Priority is claimed to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2016 108 634.7, filed May 10, 2016. The entire disclosure of said application is incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to an input device defining at least one input surface.
A great number of input devices have previously been described, largely due to many different operating concepts. In practical application, input devices thus differ in their requirements concerning functional safety, hereinafter referred to as “functional safety”, resulting from the switching and control functions they must perform, and/or from their configuration. It is common, for example, that the requirements for an input device to operate a vehicle's speed control system are higher than for an input device controlling the comfort function of the vehicle.
The configuration of an input device can also result in higher requirements, such as in an input device with several adjacent input surfaces, also called buttons, each of which can be part of a continuous surface. Even in such a case, it is always necessary to verify the operation or activation of an input surface to prevent operating errors. A particularly higher demand exists when both situations coincide, i.e., when the function to be controlled by the input device is safety-relevant and the activation or touching of the input device must be verified, for example, to suppress the triggering of the function through the unintentional touching or activation of the input device. The latter constellation can be of particular importance when several input surfaces are arranged in close proximity, rendering their contact surface relatively small and/or directly adjacent to each other or in the immediate vicinity of a gripping surface, for example, that of a steering wheel.
EP 2977872 A1 describes a touchpad in which two capacitive assemblies, each detecting a touch, are provided to increase operating safety. A no-touch is not detected.
An aspect of the present invention is to provide an input device with improved functional safety which has a simple design and which is space-efficient.
In an embodiment, the present invention provides an input device which includes an input surface, at least one first detector configured to detect at least one of a touch and an activation of the input surface, a second detector comprising a detection range which covers the input surface, the second detector being configured to detect a no-touch of the input surface, and an evaluation unit. The evaluation unit is configured so that, upon the detection of the at least one of the touch and the activation by the first detector, the evaluation device performs an assignment of a switching or control function to the at least one of the touch and the activation of the input surface, and when detecting the no-touch by the second detector, the evaluation unit excludes the assignment of the switching or control function.
The present invention is described in greater detail below on the basis of embodiments and of the drawings in which:
The present invention relates to an input device defining at least one input surface. The input device according to the present invention comprises at least one first detector which is designed to detect the touch of the input surface and/or the activation of the input surface. The terms “touch” and “activation” are to be interpreted so that touching means the soft but not necessarily powerless contact or adjoining arrangement of an input means, such as an operator's finger or fingertip, to the input surface, while activation means the application of an input means such as an operator's finger or fingertip to the input surface with some activating force. The present invention is not limited to any particular kind of detector. The first detector can, for example, be one that is designed to detect only a touch, which hereinafter is referred to as the first touch detector.
The first detector is therefore designed to detect a touch, but is not designed to detect an activating force, i.e., the first detector is not able to detect a measure or a direction of the exerted force. A space-resolving or motion-resolving touch detection is not, however, to be excluded thereby. In an embodiment, the first detector can provide the detection using an optical process and/or a capacitive process to achieve space-resolving and motion-resolving detection.
The first detector an, for example, comprise a capacitive tactile sensor. A capacitive tactile sensor defines at least one measuring capacity that is detected when the tactile sensor touches the input surface. Each tactile sensor can, for example, be provided with an associated electrically-insulated electrode generating a measuring capacity.
The present invention provides an evaluation unit which is designed to assign a switching and/or a control function to the touch or activation of the input surface of the input device when the first detector detects that the input surface is being touched or activated. The present invention also provides that the input device can, for example, comprise a second detector whose detection range covers the input surface. The second detector is designed to detect at least one no-touch of the input surface. Detection of the no-touch is defined in the present invention to mean that the second detector is designed to detect a situation where no adjacent arrangement of any object on the input surface exists, i.e., the input surface is untouched, and in particular untouched by an input means such as the operator's finger on the input surface.
The present invention provides an evaluation device which is designed to exclude assignment of a switching or control function when the second detector detects a no-touch. This prevents a switching or control function from being triggered by the evaluation unit in a case when the first detector erroneously detects a presumed touch or a presumed activation. The functional safety of the input device is thereby improved.
The second detector can, for example, be designed to detect a no-touch optically, for example, via a camera. Optical detection can provide a comparatively reliable no-touch detection. The detection signal used by the second detector can, for example, be radiation in the visible spectral range, such as a wavelength range of 380 nm to 780 μm, or infrared radiation, such as in a wavelength range of 0.78 μm to 1000 μm.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the second detector can, for example, also be designed to detect a touch to the input surface, for example, optically. The second detector can, for example, use an optical reflection measurement method. In an embodiment, the second detector can, for example, be designed to perform a space-resolving optical touch detection. The second detector can, for example, be designed to differentiate between the touch of human skin and another kind of touch. The second detector can, for example, use light in the infrared A-range as a detection signal, such as a wavelength range of 0.78 μm to 1.4 μm. In case of radiating human skin, this provides a comparatively deep penetration depth and therefore a distinct degree of absorption. When the second detector performs the reflex measurement, the second detector can thus clearly distinguish between a touch of human skin to the input surface and another kind of touch.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the second detector can, for example, be designed to non-invasively detect the vital data of the operator, for example, to optically differentiate between a touch from an object and the touch from a human body part, and thus to qualify the touch of an object as a no-touch as defined in the present invention. The pulse can, for example, optically be detected by the second detector. This can, for example, be based on the process of photo plethysmography (PPG), where changes of the blood volume in the blood vessels are measured optically. The blood volume that changes with each heart cycle flowing through the arteries can be recorded and measured with PPG. The heart rhythmically discharges blood (systole) and fills again with blood (diastole). More blood flows through the artery during systole, and less during diastole. What is measured is the change in blood volume in the body part adjacent to the input surface, such as the fingertip. The change in blood volume can be measured by the second detector via the specific light absorption of the hemoglobin (a ferrous protein complex which binds oxygen to the red blood cells of mammals and which provides them with their red color).
In an embodiment of the present invention, the second detector can, for example, be provided with a transmitter to generate a detection signal and with at least one receiver to receive the detection signal, whereby the input surface defines a border surface for reflecting the detection signal in the direction of the receiver. The second detector can, for example, be designed to detect a no-touch based on the intensity of the detection signal reflecting on the border surface, and thus also on the degree of reflection. The second detector can, for example, be designed so that in the case of a no-touch, the intensity of the detection signal reflected on the border surface and the received signal is increased or reduced compared with the state in which a touch occurs, such as from a finger.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the input surface can, for example, be defined by a layer of material which is permeable for the detection signal, for example, a translucent material such as a transparent plastic or a glass material such as soda-lime glass, quartz glass, float glass, borosilicate glass, or flint glass.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the second detector can, for example, be provided with another receiver which is designed to receive the detection signal on the input service independently of a touch and independently of a no-touch. This enables the monitoring of a function of the transmitter of the second detector.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the detection signal can, for example be encoded to improve operating safety, for example, by analogous encoding such as via modulation, or by digital encoding.
In an embodiment of the present invention, several first detectors can, for example, be provided which are designed so that they detect a touch on the input surface or an activation of the input surface independently of each other. The evaluation unit can, for example, be designed so that during a common detection of a touch or activation by at least two of the detectors, a shifting or control function is assigned to the input device during activation or touch, if the second detector does not detect a no-touch. A sufficient coincidence in the detection signal can be understood in this sense as a common detection by at least two first detectors. In an embodiment, the at least two detectors are also designed differently, i.e., they differ in the physical operation of their detection and/or measuring systems.
In an embodiment of the input device with several first detectors, these can, for example, comprise at least one first detector which capacitively detects touch and one first detector which detects an activation, which comprises a power sensor activation force with an activation force acting capacitively or resistively upon the input surface.
The evaluation unit can, for example, be electrically connected with the at least one first detector and the second detector via data cables insulated against each other to transmit the associated detection result. According to the present invention, the signals of the detector are evaluated by the evaluation unit.
The present invention also relates to a steering wheel to which an input device according to one of the above described embodiments is attached. The input device can, for example, be a so-called multifunctional switch in the steering wheel.
The present invention also relates to the use of the input device in the form of one of the above-described embodiments in a motor vehicle, in particular to control a speed control system, which is also referred to as a “tempomat” or “cruise control”.
The process according to the present invention also comprises a step of detecting a touch and/or activation of the input surface by the first detector. The process according to the present invention also comprises a subsequent step of verifying the detection by the first detector by detection of the second detector in which the evaluation unit is designed to exclude the assignment of a shifting or control function by the second detector upon detection of a no-touch. This prevents the triggering of a shifting or control function by the evaluation unit in the case of an unintentional touching or activation. This generally improves the functional safety of the input device. This prevents a switching or control function being triggered by the evaluation unit in a case when the first detector erroneously detects a presumed touch or a presumed activation. The functional safety of the input device is thereby improved in total.
Reference is made to the above-described embodiments of the inventive input device with regard to other advantageous embodiments of the process according to the present invention.
The present invention is described in detail below under reference to the drawings. The drawings are thereby to be understood only as examples showing embodiments of the present invention.
Electrode 1 is applied to a surface of a layer 11 facing the operator and is electrically contacted by an evaluation unit 3 to generate a measuring capacity. The extent of electrode 1 approximately defines the spatial extent of an input surface 8. The variation of this measuring capacity, when touched by an operating organ 5 in the area of input surface 8, is detected and evaluated by evaluation unit 3. When this variation exceeds a predetermined threshold value, evaluation unit 3 generates an associated switching function if the detection result detected by the first detector 1 does not conflict with a detection result of a second detector 2. The second detector 2 provides the optical detection of a no-touch as well as the optical detection of a touch in the area of input surface 8. The electrode 1 and layer 11 are made of a transparent material or of a translucent material. The second detector 2 comprises an infrared transmitter 2a to generate an infrared detection signal. In the shown embodiment, the infrared signal radiated by the infrared transmitter 2a is radiated laterally into the front surface of layer 11 facing away from the operator, as indicated by the geometrical radiation path 6 and radiation path 7, and due to total reflection permeates layer 11 to be received and detected by receiver 2b′ arranged on the opposite front side of layer 11, while a reflection also occurs at the border layer defined by input surface 8, as indicated by radiation path 7. The latter degree of reflection greatly depends on whether or not there is a touch in the area of input surface 8, especially by an operating organ 5, shown here as a human finger. Due to the change in intensity based on the change in the degree of reflection of the light received from receiver 2b, the second detector 2 is able to at least qualitatively differentiate between a touch and a no-touch. The received detection result is used in evaluation unit 3 to verify the detection result of the first detector 1, i.e., at least in the case of detecting a touch by the first detector 1 and a subsequent detection of a no-touch by the second detector 2 to prevent a switching or control function from being assigned due to a defective or incorrect detection by the first detector 1. The detection of a touch by the second detector 2 is furthermore used to conform or verify the result of the detection of a prior positive touch by the first detector 1. The permeation of the detection signal through layer 11 of transmitter 2a to the opposite receiver 2b′, and the minimum intensity of the reflecting and receiving detection signal, which also occurs without touch of input surface 8, is furthermore used to perform a functional control of the second detector 2, particularly of the associated transmitter 2a.
In a partial sectional view,
The present invention is not limited to embodiments described herein; reference should be had to the appended claims. Individual characteristics mentioned in the appended claims can thereby be combined in any technologically meaningful manner to constitute additional arrangements of the present invention. The description, especially with reference to the drawings, additionally characterizes and specifies the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 108 634.7 | May 2016 | DE | national |