Video Lectures On Computer Graphics Section - II:: CRT Display Devices
Video Lectures On Computer Graphics Section - II:: CRT Display Devices
Video Lectures On Computer Graphics Section - II:: CRT Display Devices
Section – II:
CRT monitor
Types of CRT display devices
• DVST (Direct View Storage Tube)
• Calligraphic or Random Scan display system
• Refresh and raster scan display system
• No refreshing necessary
DVST - Direct View Storage Tube (contd.)
Focusing Electron
Cathode Anode Beam Path
Heating
Filament Control Accelerating
Grid Anode
Basic design of a
Magnetic deflection CRT
Magnetic
Focusing Deflection Coils
Base System
Electron
Gun Electron
Connector Beam
Pins Phosphor
Coated Screen
Electrostatic deflection of the
electron beam in a CRT Phosphor
Vertical Coated Screen
Deflection
Base Focusing Plates
System
Horizontal
Connector Electron Deflection
Pins Gun Plates
Electron
Beam
DVST - Direct View Storage Tube (contd.)
Drawbacks
• Modifying any part of the image requires
redrawing the entire modified image
Host Picture
Display
CPU processor
buffer
Vector/ Display
CRT character controller
generator
Conceptual block diagram of
calligraphic refresh display - II
Vector/ Picture
CRT character processor
generator
Calligraphic or Random Scan display system (contd.)
System Bus
I/O Devices
Architecture of a raster system with
a fixed portion of the system memory
reserved for the frame buffer
System Bus
A B
A (a) Rasterized (b)
approximation
to line AB
Refresh Rate, Video basics
and Scan Conversion
• Raster is stored as a matrix of pixels
representing the entire screen area
Display
CPU Processor Monitor
System Bus
X y
Register Register
Frame Buffer
Architecture of a raster display
Video
000000011111111111111111111100000000
000000011111110000000111111100000000
000000011111111111111111111100000000
000000011111111100011111111100000000
controller
000000011111111100011111111100000000
000000011111111100011111111100000000
000000011111111100011111111100000000
000000011111111111111111111100000000
000000000000000000000000000000000000
Raster scan with
outline primitives
Raster scan with
filled primitives
Refresh Rate, Video basics and Scan Conversion (contd.)
A typical example:
Vertical
retrace
Refresh Rate, Video basics and Scan Conversion (contd.)
NTSC (American Standard Video) has 525
horizontal lines with a frame rate of 30 fps.
0
1
2
3
Schematic of a 7-line interlaced scan
line pattern.
The odd field begins with line 1. The horizontal
retrace is shown dashed. The odd field vertical
retrace starts at the bottom center. The even
field vertical retrace starts at the bottom right.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Refresh Rate, Video basics and Scan Conversion (contd.)
• N = 24 – 16 million colors
Electron
gun
Register
1 DAC
Frame
buffer CRT
raster
An N-bit plane gray level frame buffer
N
Register
0 1 0
Frame 2N
buffer 2N DAC
levels
Electron CRT
gun Raster
Simple color frame buffer
Color
Registers guns
3 0 DAC Blue
1 DAC Green
0 DAC Red
Frame buffer
CRT
raster
N-bit plane gray level Frame buffer (Contd.)
• In case of one-bit for each color frame
buffer, we get 8 colors as:
COLOR RED GREEN BLUE
BLACK 0 0 0
BLUE 0 0 1
GREEN 0 1 0
CYAN 0 1 1
RED 1 0 0
MAGENTA 1 0 1
YELLOW 1 1 0
WHITE 1 1 1
Operation of a delta-delta, shadow-mask CRT.
Three electron guns, aligned with the triangular
color-dot patterns on the screen, are directed
to each dot triangle by a shadow mask.
Electron Guns
B Magnified
G Phosphor-Dot
Triangle
Selection of
Shadow Mask
Screen
Color CRT electron gun and
shadow mask arrangement
R G B R G B R G B
G B R G B R G B R G
R G B R G B R G B
G B R G B R G B R G
R G B R G B R G B
Shadow mask arrangements
Computer Dot Pitch Pixels per
Resolution Ratio Pixels
Standard (mm) inch
8
0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1
8-bit
8 Blue - 75 DAC
1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 8-bit
Green - 172 DAC
8
8-bit
0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0
DAC
Red - 10
Frame Red
buffer Green
CRT
raster
Color Blue
guns
N-bit plane gray level Frame buffer (Contd.)
Use of
• LUT (Look-up-table)
• N-bit plane gray level/color frame buffer
with W-bit wide LUT
• Typically W > N
• The N-bit register content acts as an index
into the lookup table
• Thus out of 2W possible intensities, that are
available, only 2N different intensities are
usable at any time
• The programmer must choose 2N different
intensities, based on his requirement, and load
the LUT (addressable in memory) before use
An N-bit-plane gray level frame buffer
with a W-bit-wide lookup table.
W
N=3 Lookup
N Table
0 1 0
1 0 1 1
2W
DAC
2N
entries
Frame W=4
buffer
CRT
raster
Electron
2w intensity levels, Gun
2N at a time (W>N)
A 24-bit-plane
color frame
buffer, with
10-bit-wide
LUT N W=10
N
W=10
N
Frame Blue
W=10
buffer Color
look-up
Green table
2N
Entries
Red (CONTD.)
A 24-bit-plane color W=10
frame buffer, with
10-bit-wide lookup Color
tables W=10 look-up
table
W=10
Blue
W-bit DAC Blue
Green
Red
W-bit DAC Green
Red
W-bit DAC Red CRT
Raster
Color guns
LCD and FLAT PANEL DISPLAYS
• LCD is made up of 6 layers – vertical polarizer
plane; layer of thin grid wires; layer of LCDs;
layer of horizontal grid wires; horizontal
polarizer; and finally a reflector.
• LCD material is made up of long crystalline
molecules; When the crystals are in an electric
field, they all line up in the same direction.
• Active matrix panels have a transistor at each
grid point (X, Y). Crystals are dyed up to provide
color. Transistors act as memory, and also cause
the crystals to change their state quickly.
• LCD displays are low cost, low weight, small
size and low power consumption
LCD and FLAT PANEL DISPLAYS
• The display contains two polarizers, aligned
900 to each other.
• With the display in its OFF (or twisted) state,
light entering the display is plane polarized by
the first polarizer.
• This polarized light passes through the liquid
crystal sandwich and then through the second
polarizer and is reflected back to the display.
• Turning the pixel ON (by applying and electric
field) causes the crystal to untwist.
• Light now passing through the liquid crystal
sandwich is now absorbed by the second
polarizer. The pixel now appears dark.
LCD and FLAT PANEL DISPLAYS
• Displays are of two types – plasma/gas
discharge or Electroluminescent.
• All flat panel displays are raster refresh
displays.
• A flat CRT is obtained by initially projecting
the beam parallel to the screen and then
reflecting it through 900.
• Reflection of the electron beam reduces the
depth of the CRT bottle and hence the display.
• Plasma displays like LCDs are also called active
matrix displays.
• The required voltage or current to control the
pixel illumination is supplied using a thin-film
transistor or diode.
End of
Lectures on