Field emission display

Field emission display

A field emission display (FED) is a display technology that incorporates flat panel display technology that uses large-area field electron emission sources to provide electrons that strike colored phosphor to produce a color image as a electronic visual display. In a general sense, a FED consists of a matrix of cathode ray tubes, each tube producing a single sub-pixel, grouped in threes to form red-green-blue (RGB) pixels. FEDs combine the advantages of CRTs, namely their high contrast levels and very fast response times, with the packaging advantages of LCD and other flat panel technologies. They also offer the possibility of requiring less power, about half that of an LCD system.

After considerable time and effort in the early and mid-2000s, Sony's FED efforts started winding down in 2009 as LCD became the dominant technology.[1] In January 2010, AU Optronics announced that it acquired essential FED assets from Sony and intends to continue development of the technology. [2]

FEDs are closely related to another developing display technology, the surface-conduction electron-emitter display, or SED, differing primarily in details of the electron emission system. In August 2010, Canon announced they were shutting down their joint effort to develop SEDs commercially, signalling the end of development efforts.[3]

Contents

Operation

FED display operates like a conventional cathode ray tube (CRT) with an electron gun that uses high voltage (10 kV) to accelerate electrons which in turn excite the phosphors, but instead of a single electron gun, a FED display contains a grid of individual nanoscopic electron guns.

A FED screen is constructed by laying down a series of metal stripes onto a glass plate to form a series of cathode lines. Photolithography is used to lay down a series of rows of switching gates at right angles to the cathode lines, forming an addressable grid. At the intersection of each row and column a small patch of emitters are deposited, typically using methods developed from inkjet printers. The metal grid is laid on top of the switching gates to complete the gun structure.[4]

A high voltage-gradient field is created between the emitters and a metal mesh suspended above them, pulling electrons off the tips of the emitters. This is a highly non-linear process and small changes in voltage will quickly cause the number of emitted electrons to saturate. The grid can be individually addressed but only the emitters located at the crossing points of the powered cathode and gate lines will have enough power to produce a visible spot, and any power leaks to surrounding elements will not be visible. [4] The non-linearity of the process allows avoidance of active matrix addressing schemes – once the pixel lights up, it will naturally glow for some time. Non-linearity also means that the brightness of the sub-pixel is pulse-width modulated to control the number of electrons being produced,[4] like in plasma displays.

The grid voltage sends the electrons flowing into the open area between the emitters at the back and the screen at the front of the display, where a second accelerating voltage additionally accelerates them towards the screen, giving them enough energy to light the phosphors. Since the electrons from any single emitter are fired toward a single sub-pixel, the scanning electromagnets are not needed.[4]

Disadvantages

Just like any other displays with individually addressable sub-pixels, FED displays can potentially suffer from manufacturing problems that will result in dead pixels. However, the emitters are so small that many "guns" can power a sub-pixel, the screen can be examined for dead emitters and brightness corrected by increasing the pulse width to make up for the loss through increased emissions from the other emitters feeding the same pixel

The efficiency of the field emitters is based on the extremely small radii of the tips, but this small size renders the cathodes susceptible to damage by ion impact. The ions are produced by the high voltages interacting with residual gas molecules inside the device.

FED display requires a vacuum to operate, so the display tube has to be sealed and mechanically robust. However, since the distance between the emitters and phosphors is quite small, generally a few millimeters, the screen can be mechanically reinforced by placing spacer strips or posts between the front and back face of the tube.[4]

FEDs require high vacuum levels which are difficult to attain: the vacuum suitable for conventional CRTs and vacuum tubes is not sufficient for long term FED operation. Intense electron bombardment of the phosphor layer will also release gas during use.[5]

Competing technologies

CRT

FEDs eliminate much of the electrical complexity of a CRT, including the heated filaments in the electron gun and the electromagnets used to steer the beam, and are thus much more power efficient than a CRT of similar size.

LCD

Flat-panel LCD displays use a bright light source and filter out half of the light with a polarizer, and then filter most of the light to produce red green and blue (RGB) sources for the sub-pixels. That means that only 1/6 (or less in practice) of the light being generated at the back of the tube reaches the screen, at best. In most cases the LCD itself then filters out additional light in order to change the brightness of the sub-pixels and produce a color gamut. So in spite of using extremely efficient light sources like cold cathode fluorescent lamps or high-power white LEDs, the overall efficiency of an LCD display is not very high. Although the lighting process used in the FED is less efficient, only lit sub-pixels require power, which means that FEDs are more efficient than LCDs. Sony's 36" FED prototypes have been shown drawing only 14 W when displaying brightly lit scenes, whereas a conventional LCD screen of similar size would normally draw well over 100 W.

Avoiding the need for a backlighting system and thin-film transistor active matrix also greatly reduces the complexity of the set as a whole, while also reducing its front-to-back thickness. While a FED has two sheets of glass instead of the one in an LCD, the overall weight is likely to be less than a similarly sized LCD.[6] FEDs are also claimed to be cheaper to manufacture, as they have fewer total components and processes involved. However, they are not easy devices to manufacture as a reliable commercial device, and considerable production difficulties have been encountered. This had led to a race with two other front-running technologies aiming to replace LCDs in television use, the Active-Matrix OLED and surface-conduction electron-emitter display, or SED.

OLED

Organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) are similar to the LCDs but replace the backlights and polarizing cells with an OLED cell that directly emits light. They require no separate light source, and are highly efficient in terms of light output. They offer the same high contrast levels and fast response times that FED offers. OLEDs are a serious competitor to FEDs, but suffer from the same sorts of problems bringing them to mass production.

SED

SEDs are very similar to FEDs, the primary difference between the two technologies is that SED uses a single emitter for each column instead of the individual spots of the FED. Whereas a FED uses electrons emitted directly toward the front of the screen, the SED uses electrons that are emitted from the vicinity of a small "gap" in a surface-conducting track laid down parallel to the plane of the panel, and extracted sideways to their original direction of motion. SED uses an emitter array based on palladium oxide laid down by an inkjet or silk-screen process.[7] SED has been considered to be the variant of FED that is feasible to mass-produce, however, as of late 2009 no commercial SED display products have been made available by the industry.

History

The first concentrated effort to develop FED systems started in 1991 by Silicon Video Corporation1, later Candescent Technologies. Their "ThinCRT" displays used metal emitters, originally built out of tiny molybdenum cones known as Spindt tips. They suffered from erosion due to the high accelerating voltages. Attempts to lower accelerating voltages and find suitable phosphors that would work at lower power levels, as well as address the erosion problem through better materials, were unsuccessful.

Candescent pushed ahead with development in spite of problems, breaking ground on a new production facility in Silicon Valley in 1998, partnering with Sony. However the technology was not ready, and the company suspended equipment purchases in early 1999, citing "contamination issues". [8] The plant was never completed, and after spending $600 million on development they filed for Chapter 11 protection in June 2004, and sold all of their assets to Canon that August. [9]

Another attempt to address the erosion issues was made by Advance Nanotech, a subsidiary of SI Diamond Technology of Austin, Texas. Advance Nanotech developed a doped diamond dust, whose sharp corners appeared to be an ideal emitter. However the development never panned out and was adandoned in 2003. Advance Nanotech then applied their efforts to the similar SED display, licensing their technology to Canon. When Canon brought in Toshiba to help developing the display, Advance Nanotech sued, but ultimately lost in their efforts to re-negotiate the contracts based on their claim that Canon transferred the technology to Toshiba.

Recent FED research focuses on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as emitters. Nano-emissive display (NED) is Motorola's term for their carbon-nanotube-based FED technology. A prototype model was demonstrated in May 2005, but Motorola has now halted all FED-related development.

Futaba Corporation has been running a Spindt-type development program since 1990. They have produced prototypes of smaller FED systems for a number of years and demonstrated them at various trade shows, but like the Candescent efforts no large-screen production has been forthcoming. Development continues on a nanotube based version.

Sony, having abandoned their efforts with Candescent, licensed CNT technology from Carbon Nanotechnologies Inc. ,[10] of Houston, Texas, who were the public licensing agent for a number of technologies developed at Rice University's Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory. In 2007 they demonstrated a FED display at a trade show in Japan and claimed they would be introducing production models in 2009.[11] They later spun off their FED efforts to "Field Emission Technologies", which continued to aim for a 2009 release.[12]

Their plans to start production at a former Pioneer factory in Kagoshima were delayed by financial issues in late 2008.[13] On March 26, 2009 "Field Emission Technologies" (FET) announced that it was closing down due to the inability to raise capital.[14]

In January 2010, Taiwanese AU Optronics Corporation (AUO) announced that it had acquired assets from Sony's FET and FET Japan, including "patents, know-how, inventions, and relevant equipment related to FED technology and materials". [2] In November 2010, Nikkei reported that AUO plans to start mass production of FED panels in the fourth quarter of 2011, however AUO commented that the technology is still in the research stage and there are no plans to begin mass production at this moment. [15]

See also

References

  1. ^ Serkan Toto, "FED: Sony calls it quits, basically burying the technology as a whole", CrunchGear, 31 Mar 2009
  2. ^ a b http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20100121PD207.html
  3. ^ Martyn Williams, "Canon signals end of the road for SED TV dreams", IDG News Service, 19 August 2010
  4. ^ a b c d e Richard Fink, "A closer look at SED, FED technologies", EE Tines-Asia, August 16–31, 2007, pp. 1–4
  5. ^ Light emitting principle of an FED system by SHARP
  6. ^ "FED". Meko, Ltd.. 22 November 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-08-20. http://web.archive.org/web/20060820001806/http://www.meko.co.uk/fed.shtml. Retrieved 2006-11-27. >
  7. ^ "SED". Meko, Ltd.. 22 November 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-08-20. http://web.archive.org/web/20060820001603/http://www.meko.co.uk/sed.shtml. Retrieved 2006-11-27. 
  8. ^ Jerry Ascierto, "Candescent Delays Plant, Replaces CEO", Electronic News, 1 March 1999
  9. ^ "Candescent Technologies Files Chapter 11 and Announces a Sale of Its Assets", Business Wire, 23 June 2004
  10. ^ "Arrowhead Subsidiary, Unidym, to Merge with Carbon Nanotechnologies", nanotechwire, 23 March 2007
  11. ^ "Sony to Debut FED In 2009, Insists on Confusing Consumers With Yet Another Display Technology", Gizmodo, 9 April 2007
  12. ^ Sumner Lemon, "Sony spinoff plans high-end FED monitors for 2009", IDG News Service, 4 October 2007
  13. ^ Christopher MacManus, "Sony Delays Acquisition of FED Factory", Sony Insider, 5 November 2008
  14. ^ "Sony's Field Emission Technologies closing its doors". Engadget. http://www.engadgethd.com/2009/03/26/sonys-field-emission-technologies-closing-its-doors/. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
  15. ^ http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20101117PD210.html

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