Vacuum fluorescent display
A vacuum fluorescent display (VFD) is a display device used commonly on consumer-electronics equipment such as video cassette recorders, car radios, and microwave ovens. Sometimes named as ice tube indicator.
A VFD operates on the principle of cathodoluminescence, roughly similar to a cathode ray tube, but operating at much lower voltages. Each tube in a VFD has a phosphor coated anode that is bombarded by electrons emitted from the cathode filament.[1] In fact, each tube in VFD is a triode vacuum tube because it also has a mesh control grid.[2]
Unlike liquid crystal displays, a VFD emits a very bright light with high contrast and can support display elements of various colours. Standard illumination figures for VFDs are around 640 cd/m2 with high-brightness VFDs operating at 4,000 cd/m2, and experimental units as high as 35,000 cd/m2 depending on the drive voltage and its timing.[2] The choice of color (which determines the nature of the phosphor) and display brightness significantly affect the lifetime of the tubes, which can range from as low as 1,500 hours for a vivid red VFD to 30,000 hours for the more common green ones.[2] Cadmium was commonly used in VFDs in the past, but the current RoHS-compliant VFDs have eliminated this metal from their construction.
VFDs can display seven-segment numerals, multi-segment alpha-numeric characters or can be made in a dot-matrix to display different alphanumeric characters and symbols. In practice, there is little limit to the shape of the image that can be displayed: it depends solely on the shape of phosphor on the anode(s).
The first VFD was the single indication DM160 by Philips in 1959.[3] The first multi-segment VFD was the 1962 Japanese single-digit, seven-segment device. The displays became common on calculators and other consumer electronics devices.[4] In the late 1980s hundreds of millions of units were made yearly.[5]
Design
The device consists of a hot cathode (filaments), anodes (phosphor) and grids encased in a glass envelope under a high vacuum condition. The cathode is made up of fine tungsten wires, coated by alkaline earth metal oxides, which emit electrons when heated by an electric current. These electrons are controlled and diffused by the grids, which are made up of thin metal. If electrons impinge on the phosphor-coated plates, they fluoresce, emitting light. Unlike the orange-glowing cathodes of traditional vacuum tubes, VFD cathodes are efficient emitters at much lower temperatures, and are therefore essentially invisible.[6]
The principle of operation is identical to that of a vacuum tube triode. Electrons can only reach (and "illuminate") a given plate element if both the grid and the plate are at a positive potential with respect to the cathode.[7] This allows the displays to be organized as multiplexed displays where the multiple grids and plates form a matrix, minimizing the number of signal pins required. In the example of the VCR display shown to the right, the grids are arranged so that only one digit is illuminated at a time. All of the similar plates in all of the digits (for example, all of the lower-left plates in all of the digits) are connected in parallel. One by one, the microprocessor driving the display enables a digit by placing a positive voltage on that digit's grid and then placing a positive voltage on the appropriate plates. Electrons flow through that digit's grid and strike those plates that are at a positive potential. The microprocessor cycles through illuminating the digits in this way at a rate high enough to create the illusion of all digits glowing at once via persistence of vision. Several amateurs have experimented with the possibilities of using VFDs as triodes.[8][9]
The extra indicators (in our example, "VCR", "Hi-Fi", "STEREO", "SAP", etc.) are arranged as if they were segments of an additional digit or two or extra segments of existing digits and are scanned using the same multiplexed strategy as the real digits. Some of these extra indicators may use a phosphor that emits a different colour of light, for example, orange.
The light emitted by most VFDs contains many colours and can often be filtered to enhance the colour saturation providing a deep green or deep blue, depending on the whims of the product's designers. Phosphors used in VFDs are different from those in cathode-ray displays since they must emit acceptable brightness with only around 50 volts of electron energy, compared to several thousand volts in a CRT.[10]
Use
Besides brightness, VFDs have the advantages of being rugged, inexpensive, and easily configured to display a wide variety of customized messages, and unlike LCDs, VFDs are not limited by the response time of rearranging liquid crystals and are thus able to function normally in cold, even sub-zero, temperatures, making them ideal for outdoor devices in cold climates. Early on, the main disadvantage of such displays was their use of significantly more power (0.2 watts) than a simple LCD. This was considered a significant drawback for battery-operated equipment like calculators, so VFDs ended up being used mainly in equipment powered by an AC supply or heavy-duty rechargeable batteries.
During the 1980s, this display began to be used in automobiles, especially where car makers were experimenting with digital displays for vehicle instruments such as speedometers and odometers. A good example of these were the high-end Subaru cars made in the early 1980s (referred to by Subaru enthusiasts as a digi-dash, or digital dashboard). The brightness of VFDs makes them well suited for use in cars. Current models of Renault MPV, Scenic and Espace both use VFD panels to show all functions on the dashboard including the radio and multi message panel. They are bright enough to read in full sunlight as well as dimmable for use at night. This panel uses four colours; the usual blue/green as well as deep blue, red and yellow/orange.
This technology was also used from 1979 to the mid-1980s in portable electronic game units. These games featured bright, clear displays but the size of the largest vacuum tubes that could be manufactured inexpensively kept the size of the displays quite small, often requiring the use of magnifying Fresnel lenses. While later games had sophisticated multi-colour displays, early games achieved colour effects using transparent filters to change the colour of the (usually light blue) light emitted by the phosphors. High power consumption and high manufacturing cost contributed to the demise of the VFD as a videogame display. LCD games could be manufactured for a fraction of the price, did not require frequent changes of batteries (or AC adapters) and were much more portable. Since the late 1990s, backlit colour active-matrix LCD displays have been able to cheaply reproduce arbitrary images in any colour, a marked advantage over fixed-colour, fixed-character VFDs. This is one of the main reasons for the decline in popularity of VFDs, although they continue to be made. Many low-cost DVD players still feature VFDs.
From the mid-1980s onwards, VFDs were used for applications requiring smaller displays with high brightness specifications, though now the adoption of high-brightness organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) is pushing VFDs out of these markets.
In addition to the widely used fixed character VFD, a graphic type made of an array of individually addressable pixels is also available. These more sophisticated displays offer the flexibility of displaying arbitrary images, and may still be a useful choice for some types of consumer equipment.
KORG Inc and Noritake Co. developed a device in 2015 they call the Nutube which operates as a triode tube based on technology from Noritake's VFDs. The device targets applications in the audio industry.
Fade
Fading is sometimes a problem with VFD displays. Light output drops over time due to falling emission and reduction of phosphor efficiency. How quickly and how far this falls depends on the construction and operation of the VFD. In some equipment, loss of VFD output can render the equipment inoperable.
Emission may usually be restored by raising filament voltage. Thirty-three percent voltage boost can rectify moderate fade, and 66% boost severe fade. This can make the filaments visible in use, though the usual green-blue VFD filter helps reduce any such red or orange light from the filament.
Some researchers suggest that "zapping" the phosphor and heater(s) with selected laser wavelengths (patent pending) can restore some lost emission by annealing the phosphor and exposing fresh heater electron emitting material in some cases. A related approach appears to also work on OLED displays by a different mechanism.
History
Of the three prevalent display technologies - VFD, LCD, and LED - the VFD was the first to be developed. It was used in early handheld calculators. LED displays displaced VFDs in this use as the very small LEDs used required less power, thereby extending battery life, though early LED displays had problems achieving uniform brightness levels across all display segments. Later, LCDs displaced LEDs, offering even lower power requirements.
The first VFD was the single indication DM160 by Philips in 1959. It could easily be driven by transistors, so was aimed at computer applications as it was easier to drive than a neon and had longer life than a light bulb. This was made obsolete by LEDs. The 1962 Japanese single digit seven segment display in terms of anode was more like the Philips DM70 / DM71 Magic Eye as the DM160 has a spiral wire anode. The Japanese seven segment VFD meant that no patent royalties needed to be paid on desk calculator displays as would have been the case using Nixies or Planaplex neon digits. In the UK the Philips designs were made and marketed by Mullard (almost wholly owned by Philips even before WWII).
The Russian ИВ-15 VFD tube is very similar to the DM160. The DM160, DM70/DM71 and Russian ИВ-15 can (like a VFD panel) be used as triodes. The DM160 is thus the smallest VFD and smallest triode valve. The ИВ-15 is slightly different shape (see photo of DM160 and ИВ-15 for comparison).
See also
References
- ↑ Shigeo Shionoya; William M. Yen (1998). Phosphor Handbook. CRC Press. p. 561. ISBN 978-0-8493-7560-6.
- 1 2 3 Janglin Chen; Wayne Cranton; Mark Fihn (2011). Handbook of Visual Display Technology. Springer. pp. 1056, 1067–1068. ISBN 978-3-540-79566-7.
- ↑ (HB9RXQ), Ernst Erb. "DM 160, Tube DM160; Röhre DM 160 ID19445, INDICATOR, in gene". www.radiomuseum.org.
- ↑ Joseph A. Castellano (ed), Handbook of display technology Gulf Professional Publishing, 1992 ISBN 0-12-163420-5 page 9
- ↑ Joseph A. Castellano (ed), Handbook of display technology Gulf Professional Publishing, 1992 ISBN 0-12-163420-5 page 176
- ↑ Joseph A. Castellano (ed), Handbook of display technology, Gulf Professional Publishing, 1992 ISBN 0-12-163420-5 Chapter 7 Vacuum Fluorescent Displays pp. 163 and following
- ↑ Elektrotechnik Tabellen Kommunikationselektronik (3rd ed.). Braunschweig, Germany: Westermann. 1999. p. 110. ISBN 3142250379.
- ↑ "H. P. Friedrichs, ''Vacuum Fluorescent Display Amplifiers For Primitive Radio'', ''eHam.net'' December 2008, retrieved 2010 Feb 8". Eham.net. Retrieved 2012-12-11.
- ↑ "Des. Kostryca, ''A VFD Receiver (Triodes in Disguise)'', ''eHam.net'' January 2009, retrieved 2010 Feb 8". Eham.net. Retrieved 2012-12-11.
- ↑ William M. Yen, Shigeo Shionoya, Hajime Yamamoto (editors) ,Phosphor Handbook, CRC Press, 2007 ISBN 0-8493-3564-7 Chapter 8
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vacuum fluorescent displays. |
- Noritake's Guide to VFD Operation
- Vacuum Fluorescent Display (VFD) (including How to drive the filament)
- Photos and specs for antique Russian VFD tubes
- Simple VFD Test Circuit
- The DM70 VFD related Magic eye
- The smallest Triode and earliest VFD, the DM160, with size comparisons
- The Russian VFD indicator like a DM160