[0001] Method of manufacturing a projection cathode ray tube, the method comprising as a
process step the vapour deposition of a multilayer interference filter on a surface
of a display window, after which the display window and further components are combined
to form a projection cathode ray tube in such a manner that the surface extends on
the inside of the projection cathode ray tube.
[0002] Such a method is known from European Patent Application EP 0 246 696. Said specification
describes a method in which an interference filter is provided on the inside of the
display window. Said interference filter is formed by a stack of vapour deposited
layers of a high and a low refractive index.
[0003] It has been found experimentally that in the method according to EP 0 246 696 using
commercially available display windows for projection cathode ray tubes, the thickness
of interference filter layers decreases from the centre of the display window towards
the edges of the display window to a greater extent than could be expected on the
basis of the relative positions of the display window and the vapour deposition source
and the shape of the display window. This extra decrease in thickness of the layers
is a few percent. The effect of an interference filter depends on the thickness of
the layer; an extra decrease of the thickness of the layer has a detrimental influence
on the effect of the interference filter.
[0004] It is an object of the invention to provide a method by which a projection cathode
ray tube is obtained having a better interference filter.
[0005] For this purpose the method according to the invention is characterized in that during
the vapour deposition process the said surface is surrounded by an edge having a height
which is not more than 1/5 of the minimum distance between the centre of the display
window and the edge.
[0006] Known display windows for projection cathode ray tubes comprise an upright edge which
during the vapour deposition extends in the direction of the vapour deposition source.
The height of the edge is 1/2 to 1/3 of the said minimum distance. It has been found
experimentally that a considerable extra decrease of the thickness of the vapour deposited
layers then occurs. The display window may be both substantially rectangular and circular.
A projection cathode ray tube customarily comprises a rectangular display window.
The minimum distance between the centre of the display window and the edge corresponds
for a rectangular display window to half the length of the minor axis.
[0007] In one embodiment the height of the edge is less than 1/10 of the minimum distance
between the centre of the display window and the edge.
[0008] The height preferably is at least substantially zero.
[0009] In a further embodiment the display window comprises a recessive edge.
[0010] The occurring problem of extra decrease of the thickness of the layers towards the
edge is notably great if the vapour deposition is carried out with a background gas
pressure of more than 2 x 10⁻⁴ mbar. The method according to the invention then notably
is advantageous.
[0011] In an embodiment of the method according to the invention
inter alia TiO₂ is vapour deposited.
[0012] The method according to the invention is notably advantageous if a short wave pass
filter or a bandpass interference filter is vapour deposited.
[0013] An embodiment of the method according to the invention is characterized in that a
short wave pass filter is vapour deposited which comprises a stack of at least six
layers having alternately a high and a low refractive index, each layer comprising
an optical thickness between 0.2 λ
f and 0.3 λ
f, an average optical thickness of 0.25 λ
f, λ
f being equal to pxλ and λ being a central wavelength selected from the emission spectrum
of the display screen, and
p being a number between 1.18 and 1.33.
[0014] The invention also relates to a projection cathode ray tube manufactured by means
of the method according to the invention and a projection colour television apparatus
comprising such a projection cathode ray tube.
[0015] A few embodiments of the method according to the invention will now be described
in greater detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawing,
in which:
Figs. 1a and 1b are a plan view and a cross-sectional view, respectively, of a display window having
an upright edge,
Fig. 1c is a cross-sectional view of a further example of a display window having an upright
edge,
Fig. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a detail of the display window 1,
Figs. 3 and 4 are cross-sectional views of a vapour deposition arrangement and a detail
of a vapour deposition arrangement, respectively,
Fig. 5 shows a detail of a vapour deposition arrangement suitable for the method according
to the invention,
Figs. 6a and 6b are graphs showing the effect of a variation in thickness of the layers of the interference
filter,
Fig. 7 is a perspective view, partly broken away, of a projection cathode ray tube
manufactured according to the method of the invention.
[0016] The Figures are diagrammatic and not drawn to scale in which in the various embodiments
corresponding parts are generally referred to by the same reference numerals.
[0017] Figs. 1
a and 1
b are a plan view and a cross-sectional view, respectively, of a display window 1 having
an edge 2. On an inner surface 3 the display window 1 comprises an interference filter
4, a cathodoluminescent display screen 5 and an aluminium layer 6. The interference
filter may be used, for example, to increase the useful luminous efficiency at small
angles and/or to improve the colour display and/or to reduce halo. In this example
the height of the edge 2 is
a and half the length of the minor axis
b. Fig. 1
c shows a display window having a curved inner surface.
[0018] The height of the edge is measured on the inside of the edge of the area of the minor
axis. Display windows for projection cathode ray tubes are commercially available.
An example of such a display window is the type Co-9054-3992 manufactured by Corning
Glassworks. Such commercially available display windows have an edge having a ratio
height: half minor axis of 1/2 to 1/3. For the type in question this ratio is 23 mm:
50.24 mm. Display windows are compressed, the edge is formed by material which is
forced away from the centre of the press. For pressing a display window so much material
is customarily used that a comparatively high edge is formed. This high edge also
reduces the possibility of damage and increases the ease of handling the display window.
[0019] Fig. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a detail of the display window 1. The interference
filter 4 is present on the inner surface 3 and comprises a stack of interference filter
layers of high refractive index (8) and low refractive index (7). The interference
filter 4 is present between the display screen 5 and the inner surface 3 of the display
window. An aluminium layer 6 is present on the display screen 5.
[0020] Fig. 3 is a cross-sectional view of a vapour deposition arrangement to illustrate
the method according to the invention. This Figure is a cross-sectional view of a
vapour deposition arrangement 9 having a vapour deposition source 10 and a holder
11 for display windows 1. The holder comprises apertures in which the display windows
1 are mounted. The holder generally rotates during the vapour deposition about a central
axis. The vapour deposition source 10 may comprise, for example, a crucible containing
a material to be vapour deposited and an element generating an electron beam, a so-called
E-beam gun, for evaporating the material. The vapour deposition source 10 may comprise
several crucibles. The vapour deposition arrangement may also comprise several vapour
deposition sources. The material to be vapour deposited may also be heated in a different
manner, for example, by means of a heating element or a laser beam or ion beam. Known
materials for layers having a low refractive index are, for example, SiO₂ and MgF₂
and for layers having a high refractive index, for example, TiO₂, Ta₂O₅ and Nb₂O₅.
These substances evaporate and are deposited on the inner surface 3 of the display
window 1. The thickness of vapour-deposited interference layers on the inner surface
3 of display windows comprising an upright edge (with
a/b approximately equal to 2/5) surprisingly prove not to correspond to calculations.
The number of molecules (atoms) emitted towards a surface element is simple to compute:
N = < β f > t
wherein:
N = total number of molecules emitted towards a surface element,
<...> = time average of a quantity
β = space angle which covers the surface element viewed from the source,
f = number of molecules emitted towards the relevant surface element per solid angle
per time unit,
t = vapour deposition time.
[0021] The solid angle β is directly proportional to the area A of the surface element,
the cosine of the angle α between the normal to the surface element and the line between
the surface element and the vapour deposition source and inversely proportional to
the square of the distance D between the surface element and the vapour deposition
source:
β = Acos(α)/D²
The theoretical thickness
d of a vapour-deposited layer then follows from:
d=N/(N
typeA) = 1/N
type*<fcos(α)/D²>t
wherein N
type = the number of molecules per unit by volume.
[0022] Comparatively small differences may be expected in the number of molecules emitted
towards a surface element of the side of the display window facing the vapour deposition
source. The distance between the surface element and the vapour deposition source
D and the angle between the normal to the surface element and the line between the
surface element and the vapour deposition source may differ for various surface elements.
On the basis of this a small decrease of the layer thickness may be expected from
the centre of the display window towards the edge, approximately 0.3 % along the minor
axis 40 mm from the centre for display tubes having a flat inside having a minor axis
of approximately 50 mm and a distance vapour deposition source-display window of approximately
85 cm; approximately 2.0 % for such display tubes having a curved inside having a
radius of curvature of 35 cm. However, it has been found that these calculations do
not correspond to the experimentally measured layer thicknesses, an unexpected and
important extra decrease occurs.
[0023] Fig. 4 shows a detail of a vapour deposition arrangement. By interactions between
the emitted molecules mutually and/or between emitted molecules and background gas
molecules present in the vapour deposition arrangement some emitted molecules do not
follow a straight line between the vapour deposition source and the inner surface
of the display window but experience an impact or a reaction before they reach the
display window. In Fig. 4 molecules 12
b and 12
c experience impacts at the points A, C and B, D, respectively. It seems that such
molecules, viewed from the display window, do not originate from the vapour deposition
source but from a different point. The upright edge 2 at the display window 1 prevents
some of these molecules to reach parts of the inner surface of the display window
which are situated near the edge. The edge has a shadowing effect, the "shadow" of
the edge 2 is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 4 by shading. In this example the edge
2 prevents molecules 12
c from reaching the inner surface.
[0024] The extra decrease in thickness was particularly large if the vapour deposition was
carried out at a background gas pressure of more than 2 * 10⁻⁴ mbar. Such pressures
occur, for example, when TiO₂ is vapour deposited in an oxygen atmosphere. The extra
decrease in thickness when TiO₂ was vapour deposited in an oxygen atmosphere at an
oxygen pressure of 4 x 10⁻⁴ mbar was at most approximately 4 %. The distance between
the source evaporating Ti₂O₃ and the display window was approximately 85 cm, the height
a of the display window was 25 mm and the distance between the centre of the display
window and the upright edge was 45 to 55 mm. The maximum extra decrease was measured
in the corners of the display window. Along the minor axis an extra decrease of 3
% was measured. The extra decrease in thickness is reduced by reducing the vapour
deposition rate and the gas pressure. It has been found that this decrease does not
occur entirely linearly with the background gas pressure, for a background gas pressure
of 1 * 10⁻⁴ mbar the extra decrease is more than 1/4 of the extra decrease for a background
gas pressure of 4 * 10⁻⁴ mbar. However, the use of a comparatively low background
gas pressure extends the duration of the vapour deposition process and for TiO₂ it
has been found in addition that the vapour deposited layer of TiO₂ is not sufficiently
oxidised any longer so that light absorption in the TiO₂ layer occurs. The problem
is caused not only by interactions between background gas molecules and emitted molecules
but also by interactions between emitted molecules mutually. Interactions between
emitted molecules mutually play a part if the density of the emitted molecules is
large, that is to say near the source; according as the distance from the source becomes
larger interactions between emitted molecules and background gas molecules play a
more important part. It has been found that the problems mentioned hereinbefore can
be mitigated without the vapour deposition process lasting longer or the oxidation
occurring less readily, by reducing the height of the edge. A ratio height/half minor
axis of less than or approximately equal to 1 : 5 proved to provide good results.
[0025] A display window suitable for a projection cathode ray tube can be manufactured by
reducing the height of the edge of a commercially available display window or removing
the edge. An alternative is to compress a display window having a low edge. Sufficient
care should be taken to avoid damage.
[0026] Fig. 5 shows a detail of a vapour deposition arrangement suitable for an embodiment
of the method according to the invention. Display window 1 comprises an edge 13 having
a height zero. The advantage of this is that the edge 14 is not or hardly hampered
by a shadowing effect. It is also shown in this Figure that the angle between the
normal to the side facing the vapour deposition source, indicated by broken lines,
and the direction of vapour deposition, indicated by solid lines, increases towards
the edges of the display window. In certain circumstances it may be recommendable
to use a display window which comprises a recessive edge. A recessive edge is to be
understood to mean herein an edge which is recessed in the display window. The display
window may then be mounted in the holder 11 in such a manner that the edge 14 of the
holder 11 does not produce any shadowing effect.
[0027] The extra thickness variation has particularly detrimental results if the interference
filter is a short wave pass filter or a bandpass filter. Examples of a short wave
pass filter are given in European Patent Application EP-A 0 206 381. Light having
a wavelength shorter than a given wavelength λ
edge is transmitted (by a short wave pass filter) or light having a wavelength λ between
wavelengths λ
edge1 and λ
edge2 is passed (for a bandpass filter). A shortwave pass filter in one embodiment comprises
a stack of at least six layers having alternately a high and a low refractive index,
each layer having an optical thickness between 0.2 λ
f and 0.3 λ
f, with an average optical thickness of 0.25 λ
f, λ
f being equal to pxλ, and λ being a central wavelength selected from the emission spectrum
of the display window, and
p being a number between 1.18 and 1.33. The position of λ
edge or λ
edge2 with respect to the emission spectrum of the cathodoluminescent material from which
the display screen is built up, is of great importance for the operation of the interference
filter as shown in the graphs of Figs. 6
a and 6
b. The interference filter is a filter of the type mentioned hereinbefore comprising
a stack of 20 layers. Said short wave pass filter has a λ
edge of approximately 580 nm. The horizontal axis indicates the wavelength λ (in nm),
the vertical axis of Fig. 6
a gives the transmission T
f in the forward direction of the interference filter (curve 14) and the emission spectrum
(I) of YAG:Tb, a green phosphor. The vertical axis of Fig. 6
b indicates the amplification G
f of the light emanating in the forward direction from the display window. This amplification
is a result of the fact that a part of the light emitted by the phosphor having a
wavelength of approximately 550 nm is emitted at an angle with the forward direction.
The effective optical wavelength of the layers of the interference filter has been
increased for such light, since they traverse the layers obliquely. Such light is
reflected towards the display screen by the interference filter, a part of the reflected
layer is then scattered back in the forward direction so that more light emanates
in the forward direction. This amplification is shown by curve 15 in Figure 6
b. This amplification shows a maximum for a wavelength near λ
edge. A number of the spectral lines emitted by the phosphor are filtered away by the
interference filter, in this example two lines 16 and 17 around 600 nm, the spectral
lines around 550 nm are amplified, the spectral line around 490 nm is neither filtered
away nor amplified. The position of λ
edge is chosen to be so that the overall luminous efficiency increases and on chromaticity
of the emitted light satisfies the EBU standard. Curve 18 in Fig. 6
b shows the amplification of the light emanating in the forward direction from the
display window for an interference filter the thickness of each layer of which is
reduced by 4 %. The interference filter now has λ
edge = 555 nm, the amplification of the light of the spectral lines around 550 nm depends
to a great extent on the position of λ
edge, relatively variations of λ
edge result in large variations in intensity and chromaticity of the emitted light. As
a result of this large variations in intensity and chromaticity of the emitted light
occur. This is a problem in particular in a three colour projection television arrangement.
The intensity and chromaticity of the picture for each of the three cathode ray tubes
will vary as a result of which colour differences between the picture displayed in
the centre of the display window and in the edges of the display window will occur.
[0028] It has been found that for a rectangular display window having a long half axis of
approximately 62.5 mm, a minor half axis
b of approximately 50 mm and a height of the edge
a of approximately 25 mm, a distance between the display window and the vapour deposition
source of 85 cm and a background gas pressure of 4 * 10⁻⁴ mbar at a point on the long
axis 40 mm from the centre, the TiO₂ layers of the filter were 3 % thinner than calculated;
in a corner of the display window 4 % thinner. It has been found that at a ratio
a/b smaller than 1/5, the extra thickness variation of the interference filter layers
is less than approximately 1.5 %, which led to a significantly improved picture display.
Preferably, the edge is even lower, is entirely absent or the display window comprises
a recessed edge. The invention is of particular advantage if the display window is
curved on its inside. For a display window having a curved profile a decrease of the
thickness of the layers occurs already during the vapour deposition as a result of
geometrical factors. With the given vapour deposition arrangement, for example, the
thickness variation, as a result of geometrical factors only, for a display window
the inner surface of which has a radius of curvature of 35 cm amounts to approximately
1.8 % for the minor axis, to 2.0 % for the long axis.
[0029] Fig. 7 is a perspective view partly broken away of a projection cathode ray tube
manufactured according to the method of the invention. Projection cathode ray tube
19 comprises a display window 1 having an edge 2 provided on its inside with an interference
filter 4. Projection cathode ray tube 19 further comprises a cone 20 and a neck 21
which together with display window 1 constitutes an evacuated envelope. Projection
cathode ray tube 19 also comprises a deflection unit 22 and an electron gun 23 for
emitting an electron beam 24 and connections 25. This example should not be considered
to be restricted for the invention. The projection cathode ray tube, for example,
may be a flat cathode ray tube. A projection television apparatus comprises three
projection cathode ray tubes the emitted green, red and blue light, respectively,
of which are combined to form one image on a projection screen.
[0030] It will be obvious that many variations are possible to those skilled in the art
without departing from the scope of this invention.
1. A method of manufacturing a projection cathode ray tube, the method comprising
as a process step the vapour deposition of a multilayer interference filter on a surface
of a display window after which the display window and further components are combined
to form a projection cathode ray tube in such a manner that the surface extends on
the inside of the projection cathode ray tube, characterized in that during the vapour
deposition process the said surface is surrounded by an edge having a height which
is not more than 1/5 of the minimum distance between the centre of the display window
and the edge.
2. A method as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the height of the edge is
less than 1/10 of the minimum distance between the centre of the display window and
the edge.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 2, characterized in that the height is at least substantially
zero.
4. A method as claimed in Claim 2, characterized in that the display window comprises
a recessive edge.
5. A method as claimed in Claim 1, 2, 3 or 4, characterized in that the side of the
display window facing the vapour deposition source is curved.
6. A method as claimed in any of the preceding Claims, characterized in that vapour
deposition is carried out with a background gas pressure of more than 2*10⁻⁴ mbar.
7. A method as claimed in any of the preceding Claims, characterized in that TiO₂
is vapour deposited.
8. A method as claimed in any of the preceding Claims, characterized in that a short
wave pass interference filter is vapour deposited.
9. A method as claimed in Claim 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7, characterized in that a bandpass
interference filter is vapour deposited.
10. A method as claimed in Claim 8, characterized in that a short wave pass filter
is vapour-deposited which comprises a stack of at least six layers having alternately
a high and a low refractive index, each layer having an optical thickness between
0.2 λf and 0.3 λf, an average optical thickness of 0.25 λf, λf being equal to pxλ and λ being a central wavelength selected from the emission spectrum
of the display screen, p being a number between 1.18 and 1.33.
11. A projection cathode ray tube manufactured by means of a method as claimed in
any of the preceding Claims.
12. A projection colour television apparatus comprising a projection cathode ray tube
as claimed in Claim 11.