The present invention relates to a sensor of a touch panel, and more particularly to an electrode pattern formed at the edges of a touch panel.
General traditional touch panels are divided into resistive touch panels, capacitive touch panels, acoustic wave touch panels and optical touch panels according to their sensing principle, wherein the resistive touch panel is the most extensively used touch panel with the lowest price among all, but the capacitive touch panel gains increasingly attention and popularity now.
The resistive touch panel comprises an upper group and a lower group of ITO conductive layers stacked with each other. When a resistive touch panel is used, a pressure is applied to electrically connect upper and lower electrodes, and a controller detects the voltage change of the panel to compute the contact position and obtain an output position signal. For example, the related technology disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,822,957 generally uses a 5-wire resistive touch panel produced by Elo Touch Company.
The capacitive touch panel forms a conductive layer (such as a metal oxide layer) on a glass substrate and then an electrode pattern on the surface of the conductive layer and finally a layer of protective film on the surface layer to produce a capacitive touch panel. The sensing principle of the capacitive touch panels resides on that a voltage is supplied to four corners of a screen, and an electrode pattern forms an electric field on the glass surface. If a user touches the panel by a finger, an electric field will be produced and driven to produce a current and lower the voltage at the contact position. A controller detects the voltage change and computes the pressing position of the finger according to the different proportions of current from the four corners. For examples, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,198,539, 4,293,734, 4,371,746 and 6,781,579 disclose a technology applied for the capacitive touch panels.
In general, a touch panel has three major evaluation indexes: the linear response of an electric field, the level of structural complexity of an electrode and the width of an electrode pattern, wherein the linear response of an electric field is related to the accuracy of the touch panel, and the level of complexity of an electrode pattern is directly proportional to the manufacturing cost. Since the electrode pattern is distributed around the touch panel, therefore the width of the electrode pattern will directly affect the size of usable area of the touch panel. The electrode pattern comprises conductive silver circuits (also known as silver epoxy wires) on the surface of the conductive layer and a plurality of transparent electrodes formed by alternately arranging the conductive silver circuits. If there are more electrodes with a more gentle distribution, then the density or distribution of the electric charges of the whole touch panel will have a more gentle change, or else a more drastic change will occur. The linear response of the electric field near the frame area can be corrected according to this principle. On the other hand, there are more conductive silver circuits, and thus the invention can effectively improve the resistance of the conductive silver circuits at the four corners. The smaller the edge of the frame of the conductive silver circuit, the lower is the resistance. However, an excessively low resistance is not advantageous to the control and operation of the touch panel.
Therefore, finding a way of improving the linear response of the electric field of the touch panel, lowering the level of complexity of the electrode pattern, and reducing the width of the electrode pattern becomes an issue for touch panel designers and manufacturers to solve.
The primary objective of the present invention is to provide an electron pattern for producing an even and low-voltage electric field.
To achieve the foregoing objective, the present invention discloses a capacitive touch panel comprising: an insulating substrate, a conductive layer formed on the surface of the insulating substrate, and an electrode pattern formed on the surface of the conductive layer and disposed along the edges of the touch panel. The electrode pattern includes a plurality of rows of conductive silver circuits, and any one row of the conductive silver circuits includes a plurality of electrodes having the same length and being equidistant with each other. The invention improves the linear response of the electric field by redesigning the plurality of electrodes for each row of conductive silver circuits and the relative positions of any two adjacent conductive silver circuits.
Another objective of the present invention is to reduce the width of the electrode pattern, so as to minimize the external frame of the touch panel and increase the usable area and installation space of the touch panel.
To achieve the foregoing objectives, a feasible method of the invention redesigns the plurality of electrodes for each row of conductive silver circuits and the relative positions of any two adjacent conductive silver circuits and maintains the width of the electrode pattern below 2.8 mm.
Referring to
an insulating substrate 20, such as a glass plate;
a conductive layer 30, formed on the surface of the insulating substrate 20, and a common conductive layer 30 is a metal oxide layer; and
an electrode pattern, formed on the surface of the conductive layer 30 and disposed along the edges of the touch panel 10, and the electrode pattern includes a plurality of parallel rows of conductive silver circuits 40, and each row of conductive silver circuits 40 includes a plurality of electrodes 41 (as shown in FIG. 2) with equal length and equidistant with each other.
In a first preferred embodiment of the present invention, the total number of rows of conductive silver circuits 40 is X as shown in
For Ln=1, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=2(X−n+2)+3 (Formula 1);
For Ln=2, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=2(X−n+3)+1 (Formula 2);
For Ln=3, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=2(X−n+2)+3 (Formula 3);
For Ln=4, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=2(X−n+3)−1 (Formula 4).
Referring to
Any one electrode 41 in the conductive silver circuit L2 is jumped to two electrodes 41 in the conductive silver circuit L1;
Any one electrode 41 in the conductive silver circuit L3 is jumped to four electrodes 41 in the conductive silver circuit L2;
Any one electrode 41 in the conductive silver circuit L4 is jumped to three electrodes 41 in the conductive silver circuit L3.
The equivalent circuit shown in
Referring to
An area enclosed by the dotted lines as shown in
If the equipotential line 51 at the lower left corner of
In the foregoing first preferred embodiment of the present invention, the total number of rows of conductive silver circuits 40 is represented by X, which is equal to 4 in this embodiment, and the quantity of electrodes 41 for each row of conductive silver circuits L1, L2, L3, L4 is represented by N and determined by Formulas (1) to (4).
According to a second preferred embodiment of the present invention, the quantity of electrodes 41 in each row of conductive silver circuits 40 is also represented by N and equal to half of the quantity of electrodes of the first preferred embodiment. Similarly, four rows of conductive silver circuits 40 are used for illustration, and the quantity N of electrodes 41 in each row of conductive silver circuits L1, L2, L3, L4 according to the second preferred embodiment of the invention can be determined by Formulas (5) to (8) as follows:
For Ln=1, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=(2(X−n+2)/2)+1 (Formula 5);
For Ln=2, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=(2(X−n+3)/2)−1 (Formula 6);
For Ln=3, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=(2(X−n+2)/2)+1 (Formula 7);
For Ln=4, the quantity of conductive silver circuits N=(2(X−n+3)/2)−1 (Formula 8).