Paper
17 February 1995 ICVision: liquid crystal drive electronics design
Jeffrey H. Kulick, Axel Thomsen, Robert G. Lindquist, Patrick Nasiatka, Gregory P. Nordin, Michael W. Jones, Stephen T. Kowel
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2333, Fifth International Symposium on Display Holography; (1995) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.201929
Event: Display Holography: Fifth International Symposium, 1994, Lake Forest, IL, United States
Abstract
The ICVision system is a diffractive display based on VLSI and liquid crystal technology designed to compute and display holographic stereograms in real-time. The diffractive display is formed on the surface of standard integrated circuit chips which have been covered with a liquid crystal overlay. Fringing electrostatic fields generated by indium tin oxide electrodes on top of the integrated circuit are used to induce the actual diffractive display. A large display may be assembled from several hundred individual dies. Within each individual die making up the ICVision display will be the processor that computes the image to be displayed. This paper describes the design of image storage and drive electronics for the ICVision display. The proposed electronics allow the fabrication of an individual static ram cell and d/a converter for each of the tens of thousands of diffractive elements that make up a ICVision display.
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jeffrey H. Kulick, Axel Thomsen, Robert G. Lindquist, Patrick Nasiatka, Gregory P. Nordin, Michael W. Jones, and Stephen T. Kowel "ICVision: liquid crystal drive electronics design", Proc. SPIE 2333, Fifth International Symposium on Display Holography, (17 February 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.201929
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KEYWORDS
LCDs

Liquid crystals

Electrodes

Electronics

Analog electronics

Diffraction

Modulation

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