Portable Computer Housing with Integral Display
An electronic device such as a portable computer may have a housing with a rectangular recess in which layers of display structures such as a light guide panel layer and other light guide structures are directly mounted without intervening chassis members. Mating alignment features in the housing and display structures may be used to align the display structures relative to the housing. A display may be formed from glass layers such as a color filter glass layer and a thin-film transistor glass layer. Backlight for the display may be generated by an array of light-emitting diodes. The light guide panel may direct light from the light-emitting diodes through the glass layers. A clamp may be used to hold the light-emitting diodes and light guide structures in place in the recess. An undercut in the housing may also hold the light guide structures in place.
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This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 61/257,807, filed Nov. 3, 2009, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
BACKGROUNDThis invention relates to electronic devices and, more particularly, to display structures for electronic devices such as portable computers.
Portable computers typically have upper and lower housing portions that are connected by a hinge. The lower housing portion contains components such as printed circuit boards, disk drives, a keyboard, and a battery. The upper housing portion contains a display. When the computer is in an open configuration, the upper housing portion is vertical and the display is visible to the user of the portable computer. When the computer is closed, the upper housing lies flat against the lower housing. This protects the display and keyboard and allows the portable computer to be transported.
Portable computer displays typically contain fragile structures such as layers of glass. Displays can therefore be challenging to mount properly within the upper housing. If care is not taken, the display and the surrounding portions of the upper housing will be bulky and unsightly. At the same time, the elimination of certain structures in the display may result in display that is overly fragile. This could lead to damage to the display during normal use.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved display structures in electronic devices such as portable computers.
SUMMARYAn electronic device such as a portable computer may have a housing. The housing may have upper and lower portions that are connected by a hinge. Display structures for a display may be mounted in a portion of the housing such as the upper housing portion.
The display structures may include a color filter glass layer and a thin-film transistor substrate layer. Light-guide structures may be mounted under the thin-film transistor substrate layer. The light guide structures may include a reflective sheet of material such as white polyester (e.g., Mylar®), a layer of light guide material (sometimes referred to as a light guide panel or LGP), and one or more layers of optical film (e.g., diffuser layers, light collimating layers, etc.). The light guide structures may be mounted directly in a rectangular recess in the interior of the housing without using chassis structures. For example, the light guide structures may be provided with tabs that mate directly with corresponding features in the housing.
Undercut structures may be formed in the housing to accommodate the display structures. For example, the undercut structures may receive some or all of the light guide structures.
An array of light-emitting diodes may provide backlight for the display structures. The light-emitting diodes may emit light into an edge of the light guide panel. A reflective sheet on the rear of the light guide panel may be used to reflect light outwards through the display structures. The edges of the reflective sheet may be wrapped around the edges of the light guide panel to reflect light that would otherwise leak out of the edges of the panel. Light may also be reflected by coating interior housing surfaces with a reflective coating.
Clamp structures may be used to hold the light-emitting diode array and light-guide panel in place.
Reflective tape and reflective sheets of material may be used to help guide light from the light-emitting diode array into the edge of the light guide panel. Reflective tape may be placed on the lower surface of a clamp member.
A cosmetic bezel may be used to cover edges of the display structures. For example, in display structure configurations in which a driver integrated circuit might be visible from the exterior of the device, a bezel may be used to hide the integrated circuit from view.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
An illustrative electronic device such as a portable computer in which display structures may be provided is shown in
In general, the components of portable computer 10 can be formed from any suitable materials. As examples, the components of portable computer 10 may be formed from materials such as metals (e.g., aluminum, stainless steel, alloys of metals, electroplated metals, plated and other coated metals, etc.), plastics (e.g., polycarbonate (PC) plastics, acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) plastics, thermoplastics, PC/ABS plastic blends, etc.), composite materials (e.g., carbon fibers or other fibers bound by a binder such as a polymer resin), plastics that have been injection molded around metal structures, laminated plastic layers, ceramics, metal, glass, composites, metal-filled epoxy, other suitable materials, and combinations of these and other materials. Components of portable computer 10 which are described herein as being formed from one or more specific materials (e.g., housing 12 which is sometimes described herein as being formed from machined aluminum as an example) can be formed from any of the above-mentioned materials, other suitable materials, or combinations of such materials.
Housing 12 may have an upper portion 26 and a lower portion 28. Lower portion 28 may be referred to as the base or main unit of computer 10 and may contain components such as a hard disk drive, battery, and main logic board. Upper portion 26, which is sometimes referred to as a cover, lid, or display housing, may rotate relative to lower portion 28 about rotational axis 16. Portion 18 of computer 10 may contain a hinge and associated clutch structures and is sometimes referred to as a clutch barrel.
Lower housing portion 28 may have a slot such as slot 22 through which optical disks may be loaded into an optical disk drive. Lower housing portion may also have a touchpad such as touchpad 24 and may have keys 20. If desired, additional components may be mounted to upper and lower housing portions 26 and 28. For example, upper and lower housing portions 26 and 28 may have ports to which cables can be connected (e.g., universal serial bus ports, an Ethernet port, a Firewire port, audio jacks, card slots, etc.). Buttons and other controls may also be mounted to housing 12. Speaker openings such as speaker openings 30 may be formed in lower housing portion 28 by creating an array of small openings (perforations) in the surface of housing 12.
A display such as display 14 may be mounted within upper housing portion 26. Display 14 may be, for example, a liquid crystal display (LCD), organic light emitting diode (OLED) display, or plasma display (as examples). Display 14 may contain a number of layers of material. These display structures may include, for example, layers of optically transparent materials such as plastic and glass. Layers of plastic and optical adhesive may also be incorporated into display 14. In a liquid crystal display, layers of polarizer, light diffusing elements and light guides for backlight structures, a liquid crystal layer, and a thin-film transistor array that drives the image pixels in the display may be incorporated into the display.
Computer 10 may have input-output components such as touch pad 24. Touch pad 24 may include a touch sensitive surface that allows a user of computer 10 to control computer 10 using touch-based commands (gestures). A portion of touchpad 24 may be depressed by the user when the user desires to “click” on a displayed item on screen 14.
A cross-sectional side view of a conventional liquid crystal display (LCD) display module mounted in a computer housing is shown in
Metal chassis member 42 may have a tab with a hole through which screw 40 passes. Screw 40 may be screwed into a threaded hole in housing 34. In the arrangement of
Elastomeric gasket 38 is used to form a cushioned interface between cover glass layer 36 and housing 34. This helps to prevent damage to cover glass layer 36. Cover glass 36 is formed from clear glass and helps to protect layers 46 of LCD module 32 from damage, but adds undesirable thickness.
Another cross-sectional view of a conventional liquid crystal display module is shown in
Color filter glass layer 52, liquid crystal layer 54, and thin-film transistor (TFT) glass layer 58 are interposed between polarizer layers 50 and 62.
The polarization of individual pixels of liquid crystal material in liquid crystal layer 54 interacts with the polarizing effects of layers 50 and 62 to determine which display pixels block light and which pixels allow light to pass. Color filter glass layer 52 contains an array of colored filters that provide display 32 with the ability to represent different colors. The polarization of liquid crystal material in liquid crystal layer 54 is controlled electrically by thin-film transistor array 56. Thin-film transistors in array 56 are formed on the upper surface of thin-film transistor (TFT) glass layer 58.
Thin-film transistors 56 are controlled by drivers contained in driver circuit 60. Color filter layer 52 is horizontally (laterally) recessed with respect to TFT layer 58 to form a ledge on which driver circuit 60 is mounted. In a typical display module, there may be a number of driver chips such as circuit 60 that are mounted around the periphery of the display. Conductive traces on the upper surface of TFT layer 58 interconnect driver circuit 60 with thin-film transistors 56.
In conventional arrangements of the type shown in
An exploded view of a conventional display and computer housing is shown in
A cross-sectional side view of the conventional structures of
Conventional light guide structures 64 may be provided with a peripheral strip of double-sided tape, as shown by tape 86 in
Display structures 106 may produce an image using any suitable display technology (e.g., light-emitting diodes such as an array of organic light-emitting diodes, liquid crystal display pixels, plasma-based pixels, etc.). In general, display structures 106 may be formed from any suitable materials (e.g., plastic, glass, other optically suitable materials, etc.). An arrangement in which display structures 106 are based on liquid crystal display (LCD) technology is sometimes described herein as an example. The use of LCD structures in display structures 106 is, however, merely illustrative. Display structures 106 may, in general, be formed from any suitable type of display structures.
As shown in
Clearances D2 and D1 help prevent damage to display structure 106 during use of device 110. In a typical arrangement, clearance D2 may be about 1.2 to 1.8 mm and clearance D1 may be about 0.11 mm. End clearance D3 may be about 0.3 mm.
Light from a light-emitting diode array or other backlight source is provided to an edge of light guide panel 92. Panel 92 and the other structures in light guide structures 88 direct this light upwards in direction 108 through thin film transistor layer 98 and color filter layer 100.
Thin-film transistor substrate glass layer 98 may contain thin-film transistors in array 110. Color filter glass layer 100 may contain an array of optical filters of different colors to provide display structures 106 with the ability to display color images. Color filter layer 100 may be formed from glass into which dye of different colors has been impregnated, from a glass layer coated with a pattern of colored dye, from a glass or plastic layer that is covered with a pattern of thin colored filter structures (e.g., filters formed from polymer or glass containing dye), or any other suitable color filter structures. Liquid crystal layer 112 may be controlled by the electric fields produced by the thin-film transistors of array 110.
As shown in
To hide the peripheral portions of display structures 106 that lie along the outer edges of display housing 26 from view, an opaque material such as ink layer 114 may be incorporated around the periphery of display structures 106 to form a border. Opaque layer 114 may be formed on the underside of color filter layer 100 or on the upper surface of thin-film transistor glass layer 98 (as examples). The opaque material may have any suitable color (e.g., black, grey, silver, white, blue, red, etc.).
With the arrangement of
To ensure that light guide structures 88 are properly aligned within housing 26 even in the absence of conventional structures such as plastic chassis 44 and metal chassis 42 (
Light-emitting diode array 122 may be received within recess 124 in housing 26. Rectangular recess 134 in housing 26 may be sized to receive the rectangular outline of light guide structures 88. The depth of these recesses in housing 26 may be about 0.2 mm to 5 mm (as an example). The diagonal distance across the rectangular light guide structures 88 may be, for example, 5 to 20 inches.
With an arrangement of the type shown in
Clamp structure 130 may be formed from metal, plastic, composites, or other materials. For example, clamp structure 130 may be formed from a material such as stainless steel. Stainless steel can be formed in thin sheets that are relatively stiff, allowing the thickness of clamp structure 130 to be minimized. Housing 26 may be formed from aluminum or one or more other materials that are molded or machined into a desired shape (e.g., to form the alignment tab recesses of
To help ensure that light guide structures 88 do not bear against light-emitting diode array 122 with excessive force, recess 134 may have lips such as lip 140. As shown in more detail in
As shown in
A perspective view of one of recesses 122 (i.e., an alignment notch) and one of matching tabs 120 on light guide structures 88 is shown in
Light-emitting diodes 122 (
In arrangements of the type shown in
A perspective view of an illustrative clamping arrangement in which reflective tape is used to help ensure satisfactory backlight performance is shown in
A cross-sectional side view of an illustrative mounting arrangement that uses a planar clamp is shown in
If desired, the edge of reflective sheet 90 may overlap the edge of flex circuit 168. This type of arrangement is shown in
Light may also be reflected using reflective coatings. For example, tape 170 may be omitted and flex circuit 168 may be coated with reflective coating 174, as shown in
In the illustrative configuration of
If desired, a bezel may be used in covering display components. This type of arrangement is shown in
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
Claims
1-28. (canceled)
29. Apparatus, comprising:
- a computer housing having a substantially rectangular recess with four edges; and
- a substantially rectangular light guide panel disposed in the rectangular recess, wherein the light guide panel has four edges that are adjacent to the four edges of the rectangular recess without any intervening chassis structures.
30. The apparatus defined in claim 29 further comprising a clamp structure disposed over an edge of the light guide panel.
31. The apparatus defined in claim 30, wherein the clamp structure comprises a sheet of metal.
32. The apparatus defined in claim 30, wherein the clamp structure comprises a strip of stainless steel that is screwed into the computer housing.
33. The apparatus defined in claim 29, wherein the light guide panel comprises at least one alignment tab and wherein the computer housing has at least one mating tab-shaped recess into which the alignment tab protrudes.
34. The apparatus defined in claim 33, further comprising a reflective coating in the rectangular recess that reflects light back into the light guide panel.
35. The apparatus defined in claim 34, wherein the reflective coating comprises white paint in the rectangular recess.
36. The apparatus defined in claim 33, wherein the reflective coating comprises a layer of metal.
37. The apparatus defined in claim 29, further comprising a white reflective sheet disposed between the light guide panel and the recess in the computer housing, wherein the white reflective sheet has portions that cover at least one of the edges of the light guide panel.
38. The apparatus defined in claim 29, wherein the computer housing comprises machined aluminum.
39. The apparatus defined in claim 29, further comprising: an array of light-emitting diodes that emit light into one of the four edges of the light guide panel.
40. The apparatus defined in claim 29, further comprising:
- a thin-film transistor glass layer; and
- a color filter glass layer, wherein the thin-film transistor glass layer and the color filter glass layer are positioned above the rectangular recess and wherein light from the light guide panel passes through the thin-film glass layer and the color filter glass layer.
41. The apparatus defined in claim 29, wherein the light guide panel comprises at least one alignment tab, wherein the computer housing has at least one mating tab-shaped recess into which the alignment tab protrudes, wherein the apparatus further comprises layers of optical films including a diffuser layer, and wherein the layers of optical films each include at least one alignment tab that protrudes into the tab-shaped recess in the computer housing.
42. The apparatus defined in claim 41, further comprising a plastic reflective sheet under the light guide panel, wherein the plastic reflective sheet has bent edges that cover at least two of the edges of the light guide panel.
43. The apparatus defined in claim 29, further comprising:
- glass layers through which light from the light guide panel passes; and
- a bezel that covers at least part of the glass layers.
44. The apparatus defined in claim 29, further comprising: an array of light-emitting diodes that emit light into one of the edges of the light guide panel; a flex circuit on which the light-emitting diodes are mounted; and reflective tape that covers at least part of the flex circuit.
45. The apparatus defined in claim 44, further comprising a sheet of reflective material under the light guide panel, wherein at least a portion of the sheet of reflective material covers the flex circuit.
46. A computer, comprising:
- a housing having a base unit hingedly connected to a display housing, wherein the display housing comprises:
- a machined rectangular recess having four recess edges and having alignment notches disposed along at least two of the four recess edges; and
- a rectangular light guide panel having at least four light guide panel edges and having alignment tabs disposed along at least two of the four light guide panel edges;
- wherein the alignment taps protrude into and mate with the alignment notches in the display housing.
47. The computer defined in claim 46, further comprising a color filter glass layer through which light from the rectangular light guide panel passes.
48. The computer defined in claim 47, further comprising a white reflective sheet with tabs that mate with the alignment notches.
49. The computer defined in claim 48, further comprising at least one optical film layer on the light guide panel, wherein the at least one optical film layer includes a diffuser layer with tabs that mate with the alignment notches.
50. A method of forming a liquid-crystal display in an electronic device, comprising:
- forming a rectangular recess in an electronic device housing, wherein the electronic device housing has an exterior surface that serves as an exterior for the electronic device and has an interior surface in which the rectangular recess is formed; and
- placing individual layers of light guide structures directly into the rectangular recess without mounting the light guide structures in a chassis.
51. The method defined in claim 50, wherein the rectangular recess and the light guide structures have respective mating recess alignment features and light guide structure alignment features and wherein placing the light guide structures directly into the rectangular recess comprises placing the light guide structures into the rectangular recess so that the recess alignment features mate with the light guide structure alignment features.
52. The method defined in claim 51, wherein the light guide structures include at least one planar rectangular light guide panel, the method further comprising: attaching a clamp to the electronic device housing to hold the light guide structures in place within the recess.
53. The method defined in claim 52, further comprising: inserting at least an edge of the light guide structures into an undercut groove in the metal electronic device housing.
54. The method defined in claim 52, further comprising: holding light-emitting diodes under the clamp.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 2, 2013
Publication Date: Aug 22, 2013
Applicant: Apple Inc. (Cupertino, CA)
Inventor: Apple Inc.
Application Number: 13/855,259
International Classification: F21V 8/00 (20060101);