The present invention relates to a method of forming color laser images. It finds applications in particular in identity images for identity documents identity cards, credit cards, health insurance cards, passports, drivers licenses, secure entry badges, etc.
Patent WO 2011/124774 A1 describes a method of personalizing embedded latent images for identity documents, including a latent image made up of a matrix of pixels constituted by color subpixels embedded in a transparent protection layer. With the help of a laser beam acting through the transparent protection layer, gray levels are created on the subpixels by covering they with a black non-reflecting surface, thereby creating the gray levels of the final color laser image. This treatment serves to personalize the latent image that is constituted by the color subpixels.
The image as personalized in this way is observed by reflection through the transparent protection layer. The personalized image must be sufficiently reflective to enable it to be observed in ambient light without having recourse to an additional light source.
Patent application No. 11/00578 describes a method of making a highly reflective laser image comprising a latent image made up of color subpixels surrounded by non-colored transparent zones and covered in a transparent protection layer that is sensitive to laser radiation, that is referred to below as the “laserable” layer. A laser beam causes non-reflecting black surfaces to appear in this laserable protection layer, which surfaces cover the surfaces of the color subpixels and subpixels and the non-colored surfaces to a greater or lesser extent for the purpose of imparting the gray levels of a personalized image. The personalized image is seen by reflection on underlying reflective sublayers, in particular white sublayers, or through varnish, in order to increase the reflectivity of the image. Image reflectivity is of fundamental importance since it must enable the eye to act by additive composition to integrate the light beams with the colors of the subpixels and from the non-colored zones, as emitted by back reflection of the incident light.
Although advantageous in some respects, those structures nevertheless put a limit on the quality of the personalized image. The non-reflecting black surfaces that form the gray levels of the personalized image are situated either on the subpixels, or above the subpixels of the latent image, and they form shadow effects that darken the final personalized image.
An object of the present invention is to remedy the drawbacks of the prior art by improving the quality of the final personalized image. To do this, the invention proposes forming the non-reflecting surfaces that constitute the gray levels of the final personalized image under the latent image constituted by the color subpixels.
More precisely, the invention provides a method of forming personalized color laser images from an assembly comprising a transparent protection layer, a printed latent image constituted by color subpixels and by non-colored surfaces, a laserable layer under the latent image, reflective means, and a laser beam that passes through the protection layer, through the subpixels of the latent image, and the non-colored surfaces and forms the gray levels of a final personalized image in the laserable layer, the assembly being laminated on a medium.
The gray levels that lead to the latent image being personalized in order to form the final image are calculated with the help of software that takes an original image, segments it into subpixels, calculates the corresponding color shades, and determines the gray levels that are to be carbonized in the laserable layer under the color subpixels and the non-colored zones of the latent image in order to obtain the same color shades as those in the original image.
The gray levels of the personalized image are obtained by a degree of blackening that is made proportional to the energy deposited by the laser by means of linearizing software, known to the person skilled in the art, and also by varying the areas of the carbonization.
Furthermore, the energy of the laser beam is adjusted as a function of the colors of the subpixels, and of the non-colored zones through which it passes, since the required laser energy needs to be adjusted depending on Lbs colors of the subpixels and on the transparency of the non-colored zones.
By way of non-limiting example, the laserable materials that form the gray levels of the personalized image by being carbonized under the effect of a laser beam may be constituted by polycarbonates, certain treated polyvinyl chlorides, treated acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrenes, or treated polyethylene terephthalates.
In particular implementations of the invention;
The thickness of the laserable layer or the thickness of the doped portion of the document medium should be as thin as possible, while being compatible with the required gray levels. This thickness may advantageously lie in the range a few micrometers to about one hundred micrometers.
The color subpixels are printed by offset printing, ink-jet printing, or any other technique known to the person skilled in the art. Non-colored zones or non-colored subpixels serve to increase the reflectivity of the final image The color subpixels and the non-colored zones are organized in parallel columns or in small areas that are uniformly distributed. The latent image may be constituted by triplets or quadruplets of color subpixels. The colors of the subpixels are preferably selected from colors that are independent, i.e. mixing any two of them cannot lead to a third subpixel color being formed. These colors include red, green, and blue, or yellow, magenta, and cyan.
In the second fabrication step, referred to as “laminating”, the protection layer and the layer of laserable material are bonded hot under pressure, onto the body of the identity document, thereby embedding the matrix of color subpixels and of non-colored zones between the protection layer and the layer of laserable material.
In another variant of the invention, during lamination, the protection layer may be molded to give it specific shapes, such as a lens array, enabling the laser beam at particular angles of incidence to etch under the latent image so as to personalize a plurality of distinct color laser images.
The laser carbonization that causes the gray levels to appear obstructs incident light to a greater or lesser extent and also the reflected light that passes through the color subpixels and the non-colored zones of the latent image, thereby limiting interfering reflections and shadowing effects that might obscure the final personalized image.
The invention also provides a document including a personalized laser image made by performing the above method.
This document comprises a transparent protection sheet, a latent image constituted by an array of color subpixels and of non-colored zones, a layer of laserable material situated under the latent image, said sheet being carbonized in at least in part by laser radiation, and a document medium. The protection sheet, the latent image, the laserable layer, and the medium are suitable for being laminated together.
In particular embodiments
The invention appears better from the following description given by way of non-limiting explanation. The description refers to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11/03919 | Dec 2011 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR2012/000501 | 12/5/2012 | WO | 00 | 6/19/2014 |