1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to optically variable devices. More specifically, the present invention provides an optically variable device including an array of optical elements each having an optical grating structure which exhibits novel pleochroic properties depending upon the location from which it is viewed. The present invention also relates to articles employing optically variable devices and to a method of manufacturing optically variable devices.
2. Description of the Related Art
An optically variable device (OVD) is a device which creates a change or shift in appearance, such as, for example, a change in color, when observed from different angles. The evolution of the OVD stems largely from the search for a mechanism to resist tampering and counterfeiting of certain products and objects or alternatively to render such tampering or copying obvious. For example, paper money, drivers' licenses and credit cards frequently employ one or more OVD to prevent counterfeiting, while many consumer-type products, such as bottles and food and drug containers, employ OVDs to make it evident when the item has been opened or tampered with.
Typically color changing effects for OVDs may be derived by employing such fundamental physical phenomena as diffraction or refraction of light or combinations thereof. These effects can be generated in many ways including the use of linear diffraction gratings in the form of surface relief, from layered structures employing alternating layers of differing refractive index (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 3,858,977), or from layers containing aligned liquid crystal polymers (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,614,619). Many such structures and their properties are described in further detail in the book entitled “Optical Document Security,” 3rd Ed., R. L. van Renesse, Artech House, 2005.
For OVDs that can be mass produced, such as surface relief embossed structures, the value of such an OVD as a deterrent to counterfeiting is, in large measure, due the complexity of its design, the difficulty in creating the ‘master’ OVD and the difficulty in altering the original design. Furthermore, the choice of material construction in which the OVD is incorporated can greatly enhance the tamper proof properties of the OVD.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,412,493 describes a method of protecting an identification card by means of incorporating relief diffraction gratings into the structure of the card. The generation of a concentric, circular relief grating structure by means of a stamping die made using a ruling engine, is disclosed. Although the patent suggests more complex line curve patterns, the nature of the ruling engine and its cutting tip limits the disclosure to low frequency gratings. It is desirable, therefore, to provide a method that could be used to generate submicron nano structures. The '493 Patent also recites encapsulating the grating with material that is either identical or is of material which is at least chemically and physically identical (see, e.g., column 3, line 34). However, such proposal would result in the grating being index matched out thereby rendering its optical properties meaningless.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,623,473 describes an improved ruling engine based on laser beam lithography. The method is proposed as an improved fabrication technique for low frequency concentric zone plates and steps fresnel type lenses, and is also limited in its ability to generate high frequency gratings due to the finite size and aberration of the focused laser light spot and the machine's ability to re-register confocal to a rotating table axis. The disclosure does not teach the principle of geometric arrays of asymmetric concentric closed loop structures or their application to color change.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,808,776 discloses an optical method for generating an OVD wherein shape or color can be generated by rotating the OVD in two different axes. The effects disclosed are generally the properties of the so called ‘Rainbow’ hologram disclosed previously by Benton (J. Opc. Soc. Am, Vol 59, October 1969, p.1545A and Proc. ICO Conf. “Applications of Holographic and Optical Processing,” Jerusalem, August 23-26, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1977). The patent discloses the formation of a shape consisting of concentric elliptical zones wherein each elliptical zone contains a linear grating. The period of the linear grating is arranged to be different for each elliptical zone. The disclosure does not teach the principle of geometric arrays of asymmetric concentric closed loop structures or their application to color change.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,825,547 discloses a method of forming an OVD by means of tracks wherein a series of lines or grooves extend across or down the track. The lines or groves may be substituted by other shaped entites such as circles, polygons or other shapes which provide some diffractive property. However,
U.S. Pat. No. 5,912,767 discloses a diffractive indicia formed from elements of an embossed foil. These elements all contain concentric circular structures. While the elements may then be formed into various shapes, the concentric circular nature of the diffractive structure remains. Color differences are obtained by varying the spacing of the concentric circular gratings. Accordingly, the elements will have a constant diffractive dispersion upon rotation in a plane perpendicular to the plane of the concentric circular grating. The disclosure does not teach the principle of geometric arrays of asymmetric concentric closed loop structures or their application to color change. Indicia in accordance with the disclosure would have constant color upon rotation in the plane of the printed substrate on an axis perpendicular to the printed plane.
International publication WO 03/097376 discloses a method of creating a color shifting OVD by vacuum deposition method. The color shift is generated by light interference caused by refraction through a layered structure in which at least one layer has a controlled non-uniform thickness.
In spite of the foregoing, there remains a very real and substantial need for providing an OVD which is economical to manufacture and which exhibits novel effects, such as color changing features, which may be adapted to encode data or graphical information thereby providing a mechanism for readily identifying, by viewing with the naked eye or by machine-reading, the authenticity of the article to which it is applied, while resisting access to the same and/or alteration or counterfeiting thereof.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide an optical element having a diffraction-based grating structure which exhibits novel pleochroic properties.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an optical element that cannot be made or generated by known optical methods.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an array of elements each including a diffraction grating structured to exhibit optical effects expressly including, but not limited to, color changes.
It is another object of the present invention to provide as such diffraction gratings a series of lines or grooves, which may be closed-loop and concentric in arrangement.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an OVD having a color change feature which displays a changing color with respect to a change in the position from which it is viewed.
It is another object of the present invention to employ such an OVD on an informational article or product as a mechanism for verifying its authenticity or to expose tampering therewith.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an OVD which is easy and economical to fabricate.
It is another object of the present invention to arrange the elements of the OVD in an array which exhibits further novel optical effects, such as, for example, a pattern of color change.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an element and array of elements which may be encoded to include information which is visible by the naked eye and/or machine readable.
It is further object of the invention to provide an OVD having a color change feature with a range of colors controlled by the parameters of the optical element grating structure, such as the shape and the spacing of the lines, grooves or contours thereof.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a method of creating an optical grating structure exhibiting the foregoing features and an OVD employing the same.
It is another object of the invention to provide a device and method for analyzing information and data encoded on the OVD.
It is yet another object to provide such a device and method which is efficient and cost-effective.
The present invention provides optical elements including a light diffracting optical grating structure. Light passing through the diffraction gratings will diffract into its various wavelengths, thereby resulting in-optical effects, color change, such as the location from which the elements are viewed is changed. The elements may be arranged in any suitable orientation to form an array, thereby creating an OVD. The OVD may be encoded to include, for example, a specific color change pattern or rate of color change that may be visually identified by the human eye or alternatively be machine readable. Encoding of the OVD may include information such as, for example, without limitation, a pattern or information such as a personal identification number, for example, a social security number, credit card number or membership identification number. It will be appreciated that all of this may be accomplished while facilitating the advantageous use of combinations of additional optically variable devices such as holograms, transparent resinous plastic materials, photocopy resisting particles and providing fixed information and variable information in a secure manner which information is readily visible to the naked eye and/or machine readable. A method of making OVDs employing the foregoing optical elements and arrays is also disclosed. Such method may include, for example, providing color variation through diffraction from a surface relief grating structure containing an array of elements created, for example without limitation, by electron beam lithography.
The invention also contemplates predetermined encoded optical properties such as color changes, patterns and rates of color change and devices and methods for analyzing and recognizing such properties for authentication, identification and tamper-resistant and counterfeit-resisting purposes.
The foregoing objects of the invention and others will be more fully understood by reference to the drawings and description below.
As employed herein, the term “optically variable device” (OVD) is used in its conventional broad sense and includes the use of a single optical element alone or multiple optical elements arranged in an array which may or may not be touching each other or physically in close proximity to each other.
As employed herein, the term “informational article” refers to an article on which the exemplary OVD is employed and which is adapted to provide through words, graphics, color codes or other means information which may be provided in a form visually perceived by the human eye or in a machine readable form such as information stored on magnetic media, such as a magnetic strip or microchip. The term will expressly include, but not be limited to articles used in the high-security, identification and brand protection markets, such as, for example, identification cards, credit cards, debit cards, smart cards, organization membership cards, security system cards, security entry permits, banknotes, checks, fiscal tax stamps, passport laminates, legal documents, packaging labels and other information providing articles wherein it may be desirable to validate the authenticity of the article and/or to resist alteration, tampering or reproduction thereof.
As employed herein, the term “optical effects,” refers to the optically variable characteristics which are exhibited by the elements of the exemplary OVD and thus observed either by the naked eye or by machine when viewing the same. Such optical effects shall expressly include, but are not limited to, pleochroic properties such as change in color and rate of color change.
As employed herein, the term “overt” refers generally to security features known in the art as level one security features meaning that they are readily recognizable features not requiring, for example, any special skill or training or a machine, in order to identify. For example, without limitation, the obvious color change or optical movement effects that can be produced by merely rotating the OVD of the present invention, are overt.
As employed herein, “covert” refers generally to security features of a higher level than level one, such as level two or three, which are not readily recognizable by a layman. These are hidden features that, at level two, can only be detected by use of informed knowledge or equipment, such as, for example, a magnifying glass. At level three security, such features are typically forensic features that categorically differentiate or validate the OVD and can only be detected with specialist knowledge and/or equipment. Level three covert optical features expressly include, but are not limited to, machine readable encoding of the exemplary optical grating structure of the present invention or the inclusion of effects, such as a pattern, that can be revealed only by viewing such grating, for example, via encoded optical films or masks.
For purposes of illustration herein, the OVD of the invention will be described as being rotated about one or more axis resulting in various optical effects, such as color change, being exhibited. However, it will be appreciated that viewing of such optical effects is not limited to the situation in which the object is rotated or otherwise moved, but alternatively may also be exhibited when the object is stationary and the observation location is changed.
As will be discussed in detail herein, the exemplary grating structure 22 is unique in that it has no optically generated analogue and as such cannot be produced using known optical methods. As discussed hereinbelow with reference to
As shown in
Described another way, with reference to
Now, referring to
It will be appreciated that the optical grating structure 22, could be also modified to exhibit different or additional optical effects, expressly including, but not limited to color changes and different rates of color change. The optical effects exhibited by the exemplary optical element 20 are a component of the present invention. Changing grating structure 22 parameters such as the shape of the grooves or lines 24 or spacing therebetween results in differing optical effects being exhibited. Where the rate of change of color observed upon rotation of the element 20 about the vertical axis 32 is a function of the shape of the exemplary concentric ellipses 24. For example, where the axial ratio of the minor axis dimension to major axis dimension of the ellipses 24 approaches one, for example, the shape of the ellipses 24 approaches that of a circle (not shown) which results in the rate of color change approaching zero. Thus, a constant color would be seen regardless of how the element 20 was rotated or observed.
Change in color and the rate of such color change are also a function of the spacing of the contours of the grating structure 22. By way of example, the space between the exemplary concentric ellipses 24 at the intersection with the minor axis of symmetry 28 is preferably between about 0.2 to 1.0 microns, and more preferably about 1.0 microns. This dimension is indicated generally by element 36 in
Still further optical effects may be accomplished by changing the shape of the closed-loop lines 24 and fringes 26 to, for example, without limitation, concentric loops, conics, polygons or other shapes of more complex contour (not shown). A more complex rate of color change, such as, for example, wherein different parts of the element 20 change color at different times and at different rates, can be imparted through use of such alternative shapes. Other variations are achieved by making the grating structure 22 and substrate from, for example, without limitation, a colored material, metallic or other reflective material, or transparent and semi-transparent materials, as previously discussed.
Referring now to
It will also be appreciated that although all elements 20 shown in
Accordingly, the size of the array 50, 150, 250 and each array element (e.g., 20) may be varied. Preferably, the size of each array element 20 is in the range of 5 to 1000 microns. More specifically, both the width and length of each element 20 preferably falls within such range. More preferably, the largest dimension of the array element 20 is within the range which is not resolvable by the human eye, for example, without limitation, between about 5 to 70 microns. Elements 20 within this range of dimension will appear to the human eye to be continuous rather than pixilated.
Referring again to
As previously discussed, it is an embodiment of the present invention that measurement of the diffracted spectrum or part spectrum and/or its rate of change for the aforementioned planar arrays 50, 150, 250 provide a mechanism for encoding, such as, for example, forensic encoding and identification, of the OVD 100, 200, 300. As used herein, encoded information can include anything from a color change, array arrangement pattern, rate of color change or other optical effects, and written information, such as variable and fixed or uniform information and other information generally, which may be used to facilitate tamper resistance and/or anti-counterfeiting. Reading the encoded information may be accomplished by the naked eye or by machine, for example, by measuring the diffracted spectrum or rate of change of such spectrum for the particular OVD 100, 200, 300. Such measurements may be taken, for example, at fixed rotational angles through use of a device such as a computer (not shown). Alternatively, the array 50, 150, 250 of the OVD 100, 200, 300 may include a pattern, such as the rectangle of
It will be appreciated that other features of the array 50, 150, 250 and OVD 100, 200, 300 employing the same may be varied to include additional and differing optical effects. For example, the elements 20 of the array 50, 150, while preferably being arranged in the same plane (the X-Y plane), may undulate within such plane; one element 20 may be disposed slightly lower or higher (not shown) with respect to another element 20 with reference to the plane. Additionally, as previously mentioned, the array 50, 150 may be composed of elements (e.g., 20) of varying size, orientation, characteristic shape of concentric closed loop, spatial location, optical diffraction efficiency and/or combinations thereof to form overt and covert graphical combinations and patterns. It will further be appreciated that concepts such as sub-arrays (not shown) underlying or overlying one another within the same plane or at varying angles with respect to one another are also contemplated by the present invention and could be employed to impart still further novel optical effects to the OVD.
The exemplary optical grating structure 22, as previously discussed, has no optically generated analogue and therefore cannot be made using conventional optic methods. Therefore, the elements 20 and array 50 of the present invention are defined mathematically and the geometric coordinates of the grating structure 22 are converted into machine code files that can control the position of the electron or ion beam in an electron or ion beam microscope (not shown). With reference to
Preferably, the step 402 of providing a surface includes the step 402A of providing a photo-resist plate as such surface and step 402B, providing an electron or ion beam microscope. The photo-resist plate is then inserted into the microscope in an optional step 404A. Step 404 of creating the grating structure 22 preferable further includes steps 404B, exposing the plate to an electron or ion beam to inscribe the grating structure, step 404C of developing the photo-resist plate and step 404D of making the photo-resist surface conductive to facilitate the step 406 of reproducing the same in accordance with a suitable surface replication technique as described hereinbefore. It will, of course, be appreciated that all of the foregoing steps may be computer automated. It will also be appreciated that the method of making OVDs may comprise either a batch process wherein one batch or series of articles or products is made to include the same information and features, or alternatively, as a continuous process, where the OVD is made as a continuous film or suitable transfer medium which is subsequently applied to the article or product, or alternatively, continuously applied directly to the article or product.
Step 404A of developing the photo-resist plate, is accomplished, for example, by conventional wet chemical, vapor chemical or gas plasma etching techniques, which convert the exposed surface 40 (
In summary, as shown in
The OVD 100 of the present invention may be advantageously employed in combination with other tamper-resistant and anti-counterfeiting features such as the foregoing fixed information 506, 508, as well as with, for example, holograms 510, photocopy resistant particles 512, graphic elements 514, 516, variable information 518 (“Jane Smith”) and 520 (“No. 321”), photographic representations 522 and resinous plastic materials 504 in a secure manner to effectively resist tampering or copying of the article to which they are applied. The employee identification card 500 shown in
In view of the foregoing, the present invention provides a unique OVD 100 and array 50 and elements 20 therefor, which may be encoded, as previously discussed, to include optical effects, such as, for example, a specific color change pattern or rate of color change which may be visually identified by the human eye or alternatively be machine readable. Encoding of the OVD 100 may further include information such as, for example, a personal identification number, a social security number or credit card number. Accordingly, the OVD of the present invention may be readily employed on a wide variety of articles and products. It will be appreciated that all of this may be accomplished while facilitating the advantageous use of a combination of additional optically variable devices such as holograms, transparent resinous plastic materials, photocopy resisting particles and providing fixed information and variable information in a secure manner which information is readily visible to the naked eye and/or machine readable. The system contemplates predetermined optical effects, such as encoded color changing properties, and devices for analyzing and recognizing such properties for authentication, identification and tamper-resistant and counterfeit-resisting purposes. Methods of making OVDs and methods of using devices for analyzing information encoded therein are also contemplated.
While a specific embodiment of the invention has been described in detail, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and alternatives to those details could be developed in light of the overall teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, the particular arrangements disclosed are meant to be illustrative only and not limiting as to the scope of the invention which is to be given the full breadth of the appended claims and any and all equivalents thereof.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/591,063, filed Jul. 26, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60591063 | Jul 2004 | US |