Method for producing counterfeit-proof confidential and valuable documents, master for use in this method and confidential and valuable documents produced therewith

Abstract
A production method is provided by which a copied volume hologram from a multi-layer master is later customized by utilization of the color tuning properties of the light-curable materials used for the application onto personal documents. These holographic individual data, such as a passport photo, are also separately detectable, without the holographic elements copied from the master, that are visible under other viewing angles, impairing the visibility of the individual data. The volume hologram overlay obtained by this method is applied on personal and valuable documents to increase protection against forgery, possesses superimposed optically variable items of information that are separately visible under different viewing angles and give a defined color change under different view angles, wherein at least one of these items of optical information represents individual personal data, in particular a passport photograph.
Description

The invention relates to a method for producing counterfeit-proof confidential and valuable documents, a master to be used in this method, and a confidential and valuable document produced by means of this method, in accordance with the preamble of Claims 1, 3, and 12.


It is known that volume hologram overlays with individualised personal data are used for the protection of personal documents against forgery (EP 0896260 A2). The personal data, such as for example a photograph of the document owner, are in this case arranged separately next to other visual information, such as for example a three-dimensional object and other holographic optical elements that are difficult to imitate. The pieces of information arranged next to one another are not optimally linked together, in order to prevent unauthorised copying of individual holographic elements and manipulation of the personal data.


In EP 0701 183 A2, a multi-layer master is described, onto which a holographic recording material is laminated. The copy is made by means of at least two laser beams, which strike the master at different angles, are incoherent relative to each other or have different polarisation directions, so that all information can be reconstructed without errors. The laser beams can also have different wavelengths. The master here consists of multiple volume hologram layers with differently aligned Bragg planes (reflection volume holograms and/or transmission volume holograms).


Therefore, it is known that overlapping, differently coloured, holographic standard information items can be copied from a master by means of multiple laser beams of different wavelength. For a continuous mass production of such holograms by contact copying however, for example using a master drum replicator, a complicated procedure for continuously and dynamically changing the deflection of the laser beams would be necessary, as would a means of regulating them in a tuned manner.


U.S. Pat. No. 5,856,048 concerns holograms for the forgery protection of cards, etc., which are individualised by means of colour tuning, i.e. lamination of an expanding film onto them, or printing of an item of information by means of expanding printing ink, wherein numbers, letters and patterns are applied. In the area to be expanded the hologram has uniform Bragg planes, and overlapping holographic elements cannot therefore be introduced in the hologram region to be individualised. Connecting individual items of information (passport photo) with other holographic (standard) elements in an overlapping fashion in such a way that a higher forgery protection is achieved at the absolute minimum material cost, is not possible or not described.


In WO 02/070275 A2, a colour-tuning film is also used for the retroactive individualisation of holograms, before the individualised hologram is applied on to the document in a further step. In this case the area to be individualised is a holographic mirror, and therefore also has uniform Bragg planes, by means of which for example passport photos are cannot also be connected (in an overlapping fashion) to holographic standard elements.


Finally, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,913,990 A, a liquid solvent-containing expansion medium (thinned with solvent) is proposed, which is applied onto the hologram over its whole area, which means that the hologram swells over its whole area. According to the duration of the action, a certain colour effect is thereby obtained over the whole area. After hardening in UV light, the solvent must be finally removed, however. An expansion only in subregions of the hologram surface, and therefore the possibility of introducing additional items of individual information into the hologram, is not disclosed.


The problem addressed by the invention therefore is to disclose a method, a master and a personal and valuable document of the above-mentioned type, with the aid of which the risk of forgery and manipulation is minimised in a simple and reliable manner.


This problem is solved by means of a method according to the invention according to Claim 1, a master according to Claim 3 and by means of a personal and valuable document according to Claim 12. Advantageous configurations of the invention result from the respective dependent claims to which reference is made.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 shows a first viewing angle of a reflection volume hologram with holographic standard elements and a passport photo;



FIG. 2 shows a second viewing angle of the reflection volume hologram of FIG. 1 illustrating a holographic pattern applied to the reflection volume hologram;



FIG. 3 shows a third viewing angle of the reflection volume hologram of FIG. 1 illustrating a defined color change;



FIG. 4 shows a fourth viewing angle of the reflection volume hologram of FIG. 1 illustrating another defined color change;



FIG. 5 shows a partially transparent film applied onto another holographic layer with an incident laser light being multiply reflected and refracted;



FIG. 6 shows a photopolymer film and a transparent volume holographic film laminated over the film of FIG. 5 and illustrating the relief structures and a holographic element;



FIG. 7 shows an exposed photopolymer film;



FIG. 8 shows the exposed photopolymer film of FIG. 7 applied to a personal document by a liquid adhesive and an LCD mask generated from data in the document;



FIG. 9 shows the exposure and curing of the adhesive of FIG. 8; and



FIG. 10 shows a three-dimensional object with a holographic pattern applied to a reflection volume hologram.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

According to the invention a volume hologram overlay 1 is created, which when applied on personal and valuable documents, contributes to an increase in forgery protection, wherein it possesses variable items of information 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, that overlap one another optically and are separately visible under different viewing angles, and one of these optical information items represents individual personal data 3, in particular a coloured passport photograph.


In this process a reflection volume hologram 1 (overlay) with holographic standard elements 2, 4, 5, 6 and a passport photo 3 are applied on the document surface, at least one standard element of which is a holographic pattern (5 or 6), which covers all other holographic optical elements in the volume hologram, such as for example a three-dimensional object 4 and the passport photo 3, and an optical connection of all holographic elements to one another therefore results (FIG. 1-4). In this arrangement the visual recognisability of the respective holographic elements 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, in particular the personal data such as for example the passport photo, is preserved and is not adversely affected by the other optically holographic elements.


The problem is solved in particular by the fact that in the manufacture of the volume hologram (1) applied on the personal and valuable document, a photopolymer film 13 is preferably used, which is laminated on a holographic master consisting of multiple holographic layers 8,9 and subsequently all standard optical elements 2, 4, 5, 6 of the master are copied into the film with only one laser light beam. Here, the master 7 consists of at least two holographic layers 8, 9, while at least of one the layers is a partially transparent film (9), advantageously with a film layer thickness of a few μm, which is applied onto the other (lower) layer 8 over its whole area (FIG. 5). This partially transparent film (9) has for example a holographic surface relief 10, preferably a holographic endless pattern 5′ and further optically variable elements 6′. For example, this film can be a holographic embossed film with a highly refractive coating of the holographic surface relief, preferably zinc sulphide, titanium oxide or partially transparent, semi-demetallised metal, for example aluminium, with partially demetallised areas. However, it can also be a film with volume holographic patterns and other optical elements. The material of the hologram-carrying master layer 8, on which the partially transparent film 9 is applied, can be for example a silver halide film or photo polymer film, in which holographic elements such as e.g. a three-dimensional object 4′, an extensive, homogeneous volume lattice 2′ and further optical elements such as position marks and other marks are present. The hologram-carrying master layer 8 can however also be a surface hologram, for example embossed into a metallised film. Owing to the partial transmissivity of the film 9 applied on the layer 8 of the master 7, the holographic elements 5′, 6′ of the film 9 can be copied into the polymer film by multiple reflection and diffraction of the incident laser light 20, i.e. by a first reflection and diffraction 20a at the relief structures 10 of the partially transparent film 9 and additionally by a second diffraction 20b of the light reflected at the hologram 8 lying underneath it. At the same time, all holographic elements of the layer 8 arranged under the partially transparent film 9 can also be copied into the polymer film by diffraction and reflection of the incident light 20c.


As a result, a holographic copy is obtained in the exposed photopolymer film 13′, in which all holographic standard elements overlap one another but can be detected separately at different viewing angles. The multiple diffraction of the surface relief elements 5′, 6′ during the laser copying causes these elements 5, 6a, 6b in the exposed polymer film 13′, observed in reflection, to show a colour-flip effect when a change in the viewing angle occurs.


A transparent volume hologram film 14 can additionally be laminated onto the partially transparent film 9, the holographic elements of which function as a beam divider in the transmission mode, and therefore divide the incident laser copying beam into multiple beams, which strike the underlying layers 8, 9 at different angles and are diffracted back in different ways (FIG. 6). This enables the holographic elements 2, 4, 5, 6 copied into the photo polymer films 13 of the layers 8 and 9 with one laser light wavelength to be reconstructed in different colours as desired, if the Bragg conditions are fulfilled.


After a laser copy has taken place, the film 13′ is developed in the usual manner by the use of a photopolymer film (FIG. 7), for example fixed with UV light and baked at fairly high temperatures, preferably at 120° C.


The holographic passport photo 3 is produced for example during the application of the exposed and developed film 13′ on the personal document 17 in the applied film 13′, preferably by a liquid, solvent-free, optically cured, monomer-containing adhesive 15 being applied onto the document for gluing the hologram film. The adhesive is first exposed by a mask 16 carrying personal data, and after a few seconds, preferably 10-300 sec, is cured over its whole surface a second time without a mask in order to attain its full adhesive strength (FIG. 8, FIG. 9). The first mask exposure ensures that only those adhesive areas that are located under the light transparent mask areas are cured, while the unexposed monomers of the adhesive have time to penetrate into the polymer film and to expand it, which noticeably manifests itself in a colour change of these holographic areas. The advantage of this individualisation method consists in the fact that the personal data already present, for example in printed form, on the document 17 can be scanned in the application station, and these data can be used for generating the mask, for example an LCD mask 16 or a mask printed on the applied film by the inkjet method, which means that expensive data logistics becomes unnecessary. Simultaneously, the liquid adhesive 15 necessary for permanently bonding the hologram overlay to the personal document is used for the holographic customisation, i.e. a minimum of material usage is achieved. Likewise, it is possible firstly to bond the not yet customised film 13′ to the personal document and in a later step to carry out the individualisation of the applied volume hologram overlay during the coating of the hologram surface with protective lacquer, for example by silk-screen application of light-curable monomer-based lacquers, in the same manner.


With this fluid tuning method, one obtains holographic reproducible passport pictures with a surprisingly faithful reproduction of detail, brightness and polychromicity, without the need for multiple lasers of different wavelengths.


As well as the optical connection of all holographic elements of the volume hologram overlay 1 and the resulting higher level of counterfeit-proofing, the advantages of the invention are that only one laser copying beam is used for the production of overlapping holographic elements with different colour reproduction and therefore the equipment costs for a continuous mass production of exposed film are substantially reduced.


The connection of the various superimposed holographic elements furthermore yields possibilities for new holographic image elements, which arise through combination of the individual components under certain viewing angles, and in addition make the forgery of individual elements more difficult. For example, the three-dimensional object 4 with the holographic patterns 5, 6 can yield a meaningful morphing effect (FIG. 10), given a precise arrangement of these elements with respect to each other in the master.


An improvement in the holographic design in the volume-hologram overlay according to the invention can also be obtained if the holographic elements of the master are combined with opaque areas or contours, for example by imprinting of the uppermost master layer or between the individual master layers, or by arrangement of partially transparent film parts 9 on the lower master layers, these film parts 9 being coated with highly refractive materials of different transparency.


An advantage of the production method according to the invention is that the individual passport photo 3 is not produced until after the laser copying of the standard holographic elements 2, 4, 5, 6 from the master 7 according to the invention, immediately after the application to the document, and therefore any expensive data logistics for assignment of the holograms to the respective customised documents is unnecessary.


By using a multi-layer master with a partially transparent, hologram-carrying uppermost master layer, which is located on further hologram-carrying master layers, overlapping holographic elements, completely and separately visible under different viewing angles can be copied into a volume hologram with only one laser beam.


By means of the production method according to the invention, this copied volume hologram is later customised by utilisation of the colour tuning properties of the light-curable materials used for the application onto personal documents. These holographic individual data, such as passport photo (3), are also separately detectable, without the holographic elements (2, 4, 5, 6) copied from the master, that are visible under other viewing angles, impairing the visibility of the individual data.


The volume hologram overlay (1) obtained by this method, is applied on personal and valuable documents to increase protection against forgery, possesses superimposed optically variable items of information (2, 3, 4, 5, 6), that are separately visible under different viewing angles and give a defined colour change (6a, 6b) under different view angles, wherein at least one of these items of optical information represents individual personal data (3), in particular a passport photograph.

Claims
  • 1. Method for producing counterfeit-proof confidential and valuable documents with a volume hologram applied thereon,
  • 2. Method according to claim 1,
  • 3. Master for producing the holographic standard elements of a reflection volume hologram in accordance with the method according to claim 1, wherein, the master (7) with the holographic standards elements (2, 4, 5, 6) consists of at least two overlapping hologram-carrying layers (8, 9), of which at least the uppermost hologram-carrying master layer (9) consists of a partially transparent embossed hologram film with a layer thickness of a few μm with holographic surface relief elements (10, 5′, 6′), which are located over the volume holographic elements (2′, 4′) of the lower master layers (8).
  • 4. Master according to claim 3,
  • 5. Master according to claim 2,
  • 6. Master according to claim 5,
  • 7. Master according to claim 3,
  • 8. Master according to claim 7,
  • 9. Master according to claim 3,
  • 10. Master according to claim 3,
  • 11. Master according to claim 2,
  • 12. Customized volume hologram for increasing the counterfeit protection of personal and valuable documents, produced according to a method according to claim 1, wherein the volume hologram consists of a layer that is applied onto the document and all holographic information of the layer, including the individual holographic personal information such as passport photo (3), are superimposed on one another, and can be detected separately under different viewing angles and in different colors.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
10 2007 019 837.1 Apr 2007 DE national
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

Applicants claim priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of German Application No. 10 2007 019 837.1 filed on Apr. 25, 2007. Applicants also claim priority under 35 U.S.C. §120 of International Application No. PCT/DE2008/000261 filed Feb. 13, 2008. This application is a by-pass continuation application of said International Application No. PCT/DE2008/000261 filed Feb. 13, 2008. The International Application under PCT Article 21(2) was not published in English. The disclosure of the aforesaid International Application and German Application are incorporated by reference.

Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/DE2008/000261 Feb 2008 US
Child 12589454 US