REFLECTIVE DISPLAYS WITH ADDED COLOURS AND METHODS FOR MAKING THE SAME
20200013347 ยท 2020-01-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/1677
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to devices and methods for the application of one or more colours to a reflective display system, such as an electrophoretic display, wherein the colours are applied to one or more regions of the display where colour is desired.
Claims
1. A multilayered electrophoretic display module comprising: an electrophoretic display layer comprising, a thin-film transistor backplane layer, an electrophoretic display imaging layer comprising at least two colours formed of electronic ink provided on the electrophoretic display imaging layer, and a protective screen layer, a colour layer comprising at least one colour and being adjacent to the electrophoretic display layer; and a hardcoat layer adjacent to the colour layer; wherein the backplane has an edge seal.
2. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 1, the electrophoretic display imaging layer further comprising at least three colours.
3. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 2, the colour layer further comprising at least two colours.
4. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 1, the colour layer further comprising at least two colours.
5. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 1, wherein the at least one colour comprising the colour layer is printed onto a region of the electrophoretic display layer.
6. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 1, wherein the colour layer further comprises first and second colours, wherein the first colour is printed onto a first region of the electrophoretic display layer, wherein the second colour is printed onto a second region of the electrophoretic display layer, and wherein the first and second regions do not overlap.
7. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 6, wherein one of the two colours comprising the electrophoretic display imaging layer is the exclusive colour comprising a third region of the electrophoretic display layer, and wherein the first, second, and third regions do not overlap.
8. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 7, wherein the colour comprising the third region is the colour white.
9. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 1, the electrophoretic display layer further comprising a coloured foil layer adjacent to the electrophoretic display imaging layer and adjacent to the protective screen layer.
10. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 9, the coloured foil layer further comprising at least two colour layers.
11. The multilayered electrophoretic display module of claim 10, the electrophoretic display imaging layer further comprising at least three colours.
12. A method of displaying multiple colours in a multilayered reflective display, the method comprising the steps of: providing an electrophoretic display layer comprising, a thin-film transistor backplane layer, an electrophoretic display imaging layer comprising at least two colours formed of electronic ink provided on the electrophoretic display imaging layer, and a protective screen layer, providing a colour layer comprising at least one colour and layering the colour layer in a layered position adjacent to the electrophoretic display layer; and providing a hardcoat layer and layering the hardcoat layer in a layered position adjacent to the colour layer; wherein the backplane layer has an edge seal.
13. The method of displaying multiple colours in a multilayered reflective display of claim 12, wherein the colour layer further comprises first and second colours, and the method further comprising the steps of: printing the first colour onto a first region of the electrophoretic display layer; and printing the second colour onto a second region of the electrophoretic display layer; wherein the first and second regions do not overlap.
14. The method of displaying multiple colours in a multilayered reflective display of claim 12, the method further comprising the step of: providing a coloured foil layer and layering the coloured foil layer adjacent to both the electrophoretic display imaging layer and the protective screen layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0027]
[0028] The applicants' novel invention allows coloured transparent coatings to be added to the top of a typical EPD module 1 as shown in
[0029]
[0030] Pretreatment of the existing top surface of the EPD 13 prior to application of a colour region 11, 12 can be performed in a number of ways including, for example, UV ozone cleaning, plasma cleaning, chemical washing, chemical etching, and/or attachment of adhesion promoting chemicals. The coloured regions 11, 12 can be applied by a variety of methods including, for example, inkjet printing, screen printing, offset printing or any other printing method which is capable of accurately controlling the thickness and location of the coloured layer 11, 12. Following coating, the coloured layers 11, 12 are dried or cured by a suitable method such as using heat and/or UV irradiation, or by another fixing method. Finally an additional optically clear hardcoat 14 may be added on top of the coloured layer 11, 12 in order to achieve desired scratch resistance.
[0031]
[0032] It is also possible to combine one colour from the EPD 1 with another colour in a printed overlayer in order to allow the rendering of a third colour. For example, printing a blue region (not shown) on an EPD 1 and then selecting the yellow colour 17 from the underlying EPD layer 1 will lead to a resultant green colour (not shown). In another embodiment, instead of adding colour by printing an overlayer, colour may be added by incorporating a coloured foil within the EPD 1 layers during fabrication.
[0033]
[0034] It is also possible to combine colour foil and printed colour approaches so that additional custom colours can be added to a standard EPD unit 1. This embodiment of a reflective display module 30 is shown in
[0035] Pixel-level colour filters, such as those of the prior art, have several drawbacks. For example, they comprise a set of subpixels (usually red, green, and blue) applied to all pixels within a display. In other words, the primary colours are fixed across the entire display, such as that of an LCD. Colour filters cannot be efficiently combined with an underlying coloured EPD region. Such displays also cannot reflect a white state with a high efficiency. High resolution patterning of the colour filter in such displays is expensive and requires thin substrates along with the critical alignment with the underlying EPD in order to avoid parallax and/or colour errors.
[0036] By contrast, area-level colour filters, such as those described herein and in accordance with preferred embodiments of the present invention, are applied only to one or more regions of a display where colour is desired. The remainder of the display may show, for example, a high reflectivity white. The coloured regions can be designed to combine with an underlying white state in the EPD, and also with an underlying yellow or red state. Combining one colour in the filter with another colour in the EPD allows a third colour to be efficiently generated. Low resolution patterning of the colour filter region avoids parallax problems and allows patterning to be applied by simple printing to the outside of the display. Thus, preferred commercial embodiments of the present invention define a device construction which can provide better performance while being more straightforward in manufacture.
[0037] Therefore this invention comprises several ways to add an additional colour or multiple colours to an EPD module so that it can be customised for the needs of a user, such as a retailer. Although the present invention has been illustrated and described with reference to various embodiments and specific examples, those embodiments and examples are only exemplary, and it will be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that other embodiments and examples may perform similar functions or achieve like results. Consequently, the disclosed embodiments and examples are not to be considered limitations on the disclosure or the invention.