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Patent 1331409 Summary

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(12) Patent: (11) CA 1331409
(21) Application Number: 1331409
(54) English Title: FERROELECTRIC LIQUID CRYSTAL DEVICE
(54) French Title: DISPOSITIF A CRISTAL LIQUIDE FERROELECTRIQUE
Status: Expired and beyond the Period of Reversal
Bibliographic Data
(51) International Patent Classification (IPC):
  • G09G 03/36 (2006.01)
(72) Inventors :
  • TSUBOYAMA, AKIRA (Japan)
  • INABA, YUTAKA (Japan)
  • OKADA, SHINJIRO (Japan)
  • TANIGUCHI, OSAMU (Japan)
  • KAWAGISHI, HIDEYUKI (Japan)
(73) Owners :
  • CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA
(71) Applicants :
  • CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA (Japan)
(74) Agent: SMART & BIGGAR LP
(74) Associate agent:
(45) Issued: 1994-08-09
(22) Filed Date: 1989-10-23
Availability of licence: Yes
Dedicated to the Public: N/A
(25) Language of filing: English

Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT): No

(30) Application Priority Data:
Application No. Country/Territory Date
220755/1985 (Japan) 1985-10-03

Abstracts

English Abstract


ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
A liquid crystal apparatus comprising a ferro-
electric liquid crystal device matrix having electrodes,
including scanning electrodes and signal electrodes spaced
from and intersecting with each other, and a ferroelectric
liquid crystal disposed between the scanning electrodes
and the signal electrodes, a driving circuit for applying
a driving voltage selectively to the intersections of the
scanning electrodes and the signal electrodes, and a
uniform electric field application circuit for applying an
alternating electric field to all or a prescribed part of
the intersections before the application of said driving
voltage; said ferroelectric liquid crystal providing two
average molecular directions forming an angle 2.theta.a
therebetween in the absence of an electric field after
application of an alternating electric field, said angle
2.theta.a being larger than an angle 2.theta. formed between two
average molecular directions of the ferroelectric liquid
crystal in the absence of an electric field before
application of the alternating electric field.


Claims

Note: Claims are shown in the official language in which they were submitted.


- 42 -
THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A liquid crystal apparatus comprising:
a ferroelectric liquid crystal device matrix having
electrodes, including scanning electrodes and signal
electrodes spaced from and intersecting with each other,
and a ferroelectric liquid crystal disposed between the
scanning electrodes and the signal electrodes,
a driving circuit for applying a driving voltage
selectively to the intersections of the scanning
electrodes and the signal electrodes, and
a uniform electric field application circuit for
applying an alternating electric field to all or a
prescribed part of the intersections before the
application of said driving voltage; said ferroelectric
liquid crystal providing two average molecular directions
forming an angle 2.theta.a therebetween in the absence of an
electric field after application of an alternating
electric field, said angle 2.theta.a being larger than an angle
2.theta. formed between two average molecular directions of the
ferroelectric liquid crystal in the absence of an electric
field before application of the alternating electric
field.
2. A liquid crystal apparatus according to claim 1,
wherein said driving voltage and said alternating voltage
are separately applied to the matrix electrodes.
3. A liquid crystal apparatus according to claim 1,
wherein said ferroelectric liquid crystal comprising a
pair of uniformly extending electrodes each being isolated
from the matrix electrodes and extending over the whole
intersections, the driving voltage is applied between the
matrix electrodes from the driving circuit, and the

- 43 -
alternating voltage is applied between the pair of
uniformly extending electrodes.
4. A liquid crystal apparatus according to claim 3,
wherein said matrix electrodes are floated while the
alternating voltage is applied from the uniform electric
field application circuit.
5. A liquid crystal apparatus according to claim 4,
wherein said ferroelectric liquid crystal is formed in a
layer having thickness thin enough to release the spiral
structure of the ferroelectric liquid crystal.
6. A liquid crystal apparatus according to claim 5,
wherein said ferroelectric liquid crystal is a chiral
smectic liquid crystal.

Description

Note: Descriptions are shown in the official language in which they were submitted.


1~31~
This application is a division of co-pending
Canadian patent application Serial No. 516,944, entitled
FE~ROELECTRIC LIQUID CRYSTAL DEVICE, filed August 27,
1986.
The present invention relates to a liquid crystal
device for use in a liquid crystal display device, an
optical shutter array, etc., and more particularly to a
ferroelectric liquid crystal device having improved
display and driving characteristics, because of improved
initial alignment or orientation of liquid crystal
molecules.
Clark and Lagerwall have proposed the use of a
liquid crystal device having bistability (Japanese Laid-
Open Patent Application No. 107216/1981, U.S. Patent No.
4,367,924, etc.). As the bistable liquid crystal, a
ferroelectric liquid crystal having chiral smectic C
(SmC*) phase or H (SmH*) phase is generally used. The
ferroelectric liquid crystal has bistability, i.e., has -
two stable states comprising a first stable state and a
second stable state, with respect to an electric field
applied thereto. Accordingly, different from the
conventional TN-type liquid crystal in the above-mentioned
device, the liquid crystal is oriented to the first stable
state in response to one electric field vector and to the `
second stable state in response to the other electric
field vector. Further, this type o* liquid crystal very
quickly assumes either one of the above-mentioned two
stable states in reply to an ~
'.`':" :.
. : ~

~ 3 3 ~
--2--
electric field applied thereto and retains the state
in the absence of an electric field. By utilizing
these properties, essential improvements can be
attained with respect to the above-mentioned difficul- ; -~
ties involved in the conventional TN-type liquid
crystal device.
In order to provide a uniform orientation or
: .. . .
alignment characteristic to a ferroelectric liquid
crystal in the above described type of device, there
10 has been known to apply a uniaxial alignment treatment ;~
onto a substrate surface. More specifically, the ~ ;
uniaxial alignment treatment includes a method of
rubbing a substrate surface with velvet, cloth or
paper in one direction, or a method of obliquely
depositing SiO or SiO2 on a substrate surface.
By applying an appropriate uniaxial alignment
treatment to a substrate surface, a specific bistable
condition has been provided as an initial alignment ~ -
characteristic. Under such an initial alignment ~;
condition, however, there have been.observed practical
problems such as~poor contrasts and low light-
transmittances during an optical modulation test
carried out by using polarizers arranged in cross ~
nicols in combination with the device. ~-
More specifically, in a ferroelectric liquid
crystal device of the type described above, a state
wherein molecules of a liquid crystal (hereinafter
~, ''~'

1331
--3--
sometimes abbreviated as "LC") are twisted from an
upper substrate to a lower substrate in an LC molecular
layer (twist alignment state) as shown in Figure 21 is
readily developed rather than a state wherein 1C ``
molecules are aligned in parallel with each other in
an LC molecular layer (parallel alignment state) as
shown in Figure 22. Such a twist alignment of LC
molecules leads to various disadvantages for a display
device such that the angle formed between the LC
molecular axes in the first orientation state and the~
second orientation state (tilt angle) is apparently ~ ;
decreased to result in a decrease in contrast or light
transmittance, and an overshooting occurs in the ,
response of the LC molecules at the time of switching `
between the orientation states to result in an observ-
able fluctuation in light transmittance. For this
reason, it is desired that the LC molecules are placed
in the parallel alignment state for a display device.
~ :
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has been accomplished to
solve the above mentioned problems and aims at provid-
ing a liquid crystal device improved in display
characteristics by realizing the parallel alignment
state of liquid crystal molecules.
We have observed that the above mentioned twist
alignment state can be transformed into the parallel ~ `
: :::

~ 3 ~
- 4 -
alignment state by applying an appropriate alternating
voltage (hPreinafter sometimes represented by an AC
voltage for parallel alignment) to a bistable
ferroelectric liquid crystal.
According to the present invention, there is
provided a liquid crystal apparatus comprising a ferro-
electric liquid crystal device matrix having electrodes,
including scanning electrodes and signal electrodes spaced
from and intersecting with each other, and a ferroelectric
liquid crystal disposed between the scanning electrodes
and the signal electrodes, a driving circuit for applying
a driving voltage selectively to the intersections of the :
scanning electrodes and the signal electrodes, and a
uniform electric field application circuit for applying an --
alternating electric field to all or a prescribed part of
the intersections before the application of said driving : ;
voltage; said ferroelectric liquid crystal providing two :
average molecular directions forming an angle 2ea .~
therebetween in the absence of an electric field after ~`
application of an alternating electric field, said angle
2ea being larger than an angle 2e formed between two
average molecular diractions of the ferroelectric liquid
crystal in the absence of an electric field before :~ .
application of the alternating electric field.
These and other objects, features and advantages of
the present invention will become more apparent upon a
~: cbnsideration of the following description of`the ~ -
preferred embodiments of the present invention taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings. ~:
The following drawings and detailed description of
. ": ,.
:

~ ~3~ ~3.3
the invention are directed not only to the liquid crystal
apparatus which is the subject of the present invention,
but also to the ferroelectric liquid crystal device and
liquid crystal apparatus which are claimed in co-pending
Canadian patent application Serial No. 516,944, of which
the present application is a div:ision.
_LEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figure ~ is a schematic plan view for illustrating
an LC cell according to the present invention;
Figures 2 and 3 are a plan view and a sectional
view, respectively, of an LC cell;
Figure 4 is a circuit diagram for AC voltage
application;
Figures 5 and 6 are respectively a schematic view
for illustrating a ferroelectric liquid crystal cell;
Figures 7, 10, 12, 15, 17 and 20 are respectively a
circuit diagram of an example of the liquid crystal
apparatus according to the present invention;
Figures 8 and ll are circuit diagrams of switches
used in the examples shown in Figures 7 and 10, ~-.
respectively;
Figure 9 is a sectional view showing another example : ~
of the LC device according to the present invention; ~ ;
Figures 13 and 18 are respectively a timing chart :~
for illustrating voltage signals used in an -~
' ' '
. ~
` . ' '
'.~'.'.' ~''~'
.; ~ ~ ',,.
'',' ~ ' '"
;; ~ " ': ' `
'''~'~`'"";;

1 3 3 ~
-6-
example of the present invention;
Figure 14 is an illustration of matrix picture
elements in an embodiment of the present invention;
Figures 16 and 19 are circuit diagrams of the
5 final stages of the driver circuits in the apparatus -~
shown in Figures 15 and 17; and
Figure 21 and 22 are respectively a schematic
view of projection of C directors on a chiral smectic ~i `
molecular layer in a twist alignment state and in a -
10 parallel alignment state, respectively. ;~ ;
,- ~
~ DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
~i ~ .- ; ,-:
i~ ~ Liquid crystal materials most suited for the ~;
present invention are chiral smectic liquid crystals
`~ l5 showing ferroelectricity. More specifically, liquid ;~
crystals showing chiral smectic C phase (SmC*), G phase ~ ;
(SmG*), F phase (SmF*), I phase (SmI*) or H phase
(SmH*) are available.
Details of ferroelectric liquid crystals are ;~
described in, e.g., "LE JOURNAL DE PHYSIQUE LETTERS"
36 (L-69) 1975, "Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals"i ;
~ , . , ~ . ,.
"Applied Physics Letters" 36 (11) 1980, "Submicro
Second Bistable Electrooptlo Switching in Liquid
Crystals"; "Kotai Butsuri (Solid State Physics)" 16
~5 (141~ 1981, "Liquid Crystals", etc. In the present
invention, ferroelectric liquid crystals disclosed in
these publications may he used.

1331~
-7-
Examples o ferroelectric liquid crystal
compounds include decyloxybenzylidene-p'-amino-2-
methylbutyl cinnamate (DOBAMBC), hexyloxybenzylidene-
p'-amino-2-chloropropyl cinnamate (HOBACPC), 4-o- ;
(2-methyl)-butylresorcylidene-4'-octylaniline (~A 8),
etc. Especially preferred class of chiral smectic -
liquid crystals used in the liquid crystal device
according to the present invention are those showing
a cholesteric phase at a temperature higher than the ;~; ;
temperature for giving a smectic phase. A specific
example of such chiral smectic liquid crystal is a
blphenyl ester type liquid crystal compcund showing
~ " . . ":
phase transition temperatures as shown in an example ~ -
described hereinafter.
lS When a devlce is~constituted using these
materials, the device may be supported with a block of `
copper, etc., in which a heater is embedded in order to ~ ,;,,
.~ .":~
realize a temperature condition where the liquid
crystal~compounds assume a desired phase.
Referring t,o Figure 5, there is schematically ` ~;
shown an example of a ferroelectric liquid crystal cell
for explanation of the operation thereof. An example -` `;`
where an SmC* phase constitutes a desired phase is ~
explained. Reference numerals 51 and 51a denote base ~.
plates (qlass plates~ on which a transparent electrode
of, e.g., In2O3, SnO2, ITO (Indium-Tin~Oxide), etc., ,~
` is disposed, respectively. A liquid crys~al of an
,: ~",~

~ 3 ~
SmC*-phase in which liquid crystal molecular layers 52
are aligned perpendicular to surfaces of the glass
plates is hermetically disposed therebetween. A full
line 53 shows liquid crystal molecules. The liquid -
crystal molecules 53 continuously form a helical struc-
ture in the direction of extension of the base plates.
The angle formed between the central axis 55 and the
axis of a liquid crystal molecule 53 is expressed as
. Each liquid crystal molecule 53 has a dipole
moment (Pl) 54 in a direction perpendicular to the
axis thereof. When a voltage higher than a certain
threshold level is applied between electrodes formed
on the base plates 51 and 51a, a helical structure of
the liquid crystal molecule 53 is unwound or released
, ~ ~
~: is to change the alignment direction of respective liquid
` crystal molecules 53 so that the dipole moments (P~
54 are all directed in the direction of the electric
field. The liquid crystal molecules 53 have an ;~
elongated shape and show refractive anisotropy between
20 the long axis and the short axis thereof. Accordingly, ` -~
;~ it is easily understood that when, for instance,
polarizers arranged in a cross nicol relationship,
i.e., with their polarlzing directions crossing each
other, are disposed on the upper and the lower surfaces
25 of the glass plates, the liquid crystal cell thus `~
arranged functions as a liquid crystal optical modula~
tion device of which optical characteristics vary
; ~ ` . .:
~, "' -'.'' ~

~33~
g
.:
depending upon the polarity of an applied voltage.
The liquid crystal layer in the liquid crystal ,
":, ':
device of the present invention may be rendered
sufficiently thin in thickness (e.g., less than 10
. ~
As the thickness of the liquid crystal layer is
decreased, the helical structure of the liquid crystal
molecules is ]oosened even in the absence of an ; ;~ -
electric field whereby the dipole moment assumes
either of the two states, i.e., P in an upper direction
64 or Pa in a lower direction 64a as shown in Figure 6.
:: : ,~ ,,:
One half of the angle between the molecular axis 63 and ``
the molecular axis 63a is referred to as a tilt angle ^ '~
, which is the same as half the apical angle of the --
;cone of the helical structure. When an electric field
15 ~ E or Ea higher than a certain threshold level and
different from each other in polarity as shown in
Figure 6 is applied to a cell having the above~
mentioned characteristlcs, the dipole moment is
dlrected~eLther in the upper direction 64 or in the
lower direction 64a depending on the vector of the
electric field E or Ea. In correspondence with this,
the~llquid crystal molecules are oriented in either
of a first stable state 63 and a second stable state
63a
25When the above-mentloned ferroelectric liquid
crystal is used as an optical modulation element, it
is possible to obtain two advantages as briefly touched ;~
`:" , ` ';'^, '~'~
`: . - . . .::
: .

~ 3 3 ~
-10-
on hereinbefore. First is that the response speed is
quite fast. Second is that the orientation of the
liquid crystal shows bistability. The second advantage
will be further explained, e.g., with reference to
",
Figure 6. When the electric field E is applied to ~-
the liquid crystal molecules, they are oriented in
:
the first stable state 63. This state is stably -~
retained even if the electric field is removed. On ~ ~;
the other hand, when the electric field Ea of which ~-
~ ~ -
direction is opposite to that of the electric field
E is applied thereto, the liquid crystal molecules
are oriented to the second stable state 63a, whereby
the directions of molecules are changed. This state
is similarly stably retained even if the electric
field is removed. Further, as long as the magnitude ~`
of the electric field E or Ea being applied is not ~;~
above a certain threshold value, the liquid crystal
molecules are placed ln the respective orientation
states. In order to effectively realize high response
speed and bistability, lt is preferable that the
thickness of the cell is as thin as possible.
The most serious problem encountered in form~
ing a device using such a-ferroelectric liquid crystal
has been, as briefly mentioned hereinbefore, that it
~` ?5 is difficult to form a cell having a highly uniform
.
; monodomain wherein liquid crystal layers having an
SmC* phase are aligned perpendicular to the base plate ;~
,
~'','.' ' ':
~,

::;
-1 1- ~' ~ , ,
phasea and the liquid crystal molecules are aligned ;~
almost in parallel with the base plate phases. ~ -
There has been heretofore known a method of
applying a uniaxial orientation treatment to base
plate surfaces when a large area of a liquid crystal
; cell is produced. The uniaxial orientation treatment
is effected by rubbing the base plate surfaces with
velvet, cloth or paper in a single direction or by
the oblique or tilt vapor deposition of Sio or SiO2
10 onto the base plate surfaces. However, such a uni- ~-
axlal orientation treatment as by the rubbing or the
oblique vapor deposltion has been considered in- ;
appropri~ate for a ferroelectric liquid crystal since
such~an orientation treatment per se hinders the ` ---
bistability of the liquid crystal, based on which
drlving utllizing a memory characteristic is realized.
According t~ our further study, it has been
found~possible to provide a specific bistable state `~
as~descrlbed hereinafter by~applying a suitable uni~
2~0 axlal orientation~treatment to base plate surfaces ^` `
; - and by arranging a polarizer ln the specific axis
direction to realize driving effectively utilizing ``
a memory characteristic.~
Figure 1 is a schematic view illustrating `~`
molecular orieutatlon states in a liquld crystal device
according to the present invention. Figure 2 is a
plan view of an example of a liquid crystal cell used
`.'...~.~ ', '
~ ,

~ 3 ~ !
- 12 -
in the present invention and Figure 3 is a sectional
view of the cell taken along the line III-III shown , -;
in Fiuure 2.
Referring to Figures 2 and 3, an LC cell 1
comprises a pair of substrates 3a and 3b of glass or
a plastic, respectively provided thereon with stripe
electrodes 4a and 4b of 1000 A-thick ITO (Indium Tin
Oxide) stripe electrode films and further thereon with
alignment films 5a and 5b of 10 A - 1 ~m, preferably
L0 100 A - 5000 A, in thickness. Between the alignment
. . , ~
films are disposed polyimide spacers of 1 ~-dot shape
; so as to retain the liquld crystal layer 2 in a
constant thickness over a wide area. The above
mentioned two substrates, after having been subjected
to a rubbing treatment, are secured to each other to
.. ~; : , ~, :. ::
form a cell into which the liquid crystal is then
introduced.
Hereinbelow, an example wherein an ester type
liquid crystal mixture was used is explained with
reference to Figures 1 through 3. The ester-type
mixture liquid crystal showed the following phase
transition temperatures as determined by microscopic
observation~
Iso.(isotropic phase) ~ Ch.(cholesteric phase)
75C~ SmA (smectic A phase) 50C' SmC below 0C
; Cry.(crystal phase)
; ~ '.. '' ', ~'

1 3 ~ 9
-13- ~
When the liquid crystal layer was formed in a :
sufficiently large thickness (about 100 ~), the SmC*
phase assumed a helical structure and the pitch was
about 6 u.
In the present invention, in order to realize
the parallel alignment state, it is desirable that at ,,:''
least one of the alignment films 5a and 5b comprises
; a polymer film having a polarity term ~YbP) of 20
dyne/cm or below, preferably 10 dyne/cm or below,
~: lO particularly preferably 7 dyne/cm or below.
According to our measurement, various polymer
films usable as alignment films showed the following
polarity terms~
Film speciesPolarity term,(YbP) -~
~:; 15 polyethylene2.6 dyne/cm
~ polyvinyl alcohol 3.3 dyne/cm ,;~:`
,~ Nylon 12 3.7 dyne~cm
Nylon 11 5.0 dyne/cm .. '.. ;,.~;
: Nylon 2001 7.2 dyne/cm
Nylon 3001 11.5 dyne/cm .
polyimide* 22.6 dyne/cm ~ ,,2
*The polymide film was formed by a dehydro~
ring closure reaction at 300C of a coating film of a~`'~,:"'`,`
` polyamic acid which was a dehydro-condensation product ,-',
25 Of pyromellitlc dianhydride and 4,4'-diaminodiphenyl,~,'!~"`'.'
ether. ;,:,
The above mentioned values of polarity terms,~";",::~
: - ' ';''''-''
: .~'.: .~ '

.~. !
-14 1 3 3 ~
are those measured according to a method described in
Nippon Settyaku Kyokaishi (Journal of Adhesion Society
of Japan) vol. 18, No. 3 (1972), pp. 131-141 under the
conditions of a temperature of 20C and a relative
humidity of 55 %. The B-series liquids (containing
no hydrogen bonding component or dispersion component)
were 5 species of methylene iodide, tetrabromoethane, ~ ~
a-bromonaphthalene, tricresyl phosphate, and hexa- ~-
chlorobutadiene. The above values are respectively an
average of measured values obtained with the five
liquids. ~-
; Further, the above prepared 100 ~-thick cell
; gave a spontaneous polarization of 10 nC (nano-
Coulomb)/cm2 at 25C as measured by the triangular-
15 wave application method (K. Miyasato et al., Japanese ~ ;
: , .
~ ~ Journal of Applied Physics 22 (10), p.p. 661-663 ~
~ :
(1983)i "Direct Method with Triangular Waves for
Measuring Spontaneouà Polarization on Ferroelectric
Liquid Crystal"?. There is a tendency that the
20~ lncrease~in~tilt~angle under the memory atate by the
AC applicatlon according to the present invention may
be easily accompllshed for a liquid crystal having a
relatively large spontaneous polarization. For this
reason, a ferroeIectrlc liquid cryatal having a
spontaneous polarization at 25C of 5 nC/cm2 or larger,
particularly 10 nC/cm2 - 300 nC/cm2, is suited for the
present invention. The values, however, can vary
~: "~
':~ : ' .`'~

-15- ~ 3 ~ 9
depending on the kinds of the alignment films.
The preparation procedure of a ferroelectric
liquid crystal cell 1 as shown in Figures 2 and 3 is ~ ;
supplemented hereinbelow.
First, a cell structure 1 containing the above
mentioned biphenyl ester type liquid crystal is set in
such a heating case (not shown) that the whole cell 1
is uniformly heated therein. When, the cell 1 is
heated to a temperature (about 95C) where the liquid
crystal in the cell assumes an isotropic phase. The
temperature of the heating case is decreased whereby
the liquid crystal in the cell 1 is subjected to a
` ~ temperature decreasing stage. In the temperature i`;
decreasing stage, the liquid crystal in the isotropic
. i,. ... .
l5 phase is transformed at about 90C into a cholesteric , ``
phase having a grandjean texture and, on further ~ ``
cooling, transformed from the cholesteric phase to an ` ~
Sm~ phase which-is a uniaxially anisotropic phase at ~i
about 75C. At this~time, the axes of the liquid `` '~
crystal molecules in the SmA phase are aligned in the
rubbing direction.
Then, the liquid crystal in the SmA phase is
`, transformed into an SmC* phase on further cooling,
whereby a monodomain of SmC* phase with a non-spiral
-~ 25 structure is formed if the cell~thickness is of the~ ~;
order of, for example, 3 ~m or less. ~ `~
Referring again to Figure 1, the figure is a
", `'`',,'','~'

1 ~ 3 ~
-16-
a schematic plan view illustrating the state of orien-
tation of liquid crystal molecules as viewed from
above the substrate face 15.
In the figure, the two-head arrow 10 indicates -
S a direc'ion of a uniaxial orientation treatment, i.e.,
the direction of rubbing in this embodiment. In the
SmA phase, liquid crystal molecules are oriented or
aligned in an average molecular axis direction 11 which
coincides with the rubbing direction 10. In the SmC*
phase, the average molecular axis direction of the
:
liquid crystal molecules is tilted to a direction 12,
so that~the rubbing direction 10 and the average
molecular axis direction 12 forms an angle ~ to result
in a first stable orientation state. When a voltage
is applied between a pair of base plates in this stage,
the average molecular axis direction of the liquid
crystal molecules in the SmC* phase is changed to ~
saturation angle ~ larger than the angle ~, where ~'
a third stable orlentation~state is attained. The
average molecular~axis~direction at this tlme is
denoted by a reference numeral 13. When the voltage ~-;;-
` lS then réturned to zero, the liquid crystal molecules
are returned to~the former first~molecular axis
direction 12. Accordingly, the liquid crystal mole-
?5 cules have-a memory characteristic in the state of ~`~
the first molecular axis direction 12. When a vol~age
of the opposite polarity is applied in the state of ~ ^
, ,-:
.:

-17- 13314~3 ~ ~
the molecular axis direction 12 and the voltage is
sufficiently high, the average molecular axis direc-
tion of the liquid crystal molecules is shifted to :
and saturated at a fourth stable orientation state
giving an average molecular axis direction 13a. Then,
when the voltage is returned to zero, the liquid .'';,:
crystal molecules are returned to and settled at the
second stable state giving the average molecular axis ~ ~
direction 12a. As a result, when the polarizing ~.
: l0 direction 14 of one polari~er is set in the same ' .:~
, . . ..
direction as the molecular axis direction 12 forming :-:
the angle ~, an optical contrast between an ON state
and an OFF state can be improved in a driving method
~ utilizing an orientation between the first and second .;. .
;~ lS stable orientation states and the memory characteris~
tics. :.
The angle ~ is detected as an average of the :: :
molecular axes in one stable state, and a reason for ~;
~: the angle ~ being smaller than the angle ~ may be
attributable to the fact that the liquid crystal
~ molecules are not aligned or oriented in completely
:~ parallel with each other in an SmC* layer so that the :
average molecular axis orientation provides the angle
. It is considered possible in principle to have
: 25 the angle ~ be in concord with the angle ~
It is very effective to increase the value of ~ ; .
for the purpose of transmittance of a liquid crystal .
'' ' '

-18- 1331~
device. More specifically, in a liquid crystal device
utilizing the birefringence of a liquid crystal, a
transmittance with right angle cross nicols is deter-
mined by the following equation: ~;
; 5 I/Io = sln24- sin2(~nd~
wherein Io denotes an incident light intensity, I a
transmitted light intensity, ~ a tilt angle, ~n a
, ~ ,
~ refractive index anisotropy, d the thickness of a !~
: . :.
liquid crystal layerj and ~ the wavelength of an
incident light. The above equation holds true with a
case wherein one polarlzation axis of the rLght angle
cross nicols is arranged to coincide with the average
; molecular axis direction in one stable state and the -
transmittance is obtalned when the liquid crystal
molecules are~re-oriented to the other stable state,
wherein the liquid crystal molecules are aligned in
completely parallel with the substrate faces. It has ;~
been also conflrmed, however, that the above equation ~ ;~
;20 also holds true with a~case wherein the molecular axis ~ ;~
` directions providing the angle ~ are nearly parallel
with the substrate faces. As a result, the maximum -
transmittance~ls~obtaiDed at the tilt angle ~ = 22.5~.
The measurement of the before mentioned ~, ~a
~ ~25 and ~ has been conducted ln the followlng manner.
`~ A pair of polarizers are disposed in right angle cross
~ nlcols to sandwlch a liquld crystal cell, A posltive
: ~ ~ . '" :.. ..

-19- 'i"' ' ~
~ 3 3 ~
pulse exceeding the threshold voltage is applied across
the cell, and the cross nicol polarizers are rotated - -~
with respect to the cell while retaining their relative :
positions to a position where the darkest state of the ~-
cell is reached. Then, a negative polarity pulse
exceeding the threshold voltage is applied to the cell, ~
and the cross nicol polarizers are again rotated until :
:" ~ " . .
the darkest state of the cell is again reached. The ;
rotation angles between the positions providing the
1~ two darkest states thus measured for the respective
conditions correspond to twice the tilt angle ~, ~a
and ~ . Further to say, the tilt angles 0 and 0a are
those in the memory state, so that they are measured ;~
after removal of the pulse voltages. On the other
hand, the tile angle ~ is measured while the pulse
voltages are applied. Specific examples of actual
,-. ., ~ .
measurement are explained hereinbelow.
Example 1 -i~
Two cells havlng a cell thickness _ of 1.1 ~m
and 1.8 ~m, respectlvely, were prepared by using a
polyimide film having a polarity term (YbP) of 7.5
dyne/cm for both the alignment films Sa and 5b. The
tilt angles B were respectively measured at 8.0 and
7.5 which are both below the optimum value. Then,
two polarities of pulses respectively of DC 50 volts
were applied to the cells (d = 1.1 ~m and d = 1.8 ~m), ;
whereby the tilt angle ~ were respectively measured
.: . :
~" , :

-20- ~33~
at 23.1 and 24.0 which are close to the optimum
value.
Further, switching between the bistable states
was effected by using various magnitudes of voltage
5 pulses in combination with various pulse durations ~;
with respect to the two cells, whereby the following
swiching voltages were obtained.
Table 1 '
, '' ' ~ ~
~ 10 Pulse duration (m.sec) 1.5 1.0 0.5
, .'~.
d = 1.1 (~m) 10.1 V10.1 V 10.1 V
_ , ,.,
d = 1.8 (~m) 14.0 V14.0 V 14.0 V
Further, various AC voltages in the ranges of ;
10 - 150 V and 20 - 100 Hz were applied to the cells,
and after the removal of the voltages, the tilt angle
a between the bistable states and the pulse duration
w ltage characteristics of pulses for switching
between~bistable~states were again examined.
When the AC voltages were applied for 10
; seconds, the following results were obtained. The
effective frequency range for increasing the tilt -- `
angle ~ was 30 - 40 Hz and no remarkable difference ~ `
25 in effectiveness was observed in this range. At the ;
frequency of 40 Hz, no remarkable difference in tilt
angle Oa was observed in the range of 10 - 50 V, ~`~
,.. i",
:: '~. . .'~. '

-21- 1 3 ~ 1 4 (~ 9
whereas in the range of 50 - 60 V, the domains of
~a = 21.0 and ~a = 18.8 began to appear for the all
thickness of d = 1.1 ~m and d = 1.8 ~m, respectively.
Further, in the range of 60 - 150 V, the domains
developed entirely to provide a very good contrast.
Over 150 V, however, the monodomains were disordered
and other defects were also observed. ~`
Switching voltages after the application of
the voltage of 60 - 150 V were as shown in the
following Table 2 for switching between the bistable
states giving the tilt angle ~a.
Table 2
Pulse duration [m.sec) 1.5 1.0 0.5
_ _ .,,~
d = 1.1 ~m) 14.6 V 16.1 V 18.6 V
:
d = 1.8 (~m) 16.9 V 17.4 V 21.1 V ;~
.
As is apparent from the above Table 2 in
20~comparison with Table 1, the parallel alignment state
giving the tilt angle ~a required higher switching
voltages than in the bistable state before the AC
voltage application. This is considered to be because
the title angle ~a approached to ~ , so that it was
necessary to apply an energy~for also inverting liquid
crystal molecules in the vicinity of the alignment
films to invite an inevitable increase in driving
~,',:~.:
~`

-22- ~ 3 3 ~
voltage for switching.
The transmittance given by the tilt angle 0a
after the AC voltage application increased to 14 % for
the cell thickness of d = 1.1 ~m and 19 % for d = 1.8
5 ~m, which were nearly three times the values before the
AC application.
Example 2
~ The procedure of Example 1 was repeated except
-~ that polyvinyl films having a polarity term YbP of~ ;~
3.3 dyne/cm were used in place of the polyimide films
on the glass substrates and a cell thickness of
d = 1.5 ~m was adopted. ~Basically similar results as
follows were obtained.
; Effective AC`voltage: 45-70 V, 30-70 Hz
AC applicatlon time: 5 - 20 seconds
-Tllt angle~
Before AC voltage application B = 7.8
Durlng~DC voltage application ~ = 22.8
Aft~er~AC voltage application Ba = 21.6 ~;
20~ Switching voltages were as shown in the follow-
ing Table 3.
Pulse duratlon (m.sec~) ¦ 1.5 ¦ 1.0 ¦ 0-5
~, ~ :;
Voltage (V~ ~ 16.2 17.0 21.4
~,

-23- ~33~
The transmittance was 6 ~ before the AC voltage ;~
application and 18 ~, i.e., three times, after the
application.
Example 3 "
As described hereinbefore, a ferroelectric
liquid crystal phase having bistability is generally
produced through temperature decrease from another ~ - ;
higher temperature phase. In this example, the cells
~ used in Examples 1 and 2 were cooled while applying
;~ lO thereto an AC electric field of 40 V and 50 Hz,
whereby uniform monodomains of parallel alignment
states were realized over a wide area.
Example 4
A cell which has been transformed into a ;~
parallel alignment state providing a high contrast
due to application of an AC~electric field can return
to an original low contrast state after standing for l;
several days. Accordingly, when a ferroelectric liquid
crystal cell in a paralleL~alignment state providing
~a~tilt~angle ~a is used for a display device, iù is `,
necessary and effective to~apply an AC voltage to the ~;
cell before use thereof or when the contrast is lowered
,
during use. Figure 4 is~a diagram for illustrating a
peripheral circuit for the~above mentioned AC applica~
; 2`5 tion. Referrlng to Figure 4, transparent electrodes
41 and 42 formed on a pair of glass substrates for
sandwiching a liquid crystal are disposed mutually at ~`
., :, .
~::; ~ . .,

-
I
~24- ~331~9
'::
right angles to form picture elements in the form of a
matrix. These electrodes 41 and 42 are connected to
driver circuits 43 and 44, respectively, for applying
., -, .: :.
voltages thereto. An AC voltage generator 45 is
disposed selectively connectable to the electrodes 42. ;;~ -
More specifically, the driver circuit 42 and ~
., :., ":
the AC voltage generator 45 are connected to the
,, ~
transparent electrodes through changeover switches
46. When the switches are closed to the driver cir- ~ -~
cuit 44, image display signals are supplied to the
~; electrodes 42, whereas when the switches are closed
f~to the AC voltage generator 45, an AC voltage is
s~imultaneously applied to all the electrodes 42. In
this way, a ferroelectric liquid crystal is retained
lS in the alignment state providing the tilt angle Oa
in the present invention. `~
On the other hand, the driver circuit 43 `-
supplies a constant voltage, e.g., O volt, to all the ~ -
electrodes 41.
20 ~Example~5 ~ ;
`~`Figure 7 shows another example of circuit for
~ applying an AC voltage. Reference numerals 71 and 72
? ` ~respèctively denote transparent electrodes disposed
`mutually at right angles to form matrix picture
elements and formed a pair of glass substrates sand~
wiching a liquid crystal. Numerals 73 and 74 respec~
tively denote clriver circuits for applying voltages
~, ..
,.: ., ~:::, -.

-25- ~ 3~
.
to the electrodes, and 75 an AC voltage generator.
Switches 76, 77, 78 and 79 are selectively
turned ON and OFF as required for AC application.
When the picture elements are driven in a desired
manner, the switches 76 and 77 are turned ON and
the switches 78 and 79 are turnecl OFF.
~ Ihen an AC electric field is applied for
realizing the parallel alignment state, the switches
76 and 77 are turned OFF, and the switches 78 and 79
l0 are turned ON. The switches 76 and 77 are turned OFF ~;
~ .:
in order to protect the driver circuits 73 and 74.
Figure 8 illustrates a circuit example for one electrcde
line 71. Generally, the withstand voltage o~ a tran~
sistor is to a value of the order of a driving voltage.
: ,
; l5 However, the AC voltage applied through a line 80 is
required to be higher than an ordinary driving voltage.
For this reason, so as not apply a load exceed-
ing the withstand voltage to transistors 81a and 81b,
power supplies to the driver circuits~73 and 74 are `~
dLsconnected by means of one switch 76a among the
~` switched 76, whereby the driver circuits 73 and 74
are protected. ;
Examp~e 6
; The liquid crystal apparatus used in Example 5
~ 25 requires a rather complicated switching mechanism. In
;~ this example, in order to decrease the number of
switches, a two-layer electrode structure is adopted. ~ :
: ~

133~l~s~ .
-26
A sectional view for this arrangement is shown
in Figure 9, in which numerals 90a and 90b denote
transparent substrates such as glass plates, 91a and
91b matrix electrodes, and 92a ancl 92b whole area
5 electrodes covering the whole pic1:ure area. The whole ~
area electrodes 92a and 92b are insulated from the ~; ,
matrix electrodes 91a and 91b by insulating films 93a ~ ;
and 93b. The circuit arrangement of a liquid crystal
device having the two-layer electrode structure is
shown in Figure 10. The whole area electrodes 92a
and 92b are disposed so as to sandwich the matrix ~ ;
electrodes 108 (combination of 91a and 91b). As in
Example 5, at the time of driving, an AC application
; power~supply 102 is turned OFF and switches 103 and
lS 104 are turned ON. At the time of AC application, the `,
switches 103 and 104 are turned OFF and the AC power
supply 102 is turned ON. The switches 103 and 104
have a~function of protecting driver circuits 105 and
106 from electrical damage and also a function of
~ ; 20 electrically floating the inner matrix electrodes 108
;~ to effectively apply an AC field supplied from the
whoIe area electrodes 92a and 92b outside the matrix `~
~; electrodes to the inner SmC* liquid crystal layer. "' `
Figure 11 shows a driver circuit for one line
used in this example. In order that the electric
field applied from the whole area electrodes 92a and `
92b outside the matrix electrodes 108 is effectively ;;~;~

1 3 ~ 9 ! :
-27-
applied to the liquid crystal layer, it is necessary to
place the matrix electrodes 108 by a switch 104a. ~
According to this example, the drlver circuit ;
corresponding to the number of lines can be turned OFF
from the ground altogether by turning off the switch
104a, so that the swltching mechanism can be simpli-
fied.
Example 7
According to a system as shown in Figure 12, ~ ~;
10 driver circuits 121 and 122 can be completely isolated
from matrix electrodes 126 by switches 123 and 124, so ~-~
that the matrix electrodes are completely electrically
floated at the time of applying a voltage to whole
area electrodes. On the other hand, at the time of
lS driving, the AC circuit 127 is turned OFF. According
i to this circuit arrangement, the driver circuits can
be protected from electrical damage when a high voltage
AC application is required.
Examples 8 ~
: .
Example 1 was substantially repeated while the
polyimide films on the glass substrates were respec~
` ! ... :
~ tively replaced by polyethylene films (Example 8),
.,~ . ,
Nylon 12 films (Example 91, Nylon 11 films (Example 10) -~
; and polyimide films (Example 11), and the cell thick-
-.
25 nes5 d was set to 1.5 ~m. The tilt angles 0a for the ;~
respective celLs after an AC application of 70 V and ~
` 70 Hz for 20 seconds. The results are summarized in ~ ,

; " :
1 3 3 ~
-28
the following table.
Example Alignment film (YbP) Tilt angle ~a
8 polyethylene (2.6 dyne/cm) 20.0 ~: `
9 Nylon 2 (3.7 " ) 18.5
Nylon 11 (5.0 " ) 18.0
11 polyimide (22.6 " ) 8
:;~ Further, according to a p:referred embodiment .
~` of the present invention, there is provided a liquid
crystal apparatus comprising: a liquid crystal device
~: lO comprising matrix electrodes including scanning
signal lines and information signal lines spaced from
and intersecting with each other, and a ferroelectric
liquid crystal material disposed between the matrix :.
electrodes; a scanning signal side liquid crystal .
~ 15 driver circuit, and peripheral circuits thereof
;~; including a latch circuit and a shift register cir- -
cuit; and an lnformation signal side liquid crystal ~ .
driver circuit and peripheral circuits including a .
latch circuit and a shift register circuit; wherein
the llquid c~rystal drlver clrcuits, the latch circuits
and the shift register circuits are respectively of
the same structure cn the scanning signal side and the
information signal side; and an alternating voltage is
: simultaneously applied to all the picture elements ~'!`~`~'',`,'~'',,'.
: 25 from at least one of the driver circuits.
In this embcdiment, the` AC voltage for parallel ,~
,, , ., ~, ;,
~ alignment is provided as a combination of signals from .;;~.
~: ' . ,'.: . '
~: ,, "'~:
,~ . . ,'.` ':

I
-29- 1 331~
the scanning signal side driver circuit and the infor-
mation signal side driver circuit having the same wave
height and frequency and reverse phases. After the
AC voltage application for parallel alignment, display
signals corresponding to given image signals are
applied. ~ ~ ;
In this embodiment, the output stage transis-
tors constituting the scanning signal side driver ~-
, ~ ~
circuit and the information signal side driver circuit -
10 are those having the same withstand voltage which is ~ ;
equal to or above the waveheight of the AC voltage for
parallel alignment. -~
It is required that the AC voltage for parallel
alignment is such that liquid crystal molecules can
,. . .
cause switching between bistable states while suffi~
ciently responding thereto. The voltage waveheight ~ -~
thereof strongly depends on the kinds of liquid crystal
materiaI and alignment film used and the frequency, and
; may be adjusted to the same order as the waveheight of
2~0 pulse vo?tages for~switching.
; Driver circuits and peripheral circuits thereof -~
for a liquid crystal device in a matrix arrangement are
made~symmetrical. In other words, so-called vertical
units and horizontal units of these circuits are made
, ~:
of the same construction. By this arrangement, one
set of these may be used for the scanning signal l1nes !~
and the other may b4 used for the information signal
~ -:
:~ .

~ 3 3 ~
lines hy only changeover switching, so that the verti-
cal writing and horizontal writing can be easily
switched. Furthermore, by similarly connecting two - ~;
driver circuits to driving power supplies, it is
possible to apply an AC voltage for parallel alignment
from a driving power supply prior to writing pulses.
This embodiment is explained with reference to
the drawings.
Figure 14 shows an electrode arrangement for
,.; :,
a matrix display comprising scanning signal lines and
information signal lines forming picture elements at
; respecti~e intersections, and an example of display
formed at the picture elements.
In Figure 14, S1 - S5 denote scanning signal ~`:
lines and I1 - I5 denota display signal lines. It is
assumed that the hatched picture elements correspond ; ~`:
to a "black" writing state and the white picture ~ -
. ", ~ : ~
elements correspond to a "white" writing state.
Figure 13, especially at the display signal
20 application period, shows a timing chart for forming , `~
; i.. ;":
a display state shown in Figure 14 according to a
line-sequential writing mode wherein the scanning
. :,, .-~ .:
signal lines S1 - S5 are line-sequentially scanned - `
and the columns of the information signal line I1 and ~-
25 I2 are alternately written in "white" and "black". In ~;
Figure 13, ~T denotes a writing pulse duration, and i~ ;~
it is assumed that a positive electric field is used ;~
; ,. . . ~

1 3 31~ ~ 9 ~; :
for writing "white" and a negative electric field is
used for writing "black". It is also assumed that ~ .
writing pulses are those having a pulse durations of ~ :
~T and waveheights of +3Vo exceeding the threshold.
More specifically, Figure 13 corresponds to a ~ :
scheme wherein picture elements on a scanning signal
line are first written in "white" and selected picture .
elements on the scanning line are then written in
"black" (line clear-line writing), and the information
lO signal includes a writing signal and an auxiliary ;
signal subsequent thereto for preventing a crosstalk
caused by continuation of the same polarity of signals.
Immediately after energization of the driving
circuits, as shown at the AC application period in
lS Figure 13, AC voltages for parallel alignment are
simaltaneously applied to all the scanning signal lines
and the information signal lines with the same voltage
heights V', with rectangular waves of the same fre~
quency, but:in antiphases. As a result, a rectangular ~`~
20 AC voltage of a waveheight 2V' is applied across the :~
substrates~
Thé AC voltage for parallel alignment is for
transforming liquid crystal molecules from the twist -.~ .
state into the parallel state, and the waveheight and ;~
25 pulse duration thereof may be set to values respec- .". .
tively exceeding those of the writing pulses. In this .
example, a writing pulses of 1 msec and 10V was used,

-32- l 3 3
whereas a rectangular AC voltage of 50 Hz and about
20 V (Vpp.) was applied for several seconds to realize `~
the parallel alignment state. ~
The liquid crystal material used herein was a ~ ;
ferroelectric liquid crystal composition comprising,
as the major components, p-n-octy]oxybenzoic acid-p'- ; ;
(2-methylbutyloxy)phenyl ester ancl p-n-nonyloxybenzoic
acid-p'-(2-methylbutyloxy)phenyl ester. The liquid ;,
: .. -
crystal cell was prepared by providing an alignment
film of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) on ITO pattern elec-
trodes on a pair of glass substrates, followed by :-
rubbing, and fixing to provide a cell thickness of
about 1.5 ~m. Between the transparent electrodes and ~`
the alignment films, insulatlng films of SiO2 may be -
15 inserted.
Figùre 15 shows a circuit arrangement for a
; liquid crystal apparatus according to the present ~ ~-
invention. In Figure 15, the same circuit arrangement
is used for both the scanning signal side and the . ;
information signal side, wherein reference numeral
156 denotes a Liquid crystal matrix panel, 157 an i
information signal side driver circuit, 158 a scanning
.,..,, ,, :
signal side driver circuit, 159 and 150 latch circuits,
151 and 152 S/R (shift register) circuits, 153 a
driving power supply, 154 a driving voltage control
circuit, and 155 an I/F ~lnterface). `
In operation, when a main switch (not shown)
` '`''~`',
~( =~

r~
-33- 1331~
is first turned on, an AC voltage of vs' is applied
to all the scanning electrodes and an AC voltage of
VI' of antiphases with Vs' is applied to all the
information signal electrodes respectively at a pulse -
duration of ~T', so that a rectangular AC voltage of
VAc Vs' + VI' (peak-to-peak) is applied across the
upper and lower substrates as an AC voltage for
parallel alignment. After this AC voltage is applied
~ . ~ - . .
for a prescribed period to transform the liquid
crystal molecules into a parallel alignment state,
display driving signal voltages, i.e., a scanning
, .
signal voltage of 3Vo and -2Vo and an information
signal voltage of +V0 both having a pulse duration of ~ -
T, are set by a driving voltage control circuit 154, -;
and a muItiplex driving is started depending on input
; signals DH.
Further, switching between the horizontal
writing and the vertical writing may be easily effected
by~changing switches SW 16 - 18 depending on a H/V -;-
20 switching signal 160 to exchange the scanning signal ;~
side and the information signal side.
` ~ Figure~16 shows a circuit structure at the i
final stage of the driver circuit 157 or 158 shown in
Figure 15. Tr1 and Tr2 denote output stage transis-
~` ~ 25 tors. Referring to the driving waveform shown in
Figure 13, the withstand voltages Vc of the two output
stage transistors are equally set to satisfy the
,: ,,:,:
~ " ~

r~
-34_ 1 3 3 ~
following relationship:
( S ~ VI ) ~ V0
Further, by appropriately selecting the liquid
crystal material, the ]cind of the alignment film, and -
the frequency of the AC voltage for parallel alignment,
it is possible in this embodiment to satisfy the
: ' ' '~ '.' " ', ,.
: following rela~ionship.
~ ~ ~ Vc > V' - VO. ' ''~.'':';'.. '
Anyway, as the two driver circuits 157 and 158
are equally connected to the driving power supply 153,
an AC voltage for parallel alignment having a wave-
height and a pulse duratlon equal to or larger than
those of the writing pulses as shown in Figure 13 may
be applied between V+ and V terminals shown in Figure ~ :~
lS 16 prior to the input of a display signal DH' shown in
Figure 16 to accomplish the parallel alignment of the ~ .
liquid crystal.
According to another preferred embodiment of ;~
: the present invention, there is provided a liquid
20 crystal:apparatus comprising: a liquid crystal device ..
~: comprising matrix electrodes including scanning signal
lines and information slgnal lines spaced from and
intersecting with~each other~ and a liquid crystal
.
material disposed between the matrix electrodes, each :
25 intersection of the scanning signal lines and the ~.
information signal lines in combination with the ~ :
:~ liquid crystal material disposed therebetween
~"'~..',' ~
" ~:

_35_ ~33~J~
constituting a picture element, a scanning signal side
driver circuit, and an information signal side driver
circuit; the liquid crystal apparatus being so con-
structed that an alternating voltage is applied to the - -
whole picture elements prior to application of display
signals according to a multiplex driving scheme.
In this embodiment, the application of display
: signals and the application of an AC voltage for
parallel alignment are controlled by a common driving
power supply circuit. The application of the AC
voltage for parallel alignment may be effected by
selecting either of the two methods, one of which ~:
comprises applying the AC voltage from either one of
the scanning signal side driver circuit and the infor- ;~
mation signaI side driver circuit and grounding the
other side of:signal lines all together during the
: AC voltage application period, and the other of which
comprises AC voltages of mutually antiphases from the
scanning signal~side driver circuit and the information
signal~side driver circuit.~
The AC~voltage for parallel alignment may for . `
example be a rectangular waveform of alternating -~
: ~ ~ :: : :; :
polarities, the~voltage waveheight of which may be
set to a value higher than the voltage of display
~`: 25 signals required for switching of the liquid crystal ~
;~ in the parallel alignment state. .~
Thus, according to this embodiment, liquid .- .-
' ~ ': . . ~.':

1 3 3 1 4 ~ 9
-36- :
crystal driver circuits each connected to the scanning
signal side and the information signal side are
connected to a common driving po~wer circuit, and the
display signal voltages and the AC voltaye for parallel
alignment are applied from the driving power supply
circuit. More specifically, prior to multiplex driving
using display signals, an AC voltage of, e.g., rectan-
gular pulses having desired waveheight and pulse
duration is applied to preliminarily place the liquid ;~;~
crystal in a parallel alignment state, and then the
, ~
liquid crystal driving for display is started.
Figure 17 shows an example of liquid crystal ~ -
apparatus for supplying signal voltages as shown in --:
Figure 18.
~; l5In Figure 17, reference numeral 171 denotes
; an interface (I/F), 175 denotes a shift register (S/R~ -~
~,
circuit, 176 a latch circuit, 177 an information signal
side driver circuit, 178 a scanning signal side driver `~;
circuit, and 179 an LC matrix panel. A driving power
20 supply circuit 170~comprlses a driving power supply ; ~-
170a and a driving voltage control circuit 170b.
~; In operation, when a main switch (not shown) `~
is first turned on, AC~voltages for parallel alignment -~
~; havlng waveheights Vs' and VI' and a pulse duration ~T' ~;
~` 25 are applied in mutually antiphases to all the scanning
electrodes and the information signal electrodes,
respectively, so that a rectangular AC voltage of
`~: ''''`,'', `'`, ', ~

_37_ ~ 3 3 ~
VAc (peak-to-peak) = Vs' + VI' is applied across the
upper and lower substrates. After this AC voltage is
applied for a prescribed period to transform the liquid ~- ~
crystal molecules into a parallel alignment state, ~ ~ ;
dispaly driving signal voltages, i.e., a scanning
signal voltage of 3Vo and -2Vo and an information `~
signal voltage of +V0 both having a pulse duration of
~T, are set by a driving voltage control circuit 15~
and a multiplex driving is started. The waveheights
Vs', VII and the pulse duration ~T' of the AC voltage
or~parallel alignment are larger than the waveheight
3Vol V0 and the pulse~duration ~T, respectively, of
the writing pulses.
Figure 19 shows a circuit structure at the
final stage of the driver~circult 177 or 178 shown in `
F~igure 17. Tr1~and Tr2 denote output stage transis-
tors. The wlthstand voltages of the two transistors
; are~ equally set, so that the withstand voltage Vsc ln
the scanning s~ignal~side driver circuit 178 will
20 sat~lsfy~Vsc~> Vs~an~d~ the withstand voltage VIc ln ` `
the lnformatlon slgnal side driver circult will ~ ~: s
; satisfy~;VIc ~> VI',~while referring to Figure 17.
Further, when the AC voltage for parallel
allgnment is applied~from;~either one of the scanning ;~
25 ~signal side driver circuit 178 and the information
signal~side drlver clrcuit 179, the following condi-
t~ions may be set:

-38-
Vsc > 1/2VAC' VIC
and the information signal side electrodes are grounded
during the period for applying thè AC voltage for
parallel alignment, for example, when the AC voltage
is supplied from the scanning signal side electrodes.
In this way, an AC voltage for parallel align~
ment which is a littIe lower than the withstand
voltages Vsc and VIc of the output stage transistors -~
Tr1 and Tr2 shown ln Figure 19 may be applied between
~: .....
~; 10 V~ and V terminals shown in Figure 17 from the driving
power supply circuit 170 prior to the multiplex driving
using a display signal DH shown in the figure, thereby
to accomplish the parallel alignment of the liquid
crystal in advance.
lS In this embodiment, a driving power supply for
providing display slgnals~and a power supply for
providing an AC voItage for parallel alignment are made
common. As shown in Flgure 20, however, separate power
supplies may be disposed in combination with an approp-
20 ~riate changeover switch 201, so that an AC power supply ;
; 170c is connected when the main switch is turned on, ;~
and the switch 201~is changed over to the driving power
; supply 170a after a prescribed period.
The AC voltage for parallel alignment may be
set to a value exceeding the threshold voltage of a
. .
. ~.. ,
ferroelectric liquid crystal used, preferably selected
~` from the range of 1~0 - 500 V, partioularly 20 - 500 V,
.

_39_ ~ 331~
in terms of a peak-to-peak voltage, and the frequency
thereof may be 0.1 Hz or above, preferably in the range
of 20 Hz - 5 KHz. The period for application thereof
may be 1 sec to 10 min, preferably 5 sec to 5 min. -
The AC voltage may comprise continuous or -
intermittent pulses.
More specifically, the pulse duration of the
pulse voltage used in the above mentioned pulse voltage ; ~
application treatment may suitably be in the range of ~`
1 ~sec - 10 msec, particularly 10 ~sec - 1 msec.
; Further, the pulse spacing may suitably be in the range
of 1 - 100 times~, particularly 2 - 50 times, the pulse ~ -
duration.
The alternating voltage for pulse alignment
15 has been explained with rather simple AC voltage -c ;
signals but may comprise positive and negative com-
ponents of unsymmetrical forms, i.e., with different
waveheights (magnitudes) and pulse durations between `~
the positive and negative components or pulses.
20 ~ Some~descript~lon l5 added to describe the ~ ;
microscoplc lnternal structure of a chiral smectic
-~ ~ ferroelectric liquid crystal layer. Figure 21 i5 a
schematic view~of a section taken~along a smectic
molecular layer extending perpendicularly to the
substrates of a liquid ~rystal cell wherein the spiral
structure has been released to establlsh a bistability
condition in a twist alignment, and illustrates the '\ !`'
;;~`~ '. " .`.'~

_40_ ~ 3:3~
arrangement of C directors (molecular axes) 211 and
corresponding spontaneous polarizations 212. The
uppermost circles which correspond to the projection
of a liquid crystal cone on the smectic molecular
layer represent the states in the neighborhood of
the upper substrate, while the lowermost circles
.-: . , ,
represent the states in the neighborhood of the lower
substrate. Referring to Figure 21, the state at (a) ~-
provides an average spontaneous polarization 213a ;-~
directed downward, and the state at (b) provides an ; ;-
average spontaneous polarization 213b directed upward.
As a result, by applying different directions of
electric field to the liquld crystal layer, switching
- between the states (a) and (b) is caused.
Figure 22 is a sahematic sectional view corre~
sponding to Figure 21 of a liquid crystal cell which
is in an ideal parallel alignment state where no
twisting of C directors 211 across the thickness of
the liquid crystal cell is involved. The spontaneous
polarization 211~ is upward in the state at (a) and ;;~
downward in the state at (b).
For the purpose of generalization, cases where
C directors are somewhat tilted with respect to the
substrate faces are shown in the figures. `~
. -
~ 25 As described hereinabove, according to the ~
:,
present invent:Lon, a high AC electric field is applied ~;
to a ferroelectric liquid crystal cell under bistability ~
- ., ~ : .
. :'`;

~33~
-41- :
condition, whereby the tilt angle under the bistability ~ :
condition after removal of the AC electric field is ~ ~:
enlarged to increase the contrast of the cell. Also
by cooling the cell while applying the high AC electric
~ -
field to establish a bistability state, a wide tilt
:; : ..:
angle state is more uniformly obtained. Furthermore, ;~
by providing a ferroelectric liquid crystal apparatus ~.
; with a high AC electric field-application circuit which , '~
is applicable to the apparatus on use, an apparatus -
: 10 which can resume a wide tilt angle state as desired
may be obtained, so that a display apparatus or a .
shutter device rich in light transmittance and contrast
and also having a high speed responsive characteristic, -
: high picture element density and large area can be
15 realized.
" , ~
~ 20
,~
~ 25
,.::,
,.: ~ : ,: .:
';;.: . '~
; ,~: . .
, . i ~ ,
' ',~
,, ,, :~
~`'''..,,.^.~',. ' ,,.,,,.. ' '

Representative Drawing
A single figure which represents the drawing illustrating the invention.
Administrative Status

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Event History

Description Date
Inactive: CPC assigned 2003-04-23
Time Limit for Reversal Expired 2002-08-09
Letter Sent 2001-08-09
Grant by Issuance 1994-08-09

Abandonment History

There is no abandonment history.

Fee History

Fee Type Anniversary Year Due Date Paid Date
MF (category 1, 3rd anniv.) - standard 1997-08-11 1997-07-16
MF (category 1, 4th anniv.) - standard 1998-08-10 1998-07-20
MF (category 1, 5th anniv.) - standard 1999-08-09 1999-07-14
MF (category 1, 6th anniv.) - standard 2000-08-09 2000-07-14
Owners on Record

Note: Records showing the ownership history in alphabetical order.

Current Owners on Record
CANON KABUSHIKI KAISHA
Past Owners on Record
AKIRA TSUBOYAMA
HIDEYUKI KAWAGISHI
OSAMU TANIGUCHI
SHINJIRO OKADA
YUTAKA INABA
Past Owners that do not appear in the "Owners on Record" listing will appear in other documentation within the application.
Documents

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Document
Description 
Date
(yyyy-mm-dd) 
Number of pages   Size of Image (KB) 
Drawings 1995-08-28 19 1,670
Claims 1995-08-28 2 154
Abstract 1995-08-28 1 76
Descriptions 1995-08-28 41 3,599
Representative drawing 2001-10-30 1 11
Maintenance Fee Notice 2001-09-05 1 179
Fees 1998-07-19 1 40
Fees 1997-07-15 1 31
Fees 1999-07-13 1 27
Fees 2000-07-13 1 26
Fees 1996-07-14 1 31
PCT Correspondence 1994-05-15 1 40
Examiner Requisition 1992-08-10 2 74
Prosecution correspondence 1992-12-10 5 106