FOREIGN MATERIAL INSPECTION SYSTEM OF DISPLAY UNIT
20210255115 · 2021-08-19
Inventors
- Beom Seok LEE (Daejeon, KR)
- Chan Soo Kim (Daejeon, KR)
- Eung Jin JANG (Daejeon, KR)
- Sung Hyun Baek (Daejeon, KR)
- Yu Jin Lim (Daejeon, KR)
Cpc classification
H10K71/00
ELECTRICITY
G02B5/3025
PHYSICS
International classification
G01N21/95
PHYSICS
Abstract
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention provides a foreign substance inspection system for a display unit, including: a lighting unit configured to provide incident light to a display unit having an organic light emitting display panel; and a foreign substance detecting unit configured to receive incident light that is reflected by the display unit and detect whether a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit.
Claims
1. A foreign substance inspection system for a display unit, comprising: a lighting unit configured to provide incident light to a display unit having an organic light emitting display panel; and a foreign substance detecting unit configured to receive incident light that is reflected by the display unit, and detect whether a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit.
2. The foreign substance inspection system of claim 1, wherein the display unit includes a quarter-wave plate (QWP) disposed on the organic light emitting display panel, and a polarizing plate disposed on the quarter-wave plate.
3. The foreign substance inspection system of claim 1, wherein the foreign substance detecting unit determines that a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit when the foreign substance detecting unit determines that the reflected light is provided.
4. The foreign substance inspection system of claim 1, wherein the lighting unit provides the incident light having an inclined incident angle smaller than 90° to the display unit.
5. The foreign substance inspection system of claim 1, wherein the foreign substance detecting unit includes an image capturing unit configured to capture an image of the display unit, and a control unit configured to receive the image of the display unit from the image capturing unit and detect whether a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
EXPLANATION OF REFERENCE NUMERALS AND SYMBOLS
[0022] 10: Display unit
[0023] 11: Organic light emitting display panel
[0024] 12: Quarter-wave plate
[0025] 13: Polarizing plate
[0026] 100: Foreign substance inspection system for display unit
[0027] 110: Lighting unit
[0028] 120: Foreign substance inspection unit
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0029] The present invention will be apparent with reference to exemplary embodiments to be described below in detail together with the accompanying drawings. However, the present invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein but will be implemented in various forms. The exemplary embodiments of the present invention are provided so that the present invention is completely disclosed, and a person with ordinary skill in the art can fully understand the scope of the present invention. The present invention will be defined only by the scope of the appended claims. Meanwhile, the terms used in the present specification are for explaining the exemplary embodiments, not for limiting the present invention. Unless particularly stated otherwise in the present specification, a singular form also includes a plural form. The terms such as “comprises (includes)” and/or “comprising (including)” used in the specification do not exclude presence or addition of one or more other constituent elements, steps, operations, and/or elements, in addition to the mentioned constituent elements, steps, operations, and/or elements. The terms such as “first” and “second” may be used to describe various constituent elements, but the constituent elements should not be limited by the terms. These terms are used only to distinguish one constituent element from another constituent element.
[0030]
[0031] Referring to
[0032] The quarter-wave plate 12 may include an optically anisotropic thin plate manufactured such that a difference in optical path of λ/4 occurs between two polarized components that vibrate perpendicularly to transmitted light having a wavelength of λ. The light transmitted through the quarter-wave plate 12 becomes circularly polarized light when linearly polarized light is perpendicularly incident so that a direction in which light vibrates in the quarter-wave plate 12 has an angle of 90 degrees with respect to a direction in which the incident light vibrates. On the contrary, the light transmitted through the quarter-wave plate 12 becomes linearly polarized light when circularly polarized light is incident.
[0033] The polarizing plate 13 includes, as a polarizer, a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film which extends in a predetermined direction and is dyed with a dichroic dye. The polarizer may have a transmission axis in a predetermined direction (a transmission axis direction is denoted by ‘PA’ in the drawings) as the polarizer extends, and the polarizer transmits only the light that vibrates in a direction identical to the transmission axis direction.
[0034] Meanwhile, the display unit 10 may have a structure in which the organic light emitting display panel 11, the polarizing plate 13, and the quarter-wave plate 12 are stacked to be in close contact with one another. However,
[0035] The external light L_O to be incident on the display unit 10 may have mixed light beams that vibrate in all directions perpendicular to a traveling direction of the external light L_O.
[0036] When the external light L_O is incident on the polarizing plate 13, the polarizing plate 13 transmits only the light that vibrates in the direction identical to the transmission axis direction PA of the polarizing plate 13, that is, the polarizing plate 13 transmits first linearly polarized light L1.
[0037] The first linearly polarized light L1 transmitted through the polarizing plate 13 is incident on the quarter-wave plate 12. As illustrated in
[0038] The first circularly polarized light L2 transmitted through the quarter-wave plate 12 is incident on the organic light emitting display panel 11. As illustrated in
[0039] The second circularly polarized light L3 reflected by the surface of the organic light emitting display panel 11 is incident on the quarter-wave plate 12. As illustrated in
[0040] The second linearly polarized light L4 vibrates in a direction perpendicular to the transmission axis direction PA of the polarizing plate 13 (identical to the vibration direction of the first linearly polarized light L1). When the second linearly polarized light L4 is incident on the polarizing plate 13, the second linearly polarized light L4 vibrates in the direction perpendicular to the transmission axis direction PA of the polarizing plate 13, and as a result, the second linearly polarized light L4 cannot be transmitted through the polarizing plate 13 and is absorbed into the polarizing plate 13.
[0041] A traveling path of external light when a foreign substance F is introduced between the organic light emitting display panel 11 and the quarter-wave plate 12 will be described with reference to
[0042] Because the processes in which the external light L_O is incident and transmitted through the polarizing plate 13 and the quarter-wave plate 12 are identical to the above-mentioned processes, the description will focus on the processes after the light is transmitted through the quarter-wave plate 12.
[0043] The first circularly polarized light L2 transmitted through the quarter-wave plate 12 is incident on the organic light emitting display panel 11. However, because the foreign substance F is introduced, the first circularly polarized light L2 reaches the foreign substance F, as illustrated in
[0044] The second incompletely circularly polarized light L3′ reflected by the foreign substance F is incident on the quarter-wave plate 12. As illustrated in
[0045] However, the second linearly polarized light L4′ is not completely opposite to the first circularly polarized light L2, but the second linearly polarized light L4′ is made as the light is polarized through the quarter-wave plate 12 based on the second incompletely circularly polarized light L3′. As a result, the second linearly polarized light L4′ vibrates in a direction different from the vibration direction of the second linearly polarized light L4 which is made when no foreign substance is introduced. Specifically, the second linearly polarized light L4′ may vibrate in the direction which is not perpendicular to the transmission axis direction PA of the polarizing plate 13 (identical to the vibration direction of the first linearly polarized light L1). When the second linearly polarized light L4′ is incident on the polarizing plate 13, the second linearly polarized light L4′ is transmitted through the polarizing plate 13 because the second linearly polarized light L4′ vibrates in the direction which is not perpendicular to the transmission axis direction PA of the polarizing plate 13. Transmitted light L5 transmitted through the polarizing plate 13 may be visually recognized from the outside.
[0046]
[0047] Referring to
[0048] The lighting unit 110 may provide incident light L_O to the display unit 10 having the organic light emitting display panel 11. The lighting unit 110 may include a light source for providing incident external light.
[0049] The lighting unit 110 may provide the incident external light L_O having an inclined incident angle smaller than 90° to the display unit 10. Because an image capturing device of the foreign substance detecting unit 120, which will be described below, needs to capture an image of light reflected by the display unit 10, the lighting unit 110 needs to be disposed at one side of the display unit 10. In this case, it is advantageous to make the incident angle of the incident light smaller than 90° to the display unit 10 in order to minimize an optical interference between the incident light and the reflected light.
[0050] The foreign substance detecting unit 120 may receive the reflected light L5, which is provided as the incident external light L_O is reflected by the display unit 10, and detect whether a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit. The foreign substance detecting unit 120 may include an image capturing unit configured to capture an image of the display unit, and a control unit configured to receive the image of the display unit from the image capturing unit and detect whether a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit.
[0051] When no foreign substance is introduced into the display unit 10, the image capturing unit captures an image without receiving separate reflected light from the display unit 10, and an entire surface of the image of the display unit has no region in which contrast levels are clearly distinguished. In this case, the control unit may determine that no foreign substance is introduced into the display unit.
[0052] When a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit 10, the image capturing unit captures an image while receiving reflected light from the display unit 10, and the captured and acquired image of the display unit may have an entire surface including a bright region made by the received reflected light and a dark region in which no reflected light is provided. Therefore, because the image of the display unit has a region in which the contrast levels are clearly distinguished, the control unit may determine that a foreign substance is introduced into the display unit. In particular, the control unit may determine that the foreign substance is introduced into a region corresponding to the bright captured region.
[0053] Specifically, when no foreign substance F is introduced into the display unit 10, the light travels in the order of the polarizing plate 13, the quarter-wave plate 12, the organic light emitting display panel 11, and the quarter-wave plate 12 even though the external light L_O is incident, as illustrated in
[0054]
[0055] Specifically, incident light having an inclined incident angle smaller than 90° was provided to display units with introduced foreign substances having various sizes between 450 μm and 2,700 μm, and then images of the display units were captured. Further,
[0056] According to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, it is possible to inspect whether a foreign substance is introduced into an organic light emitting display unit, without using a light transmission optical system.
[0057] Furthermore, according to the exemplary embodiment of the present invention, whether a foreign substance is introduced may be easily inspected by using a reflective optical system even though the organic light emitting display unit 10 has the structure including the quarter-wave plate 12 and the polarizing plate 13 that prevent the incident external light from being reflected.
[0058] While the present invention has been described with reference to the aforementioned exemplary embodiments, various modifications or alterations may be made without departing from the subject matter and the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the appended claims include the modifications or alterations as long as the modifications or alterations fall within the subject matter of the present invention.