The present invention relates to a watermark formed of bistable material.
There is an increasing need for protection against forgery of documents using copiers, scanners, and various printing techniques. Watermarks have traditionally been used in paper and cloth materials to show origin or originality of the material. Watermarks traditionally were formed in a paper made of wood or rag pulp by forming an imprint or embossed image on the screen used to dry the paper. Watermarks today are formed by the same embossing or imprinting method, as well as by inks viewable only on copying, such as on checks and other security instruments. Watermarks are used to prevent copying or tampering with original materials.
For preventing copying or tampering, other materials have also been used. For example, variable security markings, including but not limited to diffraction gratings, holograms, interference coatings, metameric inks, and polarization coatings, have been widely adopted. These security markings vary in color or brightness, depending on the conditions under which they are illuminated and observed. Many of these security markings can be easily duplicated, so technologies that deliver high-level security are demanded.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,061,122 to Hoshino et al. discloses an optical identification system using high-polymer cholesteric liquid crystals, wherein the authenticity of the system is determined by recognizing optical properties of the cholesteric liquid crystal material that are substantially unaffected by an electric or magnetic field. The ability of the liquid crystal to reflect light at a certain wavelength, wherein the wavelength is dependent on the incident angle of the light, enables the formation of a holographic-like image that is difficult to reproduce.
U.S. Patent Application Publication US 2003/0173539A1 to Muller-Rees et al. discloses a security marking comprising liquid crystalline material with chiral phase, wherein the security marking is invisible to the eye, and the properties of the liquid crystalline material with chiral phase can be detected with the aid of detection devices, such as a polarizer or color filter.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,580,481 to Ueda et al. discloses an information recording/displaying card including an invisible written information area and a visible written information area. The invisible written information is recorded to be invisible, and can be accessed by a second device for reading. The invisible information is recorded on a magnetic recording layer, a write-once optical recording layer, or in an integrated circuit memory in which information can be recorded and erased.
The above-described markings either require special equipment to retrieve hidden information, or are difficult to produce. There is a need for a watermark that is easy to form and difficult to reproduce.
A material having a watermark is described, wherein the watermark comprises a substrate and a layer of bistable material, wherein the bistable material has an imagewise pattern.
The watermark and the method of forming the watermark provide an easily formed mark for determining point of origin or verifying authenticity of a material or item bearing the mark.
A watermark and a method of forming the watermark using a bistable material are described. The watermark can be used for security purposes, as an identifier, as decorative art, or to carry information.
The material used to form the watermark can be addressed with an electric field to form an image, and can retain its image after the electric field is removed, a property referred to as “bistable.” Particularly suitable electrically imageable materials that exhibit “bistability” are electrochemical, electrophoretic, electrochromic, magnetic, ferroelectric liquid crystal, or cholesteric (chiral nematic) liquid crystal materials. Certain nematic liquid crystals having proper surface treatment also exhibit bistability, such as those found in a Zenithal Bistable Display from ZBD Displays Ltd., Worcester, England, or a BiNem® display from Nemoptic, Magny les Hameaux, France, as disclosed by I. Dozov in “Bistable Liquid Crystal Technologies” (SID 2003, pp. 946-949). According to certain embodiments, the bistable material can be chiral nematic liquid crystals, which can be formed as polymer dispersed cholesteric liquid crystals.
The bistable material can be on a substrate, or between two or more substrates. The substrate can be any suitable material, for example, glass or plastic. When the substrate is plastic, it can be flexible, for example, a flexible self-supporting plastic film. “Plastic” means a polymer, usually made from polymeric synthetic resins, which can optionally be combined with other ingredients, such as curatives, fillers, reinforcing agents, colorants, and plasticizers. Plastic includes thermoplastic materials and thermosetting materials. The substrate can be transparent or opaque. The substrate can be coated at least partially with a colored or opaque material to prevent viewing of the electronic components on the substrate in the formed display element. Suitable materials for a flexible substrate can include, but are not limited to, polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate, and polyimide. The substrate can withstand temperatures required for attaching electronic components by solder reflow. The substrate can provide dimensional stability during manufacture of the watermark. The substrate can have a thickness of between 12 and 300 microns, although thicker or thinner substrates can be used as desired.
Where a flexible plastic substrate is used, it can be reinforced with a hard coating, for example, an acrylic coating. The coating can have a thickness of from 1 to 30 microns, for example, from 2 to 4 microns. Various suitable hard coatings can be used, dependent upon the substrate material. Such coatings can include a mixture of UV-cured polyester acrylate and colloidal silica, known as “Lintec” by Lintec Corporation of Tokyo, Japan, and an acrylic coating sold as Terrapin® by Tekra Corporation, New Berlin, Wis.
The bistable material can be formed on the substrate in a pattern. The bistable material can be coated, printed, or otherwise applied in a pattern corresponding to a desired mark, or the inverse, or negative, of the mark. A second bistable material with different properties can be used to fill in between patterned areas of the first bistable material, to form a layer around the patterned first bistable material to the edges of a watermark area on the substrate, or both. The watermark area can be all, or one or more portion, of the substrate.
A filler material can be used between patterned areas of the first bistable material. When a filler is used, the layer of bistable material can include the first bistable material and filler, wherein the first bistable material fills the watermark area except for the pattern defined by the filler. Optionally, the layer can include a second bistable material outside the area of the watermark, or that forms the watermark with the filler. Where the bistable material layer includes more than one material, the materials can be of the same or different thicknesses on the substrate. For example, the material forming the pattern (first bistable material or filler) can be thicker or thinner than the remaining materials forming the layer.
Alternately, a uniform layer of bistable material can be applied to the substrate, and an image formed by imagewise exposure of the bistable material to energy in the form of heat, light, or electric field, sufficient to cause an image in the bistable material. According to various embodiments, the image is permanent. A permanent image is an image intended to not change over the life of the material including the watermark. By “not change” it is meant that the image is still viewable and discernable, though it may fade or blur some over time. A permanent image can also be an image formed by exposure of the bistable material to sufficient energy to create an image in the bistable material that is not erasable. The surrounding bistable material can be the same or a different material as that forming the image, and can be the same or a different thickness as the bistable material forming the image.
There are three critical energy levels, wherein “energy” can be heat, light, or electric field, that define the permanency of an image in a given bistable material. The first energy level is the upper limit at which an image can be reversibly formed in the bistable material. Between the first and second energy levels, the image sticks, such that it requires several repeated erasure procedures to remove the image. Above the second energy level, the image is permanent but hideable, such that the image is viewable in certain states, and hidden in others, but is not erasable. The contrast of the permanent hideable image to the surrounding display areas can change over time, but the image remains clearly visible over a critical number of viewings, the critical number of viewings dependent upon the expected use of the watermark over the expected life of the material bearing or including the watermark. Above the third energy level, the image becomes permanent such that it cannot be hidden in any state, and cannot be erased. The energy levels are dependent on the type and thickness of the bistable material, and can be affected by the material of adjacent layers, for example, a dark layer, and the type of energy used.
Any energy level sufficient to form a viewable image that remains in the absence of power can be used to form the watermark. The appropriate energy level can be determined based on whether it is intended that the watermark be capable of being changed or be permanent in the bistable material; whether use of the watermark material has potential to erase the watermark, for example, by exposure to heat or magnetic field; and the type of bistable material in which the watermark is being formed. In some instances, a minimum energy level, sufficient to form a viewable mark, can be used when it is not expected that the material containing the watermark will be subjected to conditions capable of erasing the mark. In preferred embodiments, the watermark can be formed with a level of energy sufficient to permanently form the mark, whether the watermark is potentially hideable or always viewable.
If the bistable layer is larger than the watermark area, such as in a bistable display device, the non-watermarked areas of the bistable material layer can be written and erased as known in the art, to convey rewritable information. The bistable material can have two or more viewable states, and the rewritable information can be conveyed in one or more of the viewable states. For example, the rewriteable information can appear in one of two contrasting, or light and dark, states, or can include one or more grey level between a light and dark state. It is desirable that the writing and erasing of the rewritable information does not affect the watermark area. If desired, the non-watermarked areas of the bistable display can contain permanent information that is not erasable and is always viewable. A combination of permanent and rewritable information can be present in the non-watermarked area of the bistable display.
Specific examples of the formation of a watermark on a bistable material are set forth in the Figures and described in the following text. Those skilled in the art, based on known bistable display structures, the information provided herein, and the following examples, can form a watermark in other bistable materials described herein.
The display element can be flexible. The display element can be made in any shape, for example round, rectangular, parallelogram, square, or irregular. One or more display element can be used to form a display. According to certain embodiments, the display can be flexible. The display can have any three dimensional shape, for example, flat, curved, round, polygonal, square, cubed, or irregular. The display, when flexible, can follow the shape of a surface to which it is attached, for example, turning a corner of a wall. The display can be double-sided, having at least one display element on each side. Where the display is polygonal, each face of the polygon can be at least one display element. Each viewing surface of the display, regardless of display shape, can include one or more display elements. If multiple display elements are used, they can be arranged in a pattern, form a grid covering at least a portion of the surface of the display element, or each display element can abut at least one other display element.
A first conductor 20 can be formed on substrate 15. First conductor 20 can be any conductive material, for example, tin-oxide, indium-tin-oxide (ITO), or polythiophene. The first conductor 20 can be transparent. The first conductor 20 can be sputtered, coated, or printed by any known methods in the art to form a layer over substrate 15. The first conductor 20 can be coated as a continuous layer, discontinuous layer, or patterned. The first conductor can include one or more conductive layers, wherein each layer can be the same or a different conductive material. The first conductor 20 can have a resistance of less than 1000 ohms per square.
A bistable material, for example, cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30, can overlay at least a first portion of first conductor 20. A portion of cholesteric layer 30 can be removed to expose a portion of first conductor 20′ to permit electrical contact with the portion of first conductor 20′. Cholesteric layer 30 can contain a chiral nematic, or cholesteric, liquid crystal material, such as described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,695,682 to Doane et al. Application of electrical fields of various intensity and duration can be employed to drive the cholesteric material into a reflective state, a substantially transparent state, or an intermediate state. Cholesteric liquid crystal material has optical states that are stable in the absence of an electrical field. The materials can maintain a given optical state indefinitely after the field is removed. Suitable cholesteric liquid crystal materials can include, for example, Merck BL112, BL118, or BL126, available from E.M. Industries of Hawthorne, N.Y.
Cholesteric layer 30 can include a cholesteric material, for example, BL-118 from E.M. Industries, dispersed in a binder, for example, deionized photographic gelatin, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), or polyethylene oxide (PEO). The ratio of liquid crystal material to binder can be from about 8:1 to 1:8. For example, the liquid crystal material can be at a concentration of 8% in a 5% gelatin aqueous solution binder. The liquid crystal material can be dispersed to create an emulsion of 8-10 micron diameter domains of the liquid crystal in an aqueous suspension. The domains can be formed, for example, using the limited coalescence technique described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,423,368 to Stephenson et al.
The cholesteric liquid crystal emulsion can be coated over the first conductor 20 on the substrate 15 and dried to provide a polymer dispersed cholesteric coating, forming the cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30. The cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 can be machine coated using coating equipment employed in the manufacture of films. The cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 can be any suitable thickness, for example, from 2 to 30 microns thick, for example, 9 microns thick. According to various embodiments, a thin layer of gelatin can be applied over the first transparent conductor 20 to provide an insulator prior to applying cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,690,447 to Stephenson et al.
As shown in
As shown in
Returning to
Second conductor 40 can be any material capable of providing sufficient conductivity to form an electric field between the first conductor 20 and second conductor 40 strong enough to change the optical state of the cholesteric material in cholesteric layer 30. The second conductor 40 can be any conductive material, for example, metals such as aluminum, tin, silver, platinum, carbon, tungsten, molybdenum, tin, indium, or combinations thereof, or a conductive ink. Suitable conductive inks, such as Electrodag 423SS from Acheson Corporation, can be formed into a conductive layer by screen printing on the dark layer 35 or on cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30. Suitable screen-printable conductive materials can include finely divided graphite particles in a binder such as a thermoplastic resin.
As shown in
A dielectric layer such as deionized gelatin can be formed over the conductive character segments by standard printing or coating techniques. Via holes can be formed over each conductive character segment by the absence of the dielectric layer over at least a portion of each conductive character segment, or by removing a portion of the dielectric layer over each conductive character segment, for example, by ablation or chemical etching.
Electrically conductive traces can be formed over the dielectric layer by printing or coating techniques. One or more electrically conductive trace can flow through a via hole on formation, making electrical contact with the conductive character segment. The conductive traces can extend from the character segment to an exposed area along a side of the display, where the conductive trace forms a contact pad in the exposed area. The exposed area is an area of the substrate coated with the first conductive layer.
The contact pads can be any conductive material, for example, silver or carbon. The contact pads can be formed with the conductive traces, or separately therefrom. Contact pads that are not formed with the conductive traces can be coated or printed on the dielectric layer. A via hole can extend from the conductive pad through the dielectric layer to the first conductive layer. The exposed area and the contact pads thereon can be formed along one side of the display, along multiple sides of the display, or in one or more locations on the display not including the conductive character segment. According to various embodiments, the contact pads can be formed in the exposed area along one edge of the display. The contact pads can be placed linearly or grouped, such as in a pattern, for example, a square or rectangle, in the exposed area.
The optical state of the bistable material between the conductive character segment and the first conductive layer can be changed by selectively applying drive voltages to the corresponding contact pad that is electrically connected to the conductive character segment through a conductive trace, and to the first conductive layer by direct or indirect contact. Once the optical state of the bistable material has been changed, it can remain in that state indefinitely without further power being applied to the conductive layers. Methods of forming the display element are known to practitioners in the art, and are described, for example, in U.S. Ser. No. 10/134,185, filed Apr. 29, 2002 by Stephenson et al., and in co-filed U.S. Ser. No. 10/851,440 filed May 21, 2004, by Burberry et al.
One or more display element can be attached to an electrical interconnect substrate. The electrical interconnect substrate can include alignment features for aligning the display element on the electrical interconnect substrate, one or more contact pads for making an electrical connection to a display element, and one or more contact pads for making electrical connection to the display drive source. One or more electrical interconnect substrate can be attached to each display element. One or more display element can be connected to each electrical interconnect substrate.
The electrical interconnect substrate can have one or more display element attached to one surface, or to both surfaces of the electrical interconnect substrate. The attachment can be physical, wherein the display element and electrical interconnect substrate are held together by compression, friction, adhesive bonding, or by other mechanical means, such as tabs, clips, or pins. The electrical interconnect substrate can be electrically connected to one or more physically attached display element. The electrical interconnect substrate can be electrically connected to one or more display elements directly or by secondary connections, such as wires.
A display drive source can be a circuit board for writing or rewriting the display. According to certain embodiments, the circuit board can include a power source, such as a battery. According to other embodiments, the circuit board is capable of connection to an external power source, for example, a battery or an electrical circuit. The display drive source can be connected to the electrical interconnect substrate physically. The display drive source can be electrically connected to the electrical interconnect substrate directly or through some secondary connections, such as wires.
According to various embodiments, the first and second conductors for the watermark area can be separately controlled from any first and second conductors for any remaining area of the display element. According to various other embodiments, the watermark area of the display can be missing one or more conductor, dielectric material, or a combination thereof. The watermark area need not be connected to an electrical interconnect substrate or a display drive source.
The mask 54 can be any suitable material, for example, a polymeric material, metal, ceramic, or treated glass, wherein the material is capable of blocking light and/or heat from the writing source from reaching designated areas of the display element 10. The mask can be transparent to light, or heat conductive, in a pattern corresponding to the desired watermark. In other embodiments, the mask can be transparent to light, or heat conductive, in a pattern corresponding to the negative, or outline, of the desired watermark. For example, a transparent polymeric sheet, such as Dupont Mylar, can be used as the mask with an electro-photographic printed image formed on the sheet, wherein the image corresponds to the watermark. According to various embodiments, the mask can be a dot matrix super twisted-nematic (STN) display, part number TM 320240AG, from Tianma Microelectronics Corporation in China.
To imprint a watermark in the bistable material, such as the cholesteric layer, of the display element 10, light or heat can be applied through the mask to form the image or its negative. For example, the output of flash light 52 can be adjusted to imprint an image on display element 10, regardless of the initial state of the cholesteric material in element 10, that is, whether the cholesteric liquid crystal material is in a planar state, a focal-conic state, or any gray scale state in between planar and focal conic. The intensity of the energy from the writing device can be sufficiently high to form an image that remains in the absence of power. According to certain embodiments, the intensity of the energy can be sufficiently high to form a permanent image in the bistable material, whether the image is hideable or not. The amount of energy needed can depend on the light absorbing efficiency of the dark layer, the spectral and temporal dependence of the energy in the light source, the heat response of the bistable material, the thickness of the bistable material, and other factors known in the art. During the exposure to the energy source, no electrical field is needed to write the image.
The watermark can be formed in the bistable material using an energy source such as a flash lamp, as indicated above; heat, for example, a heat lamp, laser, or thermal printhead; or radiation, such as infrared or ultraviolet radiation. The energy needed to write the image can be determined based on the thickness of the bistable material layer, the energy level, the distance from the energy source to the bistable material, and the properties of the dark layer, if present. Optionally, an electrical field can be used simultaneous with the energy source to enable use of a lower amount of energy. The energy can be applied through a mask, as described above, to form the image, or can be applied in an image-wise fashion without a mask, such as by using a laser or thermal printhead, where the effected area of the bistable material can be controlled.
The watermark can be formed in the bistable layer at any time after it is applied to the substrate. For example, the watermark can be formed immediately after formation of the bistable layer on the substrate, after application of a dark layer to the bistable material layer, after formation of additional layers of the display element, or after the entire display element is formed. The watermark can be formed before or after formation of rewritable or permanent non-hideable information on the display element. The watermark can be formed after incorporation of the watermark into a material or good, such as a document, display, packaging, or cloth, and can be formed before or after distribution of such item to an end user.
If desired, the watermark area can be formed such that the watermark is permanent and non-erasable, but can be hidden from view and retrieved. For example, to write a hideable watermark, a watermark area of a display element 10 can be first placed in a planar state by any means known in the art, for example, by application of an voltage pulse, heat, light, or an electric field, as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Patent Application Publication 004/0061808A1 to Stephenson et al. For example, a 100 milliseconds voltage pulse of 140 volts can be used.
If desired, the words “Kodak Confidential,” can be hidden in a focal conic state 120 as illustrated in
Starting from the state of
The watermark “Kodak Confidential” can be retrieved from either the focal-conic state (
To write a hideable watermark, the display element 10 can be first placed in a focal conic state by application of a voltage pulse, heat, light, or electric field, as disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication 2004/0061808A1 to Stephenson et al. For example, a 100 milliseconds voltage pulse of 60 volts can be used to place the cholesteric layer in a focal conic state.
The watermark, “Kodak Confidential,” can be hidden in a focal conic state 150 as illustrated in
The watermark, “Kodak Confidential,” can be hidden in a planar state 152 starting from the visible focal-conic state of
The watermark, “Kodak Confidential,” can be retrieved from either the hidden focal conic or planar state, as illustrated in
To erase, write, or rewrite non-permanent information, or permanent non-hideable information, on the display outside of the watermark area, electrodes can be applied to the first conductor cover if present, or to the first conductor, and to the second conductor. An electrical field can be applied across the electrodes to erase any existing non-permanent visible images on the display. In this case, the watermark must be permanent, or the watermark area must have no electric field applied by either the absence of one or more of the first and second conductor, or by contacting the watermark with a separate set of electrodes than the non-watermark area. The display can be written by flash writing, application of an electrical field, heat, or a combination thereof. For flash writing, a light or heat pulse of a certain power and duration provides a thermal flux effect that can write cholesteric material into a planar, focal-conic, or gray state. The display can be written and erased repeatedly without damage to the watermark or the display structure.
Instead of a dark layer 35 as in
If desired, a watermark formed in the above manner can be hidden and retrieved. When the patterned area of the cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 has the same appearance as the background layer 36, the watermark can be hidden. When the patterned area of the cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 has a different appearance from the background layer, the watermark can be visible. The switching of the state of the patterned area of cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 can be carried out by applying voltage across the conductors, allowing information to be rendered invisible by application of a first voltage, restored with application of a second voltage, and hidden again by application of the first voltage. This means of forming a display allows information to be pre-built or designed into the display element using patterned cholesteric liquid crystal only in the watermark area. The information can be hidden by changing the cholesteric liquid crystal into a state which has the same appearance as the background area. The background area can be designed to be in the planar state, focal conic state, or any intermediate (gray scale) state.
According to another embodiment, the layer on top of the patterned area of cholesteric liquid crystal layer 30 and filling material 32, that is background layer 36 or second conductor 40, can conform to the shape of the cholesteric layers, as shown in
The watermark can be formed by any one of the methods described herein, the watermark being in a state distinguishable from the rest of the bistable material, and the watermark can be left in the viewable state. The watermark can be formed with an energy level sufficiently high to make the watermark permanently viewable.
The watermark can be formed on a portion of the substrate wherein the substrate itself forms a good or material. Alternately, the substrate having the watermark can be incorporated into, or attached to, another material. For example, the watermark can be incorporated into or attached to paper, film, glass, cloth, or other materials. For example, the watermark can be useful in electronic or paper documents, packaging, tags, or on goods such as glass, ceramics, and clothing.
The watermark described herein can be useful as a preformed image to designate a source of goods, a security level, or portray other information. Alternately, a good, such as an electronic or paper document, or packaging, can be sold having a blank watermark area, and the purchaser can form their own watermark in the area to suit their needs.
According to the present invention, a permanent watermark can be made in a bistable material, wherein the watermark can be viewable, permanent and viewable, or permanent and hideable. This invention can be used to form watermarks for use in identifying a material, providing tracking information, or for artistic purposes. The watermark can be associated with a specific good if desired for tracking or identification purposes.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be made within the spirit and scope of the invention.
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