May 19 2008
NEC LCD Technologies, together with its sales and marketing channel in the Americas, NEC Electronics America, Inc., today announced the successful development of a manufacturing technology that enables more flexible design of thin-film transistor (TFT) liquid crystal display (LCD) panels. The prototype design, a "heart-shaped," low-temperature polysilicon (LTPS) color TFT LCD module formed using two half-circular arcs and two straight lines, has a display width of 4.0 centimeters (cm), height of 3.6 cm and pixel pitch of 174 micrometers (146 pixels per inch). A presentation about the new technology, titled "A Non-Rectangular Heart-Shaped SOG-LCD," will be given at the Society for Information Display (SID) Symposium on Friday, May 23, 2008, from 9:00 a.m. to 10:20 a.m. in Petree Hall at the Los Angeles Convention Center. The module also will be on display in the NEC Electronics America booth (#235) at the SID Exhibition May 20 through 22.
NEC LCD Technologies’ new technology enables optimal arrangement of gate and souce lines in the pixel array and minimizes the overlaps between gate and source driver circuitry (*1), when the module is non-rectangular in shape. By applying its proprietary value-integrated TFT (VIT) technology and integrating the driver circuits into the module along the perimeter of the LCD glass, NEC LCD Technologies has simplified the interconnection scheme and substantially reduced the area needed to contain the wiring and interconnections between external circuits, thereby yielding a bezel as slim as 2.0 millimeters (mm) (*2).
Traditional display modules are rectangular in shape, since it is the simplest, most efficient and versatile shape for accommodating the pixel arrays. Recently LCD suppliers have started to introduce fairly simple non-rectangular LCD shapes, including circles, ellipses and rectangles with trimmed corners. The shapes have been fairly simple because the more complex the shape, the more difficult it is to accommodate the wiring patterns, resulting in thicker bezels and greater consumption of power. Displays with non-rectangular shapes are generally targeted to replace mechanical instrument gauges—such as the speedometers and tachometers found in cars—and other applications that require simple shapes.
NEC LCD Technologies’ new technology enables LCD modules to be designed with varied, more flexible shapes that can be adapted to embedded applications and also to nontraditional LCD applications. NEC LCD Technologies believes this development will stimulate the development of new and unique LCD applications.
*1: There is no overlap between the gate driver and source driver in the heart-shaped prototype
*2: The bezel size of the glass substrate, excluding the interconnection area for FPC and driver IC