how-lcd-backlights-work-150x150 What makes LCDs shine lightUnlike typical cathode ray displays that produce images on a screen by bombarding into a layer of phosphorous, liquid displays can’t actually produce their while functioning. This is because the pixels on an are basically like little shutters that vary their opacity accordingly to the amount of electric current they receive.

This disadvantage is especially visible in the case of old-fashioned monochrome liquid displays, which can be read only when they are lit with coming from the environment, and become totally useless in the absence of it. In this case, coming from the Sun or reflected by the environment enters the , passes through all the layers of the before encountering a reflective surface that sends the back to the viewer.

In more advanced color LCDs however, the lighting problem is solved by placing a source behind the color pixel panel. Typical panels use as source a single straight tube known as a cold cathode lamp, which works much in the same way as regular lamps. The tube usually contains a low-pressure mercury vapor that, when ionized, starts to emit ultraviolet . Human eyes cannot see in ultraviolet wavelengths, thus a coat of inside the tube ensures that the ultraviolet is then converted into bright white .

The produced by the tube is used to shine a panel, which then scatters evenly across the whole surface, thus providing the with uniform amounts of .

Cold Cathode Lamps

lamps generally use heated elements in order to produce and to ionize the gas discharge mixture. CCFLs on the other hand do not require such constructive elements, therefore, as their name says, they do not produce heat while generating . To achieve electron emission nonetheless, CCFLs harness an effect known as thermionic emission. In thermionic emission, the are generated in the presence of a sufficiently high voltage.

This doesn’t mean however that CCFLs must necessarily remain cold during operation. If fact the can get extremely hot, red hot even, due to impacting the anode of the device.

What makes CCFLs ideal for the use in LCDs is that they have sizes comparable to that of a lead pencil, are somehow much tinner than the latter, and can produce very high amounts of . Also, CCFLs are extremely sensitive to physical shocks, so if you drop an panel and it doesn’t up anymore, the source is most likely broken.

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