E-paper is a revolutionary material that can be used to make next generation electronic displays. It is portable reusable storage and display medium that look like paper but can be repeatedly written one thousands of times. These displays make the beginning of a new area for battery power informatio...
E-paper is a revolutionary material that can be used to make next generation electronic displays. It is portable reusable storage and display medium that look like paper but can be repeatedly written one thousands of times. These displays make the beginning of a new area for battery power information applications such as cell phones, pagers, watches and hand-held computers etc.
Like traditional paper, E-paper must be lightweight, flexible, glare free and low cost. Research found that in just few years this technology could replace paper in many situations and leading us ink a truly paperless world.
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Language: en
Added: Oct 08, 2014
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Slide Content
SEMINAR ON
E-PAPER
TECHNOLOGY
Introduction
What is E-paper ?
Construction of E-paper
Working
Properties
Comparision of E-paper & LCD
Advantages
Dis-advantages
Apllication
Future Scope
Conclusion
The first E-Paper is developed in 1974’s by
Nicholas K Sheridon at Xerox’s Palo Alto
Research Centre.
E-Paper is also called Electronic Paper or
Electronic ink Display.
It is a display unit.
E-Paper is flexible.
E-paper have a wide viewing angle.
A digital pen is also used to create handwritten
document.
E-Paper is an electronic ink display unit.
It reflect light like ordinary paper.
It is capable of holding text and images.
It is flexible while using plastic materials and
electronics.
It is more comfortable to read than conventional
display.
A wider viewing angle.
It can read directly from sunlight without fading
images.
Light weight and durable.
Low power consumption.
It has two different parts.
◦Front plane.
◦Back plane.
The front plane consist of E-ink.
The back plane consist of electronic circuits.
To form an E-ink electronic display the ink is
printed onto a plastic film that is laminated to a
layer of circuitry.
GYRICON
The first Gyricon E-ink developed in 1974s by “Nick
Sheridon” at Xerox.
It based on a thin sheet of flexible plastic containing a
layer of tiny plastic beads each encapsulated in oil and
it rotate freely.
Each hemisphere of a bead has different colour and
different electric charge.
Electric field is applied the beads are rotate, creat two-
coloured pattern.
This method have some limitations.
1.Low brightness and resolution.
2.Lack of color.
Other form of E-ink with improve propertys
compared to Gyricon is Electrophorestic.
Electrophorestic
Electrophorestic frontplane consist of millions of
micro capsules.
Each approximately 100 microns in dia.
Each micro capsule is filled with a clear fluid
containing positivaly charged white particle and
black particle.
How Electronic Ink Works:- Basically, this form of
e-paper is created by sandwiching millions of tiny
plastic wells between two sheets of flexible plastic.
Each well contains both white and black particles,
suspended within a clear fluid.
The key to this technology is that the white and
black particles have opposite charges, so when an
electric voltage is applied to individual wells --
through circuitry embedded underneath -- the
black and white particles can be separated to
opposite sides.
In this way, the face-up side of each well can be
set to appear either as black or white as seen
through the top layer of clear plastic.
Each well functions as a separate pixel on the E
ink display..
The disadvantage of this technology is it take
time for the particle to move from one side to
another.
Drawing a new text or image is too slow and creat
a flicker.
Ultra-thin and flexible energy cell.
Eliminates the cost of the battery,weight and
volume of the battery holder.
Can be made into almost any shape.
Can be integrated on almost any surface.
Low cost and simple to produce, using printing
process.
Environmentally friendly, non-caustic, no
possibility of explosion, burns, or overheating.
Electronic ink Electronic ink
displaydisplay
Liquid Crystal Liquid Crystal
DisplaysDisplays
Wide viewing angleBest image only
from one position
Black on paper
white
Gray on gray
Readable in sunlightCan be difficult to
see
Holds image without
power drain
Required power to
hold images
Electronic ink displayElectronic ink displayLiquid Crystal Liquid Crystal
DisplaysDisplays
Plastic or glass Glass only
Light Weight Power supply and
glass make LCDs
relatively heavy
Thin (~1 mm) Thick (~7 mm)