The LCD's themselves have extremely low power requirements. A
very small electric field is required to excite the crystals into
their liquid state. Most of the energy used by an LCD display system
is due to the back lighting.
I mentioned earlier that LCD's slowly transition back to their
crystalline state when the E field is removed. In scanned displays,
with a large number of pixels, the percentage of the time that
LCDs are excited is very small. Thus the crystals spend most of
their time in intermediate states, being neither "On" or "Off".
This behavior is indicative of passive displays. You might
notice that these displays are not very sharp and are prone to
ghosting. Another way to building LCD displays uses an
active matrix. The individual cells are very
similar to those described above. The main difference is that
the electric field is retained by a capacitor so that the crystal
remains in a constant state. Transistor switches are used to transfer
charge into the capacitors during the scanning process. The capacitors
can hold the charge for significantly longer than the refresh period
yielding a crisp display with no shadows. Active displays, require
a working capacitor and transistor for each LCD or pixel element,
and thus, they are more expensive to produce.