The present invention concerns an electronic object such as a timepiece, capable of being worn on a user's wrist.
There are currently on the market multifunction timepieces that allow the persons wearing them not only to access various time-related information, but also to receive and, if necessary to transmit, for example radiobroadcast information concerning the state of road traffic, market prices or the weather forecast.
In addition to the large number of functions that they are capable of fulfilling, the watches of the aforementioned type have the peculiarity of being, in most cases, very high power consumers. This is why they are usually powered, not by disposable batteries whose energy storage capacity is limited, but by accumulators that can be periodically recharged by means of electric chargers provided for this purpose.
The accumulators can be charged via ohmic contacts provided on the watchcase and by means of which said multifunction watch is connected to its charger. The drawbacks of such ohmic contacts are, however, well known. They are seriously detrimental, in particular, to the sealing of the watch to which they are fitted, offering an easy access passage to water, dust and moisture.
In order to overcome these drawbacks, techniques for charging accumulators via induction have been used. In this case, the charger includes a winding which constitutes the primary of a charge transformer, while the secondary winding of the transformer is placed in the charge circuit or the rechargeable accumulator(s), inside the watch.
The induction charging technique advantageously allows the watch accumulators to be charged without any contacts and without any lead wires. It thus allows ohmic contacts, which are usually provided to connect said accumulators to an external charger, to be omitted. This technique however requires the watchcase to be preferably made of a plastic material. Indeed, a watchcase made of a metal material would reduce the efficiency of the electromagnetic coupling between the primary and secondary windings of the charge transformer. In order to keep the same charge efficiency as that observed with a case made of plastic material, the charge current frequency would thus have to be increased, in the case of a metal case, running the risk of breaching the standards regulating the exposure of the population to electromagnetic fields. The choice of materials that can be used to make watches intended to be recharged by induction is thus limited, which constitutes a serious handicap for watch manufacturers who experience difficulties in order to be able to adapt to changes in fashion and the demands of clients.
The object of the present invention is to overcome the aforementioned drawbacks, in addition to others, by proposing an electronic object such as a wristwatch whose accumulators can be recharged via induction in a simple manner while guaranteeing an optimum charge of such accumulators.
The present invention therefore concerns a portable object such as a wristwatch capable of being worn on a user's wrist by means of a wristband, this portable object being supplied with electric power by at least one rechargeable accumulator able to be recharged by induction charging means, these induction charging means including a primary winding and a secondary winding, said portable object being characterised in that the secondary winding is housed in the wristband.
Owing to these features, the present invention provides a portable object, in particular a wristwatch, whose case can be made of any type of material, which leaves watch manufacturers complete freedom to adapt to changes in fashion or to answer specific requirements emanating from the clientele. Moreover, although the watch can be made, in particular, of metallic materials, the present invention retains all the advantages linked to charging accumulators via induction, namely the absence of any contact and lead wires, which enables a case free of connectors to be provided, whose sealing is thus easier to guarantee.
According to a complementary feature of the invention, the conductive paths forming the secondary winding are arranged on at least one of the faces, and preferably on both faces, of an insulating substrate.
Indeed, the fact of being able to have a significant number of conductive paths to form the secondary winding advantageously allows the accumulator charge current frequency to be reduced, which prevents any risk of breaching the limit values in terms of exposing the population to the electromagnetic radiation decreed by the standards currently in force.
According to a first embodiment of the invention, the insulating substrate on which the secondary winding is deposited, is embedded by moulding in the thickness of a wristband made of a flexible material such as plastic or an elastomer.
According to a second embodiment, the insulating substrate on which the secondary winding is deposited is introduced into a sheath-shaped wristband.
As already mentioned in the preamble of the present Patent Application, the portable object according to the invention is particularly intended for picking up radiobroadcast type information. Therefore, it has to be fitted with a receiving antenna. Both the secondary winding and the antenna can advantageously be deposited on the same insulating substrate, which simplifies the manufacturing method and thus makes significant savings in terms of time and money.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly from the following detailed description of an embodiment of the portable object according to the invention, this example being given purely by way of non-limiting illustration, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
The present invention proceeds from the general inventive idea consisting in arranging the secondary winding of an induction charge device in a different location than the case of a portable object powered by accumulators intended to be recharged by means of the charge device. By doing this, full advantage is taken of the advantages linked to induction charging which avoids, in particular, having to use ohmic contacts that are detrimental to the sealing of the case, while avoiding one of the only problems of the inductive charge, namely the limited choice of materials able to be used for manufacturing the case.
The present invention will be described with reference to a timepiece of the wristwatch type. It goes without saying that the invention is not limited to such an embodiment and that it can be applied to any type of electronic object of small dimensions able to be worn by a user on his wrist by means of a wristband.
As can be seen in
Turns 4 to 8 of secondary winding 2 are deposited on insulating substrate 1 by any appropriate technique such as, for example, photolithography. In such case, a thin film of a conductive material such as copper is first bonded onto the surface of the substrate. This film of conductive material is then coated with a layer of photoresist which will be exposed to a light beam through the apertures of a mask reproducing the desired shape of secondary winding 2. After the photoresist has been developed, the zones of the copper film that are not covered by the resist are then chemically etched. Finally the remaining resist is removed.
Turns 4 to 8 arranged on the top face of insulating substrate 1 and the turns (not shown) arranged on the bottom face of said substrate 1 are conventionally connected to each other by through vias or holes (also not shown) located beneath a contact pad 10 provided at the free end of inner turn 8.
For reasons of convenience, both ends 12 and 14 of secondary winding 2 are arranged on the same top face of insulating substrate 1, the first end 12 being connected to external turn 4 of said secondary winding 2, whereas the second end 14 is connected via a through hole passing through the thickness of said substrate and metallised in order to be able to be conductive to the turns arranged on the bottom face of said substrate 1.
According to a first embodiment of the invention shown in
Since the impervious passage of the ends of the secondary winding through case 20 of wristwatch 18 does not form the subject of the present Patent Application, it will not be described here. For such questions, reference may advantageously be made to the European Patent Application published under number EP 1 033 636 in the name of the Applicant.
Another solution that may be envisaged for mounting insulating substrate 1 and conductive structures formed at its surface consists simply in inserting the latter into the cavity of a sheath-shaped wristband. In this case, the ends of the secondary winding can be secured by soldering or bonding onto the printed circuit board contained in the watchcase since, in order to replace a worn wristband, the latter need only be pulled slightly to remove insulating substrate 1. This second solution is shown with reference to
Wristwatch 18 according to the invention is intended, in particular, for picking up information broadcast by radio waves. Thus, it has to include an antenna which, as can be seen in
It goes without saying that the invention is not limited to the embodiments which have just been described, and that various simple modifications and variants can be envisaged without departing from the scope of the present invention.
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