmission from the bright state) is 1.2ms. Switching the frequency from f|OW to fhjgh leads to a change "from a dark to a bright state and the corresponding electro-optic response curve is shown in figure 4. The time required for this switching Toff, is 550. As shown in figure 5, both x0n and x0ff decrease with increasing voltage.
To estimate they improvement of this dual-frequency driving scheme over the conventional single frequency scheme, the performance of the TN-LCD device with the single frequency driving has been obtained. The electro-optic responses obtained in the ON and OFF states by driving the device with a voltage of 60 V,ms > 1 kHz sine wave pulse of 0.5 seconds duration with a repetition rate of 2Hz are shown in figures 6 and 7 respectively. The values of Ton and T0ff extracted from these figures are 1:2ms and 110 ms respectively. Thus the dual frequency addressing results in 200 times faster switch-off time as compared to the ' conventional single frequency addressing scheme.
The polar plot of the contrast ratio between the intensities in the ON and OFF states for the device of the present invention is given in figure 8. The advantage of the device is clear from the fact that the curve for the contrast ratio is symmetric along the vertical and horizontal directions for a fixed value of 8. The decrease in the contrast ratio at oblique viewing angles midway between the axes of the polarizers does not arise from the optics of the LC material. It is due to the imperfect light blocking property of the crossed polarizers at oblique angles (see e.g., M.Oh-E, M.Yoneya, M.Ohta and K.Kondo, Liquid Crystals, 22, 391-400 (1997); H.Bock, Appl. Phys. Lett., 73, 2905-2907 (1998)).
Device 2
To study the electro-optic response time, an AC voltage of constant amplitude, either sine or square in shape was applied to the sample, and the frequency switched between fiow=10kHz (Ae>0) and fhjgh~600kHz (Ae
for the device is shown in figure 9. The regions marked "fiow" and "fogi," represent the time duration over which the frequency of the applied voltage (30 Vrms) was 10 kHz (f|OW) and 600 kHz (fhigh) respectively. If the operating frequency is changed from fnjg„ to f|OW, the device switches from a bright state to a dark state. An enlarged view of the electro-optic response during this switching is shown in figure 10. The time required for this switching, Ton (i.e. the time required to reach 10% of transmission from the bright state) is 50 jas. Switching the frequency from fiow to f^ leads.to a change from a dark to a bright state and the corresponding electro-optic response curve is shown in figure 11. The time required for this switching x0ff, is 300jas. As shown in figure 12, both Ton and x0ff decrease with increasing voltage.
To estimate the improvement of this dual-frequency driving scheme over the conventional single frequency scheme, the performance of the TN-LCD device with the single frequency driving has been obtained. The electro-optic responses obtained in the ON and OFF states at the same temperarure (130 °C) by driving the device with a voltage of amplitude30 Vans and frequency 10 kHz with a pulse duration of 0.5 seconds at a repetition rate of 0.5 s"1 are shown in figures 13 and 14 respectively. The values of xon and x0ff extracted from these figures are 50 jas and 60 ms respectively. Thus the dual frequency addressing results in 200 times faster switch-off time as compared to the conventional single frequency addressing scheme.
The polar plot of the contrast ratio between the intensities in the ON and OFF states for the device of the present invention is given in figure 15. The advantage of the device is clear from the fact that the curve for the contrast ratio is symmetric along the vertical and horizontal directions for a fixed value of 9. The decrease in the contrast ratio at oblique viewing angles midway between the axes of the polarizers does not arise from the optics of the LC material and as mentioned earlier, it is due to the imperfect light blocking property of the crossed polarizers at oblique angles.

comparison ot the results and Inferencer
From the investigations performed on the two test devices, it is clear that the dual frequency addressing results in 200 times faster switch-off time as compared to the single frequency addressing scheme. However, owing to the difference in the physical properties of the two nematic LC mixtures used in the device cell, there is the difference in the operating frequency
and the voltage. Also;-as the device 2 is operating at very high temperature (i.e., 130 °C) has a faster response time compared to the room temperature operating device 1. On comparing figures 8 and 15 with figure 1, it is evident that the viewing angle cone has widened and looks more symmetric with the technique adopted in the present invention. However, the contrast ratio for the device 2 is seen to be quite less compared to that of the the device 1 while the contrast ratio of the device 1 is almost the same as that observed for the conventional TN-LCD. The reason for this is that the nematic LC mixture is not filled into the device 2 in the isotropic phase, as the clearing tempereature is very high (275 °C) while the device cell 1 is filled by the nematic LC mixture in the isotropic phase as its clearing temperature is quite low (68 °C). It is known that filling the LC in the nematic phase into the cell with the nonrubbed polyimide films results in a nonuniform LC molecular alignment mainly due to the flow alignment [Y.Toko, T.Sugiyama, K.Katoh, Y.Iimura and S.Kobayashi, J.Appl Phys., 74, 2071-75 (1993)].
Advantages of the present invention
• The device has a very much faster response time (about 200 times faster) than the conventional TN-LCD device and hence can be made use for the fabrication of simple matrix TN - LCDs with fast response time.
• The device has a much wider and more uniform viewing angle than the conventional TN-LCD. Hence the device is economical as no additional retarders or compoensators or

complicated electrode patterns are needed to widen the viewing angle of the conventional TN - LCDs.
The device is not only easy to fabricate but also improves the yield as the mechanical rubbing of the polymer is avoided.
The device has high multiplexing capabilities because of the dual frequency addressing



We claim.
1. A liquid Crystal Device which comprises
(a) pair of transparent substrates held facing each other with a gap normally employed in such devices
(b) each substrate having on one of its surfaces a coating of a transparent electrically conducting material which serves as an electrode
(c) an additional layer of a coating of a polymer on the resulting substrate
(d) a dual frequency addrerssable nematic liquid crystal being filled in the gap between the coated surfaces of the substrates thereby forming a cell and
(e) the cell incorporated between a pair of crossed polarisers

2. A device as claimed in claim 1 wherein the transparent substrate such as glass plates, Plastic is used
3. A device as claimed in claims 1&2 wherein materials such as Indium Tin Oxide, Tin Oxide is used as the transparent electrically conducting material
4. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 3 wherein each substrate has on one of its surfaces a coating of a material like silica and the like as barrier layer in order to prevent leaching of ions from the substrates into the liquid crystal
5. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 4 wherein the surface of the resulting substrate is
coated with polymer selected from polyimides, polyamides etc.
*
6. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 5 wherein the coated surfaces of the substrates are held
* facing each other with a gap of about &\xm
7. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 6 wherein the substrates are spaced apart by employing
spaces such as polyethylene terephthalate films, polyimide films, glass microspheres or
bars etc.
8. , A device as claimed in claims 1 to 7 wherein the dual frequency addressable liquid crystal
material employed has, in the nematic phase, the sign of the dielectric anisotropy (Ae)

depending on the frequency for low frequencies, Ae is positive and the molecules align parallel to the direction of the applied field of sufficient strength. For high frequencies, Ae becomes negative and the molecules align perpendicular to the direction of the applied field.
9. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 8 wherein the commercially available ZLI 2461, Ml
mixture (IVlerck), RO-TN 2851 (Roche), EK 11650 (Eastman Kodak), Mixture 2F- 3333
tli th th
(Roiic) and pure compounds like the 4 , 6 and 8 members of the homologous series 4-alkoxybenzoyioxy-4'-cyanoazobenzene is used as the dual frequency addressable nematic material
10. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 7 wherein the dual frequency addressable nematic
material is doped in a chiral dopant such as CM-9209F (Rolic)
11. A device as claimed in claim 8 wherein the concentration of the dopant is adjusted to give
a 90 degree twist to the director in the cell
' 12. A device as claimed in claims 1 to 9 wherein an optical reflector is provided at the bottom of the device for its use in a reflecting mode 13. A Liquid Crystal Device useful for high multiplexing, wide viewing angle and faster response disply substantiaslly as herein described with reference to the Examples and figs. 2 to 15 of the drawing accompanying the specification.


Documents:

126-mas-2000-abstract.pdf

126-mas-2000-claims duplicate.pdf

126-mas-2000-claims original.pdf

126-mas-2000-correspondance others.pdf

126-mas-2000-correspondance po.pdf

126-mas-2000-description complete duplicate.pdf

126-mas-2000-description complete original.pdf

126-mas-2000-description complete provisinal.pdf

126-mas-2000-drawings.pdf

126-mas-2000-form 1.pdf

126-mas-2000-form 19.pdf

126-mas-2000-form 3.pdf

126-mas-2000-form 5.pdf


Patent Number 206304
Indian Patent Application Number 126/MAS/2000
PG Journal Number 26/2007
Publication Date 29-Jun-2007
Grant Date 23-Apr-2007
Date of Filing 18-Feb-2000
Name of Patentee CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH
Applicant Address P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 VENKAT NAGA RAJA CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
2 SUBBARAO KRISHNA PRASAD CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
3 SIVARAMAKRISHNA CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
4 CHANNABASAVESHWAR VEERAPPA YELAMAGGAD CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
5 UMA SIDDHALINGAYYA HIREMATH CENTRE FOR LIQUID CRYSTAL RESEARCH P.O.BOX 1329,JALAHALLI,BANGALORE-560 013
PCT International Classification Number G02F01/133
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA