The present application relates to a method for controlling a touch sensor, especially to a method for detecting an actuation position where the user touches or approaches the touch sensor and detecting a force being applied to the touch sensor. The present application relates furthermore to a controller for controlling a touch sensor, a sensor arrangement, and a device comprising the sensor arrangement.
Touch sensors are known in the art for controlling devices, especially mobile or portable devices, via a user interface. The touch sensor may comprise a touch sensible panel which is arranged on top of a display forming a so-called touch screen. The touch screen provides a very intuitive way of operating the device. Information can be displayed on the display and in response to the displayed information the user may touch the display for initiating actions or operations. The touch sensor may work by detecting a change of capacitance when the user approaches or touches the touch sensor. The touch sensor may furthermore provide a location information indicating where the user touches or approaches the touch sensor. Thus a two-dimensional user interface may be provided. In connection with complex applications, a three-dimensional user interface may be preferred. A third input dimension may be realized by measuring a force being applied by the user to a surface of the touch screen. A strain gauge sensor may be used for measuring a strain on for example a glass window of the touch screen created by a force applied by the user on the glass window. However, strain gauge sensoring is very sensitive with respect to electrical noise present in an environment of the strain gauge sensor. For example, the display as well as the touch sensing may transmit noise signals, for example a square wave signal, of several hundred kHz at a voltage level of several volts, for example 5-10 V, which may disturb the strain gauge sensoring.
Therefore, there is a need to provide a simple, reliable and robust measuring of a strain, especially with respect to electrical and electromagnetic noise.
According to the present invention, this object is achieved by a method for controlling a touch sensor as defined in claim 1, a controller for controlling a touch sensor as defined in claim 9, a sensor arrangement as defined in claim 11, and a device as defined in claim 13. The dependent claims define preferred and advantageous embodiments of the invention.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a method for controlling a touch sensor is provided. The touch sensor comprises a support layer, for example a glass window or a resin window, and an electrically conductive sensor structure thereon. The electrically conductive sensor structure forms a plurality of capacitors. Each of the capacitors has a capacitance varying in response to a user touching or approaching the corresponding capacitor. The electrically conductive sensor structure comprises a piezoresistive material and is furthermore configured to provide a resistance varying in response to a force being applied to the support layer. For example, the resistance may vary in response to a varying strain applied to the piezoresistive material upon a force applied by the user to the support layer bending the support layer. According to the method, an alternating electrical signal is supplied to the electrically conductive sensor structure for scanning the plurality of capacitors. An actuation position where the user touches or approaches the touch sensor is determined based on the alternating electrical signal and the capacitances of the plurality of capacitors. Furthermore, an electrical signal, which is a function of the resistance of the electrically conductive sensor structure, is detected and the detected electrical signal is synchronously demodulated. The synchronous demodulation is performed based on the alternating electrical signal. The demodulated electrical signal may be furthermore low-pass filtered.
The electrical signal, which is a function of the resistance of the electrically conductive sensor structure, varies in response to the force being applied to the support layer. However, the electrical signal may be disturbed by noise, DC drifts in the electronics and line noise pickup. By detecting the electrical signal while the electrically conductive sensor structure is supplied with the alternating electrical signal, and synchronously demodulating the electrical signal and low-pass filtering the demodulated electrical signal, an amplitude information corresponding to the resistance can be recovered. The disturbances all get mixed to the carrier frequency of the alternating electrical signal and can be removed by means of the low-pass filter. Therefore, the noise level will be greatly reduced. Furthermore, no synchronization between the touch and force sensing is needed. The force sensing can be done at the same time while the touch sensing is done. There is no need to have a blanking period where the touch sensing is switched off while the force is measured and vice versa. Thus, the total scan rate will speed up and hardware and software for implementing the method can be simplified.
According to an embodiment, the demodulation and filtering of the detected electrical signal is performed with a lock-in amplifier. The lock-in amplification is a technique used to separate a small, narrow-band signal from interfering noise. The lock-in amplifier acts as a detector and narrow-band filter combined. Very small signals can be detected in the presence of large amounts of uncorrelated noise when the frequency and phase of the desired signal are known. A sensing circuit that uses a DC excitation may be plagued by errors caused by thermocouple effects, 1/f noise, DC drifts in the electronics, and line noise pickup. By exciting the force sensoring circuit with an alternating electrical signal, amplifying the detected electrical signal with an amplifier, and synchronously demodulating and low-pass filtering the resulting signal, the AC phase and amplitude information from the sensor circuit is recovered as a DC signal at the output of the filter. The disturbances are mixed to the carrier frequency of the alternating electrical signal and are removed by means of the low-pass filter.
According to a further embodiment, performing the demodulation of the detected electrical signal comprises multiplying the detected electrical signal by the alternating electrical signal. Thus, the demodulation of the detected electrical signal can be easily accomplished. Multiplying the detected electrical signal by the alternating electrical signal may be performed in an analog circuit or may be performed in a digital domain, for example in a digital signal processor, after converting the detected electrical signal into a corresponding digital signal.
According to a further embodiment, the electrical signal is detected with a Wheatstone bridge. A part of the piezoresistive material of the electrically conductive sensor structure may constitute a branch of the Wheatstone bridge. By supplying the alternating electrical signal to the electrically conductive sensor structure, the Wheatstone bridge is supplied with the alternating electrical signal as a supply voltage. The Wheatstone bridge is able, to detect small signal values or small changes in signal values and may therefore advantageously be used for detecting the electrical signal which is a function of the resistance of the electrically conductive sensor structure.
According to a further embodiment, the demodulation of the detected electrical signal is performed by converting the detected electrical signal into a digital signal, and performing a synchronous demodulation of the digital signal based on the alternating electrical signal. The synchronous demodulation of the digital signal may comprise a determination of a frequency spectrum of the digital signal and a generation of the demodulated digital signal based on the frequency spectrum and a frequency of the alternating electrical signal.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a controller for controlling a touch sensor is provided. The touch sensor comprises a support layer and an electrically conductive sensor structure thereon. The electrically conductive sensor structure forms a plurality of capacitors. The capacitors may be arranged in a matrix comprising several rows and columns of electrically conductive lines. The capacitors may be constituted at crossing points of the rows and columns. The capacitors have a capacitance varying in response to a user touching or approaching the corresponding capacitor. The electrically conductive sensor structure comprises a piezoresistive material and is configured to provide a resistance varying in response to a force being applied to the support layer. The controller is configured the supply an alternating electrical signal to the electrically conductive sensor structure for scanning the plurality of capacitors. The alternating electrical signal may be supplied to the electrically conductive sensor structure such that for example the columns are sequentially energized with the alternating electrical signal and the capacitive sensing is performed at the rows. An actuation position, where the user touches or approaches the touch sensor, is determined based on the alternating electrical signal and the capacitances of the plurality of capacitors. Furthermore, the controller is configured to detect an electrical signal which is a function of the resistance of the electrically conductive sensor structure. For example, a current through one of the columns of the electrically conductive sensor structure may be detected as the electrical signal. Finally, the controller is configured to perform a synchronous demodulation of the detected electrical signal based on the alternating electrical signal. Thus, the controller can detect the resistance with a noise level greatly reduced. Based on the resistance a force applied to the support layer may be determined by the controller.
Furthermore, the controller may be configured to perform the above-described methods and embodiments.
According to a further aspect of the present invention, a sensor arrangement is provided which comprises the above-described controller and the above-described touch sensor. The piezoresistive material of the electrically conductive sensor structure may comprise for example indium tin oxide (ITO), graphene, or carbon nanotubes. These materials provide a piezoresistive property and may be coated on a transparent support layer in a thin layer, for example on a glass surface or a resin surface. A thin layer of these materials has a high transparency and thus a sensor arrangement may be arranged on top of a display for constituting a touch screen for a user interface.
According to a further aspect of the present invention, a device comprising the above-described sensor arrangement is provided. The device comprises a mobile or portable device, for example a mobile phone, a personal digital assistant, a mobile music player or a mobile navigation system.
Although specific features described in the above summary and in the following detailed description are described in connection with specific embodiments and aspects, it is to be understood that the features of the embodiments and aspects may be combined with each other unless specifically noted otherwise.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In the following, exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described in more detail. It has to be understood that the following description is given only for the purpose of illustrating the principles of the invention and is not to be taken in a limiting sense. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined only by the appended claims and is not intended to be limited by the exemplary embodiments hereinafter.
It is to be understood that the features of the various exemplary embodiments described herein may be combined with each other unless specifically noted otherwise. Same reference signs in the various drawings and the following description refer to similar or identical components.
The touch sensor 20 comprises a support layer 21 and an electrically conductive sensor structure 22-27 thereon. The support layer 21 may comprise for example an isolating transparent material, for example a glass window or a resin window. The electrically conductive sensor structure 22-27 comprises a piezoresistive material, for example indium tin oxide (ITO), graphene or carbon nanotubes. As shown in
The touch sensor 20 described above is illustrated with three row electrodes 22-24 and three column electrodes 25-27. However, these numbers are only exemplary and any other number of row and column electrodes may be used depending on the size of the touch sensor 20 and the required resolution.
The control circuit furthermore comprises a Wheatstone bridge 40, an AC amplifier 41 and a lock-in amplifier 42. The Wheatstone bridge 40 comprises three resistors 43-45 and at least one of the electrodes 22-27 of the touch sensor 20 as a forth resistor. The resistors of the Wheatstone bridge are connected in a square. The AC source 30 supplies via the switch matrix 31 a supply voltage to one diagonal of the resistor square. Inputs of the amplifier 41 are sensing a voltage over the other diagonal of the resistor square of the Wheatstone bridge 40. The Wheatstone bridge is adapted to measure extremely small changes in resistance. As the piezoresistive material of the electrodes 22-27 of the touch sensor 20 provides only a very small change in resistance due to a change in strain, the Wheatstone bridge 40 is a very appropriate way of measuring the change of resistance of e.g. the electrode 25. However, any other kind of high precision measuring of the resistance or change in resistance of the electrode 25 may be used instead of the Wheatstone bridge 40. The output of the amplifier 41 is fed into the lock-in amplifier 42. The lock-in amplifier 42 comprises a demodulator 46 and a low pass filter 47. The signal from the AC source 30 is fed to the demodulator 46. The demodulator 46 may comprise a multiplier multiplying the output of the amplifier 41 and the signal from the AC source 30. Thus, the output signal from the amplifier 41 is synchronously demodulated with the AC source 30. The low pass filter 47 filters the demodulated output from the demodulator 46 and provides a signal which varies in response to a change in resistance of the column electrode 25. The output from the low pass filter 47 may be supplied to the microcontroller 33 which determines from the change in resistance of the column electrode 25 a force being applied from the user to the touch sensor 20.
The force sensing by monitoring the change in resistance of the piezoresistive material of the electrodes 22-27 may in general be disturbed by the capacitive touch sensing and electromagnetic fields from a display which may be arranged near the touch sensor 20. The lock-in amplifier 42 helps to separate a small narrow-band signal from interfering noise. The lock-in amplifier acts as a combined detector and narrow-band filter. Very small signals can be detected in the presence of large amounts of uncorrelated noise when the frequency and phase of the detected signal are known. Frequency and phase are known from the AC source 30 and thus, by demodulating the signal detected by the Wheatstone bridge 40, uncorrelated noise can be easily removed.
The electrically conductive sensor structure 71-79, i.e. the electrode structure 79 as well as the strain gauge sensor structures 71-78, are connected to the AC source 30 and supplied with an alternating electrical signal. As described in connection with
While exemplary embodiments have been described above, various modifications may be implemented in other embodiments. For example, one or more of the resistors 33-35 of the Wheatstone bridge 40 may be replaced by further electrodes 22-27 of the touch sensor 20. Furthermore, the lock-in amplifier 42 may be implemented in a digital domain, for example in a software of the microcontroller 33. Therefore, the output of the amplifier 41 may be converted with an analog-to-digital converter into a corresponding digital signal and the demodulation and the low-pass filtering may be performed on the digital signal in the microcontroller 33. For demodulating and low-pass filtering the digital signal in the digital domain, a frequency spectrum of the digital signal may be determined by the microcontroller 33 and the demodulated digital signal may be generated based on the frequency spectrum and the frequency of the AC source 30.
Finally, it is to be understood that all the embodiments described above are considered to be comprised by the present invention as it is defined by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP12/01165 | 3/15/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/29/2013 |