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E-Paper Displays Video

A new type of MEMS-based electronic paper for cell phones is fast enough to show video.

By Duncan Graham-Rowe

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

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A novel electronic-paper display developed by Qualcomm can deliver high-quality video images, making it more versatile than other e-paper technologies. The display employs microscopic mechanical switches that turn pixels on and off at rates more than fast enough to display video.

Mechanical displays: Micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) devices make it possible to display colored video images on a novel electronic-paper display.
Credit: Qualcomm MEMS Technologies
Multimedia
•  See how full-color video images are displayed on an electronic-paper display.

The first versions of the display will be monochrome; one is featured in an Audiovox Bluetooth headset, released this week. A two-color display will be used next year in a phone made by the Chinese phone company Hisense. Full-color versions will follow.

Like ordinary paper, e-paper displays are designed to be reflective, making them much easier to view in a range of different lighting conditions, such as bright sunlight, than are traditional displays, such as backlit LCDs. The other main advantage is that they are bi-stable, meaning that once they have been switched to a state, they will hold that state without requiring an electrical current. The benefit of this is that they use considerably less power. These features make them ideal for applications such as signs and electronic books, including Sony's eBook reader.

In most e-paper displays, however, pixels switch on and off too slowly to display video, says James Cathey, vice president of business development for Qualcomm MEMS Technologies, based in San Diego. Indeed, other e-paper technologies can take longer than half a second to respond. Such slow switching can lead to "ghosting," in which moving subjects blur. In contrast, pixels in the new Qualcomm display can switch in just tens of microseconds--fast enough to produce sharp video images. Cathey says that this ability to use the displays for video could make e-paper less of a niche technology and suitable for more mainstream multimedia displays for mobile devices like cell phones.

The new display technology uses a novel method for producing color. The method employs mechanisms that are similar to the ones that give films of oil on water a colorful sheen, says André Arsenault, a chemist at the University of Toronto, and cofounder and chief technology officer of Opalux, a Toronto-based e-paper startup.

Story continues below

When light hits a film of oil, it splits, with some reflecting and the rest passing through the oil before being reflected off the surface of the water. The light reflecting off the oil is slightly out of phase with the light reflecting from the water. As a result, light waves interfere with each other, with some wavelengths being reinforced and others canceled out. The distance between these surfaces determines which colors are amplified and which are canceled. Films of oil of a certain thickness, for example, would amplify green light while canceling out red and blue light, making the oil appear green.

In the display, each pixel consists of several color-specific cells that mimic the film of oil on water. Each cell is made up of two reflective layers, one on top of the other. The top layer is only partially reflective, allowing some light to pass through it and bounce off the second surface. In each cell, the gap between these surfaces is spaced so that constructive interference occurs for only one specific range of wavelengths, causing them to amplify a single primary color while canceling out other colors. To create a full-color display, each pixel is made up of three different types of cells, each having a different-size gap between the layers that reflects red, green, or blue.

Comments

  • Video paper
    This could be a real improvement to modern technology.  Think - tree-huggers can't complain anymore because one piece of paper is now the whole book.  Virtual reality takes a step forward with 3-D, bendable displays.  Wrist watches adapt to the shape of your wrist.  Your laptop can be rolled up.  Just think of all the possible uses.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    Raistlin
    11/01/2007
    Posts:9
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • static is relative
    In many video scenes, much of the display is taken up with unchanging or slow-changing background.  There is also the question of timing of changes; even brief intervals of stable input would add up.

    And it would vary considerably by what was being displayed; talking heads in a studio: mostly static; action movie: mostly changing. 
    Rate this comment: 12345

    Brian H
    11/11/2007
    Posts:28
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
  • Qualcomm can do better
    Qualcomm is behind many of the cell phone standards, and owns many patents.  With a little extra effort, it's likely Qualcomm could create a single MEMS device that can tune any visible wavelength?  This could provide pixel resolution advantages over RGB display technologies.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    carlii
    02/10/2008
    Posts:26
    Avg Rating:
    4/5

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