The present invention relates to an acoustic biometric imaging system, and to a method of manufacturing such an acoustic biometric imaging system.
Biometric systems are widely used as means for increasing the convenience and security of personal electronic devices, such as mobile phones etc. Fingerprint sensing systems, in particular, are now included in a large proportion of all newly released personal communication devices, such as mobile phones.
Due to their excellent performance and relatively low cost, capacitive fingerprint sensors are used in an overwhelming majority of all biometric systems.
Among other fingerprint sensing technologies, ultrasonic sensing also has the potential to provide advantageous performance, such as the ability to acquire fingerprint (or palmprint) images from very moist fingers etc.
One class of ultrasonic fingerprint systems of particular interest are systems in which acoustic signals are transmitted along a surface of a device member to be touched by a user, and a fingerprint (palm print) representation is determined based on received acoustic signals resulting from the interaction between the transmitted acoustic signals and an interface between the device member and the user's skin.
Such ultrasonic fingerprint sensing systems, which are, for example, generally described in US 2017/0053151 may provide for controllable resolution, and allow for a larger sensing area, which may be optically transparent, without the cost of the fingerprint sensing system necessarily scaling with the sensing area.
Although the general principle of such ultrasonic fingerprint sensing is known, there appear to be remaining challenges to be overcome. For instance, it would be desirable to improve sensing of a finger placed on a transparent portion of a device, using at least one ultrasonic transducer that is not visible to the user of the device.
In view of above-mentioned and other drawbacks of the prior art, it is an object of the present invention to provide for improved sensing of a finger placed on a transparent portion of a device, using at least one ultrasonic transducer that is not visible to the user of the device.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, it is therefore provided an acoustic biometric imaging system comprising: a transparent device member having a first face to be touched by a finger surface of a user, and a second face opposite the first face, the transparent device member having a first acoustic impedance; a first ultrasonic transducer acoustically coupled to the second face of the transparent device member in a first transducer region for receiving acoustic signals conducted by the transparent device member from a finger touch region laterally spaced apart from the first transducer region, the first ultrasonic transducer having a second acoustic impedance; and an opaque masking layer arranged between the transparent device member and the first ultrasonic transducer in the first transducer region, the opaque masking layer having a third acoustic impedance between the first acoustic impedance and the second acoustic impedance.
It should be noted that the finger touch region is spaced apart from the first transducer region, so that the first ultrasonic transducer, which is arranged on the second side of the transparent device member, is not directly opposite the finger touch region on the first side of the transparent device member.
When the acoustic biometric imaging system according to embodiments of the present invention is in use, an acoustic transmit signal is transmitted by a transmitting ultrasonic transducer acoustically coupled to the transparent device member. The acoustic transmit signal is laterally propagated by the transparent device member, and interacts with a hand surface touching the transparent device member to produce acoustic interaction signals indicative of interactions between the acoustic transmit signal and an interface between the first face of the transparent device member and the hand surface touching the first face of the transparent device member. The interaction signals are laterally propagated by the transparent device member, and received by a receiving ultrasonic transducer acoustically coupled to the transparent device member. Based on the interaction signals, a representation of the contact area between the transparent device member and the hand surface can be determined. The representation of the contact area (such as a fingerprint) may be used to identify or authenticate the user using, per se, known methods.
The transmitting ultrasonic transducer and the receiving ultrasonic transducer may be different transducers. Alternatively, the same ultrasonic transducer may first transmit the acoustic transmit signal, and then receive acoustic interaction signals.
Other acoustic biometric imaging systems exist, in which the finger touch region is directly opposite the transducer region, so that the acoustic transmit signal is propagated directly through the transparent device member from the second side of the transparent device member to the first side of the transparent device member. Such systems have the obvious disadvantage that the finger touch region is predefined and relatively small, since it has to correspond to a region populated with ultrasonic transducers.
The present inventors have found that the lateral propagation of the acoustic transmit signal and the acoustic interaction signals in the transparent device member requires a significantly more efficient/better acoustic coupling between the ultrasonic transducer and the transparent device member than in existing acoustic biometric imaging systems of the above-described kind, in which the finger touch region is directly opposite the transducer region.
In particular, the present inventors have found that a conventional opaque masking layer formed by polymer ink cannot provide sufficient acoustic coupling between the ultrasonic transducer(s) and a transparent device member of materials typically used in modern electronic devices, to allow lateral propagation, by the transparent device member, of transmit signal and interactions signals as described further above.
The present invention is thus based upon the realization that this type of acoustic biometric image system requires the opaque masking layer used for hiding the ultrasonic transducer(s) to exhibit an acoustic impedance that is between the acoustic impedance of the ultrasonic transducer(s) and the acoustic impedance of the transparent device member.
According to various embodiments, the third acoustic impedance of the opaque masking layer may advantageously be greater than 8 MRayls and less than 24 MRayls.
To provide for a sufficiently high degree of acoustic energy transfer into the transparent device member, the opaque masking layer may advantageously have a thickness of less than around 10 μm.
To achieve the desired acoustic impedance, while still being opaque, the opaque masking layer may advantageously be a vacuum deposited layer. In other words, the opaque masking layer may have been formed by a vacuum deposition method, rather than through, for example, screen printing. It should be noted that it will be straight-forward for one of ordinary skill in the art to determine if a layer has been formed by a vacuum deposition method or, for example, has been screen printed.
The present inventors have found that, using suitable vacuum depositing techniques, the acoustic impedance of the opaque masking layer can be tuned to a desired value, while at the same time achieving one of several different colors. This is beneficial, especially for applications where esthetics is important, such as mobile personal devices etc.
An example of a suitable vacuum deposition technique for forming the opaque masking layer has been found to be so-called Non-Conductive Vacuum Metallization (NCVM), which is, per se, well known in the art for other applications.
According to various embodiments, furthermore, the opaque masking layer may advantageously be an oxide layer.
In embodiments, such an oxide layer may advantageously comprise silicon and zirconium. In particular, the present inventors have found that an opaque masking layer with an acoustic impedance tuned to work well with advantageous combinations of transducer materials (ceramics, such as PZT) and transparent device member materials (chemically strengthened glass, such as so-called gorilla glass) can be achieved by varying the ratio of silicon oxide to zirconium oxide in in the opaque masking layer. If a higher acoustic impedance is desired, the proportion of zirconium oxide should be higher, and vice versa.
According to various embodiments, furthermore, the acoustic biometric imaging system may additionally comprise an attachment layer between the opaque masking layer and the first ultrasonic transducer.
The attachment layer may advantageously have an acoustic impedance that is also between the acoustic impedance of the transparent device member and the acoustic impedance of the first ultrasonic transducer. In embodiments, the attachment layer may be made of a Bismuth-based alloy, such as a Sn—Bi alloy.
According to various embodiments, the acoustic biometric imaging system may advantageously further comprise a metallic layer between the opaque masking layer and the attachment layer.
The metallic layer may comprise a metal that can form a mechanically robust alloy together with the attachment layer. In the case when the attachment layer is made of SnBi, the metallic layer may thus, for example, be made of Ni or Cu.
According to embodiments, moreover, the first ultrasonic transducer may be a ceramic piezo-electric transducer. For instance, the first ultrasonic transducer may be made of PZT.
In embodiments, the first ultrasonic transducer may be configured to be a shear wave transducer. For example, a ceramic piezo-electric transducer may be appropriately poled.
In other embodiments, the first ultrasonic transducer may be configured to be a longitudinal wave transducer.
According to various embodiments, the acoustic biometric imaging system may further comprise transducer control circuitry connected to the first ultrasonic transducer for receiving, from the first ultrasonic transducer, electrical signals indicative of the acoustic signals conducted by the transparent device member from the finger touch region.
The transducer control circuitry may further be controllable to provide electrical signals to the first ultrasonic transducer (and/or to a second ultrasonic transducer) to cause the first ultrasonic transducer (and/or second ultrasonic transducer) to transmit the above-mentioned acoustic transmit signal.
The acoustic biometric imaging system may further comprise processing circuitry connected to the transducer control circuitry and configured to form a representation of the finger surface based on signals from the transducer control circuitry.
Moreover, the acoustic biometric imaging system according to various embodiments of the present invention may advantageously be included in an electronic device, further comprising a controller configured to: acquire the representation of the finger surface from the acoustic biometric imaging system; authenticate a user based on the representation; and perform at least one user-requested process only if the user is authenticated based on the representation.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing an acoustic biometric imaging system, comprising the steps of: providing a transparent device member assembly including a transparent device member having a first face and a second face, and an opaque masking layer deposited on a portion of the second face of the transparent device member; and attaching a first ultrasonic transducer to the opaque masking layer on the second face of the transparent device member.
The step of providing the transparent device member assembly may comprise the steps of: providing the transparent device member; and vacuum depositing the opaque masking layer on the second face of the transparent device member.
Further embodiments of, and effects obtained through this second aspect of the present invention are largely analogous to those described above for the first aspect of the invention.
These and other aspects of the present invention will now be described in more detail, with reference to the appended drawings showing an example embodiment of the invention, wherein:
In the present detailed description, various embodiments of the acoustic biometric imaging system according to the present invention are mainly described with reference to an acoustic biometric imaging system comprising a cover glass for a mobile communication device, with an ultrasonic transducer array attached thereto. It should be noted that acoustic biometric imaging systems with many other configurations also fall within the scope defined by the claims. For instance, the transparent device member need not necessarily be a cover glass, and/or the ultrasonic transducer array included in the acoustic biometric imaging system may include fewer or more piezoelectric elements. Moreover, the first and second transducer electrodes may be connectable from the same or different sides of the ultrasonic transducer device.
The acoustic biometric imaging system according to embodiments of the present invention may be included in various electronic devices.
As is schematically indicated in
The ultrasonic transducer array 5 is acoustically coupled to a transparent device member, here cover glass 11, of the electronic device 1 in a first transducer region, corresponding to the extension of the ultrasonic transducer array 5. The user touch, which takes place in a finger touch region 14 laterally spaced apart from the first transducer region 5, is indicated by the thumb 13 in
When the acoustic biometric imaging system 3 is in operation, the controller 9 controls one or several piezoelectric element(s) comprised in the ultrasonic transducer array 5 to transmit an acoustic transmit signal ST, indicated by the block arrow in
The acoustic interaction signals SIn are presently believed to mainly be due to so-called contact scattering at the contact area between the cover glass and the skin of the user (thumb 13).
The acoustic transmit signal ST may advantageously be a pulse train of short pulses (impulses), and the acoustic interaction signals SIn, which may be measured for different angles by different receiving piezoelectric elements, may then be impulse responses. The impulse response data carried by the acoustic interaction signals SIn can be used to reconstruct a representation of the contact area (the fingerprint) using a reconstruction procedure similar to methods used in ultrasound reflection tomography.
It should be understood that the “representation” of the fingerprint of the user may be any information extracted based on the received acoustic interaction signals SIn, which is useful for assessing the similarity between fingerprint representations acquired at different times. For instance, the representation may comprise descriptions of fingerprint features (such as so-called minutiae) and information about the positional relationship between the fingerprint features. Alternatively, the representation may be a fingerprint image, or a compressed version of the image. For example, the image may be binarized and/or skeletonized. Moreover, the fingerprint representation may be the above-mentioned impulse response representation.
Referring first to
Referring now additionally to
As is also indicated in
To provide for a good acoustic coupling between the ultrasonic transducer 15 and the transparent device member 11, the third acoustic impedance Z3 and the fourth acoustic impedance Z4 should both have values between the value of the first acoustic impedance Z1 and the second acoustic impedance Z2. Since the metal layer 22 and the first transducer electrode 31 can be made very thin (such as less than 1 μm), these layers can be disregarded in view of the acoustic coupling between the ultrasonic transducer 15 and the transparent device member 11.
An ultrasonic transducer 15 comprising a piezoelectric element 19 made of PZT has an acoustic impedance of about 23.6 MRayls for longitudinal waves, and about 14.4 MRayls for shear waves.
Chemically modified glass (such as so-called gorilla glass), which is a suitable material for the transparent device member 11 for use in, for example, a mobile communication device 1, has an acoustic impedance of about 13.7 MRayls for longitudinal waves, and about 8.8 MRayls for shear waves.
For a first exemplary acoustic biometric imaging system using longitudinal waves, the first acoustic impedance Z1 may thus be around 23.6 MRayls, and the second acoustic impedance Z2 may be around 13.7 MRayls. This means that the third acoustic impedance Z3 should be higher than about 13.7 MRayls, and less than about 23.6 MRayls.
For a second exemplary acoustic biometric imaging system using shear waves, the first acoustic impedance Z1 may be around 14.4 MRayls, and the second acoustic impedance Z2 may be around 8.8 MRayls. This means that the third acoustic impedance Z3 should be higher than about 8.8 MRayls, and less than about 14.4 MRayls.
Neither of these ranges can be achieved using conventional polymer ink, which typically has an acoustic impedance of less than 1 MRayls for both longitudinal waves and shear waves.
According to embodiments of the biometric acoustic imaging system 3 of the present invention, the opaque masking layer 18 is instead a vacuum deposited oxide layer formed by a mix of silicon oxide and zirconium oxide.
Silicon oxide (silicon dioxide) has (depending on the density) an acoustic impedance of about 13 MRayls for longitudinal waves, and about 8.5 MRayls for shear waves.
Zirconium oxide (zirconium dioxide) has (depending on the density) an acoustic impedance of about 30 MRayls for longitudinal waves, and about 19 MRayls for shear waves.
By vacuum depositing silicon oxide and zirconium oxide in suitable proportions, it is clear that an opaque layer can be achieved that is within the desired acoustic impedance ranges for longitudinal waves as well as for shear waves. Using Non-Conductive Vacuum Metallization (NCVM), which is, per se, well known in the art for other applications, silicon oxide and zirconium oxide can be provided in suitable proportions. A desired appearance (such as color) of the opaque masking layer 18 can, for example, be achieved by tuning the thickness of the layer.
The attachment layer 24 may suitably, for example, consist of a Sn—Bi alloy, which has an acoustic impedance of 11.3 MRayls for shear waves.
Before turning to an exemplary embodiment of the manufacturing method according to the present invention, an example configuration of the ultrasonic transducers 15 in the biometric acoustic imaging system 3 will be described with reference to
As is indicated in
An example method of manufacturing the acoustic biometric imaging system 3 according to embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the flow-chart in
In a first step 101, a transparent device member, here cover glass 11 having a first face 12a and a second face 12b is provided.
In the subsequent step 102, an opaque masking layer 18 is vacuum deposited on a portion of the second face 12b of the cover glass 11, using NCVM. As described further above, the proportions of silicon oxide and zirconium oxide, or other suitable oxides or nitrides, are tuned so that the opaque masking layer 18 exhibits an acoustic impedance in a desired range as exemplified further above. As the NCVM process is, per se, well known for other purposes, details of NCVM processing are not provided herein.
In the next step, 103, a thin metal layer 22 is deposited on the opaque masking layer 18, using, for example PVD. The metal layer 22 is provided as an interface layer between the opaque masking layer 18 and the attachment layer 24, that is deposited in step 104.
In the final step 105, an ultrasonic transducer array 5 comprising a plurality of ultrasonic transducers 15 is bonded to the second face 12b of the cover glass 11, using the attachment layer 24.
In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measured cannot be used to advantage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1850677-4 | Jun 2018 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2019/050485 | 5/27/2019 | WO | 00 |