Pei-Yi Lai Lee, Ya-Wen Yang, Sih-Han Li, Jian-Jhih Sun, T. Y. Hung, Chih-Wen Lu, Yen-Hsiang Fang, W. Kuo, Li-Chun Huang, G. Su, Poki Chen
{"title":"一个1280 x 720微型led显示驱动器与10位电流模式脉宽调制","authors":"Pei-Yi Lai Lee, Ya-Wen Yang, Sih-Han Li, Jian-Jhih Sun, T. Y. Hung, Chih-Wen Lu, Yen-Hsiang Fang, W. Kuo, Li-Chun Huang, G. Su, Poki Chen","doi":"10.1109/A-SSCC53895.2021.9634720","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Micro-light-emitting diode (micro-LED) displays are the most promising next-generation displays that use tiny LEDs acting as pixels [1–2]. Micro-LED displays are considerably brighter than are organic LED displays, which makes micro-LED displays suitable for head-up display (HUD), virtual-reality (VR), and augmented-reality (AR) applications [3]. A mass transfer technology is used to transfer a micro-LED array from epitaxy to a Si substrate. Pulse width modulation (PWM) is generally employed to generate gray levels in these arrays [4]. Micro-LED display drivers with voltage-mode PWM have strong driving ability but poor display uniformity. By contrast, current-mode PWM is a suitable driving method for achieving display uniformity. However, for high-resolution micro-LED displays, a large number of pixels must be connected to the data line, which creates a large capacitive load on the data line. A micro-LED consumes only tens of microamperes of current; thus, designing a display driver that uses a small current to drive a high-resolution and high-frame-rate display with current-mode PWM is challenging. In this paper, a precharge scheme and a pixel circuit with two transistors and one LED (2T1D) are proposed to solve the aforementioned issue. A $1280 \\times 720$ micro-LED display driver with 10-bit current-mode PWM was designed and fabricated in this study. Furthermore, a micro-LED array was successfully integrated into the designed display driver chip, which verified the feasibility of the designed display driver.","PeriodicalId":286139,"journal":{"name":"2021 IEEE Asian Solid-State Circuits Conference (A-SSCC)","volume":"41 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A 1280 x 720 Micro-LED Display Driver with 10-Bit Current-Mode Pulse Width Modulation\",\"authors\":\"Pei-Yi Lai Lee, Ya-Wen Yang, Sih-Han Li, Jian-Jhih Sun, T. Y. Hung, Chih-Wen Lu, Yen-Hsiang Fang, W. Kuo, Li-Chun Huang, G. Su, Poki Chen\",\"doi\":\"10.1109/A-SSCC53895.2021.9634720\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Micro-light-emitting diode (micro-LED) displays are the most promising next-generation displays that use tiny LEDs acting as pixels [1–2]. Micro-LED displays are considerably brighter than are organic LED displays, which makes micro-LED displays suitable for head-up display (HUD), virtual-reality (VR), and augmented-reality (AR) applications [3]. A mass transfer technology is used to transfer a micro-LED array from epitaxy to a Si substrate. Pulse width modulation (PWM) is generally employed to generate gray levels in these arrays [4]. Micro-LED display drivers with voltage-mode PWM have strong driving ability but poor display uniformity. By contrast, current-mode PWM is a suitable driving method for achieving display uniformity. However, for high-resolution micro-LED displays, a large number of pixels must be connected to the data line, which creates a large capacitive load on the data line. A micro-LED consumes only tens of microamperes of current; thus, designing a display driver that uses a small current to drive a high-resolution and high-frame-rate display with current-mode PWM is challenging. In this paper, a precharge scheme and a pixel circuit with two transistors and one LED (2T1D) are proposed to solve the aforementioned issue. A $1280 \\\\times 720$ micro-LED display driver with 10-bit current-mode PWM was designed and fabricated in this study. 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A 1280 x 720 Micro-LED Display Driver with 10-Bit Current-Mode Pulse Width Modulation
Micro-light-emitting diode (micro-LED) displays are the most promising next-generation displays that use tiny LEDs acting as pixels [1–2]. Micro-LED displays are considerably brighter than are organic LED displays, which makes micro-LED displays suitable for head-up display (HUD), virtual-reality (VR), and augmented-reality (AR) applications [3]. A mass transfer technology is used to transfer a micro-LED array from epitaxy to a Si substrate. Pulse width modulation (PWM) is generally employed to generate gray levels in these arrays [4]. Micro-LED display drivers with voltage-mode PWM have strong driving ability but poor display uniformity. By contrast, current-mode PWM is a suitable driving method for achieving display uniformity. However, for high-resolution micro-LED displays, a large number of pixels must be connected to the data line, which creates a large capacitive load on the data line. A micro-LED consumes only tens of microamperes of current; thus, designing a display driver that uses a small current to drive a high-resolution and high-frame-rate display with current-mode PWM is challenging. In this paper, a precharge scheme and a pixel circuit with two transistors and one LED (2T1D) are proposed to solve the aforementioned issue. A $1280 \times 720$ micro-LED display driver with 10-bit current-mode PWM was designed and fabricated in this study. Furthermore, a micro-LED array was successfully integrated into the designed display driver chip, which verified the feasibility of the designed display driver.