The present invention relates to a method and an apparatus for measuring magnetic properties of documents, in particular bank notes, and to a measuring head suitable therefor for measuring magnetic field changes.
Methods and apparatuses for measuring magnetic properties of documents are known in which a magnetic field is generated by means of a permanent magnet. In this regard, DE 40 22 739 A1 describes an apparatus with a magnetic circuit, consisting of soft magnetic and permanent magnetic material, the static magnetic field generated by the permanent magnetic material penetrating the magnetic circuit. The magnetic circuit generates a stray field which undergoes changes when a test object with magnetic particles is moved into the stray field area. Said changes are detected by means of a coil by a voltage being induced in the coil due to the changes. With this measuring principle, the change to be measured can be noticeably influenced by even small external influences, which additionally impedes the detection of the change.
DE 39 31 828 A1 describes a method and an apparatus for reading a bar code which consists of a multiplicity of adjacent stripes made of ferromagnetic material. A high-frequency electromagnetic alternating field is generated above the bar code so that a change of the electromagnetic alternating field is caused by the ferromagnetic stripes. By means of sensor coils which induce a changing voltage in accordance with the changes, inductive recognition of the bar code is possible. The induced voltage can be disturbed by external influences, however, so that the measured changes are distorted. To eliminate such disturbances from the measured signal, the measured signal is additionally supplied to a synchronous demodulator and a low-pass filter. The measured signal is multiplied in the synchronous demodulator by a reference signal of the same frequency and if possible the same phase. High-frequency components are subsequently filtered out in the low-pass filter to obtain an adjusted signal containing substantially only the measured changes. This type of signal processing is sometimes also referred to as the lock-in principle.
A disadvantage of the above-mentioned inductive methods is that small changes of the electromagnetic alternating field, for example if only a very low concentration of ferromagnetic material is provided in the stripes or the exciting magnetic field is weak, are very difficult or impossible to recognize. The primary reason for this is that there are frequently interference fields in the measuring site that are superimposed on the measurement in such a way that an additional slight change of the electromagnetic alternating field by a document to be measured is no longer reliably detectable by conventional means.
The problem of the invention is to specify a solution permitting reliable classification even of documents having small amounts of magnetic particles.
This problem is solved by the features of the independent claims. Advantageous embodiments and developments of the invention are stated in dependent claims.
According to the invention, a document to be checked containing magnetic particles is brought into an electromagnetic alternating field, the change of the alternating field being measured using a measuring element which converts an electrical input signal of the measuring element into an electrical output signal in dependence on the electromagnetic alternating field applied to the measuring element. Compared with the purely inductive measurement procedures known from the prior art, measurement with such a measuring element has the advantage of being time-independent, since the change of electrical resistance in a given test document depends only and directly on the strength of the applied magnetic field. In contrast, purely inductive methods are (also) time-dependent since a voltage is induced in the coil only when the magnetic flux penetrating the coil is subject to a temporal or spatial change. The invention therefore permits a static measurement or a measurement at slow document feed, thereby making the measurement more exact.
Preferably, a measuring element is used wherein the electrical resistance of the measuring element changes in dependence on the changes of the electromagnetic alternating field. The measuring element can for example be supplied with a current so that an alternating voltage drops across the measuring element. When the electrical resistance of the measuring element changes due to the change of the alternating field, the amplitude of the applied alternating voltage also changes. This detected amplitude change can then be processed further accordingly.
Particularly preferably, the measuring element used is a magnetoresistive element. Preferably, this is a giant magnetoresistance (GMR) element. In GMR elements the change of an external magnetic field applied to the element causes a change in its electrical resistance. This enables the GMR element to convert magnetically coded information into an electrical signal by the amplitude of the output signal of the GMR element changing in dependence on the resistance value of the GMR element. It is a special advantage of such a measuring element that even small changes of the electromagnetic alternating field can be ascertained, since GMR elements have the property of changing their electrical resistance comparatively strongly upon even small magnetic field changes. Thus, GMR elements have increased sensitivity compared to other measuring elements or sensors. It is therefore possible to detect even weakly doped documents that cause only a small field change. Due to the increased sensitivity, authentic bank notes can furthermore be better distinguished from forgeries whose magnetic particle content differs only slightly from that of authentic bank notes. Also, the inventive apparatus can be used variably and has little influence on adjacent systems, since the GMR sensor can also work at accordingly low field strengths due to its high sensitivity.
If the signal generator generates a high-frequency signal, a further advantage of the GMR element can be utilized. The disturbing 1/f noise of the GMR element occurs in a GMR element only in the low-frequency range and disappears above a certain frequency, leaving only a lower, white noise component. In this way a substantially higher signal-to-noise ratio is obtained. “High-frequency” means in this connection a frequency of more than 1 kHz, preferably over 10 kHz. In tests, magnetically soft and hard particles were detected with the inventive apparatus at a reference frequency of 7 kHz. Due to the properties of the GMR element an improvement in the measurement results is to be expected at a reference frequency between 10 kHz and 50 kHz. The structure of GMR elements and their operation are described in detail for example in EP 0 793 808 B1.
It is provided according to the invention to process the output signal of the measuring element by means of a lock-in amplifier. If the measuring element used is for example a GMR element, even very small changes of the electromagnetic alternating field can be detected by the GMR element. Since these changes result in comparatively small changes of the output signal of the GMR element, the output signal can be amplified in the lock-in amplifier for further processing. For this purpose the GMR signal, possibly after being amplified, is multiplied by a normalized reference signal of the same frequency in a synchronous demodulator. The signal generator with which the electrical input signal for the GMR element is generated is preferably also used for generating the reference signal. Since the frequency of the GMR output signal always corresponds to that of the GMR input signal independently of any effect of a magnetic field, the common signal generator can be used to generate same-frequency signals for the lock-in amplification. To make sure that the reference signal is multiplied by the GMR output signal in phase, it is possible to use for example a phase-locked loop (PLL) for phase-locked regeneration of the reference signal.
The output signal of the synchronous demodulator subsequently passes a low-pass filter. The low-pass filter with a certain cutoff frequency removes the disturbing high-frequency components. After the low-pass filter has filtered out the high-frequency components, the result obtained is an adjusted signal which is proportional to the amplitude of the GMR output signal.
Since the electrical output signal of the measuring element is multiplied by a system-inherent reference signal of the same frequency and phase, the reference signal used preferably being the input signal for the measuring element, even small changes of the electromagnetic alternating field which can be detected and verified by the measuring element can be processed with high precision. An additional evaluation electronics can be used to evaluate the measurements accordingly. In particular upon comparison measurements, the signal measured and processed by the lock-in amplifier must be compared with a given signal and/or other measured signals and evaluated. This comparison and the evaluation are then effected in the evaluation electronics, whereby the evaluation electronics can for example already comprise the lock-in amplifier.
The inventive apparatus can be used particularly advantageously for measuring or recognizing magnetically soft particles in documents. The magnetically soft particles are continually reversed magnetically by the electromagnetic alternating field. The particles bundle the magnetic field lines, thereby strengthening the magnetic field. An advantage of magnetically soft materials is that they are readily magnetizable and can therefore also strengthen weak magnetic fields. On the other hand, magnetically soft materials only slightly change the electromagnetic alternating field, unlike magnetically hard materials, and thus provide only a weak signal to be measured. With conventional measuring devices they are therefore not always reliably detectable. The invention also permits such materials to be reliably detected in documents, in particular when a GMR element and/or a lock-in amplifier is used.
In one embodiment of the invention, the electromagnetic alternating field is generated by high-frequency bursts of a burst generator. Burst excitation is understood to be the intermittent, bursty transmission of a signal. Burst excitation permits a particularly high current load on the field generating coil due to the lower average dissipation rate. The average dissipation rate is lower in burst excitation since there is no power dissipation in the burst pauses. If bursts with high current intensity are used, the magnetic particles of the document are magnetized accordingly more strongly and consequently cause a stronger change of the alternating field. This causes an accordingly stronger change in the electrical output quantity of the measuring element, i.e. its electrical resistance in the case of a GMR element, thereby making the measurement of the magnetic properties of the document more exact.
The inventive apparatus also makes it possible to distinguish magnetically hard and soft particles. Magnetically hard materials have a considerably “broader” hysteresis loop than magnetically soft materials. That is, magnetically hard materials have a higher remanence, so that considerably higher coercive field strength must be applied in comparison with magnetically soft materials to make this remanence disappear. Consequently, magnetically hard materials have a higher remanence in the absence of an external magnetic field, i.e. in the absence of current on the exciting coil, which manifests itself upon measurement with the measuring element in a greater change of the electrical resistance of the measuring element. Due to these different properties of magnetically hard and soft materials, it can be ascertained what kind of material is involved by a comparison of different measurements. For example, the particles can be premagnetized in a premagnetization section. Measurements can then be carried out at times when the coil does not generate an electromagnetic alternating field. It is particularly preferable to use burst excitation as the excitation for the exciting coil, since in the no-pulse periods between the recurring pulse bursts when the exciting coil does not carry current, the materials to be measured are premagnetized and can be measured.
A measuring head for measuring changes of a magnetic field which can be advantageously used with the present invention comprises at least one exciting coil for generating a magnetic field and a giant magnetoresistance (GMR) element for measuring changes of the magnetic field, the at least one exciting coil and the GMR element being disposed on a printed circuit board. The integration of the coil and the GMR element on a printed circuit board is inexpensive and is therefore advantageous compared to known measuring heads. An evaluation electronics suitable for evaluating changes of the magnetic field can also be disposed inexpensively on the printed circuit board. The evaluation electronics can comprise the lock-in amplifier.
The printed circuit board is preferably disposed between two elements, for example made of ferrite material, which concentrate the flux of the magnetic field generated by the at least one exciting coil. Furthermore, the arrangement of the exciting coil on the printed circuit board is executed inexpensively as a multilayer printed coil.
A further advantage of the inventive measuring head is the space-saving structure. This makes it possible for example to dispose a multiplicity of measuring heads side by side in the above-described inventive apparatus to permit measurements to be carried out at the same time along a multiplicity of measuring tracks across the whole width of a document to be examined.
According to a further idea of the present invention, the magnetoresistive elements used are not GMR elements but alternatively so-called “spin-dependent tunneling” (SDT) elements. Said SDT elements have a higher sensitivity than GMR elements by a factor of 10-20 and are therefore particularly preferable.
It should be emphasized that the features of the dependent claims and of the embodiments stated in the following description, in combination or independently of each other and in particular of the subject matter of the main claims, e.g. in magnetic measurement procedures without the use of lock-in amplifiers, describe further basic ideas and can be advantageously used.
Further features and advantages of the invention will result from the following description of various inventive embodiments and alternatives in connection with the accompanying drawings. These show:
A measuring element 6 which detects a corresponding change of the electromagnetic alternating field is provided between the coils 3. The measuring element 6 can be for example a GMR element which changes its electrical properties when a magnetic field is applied. The GMR element is subject to a signal whose amplitude changes according to the change of the magnetic field. The further processing of the amplitude-modulated GMR output signal will be described hereinafter with reference to
As mentioned above, a “spin-dependent tunneling” (SDT) element can also preferably be used, due to the higher measuring sensitivity, in addition or as an alternative to the GMR elements in this and all other embodiments.
If such a measuring head 1 is to detect the total width of the test object, the magnetic field must be dimensioned accordingly strongly because of the large air-gap. For example, an excitation burst of high current intensity can be passed through the coils for this purpose. However, it is also possible to dispose a plurality of small measuring heads side by side.
Since conventional lock-in amplifiers are suitable only for processing analog signals, the reference signal can be for example an alternating current signal. The changes of the electromagnetic alternating field which change the electrical resistance of the GMR element 6 cause a change in the amplitude of the voltage dropping across the GMR element 6. This alternating current signal with changing amplitude is made available to the lock-in amplifier 7 as the output signal of the GMR element. After the preamplified GMR output signal has been multiplied by the same-frequency reference signal in the synchronous demodulator 9, a low-pass filter 11 filters out spurious high-frequency components of the signal, so that a signal is obtained that is proportional to the signal amplitude of the GMR output signal.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 008 967.4 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/001702 | 2/24/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/14/2007 |