Mitsubishi Electric develops reversible LCD

February 18, 2004, 08:19 AM —  IDG News Service — 

Mitsubishi Electric Corp. on Tuesday unveiled a liquid crystal display (LCD) that can be viewed from both sides. The display, which the company says is a world first, was developed initially for use in clamshell-type cellular telephone handsets and could help make such telephones thinner and lighter.

At present, many clamshell-style handsets have two displays: a large main-display facing inwards and a smaller sub-display that faces outwards and is used to display basic information when the phone is closed and the main display out of view. Each of these displays typically consists of a glass LCD panel on which the image is shown and a backlight that sits behind the panel and projects light through it so the image can be clearly seen by viewers.

The displays are in a physically similar position inside the upper portion of the clamshell-case. However, each display can only be viewed from one side because the backlights restrict viewing from the reverse. A cross section of this part of the phone case would reveal a four-layer sandwich of components: two backlights positioned back-to-back in the center with their associated displays on the outer edge.

Mitsubishi Electric's new display incorporates a conventional LCD panel with newly designed backlights constructed in a three-layer sandwich in which the display sits at the center and the backlights are on the outer edge. The new backlights are transparent and so enable the single LCD panel at the center to be seen from both sides even though it is in the center of the sandwich. For viewing from the right, for example, the left-hand backlight transmits light through the panel and on through the right-hand backlight to the viewer.

Mitsubishi Electric has developed two variations of the reversible LCD and both were demonstrated Tuesday at the company's research and development center here in western Japan.

The first version allows a single image to be viewed from both sides of the same panel. The image isn't adjusted depending on the viewing direction, so from one side text appears correctly and from the other side it appears reversed. A second type gets over this problem by rapidly changing the image on the display in syncronization with each back light 120 times per second so that the same image, correctly displayed, is projected in each direction 60 times per second.

The display has three modes: front view, rear view and simultaneous view from both sides.

Development of first generation displays using the technology is nearing completition and with its unveiling Tuesday the company is beginning to look for potential clients. In addition to cellular telephones, the company anticipates other small portable devices, such as PDAs (personal digital assistants), could also benefit from the technology.

Because the display uses only one LCD panel, it is thinner and its cost is around two-thirds that of two separate displays, said the company. The use of the reversible display also means that the sub-display on a telephone can be as large as the main display. This is advantagous for cellular telephones that incorporate digital still-camera or video-camera functions because images can be easily viewed and recorded without having to open the telephone.

Mitsubishi Electric is not the only company that has been working on ways to reduce the amount of space taken up by the main and sub-displays in cellular telephones. South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. said last year that it had developed a display controller chip that is capable of supporting two displays. Conventional chips can only control a single display and that means the two displays in clamshell-style phones have needed two controller chips.

IDG News Service

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