1. Introduction
Liquid crystal displays (LCDs) have played a leading role in the display market by virtue of their long service life, low power consumption, and low price. However, the viewing angles are restricted because of refractive index anisotropy. To improve the viewing angles in LCDs, in-plane switching (IPS) and fringe-field switching (FFS) have been used to control the liquid-crystal (LC) molecular behavior in the plane [
1,
2]. Furthermore, multiple domains have been used to symmetrically arrange LC molecules to reduce the difference in phase retardation according to the direction [
3,
4].
Another method that ensures a wide viewing angle involves adding a phase retardation film to the outer part of the LC panel, which can compensate for the difference of phase retardation between the normal direction and oblique directions. A lens array has also been used as a diffuser for LCDs with quasi-collimated backlights (QCBLs) [
5,
6]. However, a wide viewing angle may be a drawback for personal devices. Therefore, a technique is required to switch the viewing angles of an LCD in different usage environments. Several types of the LCDs for controllable viewing angles have been reported: Dividing the pixels according to the viewing angles [
7,
8,
9], additional viewing angle control systems [
10,
11], switchable viewing angle backlight systems [
12,
13]. However, these methods reduce the resolution and brightness compared to the conventional LCDs, or use unique liquid crystals such as the blue phase and discotic phase, thereby causing problems in temperature reliability and fabrication process. Some of the methods with the viewing angle control system increase the weight and volume of the display due to the additional complex systems. As another method for adjusting the viewing angle, a technique of controlling the focal length or diffusing the light by electrically controlling the wavefront using the LC-polymer composite has been proposed [
14,
15,
16]. However, the LC-polymer composite has a vulnerability to the light, low thermal stability, and electro-optical hysteresis due to the characteristics of a polymer compared to the nematic liquid crystal. In particular, the hysteresis of the LC-polymer composite, caused by the differences in LC molecular behavior with an applied voltage, results in image distortion or change in transmittance [
17].
In this paper, a new method is proposed to electrically control the viewing angle of LCDs in various usage environments by using an electric-field-driven liquid crystal (ELC) lens [
18] as a diffuser in front of the LCD. The ELC diffuser disperses or transmits light depending on whether a voltage is applied, so light distribution can be realized with a wide or narrow viewing angle. The retardation distribution affects the optical characteristics of the ELC diffuser and is obtained by numerically calculating the behavior of the liquid crystal through de Gennes’ order tensor theory and Ericksen–Leslie equation [
19]. Taguchi’s design of experiments method was used to optimize the design factors of the ELC diffuser [
20]. Finally, an LCD system was equipped with the ELC diffuser, and the light distribution was calculated by ray tracing, and the viewing angles could be switched by the voltages applied to the diffuser.
2. Optimal Design and Numerical Simulation
Figure 1 shows diagrams of the wide- and narrow-view modes of the proposed LCD system and structure of ELC diffusing unit. Each diffusing unit of the ELC diffuser is an ELC lens that can electrically control the direction of light. The LC molecules of the ELC diffusing unit are homogeneously aligned parallel to the polarizer direction of the LCD panel so that maximum retardation occurs in the field-off state. If no voltage is applied to the diffusing unit, the diffusing unit transmits collimated light from the QCBL without a wavefront change, as illustrated in
Figure 1a. Thus, a light distribution appears with a narrow viewing angle. However, if an appropriate voltage is applied to the diffusing unit, the polarized light that passes through the LC panel undergoes different retardations because of the different spatial refractive indexes of the liquid crystals, as shown in
Figure 1b. Accordingly, the wavefront of the light becomes spherical. This spherical wave forms a focus and then generates a wide light distribution in the viewing zone.
To form a spherical wave with a wide light distribution, the retardation needs to monotonically decrease from the center of the diffusing unit to both ends. In the case of liquid crystal with positive birefringence, the effective refractive index decreases if the tilt angle of the optic axis increases, which decreases the retardation at the corresponding position. Therefore, driving electrodes are installed at both ends of the diffusing unit as shown in
Figure 1c, and an appropriate voltage is applied. As a result, LC molecules can be arranged in the vertical direction from the glass surface or in the direction where the tilt angle increases. The retardation distribution can be precisely controlled when the retardation distribution of the ELC diffusing unit is controlled and the unit has multiple driving electrodes. However, in this study, a single driving electrode was arranged at each end to reduce the thickness of the diffusing unit, as well as to ensure structural simplicity and convenience of the production process. Since the length of the lenticular-like ELC diffusing unit coincides with the vertical length of the LC panel, it does not affect the vertical viewing angle of the display and only changes the horizontal viewing angle.
Before the ELC diffusing unit was designed, the ideal retardation distribution of the diffusing unit (the Lambertian distribution) was calculated. This distribution is defined as a criterion for the retardation distribution of the ELC diffusing unit. The ideal shape of a diffusing unit with a Lambertian distribution was designed using the following equation, which is based on ray tracing and energy conservative mapping [
21,
22]:
where
is the distance from the center of the diffusing unit (the position in the horizontal direction), and
is the height from the bottom of the unit (the position in the vertical direction).
and
are the transmittance and the illuminance of the incident light at
of the diffusing unit, respectively, and
is the intensity of the emitted light at tilt angle
and azimuth angle
. In the case of Lambertian emission,
can be expressed as follows:
where
is the peak intensity. The height z for any position r in the ideal diffusing unit can be obtained from Equation (1). Accordingly, the retardation distribution of the ideal unit is obtained by:
where
is the retardation according to the position
of the ideal diffusing unit,
and
are the refractive indexes of the diffusing unit material and the incident area, respectively, and
is the thickness of the diffusing unit according to the position
.
For the ELC diffusing unit, the retardation according to the position is:
with
where
is the retardation according to the position r of the ELC diffusing unit,
,
, and
are the effective, the ordinary, and the extraordinary refractive indices of liquid crystal, respectively,
is the thickness of the LC layer, and
is the angle between the optical axis of the liquid crystal and the direction of light.
In the case of an isotropic diffuser, the retardation according to the position depends on the thickness z(r), as shown in Equation (3). In the case of the ELC diffusing unit, the retardation can be controlled by changing the direction of optical axis of liquid crystal, , which affects the effective refractive index , as expressed by Equation (5). The direction of the optical axis of the liquid crystal can be controlled by the structure of the electrodes at both ends of the diffusing unit and the electric field distribution generated by a voltage applied to them. Accordingly, the ELC diffusing unit can be optimally designed if the electrode structure and voltage are determined so that the retardation distribution according to the position of the ELC diffusing unit in Equation (4) can be equivalent to the ideal retardation distribution of Equation (3). A wide viewing angle of the Lambertian distribution can be obtained if the optimized ELC diffusing is subject to an appropriate voltage.
The LC panel of the proposed LCD system uses IPS mode. Its resolution is 2960 × 1440, and its pixel size is 37 × 37 µm. The diffusing unit pitch of the ELC diffuser was set to be equal to the pixel. The pitch of the LC panel minimizes the crosstalk which leads to the overlap of the images between the adjacent pixels. The diffusing unit uses a nematic liquid crystal, which has a birefringence of 0.42 at a wavelength of 550 nm, elastic constants of
and
, and dielectric anisotropy of 7.6 [
23].
A maximum thickness for the maximum retardation of 15,500 nm was determined at the center of the ideal diffusing unit by applying a diffusing unit size of 37 µm and a refractive index of 1.5 to Equations (1)–(3). Accordingly, the cell gap needs to be at least 36.91 µm for the birefringence of liquid crystal of 0.42 from Equation (4) to obtain the retardation of 15,500 nm in the ELC diffusing unit. In addition, the optical axis of the LC molecules needs to align in the vertical direction from the glass surface at both ends so that the retardation can become 0 to enable a 15,500 nm difference in the retardation at the center and both ends of the unit. Therefore, it is necessary to infinitely increase the applied voltage, which generates a strong vertical electric field at the electrodes and across the entire ELC diffusing unit. Consequently, the optical axes of the LC molecules are excessively arranged in the vertical direction from the glass surface such that the retardation distribution of the diffusing unit deviates from the ideal retardation distribution.
The vertical component of the electric field across the entire diffusing unit can be reduced if the applied voltage is decreased. However, in this case, the optical axes of the liquid crystals at the driving electrodes are not sufficiently arranged in the vertical direction, which increases the retardation to more than 0. Accordingly, the cell gap needs to be increased as much as the increase of the retardation at the electrodes to make the overall retardation distribution equivalent to the ideal retardation distribution. As a result, the retardation at the center of the unit is increased. However, the driving voltage and the response time of ELC diffusing unit increase if the cell gap becomes excessively large. To solve this problem, the optimal design of the ELC diffuser should consider both the driving voltage and the cell gap of the ELC diffuser.
Taguchi’s design of experiments method was used for the optimal design of factors that are influential on the optical characteristics of the ELC diffusing unit. This allows the number of simulations to be reduced effectively, and the correlation between the design factors of the ELC diffuser and retardation distribution can be obtained. Before applying the Taguchi method, the performance characteristics of the target diffuser need to be defined. The performance characteristics can be obtained by quantifying the proximity between the retardation distribution and the ideal retardation distribution.
The retardation distribution can be expressed based on retardation values at each position and their rates of change. The performance characteristics are determined by applying appropriate weights to the differences of retardation and rates of change between the ideal diffuser and the designed diffuser at each position. As the performance characteristic becomes closer to 0, the design becomes more ideal, which is a smaller-the-better (STB) situation. Taguchi’s signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the performance characteristics can be calculated as follows:
where
The ELC diffusing unit, respectively and
and
are weighting factors, which have values of 1 because they are equally important. Moreover, the selected control factors were the width of the electrode, the voltage applied to the electrode, and the cell gap. These were selected because they influence the behavior and light transmittance of liquid crystal molecules. As presented in
Table 1, three levels were set for each factor by considering the physical properties of materials, the response time of liquid crystal, and the convenience of the production process.
Figure 2 shows the modeling results for analyzing the light transmittance of the ELC diffuser. The LC layer of the ELC diffusing unit was divided into grids. Each grid was 1 µm in the r direction and 0.1 µm in the z direction. The directions of each incident ray in the grid and the corresponding retardation can be obtained by using Snell’s law and the effective refractive indices in the grids. The direction of light transmitted through the ELC diffusing unit was identified by using the wavefront obtained from the directions of light in each grid and the corresponding retardation. The effective refractive index of liquid crystal in each grid was calculated using Equation (5). The angle (
) was numerically obtained by using a finite difference method (FDM), which is suitable for highly nonlinear equations with de Gennes’ order tensor and the Ericksen–Leslie equation [
19].
3. Results and Discussion
Table 2 presents the resulting signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) from the simulation results for each scenario. The results were obtained from an L9 orthogonal array, which was constructed by using Taguchi’s design of experiments method.
Figure 3 shows the average calculated SNRs according to the levels of each factor in
Table 2.
Figure 3 illustrates the relative influence of the levels of each factor on the performance characteristics. The slopes connecting the average values indicate the sensitivity of each level to the performance characteristic. As the slope increases, the correlation to the performance characteristic also increases.
The factor levels of A1, B2, and C3 had the highest average Taguchi SNR. The corresponding applied voltage, driving electrode width, and liquid crystal thickness were 15 V, 2 and 42 µm, respectively. However, the SNR may increase if the control factor A is set to 15 V or below (level 1) and factor C is 42 µm or above (level 3). As a result, the performance is improved. Hence, it is necessary to conduct additional simulations for factors A and C.
In the case of factor C, the response time of the liquid crystal is seriously delayed if the thickness of the LC layer is excessively larger than the width of the diffusing unit, and the applied voltage becomes higher. Therefore, factor C was restricted to level 3. After factors B and C were fixed to levels 2 and 3, respectively, factor A was set to 15, 14, and 13 V, which correspond to level 1 and below. Each performance characteristic and SNR were calculated to identify the optimal values of factor A. The SNRs for 15, 14, and 13 V were −28.32, −31.23, and −33.31 dB, respectively. The SNR was highest when factor A was 15 V. Accordingly, the optimal design conditions for the applied voltage, electrode width, and cell gap of the ELC diffusing unit were 15 V, 2 and 42 µm, respectively. Under these conditions, the SNR of the performance characteristic for the retardation distribution was calculated as −28.32 dB.
Figure 4 shows the simulation results for the director distribution of the LC molecules on the cross-section of the ELC diffusing unit. The LC molecules homogeneously aligned with the same pre-tilt angle by rubbing process change to the vertical direction by applying a voltage above the threshold. In this case, the LC directors near one of the electrodes of the ELC unit are aligned in the opposite direction to the pre-tilt angle due to the mirror symmetry of the electric field distribution. As a result, the alignment of the LC molecules at the corresponding position becomes unstable, thereby leading to the disclination of the LC directors, as shown in
Figure 4. Since the electrodes of the ELC unit are located just above the black matrix, however, the optical distortion caused by the unstable behavior of the LC molecules near the edge of the unit is blocked by the black matrix and can be ignored.
Figure 5 illustrates the retardation distributions of the ideal diffusing unit and the optimally designed ELC diffusing unit according to the positions. The retardation between both driving electrodes and the center of the ELC diffusing unit is lower than the ideal retardation. This occurs because the strong vertical component of the electric field heading from the driving electrodes at both ends to the common electrode makes the LC molecules excessively arranged in the vertical direction with respect to the surface. There is an inflection of the retardation distribution near the edge of a driving electrode, which is about 18 µm from the center of the unit. The inflection is caused by the distorted behaviors of LC molecules, which is attributable to the generation of the horizontal component in the electric field heading from the edge of the driving electrode to the common electrode.
Figure 6 shows the normalized intensity of the exiting light at different viewing angles in wide-view mode. The results were calculated by ray tracing for an LCD system with the optimally designed ELC diffuser. The intensity of the exiting light was calculated by counting the number of rays that passed through the LC panel and the ELC diffuser according to the exit angles. The resulting intensity distribution was similar to the Lambertian distribution. However, the intensity of the exiting light was higher than the ideal one at a viewing angle of 50° or less but was lower at higher viewing angles. This occurred because the discrepancy in the retardation distributions (
Figure 4) results in deviation of the wavefront and direction of the exiting light from the ideal case. As shown in
Figure 6, the intensity is higher than the ideal one at some viewing angles because the rays that are expected to exit at a viewing angle of at least 50° actually exit at lower angles.
Figure 7 presents the normalized luminance of the exiting light according to the viewing angles, including the Lambertian distribution, wide-view mode of the LCD system with the ELC diffuser, the conventional IPS-LCD, and the calculation of the narrow-view mode with the ELC diffuser turned off. Similar to
Figure 6, the luminance of the wide-view mode in
Figure 7 “(b)” is generally lower than the ideal case in
Figure 7 “(a)” at a viewing angle of 50° and above. However, in comparison with the IPS-LCD, a very high luminance is shown at almost all the viewing angles except in a few sections near 70°. The IPS-LCD is known to have the best wide-viewing characteristics among LCD modes. Even in comparison with the ideal Lambertian distribution, the similarity was 84.3%.
To improve the similarity between the luminance distribution of the wide-view mode and the ideal Lambertian distribution, a liquid crystal with high birefringence needs to be employed to decrease the cell gap. Thus, the diffuser can be driven at a lower voltage, and the vertical component of the electric field near the electrodes can be appropriately controlled. In
Figure 7 “(d)”, the collimated beam of the QCBL travels without changes of the wavefront, resulting in a narrow viewing angle. The FWHM was calculated to be 7° in the luminance distribution of the exiting light. In this case, most output light from the backlight is distributed in the front of the user. In the proposed LCD, considering that the QCBL has the FWHM of around 7°, and very few light is observed over 20° as shown in
Figure 7, the image distortion by the crosstalk between the adjacent pixels can be ignored. Consequently, bright and clear images are provided at low energy consumption.