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Digital Displays Cathode Ray Tubes Flat Panel Displays

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1 Digital Displays Cathode Ray Tubes Flat Panel Displays
Lecture 7: Displays Digital Displays Cathode Ray Tubes Flat Panel Displays 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

2 Summary of What We Have Learned
Ohm’s Law Resistor Combinations What a Diode Does Transistors as Switches Op-Amp Configurations 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

3 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Ohm’s Law Kirchoff’s Voltage Law Kirchoff’s Current Law Series Equivalent Parallel Equivalent 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

4 Diode V-I Characteristic
For ideal diode, current flows only one way Real diode is close to ideal Ideal Diode 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

5 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

6 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Op-Amp 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

7 Ideal Op-Amp Continued
Bandwidth is also infinite. Thus, an ideal op-amp works the same at all frequencies. 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

8 Golden Rules for Op-Amps
The output attempts to do whatever is necessary to make the voltage difference between the two inputs zero. (Negative Feedback is Required) The inputs draw no current. 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

9 Op-Amp Configurations
Buffer or Voltage Follower No voltage difference between the output and the input Draws no current, so it puts no load on the source Used to isolate sources from loads 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

10 Op-Amp Configurations
Non-Inverting Amplifier Note that this formula is different in the lab write up 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

11 Op-Amp Configurations
Inverting Op-Amp 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

12 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Binary Numbers 0 0000 1 0001 2 0010 3 0011 4 0100 5 0101 6 0110 7 0111 8 1000 9 1001 = 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

13 Astable and Monostable Multivibrators
What are they good for? Astable: clock, timing signal Monostable: a clean pulse of the correct height and duration for digital system 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

14 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
555 Timer The correct frequency is given by Note the error in the figure 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

15 From What We Have Seen So Far, How Would We Make a Display?
LEDs in some kind of an array How to arrange them? How to control them? What is the purpose of the display? How much should it cost? 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

16 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
7 Segment Displays Binary inputs are converted to a decimal number display by turning on a set of 7 LEDs 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

17 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
7 Segment Displays Common cathode at the right and common anode at the left 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

18 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
7 Segment Displays This is the 0-9 counting circuit you will be building in the lab. Note that it has to count and then convert the binary to show decimal 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

19 Displays Applications
7 Segments are excellent for displaying simple alphanumeric information – multimeters, clocks, etc. More complex displays are needed to show images – computer displays, televisions, etc. 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

20 2 Minute Quiz Name________________ Sec___
Give three examples of electronic displays What is a pixel? True or False Blue light is higher energy than red light Most colored light is not produced directly Solid state light is generally produced directly 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

21 Dividing Images Into Pixels
Second image is blown up many times to show the individual pixels 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

22 Dividing Images Into Pixels
The second image is blown up a bit less but pixels are still obvious 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

23 Dividing Images Into Pixels
The second image is sampled more coarsely 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

24 Dividing Images Into Pixels
Black and white or single color displays are easier to implement 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

25 Dividing Images Into Pixels
Images can be constructed by scanning across them, line-by-line The original image is encoded in this manner (e.g. this is the way a scanner or copier works) by, say, starting at the upper left and going line by line to the lower right 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

26 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Plasma Displays Large, bright, flat panel display View from a wide angular range Designed for HDTV Available from many companies 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

27 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Plasma Displays High voltage discharge creates high energy photons (UV) that excite phosphors 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

28 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Plasma Displays Note the patterns of the address and display electrodes To excite an address, both voltages must be applied 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

29 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Plasma Displays Fujitsu ALIS display More complex electrodes but better use of surface area for display 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

30 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Plasma Displays Discharge region geometry and voltages 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

31 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: CRT In a CRT, an electron beam excites the phosphor rather than a UV photon The beam is directed to a spot on the surface using sweep plates 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

32 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: CRT Three separate electron guns are required to produce a color picture 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

33 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: CRT At the left is the layout of the mask and phosphors At the right is the scanning sequence 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

34 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: CRT A large variety of configurations are used by manufacturers Look carefully at the screen of your TV 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

35 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Image From My TV 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

36 Same Image Enlarged to Show Screen
17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

37 Same Image Enlarged Further
17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

38 Same Image Enlarged Further
17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

39 Unsmoothed Image Enlarged Further
17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

40 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: Early TV Allen Dumont B.S.E.E. RPI 1924 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

41 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Displays: Dumont Developed the first practical CRT (previous versions lasted only 10s of hours) First company to market home TV receiver in 1938 (previous slide) Dumont network until 1956 – It could not compete with radio networks (poorly funded) Broadcast Jackie Gleason, first sporting events, but shows were bought by big 3 networks Dumont was one of broadcastings first millionaires 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

42 Where Will You See This Material Again?
7 Segment Displays: Many courses CRT: ECSE-2100 Fields and Waves I Digital Imaging: ECSE-4540 Voice and Image Processing RF Circuitry: ECSE-4060 Communications Circuits Plasmas: ECSE-4320 Plasma Engineering Optics: ECSE-4630 Lasers and Optical Engineering and ECSE-4640 Optical Communications and Integrated Optics 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

43 Introduction to Engineering Electronics
Imaging Tools Mathworks Image Processing Toolboxes 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor

44 Charged Particle Accelerators
Fermilab Medical Accelerator 17 September September 2018 Introduction to Engineering Electronics K. A. Connor


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