This non-provisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(a) on Patent Application No(s). 099109075 filed in Taiwan, R.O.C. on Mar. 26, 2010, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to the touch panel technology, specifically in the invention of an integrated touch panel of which production process is simplified, panel strength is intensified, and yield rate is increased.
2. Description of the Related Art
There are some common types of touch panels; i.e. the resistive panel, capacitive panel, surface acoustic wave panel, optical (infrared) panel etc. Among these, the most commonly used are the resistive panels, followed by the capacitive panels. The advantages of the capacitive panels are waterproofing and scratch-proofing, and they have high light transmittance and broad temperature range. Therefore, the panels come at a high price. With the advancement of technology, however, the capacitive panels are beginning to gain a share in the market of small monitors.
The outermost surface of the conventional touch panel, which comes to contact with the environment, is usually made of a chemical-tempered cover glass substrate. This outermost cover substrate is then laminated to the sensing layer, which uses indium tin oxide (ITO) as its conductance. Integrating this combination with the display panel (i.e. the back light module) produces a complete touch screen. In the past, the cover glass substrate and the sensing layer, as described above, are laminated with optically clear adhesive (OCA). Other than that, an additional black icon or artwork layer is printed on the edges of the cover glass substrate to shield the circuits. The conventional icon layer is printed on the cover glass substrate perpendicularly and this will usually cause unsatisfactory results when laminating the substrate to the sensing layer; incomplete or uneven cladding may occur. Many times, the uneven slots produced during the etching of sensing circuits on the ITO sensing layers will compromise the quality of the images on the display and reduce its yield rate.
In order to improve the poor outcome caused by the conventional OCA lamination process, the inventor invented an integrated touch panel which uses low temperature sputtering method to stack the films instead of OCA lamination. This will effectively reduce the thickness of the touch panel and thus increase the light transmittance efficiency. Furthermore, stacking optical film on the sensing layer with sputtering method has lesser problems of uneven slots caused by circuit etching and thus the quality of the images on the display is improved. Moreover, the placement of the icon layer is different from that in the conventional device and this will improve the cladding of the subsequent coatings remarkably and will get rid of the problems of uneven coatings all together. The overall strength of the panel is also improved greatly.
In view of the abovementioned problems, the purpose of the present invention is to coat on one of an icon or artwork layer on the periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate, also the inner periphery of the icon or artwork layer is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate. Sputtering method is then used to stack layers of optical films or sensing layers on the above. As the icon layer or artwork layer is not placed perpendicularly, complete cladding of the optical films or sensing layers can be done and thus the yield rate of the device increased.
In order to achieve the above objectives, an integrated touch panel is introduced in the present invention. It consists of one transparent substrate, one of an icon layer or artwork layer, the first layer of the optical film, and the first sensing layer. The icon layer or artwork layer is coated on the periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate and its inner periphery is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate. The first layer of optical film is stacked on such icon layer and the areas on the transparent substrate which are not coated with the icon layer. The first sensing layer is stacked on the first optical film via sputtering method.
The transparent substrate used in the present invention may either be made of glass or polymer plastics. One passivation film may be included in the structure and is stacked on the first sensing layer.
The integrated touch panel may further comprise a second layer of optical film stacked on the first sensing layer and a passivation film may or may not be stacked on the optical film. The first isolation layer may be stacked on the second layer of optical film, and a third layer of optical film may be stacked on such isolation layer. A second sensing layer may be stacked on the third optical film, and a passivation film may be subsequently stacked on such sensing layer. The invention may further comprise a layer of shield stacked on the second sensing layer, and a passivation film stacked on the shield.
The present invention further comprises the first isolation layer stacked on the second optical film. The isolation layer may then be stacked by a second sensing layer followed by a passivation film. Alternatively, it may consist of a second sensing layer stacked on the first isolation layer followed by a second isolation layer. A shield may then be stacked on the second isolation layer, followed by a passivation film.
In order to achieve the above objectives, an integrated touch panel is introduced in the present invention. It consists of one transparent substrate and one of an icon layer or artwork layer coated on the periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate and its inner periphery is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate. It consists of the first sensing layer which is stacked on the abovementioned icon layer and the areas on the transparent substrate which are not coated with the icon layer or artwork layer. It consists of the first layer of optical film stacked on the above sensing layer via sputtering method. Its structure may further comprise a passivation film stacked on the above first optical film. Alternatively, it may further comprise the first isolation layer stacked on the above optical film followed by a second sensing layer. A second layer of the optical film may be stacked on such second sensing layer followed by a layer of passivation film. Alternatively, it may further consist of a second isolation layer stacked on the second layer of optical film followed by a layer of shield. A passivation film may then be stacked on the shield.
In order to achieve the above objectives, an integrated touch panel is introduced in the present invention. It consists of one transparent substrate and one of an icon layer or artwork layer coated on periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate and its inner periphery is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate. The first layer of optical film is stacked on the abovementioned icon layer and the areas on the transparent substrate which are not coated with the icon layer. Other than that, it consists of the first sensing layer which is stacked on the above optical film layer via sputtering method. A second layer of optical film is stacked on the first sensing layer and the first isolation layer is stacked on such optical film. A third layer of optical film is stacked on the first isolation layer. A second sensing layer is then stacked on the third layer of optical film via sputtering method. A fourth layer of optical film is stacked on the above second sensing layer followed by a passivation film.
In order to achieve the above objectives, an integrated touch panel is introduced in the present invention. It consists of one transparent substrate and one of an icon layer or artwork layer which is coated on the periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate and its inner periphery is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate. It also consists of the first layer of optical film which is coated on the abovementioned icon layer or artwork layer and the areas on the transparent substrate which are not coated with icon layer or artwork layer. Other than that, it consists of the first sensing layer which is stacked on the above optical film layer via sputtering method. A second layer of optical film is stacked on the first sensing layer and the first isolation layer is stacked on such optical film. A third layer of optical film is stacked on the first isolation layer. A second sensing layer is then stacked on the third layer of optical film via sputtering method. A fourth layer of optical film is stacked on the above second sensing layer followed by a layer of shield. A passivation film is then stacked on the shield.
The other purpose of the present invention is to propose a production method for the abovementioned integrated touch panel. The temperature of the entire production process has to be controlled below 200° C. in order to greatly enhance the strength and stability of the touch panel. The production steps include cutting the transparent substrate into a few pieces and coating an icon layer on the periphery of each transparent substrate. The inner periphery of each icon layer or artwork layer is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of such transparent substrate. A sensing layer is coated on each icon layer or artwork layer and the areas on the transparent substrate which are not coated with icon layer or artwork layer via sputtering method. However, prior to and/or after the stacking of the sensing layer, at least one layer of optical film may be formed and placed on one side face or two side face of the sensing layer.
One of the advantages of the present invention is that instead of using the conventional way of laminating the transparent substrate and sensing layer with optically clear adhesive, the inner periphery of the icon layer or artwork layer is arranged not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate so that a complete cladding of the optical film or sensing layer can be done via sputtering method. The yield of the structure is thus raised. At the same time, one layer or two layers of optical film are covered on the top and/or bottom surface of each sensing layer. This addition will cover up the metal slots caused by circuit etching preventing them from reducing the resolution and impairing the visual quality of the touch panel.
The descriptions of the drawings are given below so that the certification committee will have a clear idea of the subject matter of the present invention. Please refer to the drawings and their respective descriptions.
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The transparent substrate 1 is the outermost surface of the touch panel that directly comes to contact with the environment. Therefore, it is strengthened to protect it from scratch and other damages. The transparent substrate 1 may either be made from glass or polymer plastic. If glass is used as its material, the glass is first cut into several small pieces where the thickness of each is about 0.5˜1.8 mm. These little pieces are then chemically-tempered by dipping them in potassium nitrate solution or other chemical solutions.
The icon layer or artwork layer 2 mainly functions as a shield to cover up the signal conducting wires at the edges of the touch panel. To do that, ink prints of about 2-15 μm thick are coated on periphery of one side face of the transparent substrate 1. Also, the inner periphery of the icon layer is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate 1 so that the cladding of the subsequent structures can be complete. In order to control the screen printings so that they are formed at a non-perpendicular angle, the below parameters are required: ink with a viscosity of 10˜300 dPa·s, the screen conditioned at 50˜400 mesh tetron screen, and the tension at minimun 15N.
Prior to stacking the first sensing layer 4a, the first layer of optical film 3a should be stacked on the icon layer or artwork layer 2 and those areas on the transparent substrate 1 which are not coated with the icon layer or artwork layer 2. This would prevent the formation of uneven metal slots on the sensing layer 4a caused by circuit etching and thus minimize the impairment of visual quality. The embodiment of the first layer of optical film 3a can be achieved through sputtering, spraying, or coating methods and its thickness is limited to within 200 nm.
As mentioned above, the first sensing layer 4a is then stacked on the first layer of optical film 3a via sputtering method. One example of this is the ITO transparent conductive film with a thickness of 10-100 nm. This can be done using vacuum DC and RF magnetron sputtering deposition technique. Otherwise, methods like layer-by-layer sputtering, spray pyrolysis, pulsed laser deposition, arc discharge ion plating, reactive evaporation, ion beam sputtering, or chemical vapor deposition (CVD) etc. can be used.
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The twenty-first drawing is a flow chart of the production process for the preferred embodiment of the present invention (PE 1). The flow chart demonstrates the embodiment process of the integrated touch panel as in the first drawing (
Subsequently, an icon layer is coated on one of the lateral edges of the transparent substrate and the inner periphery of the icon layer is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate (S82). In order to achieve that, the viscosity of the ink should be within 10˜30 dPa·s, the screen conditioned at 50˜400 mesh tetron screen, and the tension at minimum 15N. The final thickness of the film is around 2˜15 um.
A sensing layer is sputtered on each icon layer and the areas on the transparent substrate that are not coated with icon layer (S84) and its thickness is maintained within 10-100 nm. The sensing layer uses the transparent ITO as its conductance, and due to its nature, the ITO is also an electrode. The process may also be carried out using vacuum DC, RF magnetron sputtering deposition, and other sputtering methods like co-sputtering, layer-by-layer sputtering, spray pyrolysis, pulsed laser deposition, arc discharge ion plating, reactive evaporation, ion beam sputtering, or CVD etc.
In order to prevent the formation of uneven metal slots caused by circuit etching on the sensing layer and to minimize the impairment of visual quality by these uneven slots, a layer of optical film may be stacked before and/or after the sensing layer sputtering is done on the icon layers and areas on the transparent substrate not coated with icon layer. The optical film should be placed on one lateral edge or two lateral edges of the sensing layer (S83) (S85).
Overall, the present invention avoids the conventional method of laminating the substrate and the sensing layers with optically clear adhesive. Instead, the inner edge of the icon layer is not perpendicular to the adjacent line of the transparent substrate so that complete cladding can be obtained when sputtering the optical film or sensing layers on it. This overcomes the unevenness produced when the black icon layer is printed prior to film coating. The yield of the overall structure is thus raised. Furthermore, the quality of the ink used in film-coating the icon layer will not deteriorate and so the resistive value of the ITO sensing layer will not alter. Meanwhile, one layer or two layers of optical film are stacked on the top and/or bottom of each sensing layer to shield any metal slots caused by circuit etching. This will prevent the reduction of resolution and the impairment of visual quality.
All the above-mentioned are only applicable to the preferred embodiment of the present embodiment and will not restrict the scope of the actual embodiment of the present invention. As such, all equivalent or slightly modified versions produced by those familiar with the technology mentioned here will be considered the patent claim of the present invention in the event that such modification is found to be consistent with the essence and claims of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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099109075 | Mar 2010 | TW | national |