Patent ID: 8508143

Claim:
A driving circuit for controlling a brightness of a light emitting diode based on a duty ratio of a pulse-width modulation signal, the driving circuit comprising: a first transistor coupled with a constant current source, the first transistor configured to receive a constant current from the constant current source when the first transistor is activated; a second transistor coupled in series with the light emitting diode, the second transistor and the first transistor included in a current mirror circuit, the second transistor configured to supply the constant current to the light emitting diode when the second transistor is activated; a connecting line connecting a gate of the first transistor and a gate of the second transistor; an integration circuit disposed on the connecting line, the integration circuit configured to smooth a change in a gate voltage of the first transistor and transmit a smoothed change in the gate voltage to the gate of the second transistor; a third transistor coupled between a ground and a portion of the connecting line located between the gate of the first transistor and the integration circuit, the third transistor configured to be activated and deactivated based on the duty ratio of the pulse-width modulation signal, thereby changing the gate voltages of the first transistor and the second transistor between an on-voltage and an off-voltage so as to activate and deactivate the first transistor and the second transistor; and a rectifier diode coupled in parallel with the integration circuit so that the gate voltage of the second transistor follows the gate voltage of the first transistor when the gate voltage of the first transistor is changed from the on-voltage to the off-voltage, the rectifier diode having a forward direction in a direction from the gate of the second transistor to the gate of the first transistor, wherein the anode of the rectifier diode is connected to the gate of the second transistor, and the cathode of the rectifier diode is connected to the gate of the first transistor.