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Untitled Document
What is liquid crystal anyway?
You probably already know that the acronym LCD stands for Liquid Crystal Display,
but what is a liquid crystal, and how does it help the display work?
Most crystals, such as quartz, are solid minerals. The liquid crystal in an
LCD display however, is a liquid chemical. The molecules in liquid crystal are
attached together in millions of little thread shapes, which can pass light
through. These threads naturally arrange themselves into precise patterns, which
can act as a lens. These patterns can be changed with the application of heat,
pressure, or electricity. This property is used to make the crystal pass light
through, or block it out as needed.
Each pixel of an LCD screen is made up of 3 sub-pixels, red, green
and blue. By lighting up individual sub-pixels, any colour of light can be made.
Each sub-pixel of the LCD contains a little pocket of liquid crystal, sandwiched
between 2 layers of glass. The inside surfaces of these pieces of glass both
contain very fine microscopic grooves running along them.

The orientation of these grooves are at 90 degrees to each other. The threads
of liquid crystal try to align themselves along both sets of grooves, producing
a gradual 90 degree twist in the pattern of threads. When light passes through,
it is also twisted through 90 degrees.

The left diagram shows the light passing through, the right shows the light
being blocked off by the polarizing filters.
On either side of the glass, there are polarising filters. These are like microscopic
Venetian blinds, blocking out all light that isn't travelling at the correct
angle. As the diagram above shows, the filters are arranged so that light can
only pass through the whole sandwich of filters and liquid crystal when the
light follows the 90-degree twist of the crystals.
When a small voltage is applied to the liquid crystal, the threads change orientation,
lining themselves up with the electric current. This means the light no longer
twists by 90 degrees and is prevented from making its way through both filters.
By varying the voltage, you can vary the amount of light passing through. To
make this into a display, all that is needed is coloured filters in front of
the sub-pixels, a strong backlight behind, and some driving electronics.
So what does "TFT" mean?
You may have heard the term TFT used to describe flat screen monitors. TFT
stands for Thin Film Transistor, and is a technology used in almost every LCD
monitor. Each sub-pixel of a TFT monitor is controlled by a transistor on the
glass itself. This gives the monitor very precise control over the screen, allowing
it to display true 16-bit colour.
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