Thin Film Transistor LED Displays - Visual I/O
Circuit Cellar|September 2024
To add a resistive touchscreen on top of a TFT display, Jeff explores the technology offerings and libraries needed to accomplish his task. Calibrating the touchscreen's computed coordinates with the actual pixel coordinates of the display proved difficult with a modular framework but separating functions allows easy expansion.
Jeff Bachiochi
Thin Film Transistor LED Displays - Visual I/O

Last month I chose to use a TFT display, based on the simple fact that it was compatible with Arduino UNO shield (Circuit Cellar #409, August, 2024 [1]). That means the display mounts atop an UNO and requires no wiring whatsoever to operate. My micro of choice nowadays is an ESP32. Officially there is no UNO-format ESP32 from Arduino. They do make a NANO format ESP32, but that lacks the Arduino expansion format. Third-party companies such as Wemos offer one, but it's hardly a standard. Using an UNO or MEGA format board with a shield-compatible display board made a lot of sense.

Despite its advantages, a TFT screen cannot emit light on its own, and needs a backlight to generate an image. In this month's column, I add a resistive touchscreen on top of the TFT display

HOW TFTS AND TOUCHSCREENS WORK

TFT display: A TFT or "thin-film-transistor" technology display has a sandwich-like structure with liquid crystal material between two glass plates. Referring to Figure 1, you can see the two polarizing and RGB (Red/Green/Blue) color filters, which, combined with two alignment layers, determine the amount of light allowed to pass. An uncharged pixel allows the vertically polarized light to pass unaffected, then it gets blocked by the second horizontal polarizer. When charged, the liquid crystals bend the vertically polarized light 90°, allowing it to pass through the second polarizer. Each pixel in the active RGB matrix is paired with transistors that includes a capacitor to give each sub-pixel the ability to retain its charge. Thus, the TFT layer controls the amount of light allowed to flow through its color filter. The TFT screen, itself, however, can't emit light like an OLED display; it must have a backlight to generate the picture.

Esta historia es de la edición September 2024 de Circuit Cellar.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición September 2024 de Circuit Cellar.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE CIRCUIT CELLARVer todo
HSYCO Unveils New BACnet Server Driver for Enhanced Building Automation
Circuit Cellar

HSYCO Unveils New BACnet Server Driver for Enhanced Building Automation

HSYCO, a leading provider of integrated building management solutions, is excited to announce the release of its new BACnet Server driver.

time-read
1 min  |
March 2025
Longsys Launches 7.2mm Subsize eMMC, Breaking the Physical Space Constraints of AI Wearables
Circuit Cellar

Longsys Launches 7.2mm Subsize eMMC, Breaking the Physical Space Constraints of AI Wearables

In the design of wearable devices, every millimeter matters.

time-read
2 minutos  |
March 2025
The Future of Voice-Enabled AI Industry Advancements in MEMS Microphones for Voice AI
Circuit Cellar

The Future of Voice-Enabled AI Industry Advancements in MEMS Microphones for Voice AI

Acoustic Activity Detection and High Acoustic Overload Point Transform Voice Interaction Advancements in MEMS microphones are enhancing voiceenabled AI technologies across various consumer electronics.

time-read
4 minutos  |
March 2025
Exploring the RP2350 Security
Circuit Cellar

Exploring the RP2350 Security

Raspberry Pi's Novel \"Security through Transparency\" Approach

time-read
8 minutos  |
March 2025
Learn Lisp Programming Using MCUS
Circuit Cellar

Learn Lisp Programming Using MCUS

Part 3—Forward Kinematics in µLisp

time-read
10+ minutos  |
March 2025
Pison and STMicroelectronics Announce Timex as Neural Sensor Partner, Ushering a New Era of Neurocognitive Wearables
Circuit Cellar

Pison and STMicroelectronics Announce Timex as Neural Sensor Partner, Ushering a New Era of Neurocognitive Wearables

Pison, the trailblazer in AI-powered neural sensors for neurocognitive health, wellness, and gesture control, announced it has begun licensing its innovative neural sensor to leading smartwatch and wearable brands.

time-read
1 min  |
March 2025
Datasheet: DSPs and DSCs
Circuit Cellar

Datasheet: DSPs and DSCs

Smarter Algorithms and Beyond

time-read
7 minutos  |
March 2025
An Air Quality Monitor with a Blues Satellite Link Module
Circuit Cellar

An Air Quality Monitor with a Blues Satellite Link Module

Brian had no sooner finished the review of Blues' LoRa Notecard when the new Starnote module was introduced. This module allows an IoT device to link to a geosynchronous satellite, for situations in which neither WiFi nor Cellular data links are operational. This article describes a project using the Starnote module.

time-read
10+ minutos  |
March 2025
Create an AI-Driven Smart Home Security System
Circuit Cellar

Create an AI-Driven Smart Home Security System

Part 1- Setup and First Steps of the Raspberry Pi AI Kit

time-read
10+ minutos  |
March 2025
Wearable Devices Announces Availability of its Mudra Link Neural Gesture-Control Wristband
Circuit Cellar

Wearable Devices Announces Availability of its Mudra Link Neural Gesture-Control Wristband

Wearable Devices, Ltd., announced the general availability of its Mudra Link, the first neural wristband for Android, macOS, and Windows devices.

time-read
1 min  |
March 2025