How An LCD TV Works.
This explanation requires a few sub explanations so please bare with me. I promise it will all make sense in the end.
What Is A Liquid Crystal and What Can It Do
A liquid crystal is a substance with unusual properties. That is it
behaves differently to most substances and this is quite useful. If you
supply an electrical current to one of these liquid crystals then it
temporarily changes its 'state' and can be controlled to either allow
light through it or not.
Liquid Crystals and Colour
Now imagine a light and then a liquid crystal and then a colour filter.
If the light is on and you can control if the liquid crystal allows it
through then you can control the switching on and off of a coloured
light.
Sub Pixels
Now if you can accept that mixing combinations of Red, Green and Blue
lights at different intensities can make any colour (or one of about 16
million) then we are getting somewhere towards understanding how LCD
TVs work. Each individual Red, Green or Blue light is switched on and
off at varying intensities by varying the electrical current passed to
it. Each of these lights is called a Sub Pixel.
Pixels
A pixel is made of 3 sub pixels (phosphors), It is the dot you can
actually see if you put your face really close to the screen.
Combinations of dots (pixels) make a picture, Refreshed (redrawn)
quickly (50 times a second) makes the moving picture that we see.
Summary So Far:-
Fine so all this is great but how does an LCD TV know where and how to
light these millions of sub pixels at millions of different
combinations and intensities to light about a million(depending on the
specific TV) pixels, that form a picture, so damn quickly?!
The Electrrode Grid
This is a lattice of circuits (One for each sub pixel) that can be
accessed individually one after the other with a current of varying
voltage. The circuits connect to electrodes which set the liquid
crystal to light (or not) each individual sub pixel at (depending on
the voltage) the required intensity. They of course then light the
pixel at the precise colour required. This happens between 50 & 60
times per second per sub pixel (WOW!). Creating the moving image.
The Processor and LCDs are not TV's At All?
What controls this is a computer processor. Not unlike, but never the
less different from a PC processor. It is the inclusion of a processor
and a relatively flat lattice of electrical circuits which alleviates
the need for an electron gun which is what produces the picture in a
conventional TV. The absence of an electron gun and its large space
requirements is why LCDs are so thin it also technically speaking means
that LCD TVs are not really TVs at all but more like monitors.