The invention is generally related to the field of user devices that have haptic effects as a part of their user experience. The invention is particularly related to electrically operated transducers that can be used to make one or more surfaces of the user device convey the haptic effects to the user.
Haptics in general means the technology of using forces, vibrations, and/or motions to a user to generate an experience of touch. Haptics can be used in hand-held user devices as an effect that makes the user experience more versatile. For example, the hand-held controllers used as a part of the user interface of many video game devices may include means for producing haptic effects such as vibration. Cleverly designed haptic effects may be used to deceive the human sensory system so that the user believes to feel e.g. a macroscopic movement of a button under their finger, even if in reality there is only a relatively stable structure that undergoes a short, intensive, elastic deformation or vibration in a much smaller scale.
In order to have optimal applicability in hand-held user devices, an arrangement for producing haptic effects should be small in size, have a low energy consumption, allow for versatile ways in attaching to the other structures of the device, and preferably be possible to manufacture at low cost.
It is an objective to provide a method and an arrangement for producing haptic effects in user devices in an optimal way. Another objective is to enable producing haptic effects in such parts of a user device that are movably attached.
According to a first aspect there is provided an arrangement for producing haptic effects in a user device. The arrangement comprises a first part of the user device and a second part of the user device, which second part constitutes a hand-held body of the user device. A movable attachment between said first and second parts of the user device allows a user of the user device to hold the second part by hand and move the first part in relation to the second part during use of the user device. A haptic transducer produces haptic effects for said user during said use of the user device. The haptic transducer comprises a first half and a second half, as well as an arrangement of permanent magnets, of which at least a first permanent magnet is located in said first half and at least a second permanent magnet is located in said second half. At least one coil is located in said haptic transducer and configured to create, under influence of an electric current flowing through said coil, dynamic magnetic forces in said haptic transducer. Said first half is attached to said first part of the user device and said second half is attached to said second part of the user device.
According to an embodiment the second part of the user device comprises a current source for feeding said electric current into said at least one coil.
According to an embodiment said movable attachment is a swivel joint, slide joint, or elastically deforming joint for allowing said user to utilize said first part as a trigger to be pulled by a finger of the same hand that holds the second part.
According to an embodiment the arrangement comprises a detector configured to produce a detection signal in response to the user applying to said first part a force for moving the first part in relation to the second part. A controllable driver circuit may then generate said electric current to said coil in response to a control signal. A controller may be coupled to said detector and to said driver circuit, said controller configured to produce said control signal in response to receiving said detection signal.
According to an embodiment said detector and said haptic transducer are different elements.
According to an embodiment said haptic transducer is configured to also operate as said detector.
According to an embodiment the arrangement comprises an electric coupling between said coil and said controller for enabling said controller to detect a current induced into said coil and to use such detected current as said detection signal.
According to an embodiment said first part is movable in relation to said second part between a released position and an operated position. In said released position the first and second halves of the haptic transducer may then be located at a first distance from each other. In said operated position said first and second halves of the haptic transducer may be located at a second distance from each other, said second distance being smaller than said first distance.
According to an embodiment said movable attachment is a swivel joint configured to allow said first part to rotate around a swivel axis with respect to said second part. Said first and second halves of the haptic transducer may then be rotationally symmetric about a common axis of symmetry and placed with said axis of symmetry coincident with said swivel axis.
According to an embodiment the first permanent magnet and the second permanent magnet have similarly named magnetic poles facing each other in the permanent magnet arrangement, and a magnetic repulsion between said similarly named magnetic poles pushes, in the absence of any intentional counteracting force caused by the user, the first part into a released position away from the second part.
According to a second aspect there is provided a method for producing haptic effects in a user device. The method comprises responding to a detected predetermined way of a user using a user device—that comprises two parts movably attached together—by making a current flow through a coil of a haptic transducer, two halves of which are attached to respective ones of said two parts of the user device. Said current creates dynamic magnetic forces that together with static magnetic forces created by permanent magnets of said haptic transducer produce the desired haptic effect.
According to an embodiment the method comprises detecting a predetermined movement of a first part of the user device in relation to a second part thereof, and creating said current as a response to said detection.
According to an embodiment the method comprises performing said detecting of a predetermined movement by detecting a current induced into said coil of the haptic transducer.
The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and together with the description help to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
This description uses the term haptic transducer. This means in particular a transducer that has been described as an acoustic and/or haptic transducer in any of the following previous patent or utility model applications: FI20195599, FI20175942, FI20205298, FI20206132, U.S. Ser. No. 16/776,428, U.S. Ser. No. 16/138,993, U.S. Ser. No. 16/427,377, EP19216516.5, GB1420483.8, GB15801194.0, CN202020145485.4, FI20215082. These are all incorporated herein by reference.
Certain features are common to the transducers that are meant here and described as haptic transducers. The transducer comprises two parts, which may be called the first half and the second half. The use of the term “half” does not mean that said parts of the transducer should have mutually equal size, mass, diameter, height, or any other dimension. The term is used here only as an illustrative name to make unambiguous reference to the two main parts of a transducer. Other names like “first transducer part” and “second transducer part” could be used quite as well.
The transducers of the kind meant here comprise an arrangement of permanent magnets, of which at least a first permanent magnet is located in the first half and at least a second permanent magnet is located in the second half. The purpose of the permanent magnets is to create—possibly together with other parts of the transducer, like one or more surrounding cover parts made of magnetic material—a static magnetic force. The static magnetic force may be for example such that there are one or more balance positions, in which the first and second halves of the transducer are at a local minimum of magnetic potential energy.
Typically, the physical structure of the transducer is such that there is a natural direction of movement in which at least one of the first and second halves may move in relation to the other during operation. If the general outline of the transducer is that of a box or case with an essentially flat bottom and—parallel to it—a relatively flat top, the bottom may be generally defined by the first half and the top may be generally defined by the second half. In such a case, the direction of a symmetry axis that goes essentially perpendicularly through the bottom and top may be said natural direction of movement. One or more points along the natural direction of movement are then the balance positions referred to above.
Yet another feature common to the haptic transducers meant here is the provision of one or more coils in the transducer. At least one such coil is configured to create, under influence of an electric current through said coil, dynamic magnetic forces in the haptic transducer. Various options exist for placing the coil(s) in relation to the first and second halves of the transducer, as well as in relation to the permanent magnets that make up the arrangement of permanent magnets. Each such option may have its own advantages and disadvantages, but for the purposes of this description the location of the coil(s)—like the exact configuration of the arrangement of permanent magnets—has little significance.
The haptic effect produced by the transducer is the result of feeding an electric current of desired waveform to the coil(s). Under the combined influence of the dynamic magnetic forces created this way and the static magnetic forces intrinsic to the arrangement of permanent magnets, a relative movement arises between the first and second halves of the transducer. Attachments of the first and second halves of the transducer to further parts of the device that houses the transducer convey this relative movement further, so that eventually the user will feel the consequences of said relative movement using their senses. The user may sense said consequences of the relative movement either directly, by touching at least one of those parts of the user device to which at least one of the first and second halves is attached, or indirectly so that there are one or more further parts in between.
The arrangement shown in
The arrangement comprises a haptic transducer 104 for producing haptic effects for the user during said use of the user device. The haptic transducer 104 comprises a first half 105 and a second half 106. Also comprises in the haptic transducer, although not shown in
The first half 105 of the haptic transducer 105 is attached to the first part 101 of the user device, and the second half 106 is attached to the second half 102 of the user device. Thus, taken the movable attachment between the first and second parts 101 and 102 of the user device, the first half 105 of the haptic transducer 104 moves along with the first part 101 of the user device and the second half 106 of the haptic transducer 104 moves along with the second part 102 of the user device.
The attachments of the first half 105 to the first part 101 on one hand and the second half 106 to the second part 102 on the other hand means that the user may feel the haptic effects produced by the haptic transducer 104 in either one—or both—of the first and second parts 101 and 102. In line with the illustrative example above, if the user device is a game controller and the first part 101 is a trigger, the user may feel e.g. a vibrating effect and/or a sensory-system-deceiving feeling of movement while pulling the trigger.
As is known from many of the patent applications that were mentioned above and incorporated herein by reference, other structures like cover parts of the haptic transducer may direct the magnetic fields so as to create a balancing, attractive magnetic force. As the magnitudes of both said repulsing force and said attractive force depend on distance, together they may give rise to one or more balance positions at which the net magnetic force in the direction of movement is zero. However, the repulsing force mentioned above may also be utilized as an addition to or a replacement of a return spring. In such an embodiment the magnetic repulsion between the similarly named magnetic poles of the permanent magnets pushes, in the absence of any intentional counteracting force caused by the user, the first part into a released position away from the second part. Such a functionality may be particularly useful if the first part 101 of the user device is a spring, joystick, knob, or other feature that should always return to a released position when the user is not actively operating it.
In the embodiment of
Another feature shown in the embodiment of
The exact nature of the movable attachment 103 between the first and second parts 101 and 102 of the user device is not very important. It may be for example a swivel joint, a slide joint, or an elastically deforming joint. As already mentioned above, one possible reason for providing such a movable attachment may be to allow the user to utilize the first part 101 as a trigger to be pulled by a finger of the same hand that holds the second part 102.
The embodiment of
The detector 301 and the haptic transducer may be different elements of the user device, as suggested by drawing them separate in
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
The first and second sub-parts 701 and 702 are coupled to each other through suspension means 703. According to an embodiment, the suspension means 703 constitute elastic suspension means for making the first sub-part 701 move in relation to the second sub-part 702 under influence of the haptic effects produced by the haptic transducer 104. Another possibility is that the suspension means 703 constitute rigid suspension means for making the first sub-part 701 undergo elastic deformations under influence of the haptic effects produced by the haptic transducer 104. Thus the terms “elastic” and “rigid” are used here as relative definitions. Their meaning is to be interpreted by examining, whether the produced haptic effects involve primarily moving the whole first sub-part 701 in relation to the second sub-part 702 or whether they involve primarily (at least) the first sub-part 701 deforming elastically.
The suspension means 703 may involve elements that are elastic by form and/or material, like springs and/or solid pieces of elastomer materials. Additionally or alternatively, they may involve rigid attachment means such as glue, screws, rivets, welded seams or the like. In some embodiments they may involve joint means, such as swivel joints or sliding joints for example. In one embodiment the suspension means involve a joint located in one direction from the haptic transducer and a spring or other elastic member in another direction, so that the movement of the first sub-part caused by the haptic transducer has the nature of moving about said joint while tending to return to a relaxed position defined by the elastic member.
In the embodiment of
As the first part 101 is assumed to be relatively small in relation to the second part 102 of the user device, also in the embodiment of
A class of embodiments, an example of which is schematically shown in
One sub-class of said class of embodiments may have said first sub-part and said second sub-part coupled to each other through elastic suspension means for making the first sub-part move in relation to said second sub-part under influence of the haptic effects produced by said haptic transducer.
Another sub-class of said class of embodiments may have said first sub-part and said second sub-part are coupled to each other through rigid suspension means for making the first sub-part undergo elastic deformations under influence of the haptic effects produced by said haptic transducer.
It is obvious to a person skilled in the art that with the advancement of technology, the basic idea of the invention may be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are thus not limited to the examples described above, instead they may vary within the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20215082 | Jan 2021 | FI | national |
20215101 | Jan 2021 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI2022/050033 | 1/20/2022 | WO |