A. Gupta, R. Gross, et al.
SPIE Advances in Semiconductors and Superconductors 1990
A crystalline silicon active-matrix 2048 × 2048-pixel light-valve array chip has been designed and fabricated as part of the development of a reflective liquid crystal technology for projection displays. The small feature processing and higher circuit performance available with crystalline silicon technology were exploited for the design and fabrication of the active-matrix chip. A 10-V CMOS process was developed to satisfy active-matrix pixel-cell requirements. Row-selection circuits were integrated which incorporate redundant data paths. Adjacent-line demultiplexing circuitry was integrated to minimize the number of external data drivers, to minimize the number of connections, and to maximize chip yield. The pixel, row-driver, and data-driver demultiplexing circuit designs and performance are discussed. The testing methods are presented. The chip is 64 mm on a side and is used in a prototype rear-projection color display system. Companion papers describe the system and its additional components incorporated in the prototype display system.
A. Gupta, R. Gross, et al.
SPIE Advances in Semiconductors and Superconductors 1990
Elizabeth A. Sholler, Frederick M. Meyer, et al.
SPIE AeroSense 1997
Xinyi Su, Guangyu He, et al.
Dianli Xitong Zidonghua/Automation of Electric Power Systems
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997