This invention relates to a method of manufacturing flexible magnetic tape having a permanently structured magnetic characteristic which varies from place to place in two different directions in the plane of the tape.
A known method of manufacturing permanently structured magnetic tape is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,023,204, and is shown schematically in
In a modification of the above method, disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,873,975, data can be coded in direction 8 across the tape by substituting a segmented magnet with a plurality of independently controllable write heads for the electromagnet 6. This can provide the advantage that after slitting the substrate, each length of tape can have different data. This method is reasonably satisfactory for making permanently structured magnetic tape for use on IS0781X cards, where the width of tape reels required lie between 11 and 15 mm. Typically, 15 independent channels are created simultaneously across the substrate, each one 11-15 mm wide.
However, the method is unsuitable for manufacturing narrow tapes of the order of 1 or 2 mm across as might be embedded into banknotes, because of the lateral spreading of the magnetic field from each head of the further magnet. The method also has the disadvantage that many independent channel driver circuits are required, one for each write head. To make 1 mm wide threads, the required number of channels will increase by an order of magnitude (for example from 15 to 150). The cost of providing so many circuits, and checking the calibration of each one periodically, becomes increasingly high for narrow threads. It is an object of the present invention to mitigate the above disadvantages.
According to the present invention there is provided a method of manufacturing flexible magnetic tape. This method is advantageous for manufacturing magnetic security elements having a width of 2 mm or less, but can be employed to make any width of tape.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings, in which:
The oblique angle between the direction of orientation of the particles controlled by the respective electromagnets is preferably chosen so that both orientations can be sensed by the same read head.
The essential feature of the present invention is to provide a detectable modulation of a detectable characteristic in two different directions making an oblique angle with one another. The oblique angle is chosen such that both modulations can be sensed by the same magnetic read head. In the above described embodiment this is achieved by patterning a single layer of magnetic particles using a pair of electromagnets having variable field strengths. There are, however, alternative ways of producing a modulation detectable by a magnetic read head. For example, the slurry may be coated onto a flexible substrate which has previously been provided with diagonal metal stripes using selective deposition or deposition and selective removal. Such metal stripes preferably have a thickness in the range 5 to 15 microns. The second electromagnet is then used to orient the magnetic particles in the slurry as before. The metal stripes can lie either on the same side of the substrate as the magnetic particles or on the opposite side. As an alternative, the striped metal layer may be deposited onto the solidified slurry layer after the solidification has taken place, so that there is less thickness modulation in the magnetic layer. This arrangement is shown in cross section in
In the case of metal stripes, an active read head can detect increased eddy currents in the presence of one of the metal stripes, and so can produce a signal in response to the presence or absence of metal, as well as a signal in response to the magnetic characteristics.
A further way of producing a detectable modulation would be to print the substrate under the slurry with a striped non-magnetic insulative layer (15). In this case the read head would detect variations in the thickness of the layer (16) including the magnetic particles, as the slurry would provide a flat surface but the underlying topography would cause variations in magnetic layer thickness. This arrangement is shown schematically in
As mentioned previously, the horizontal banding in
The Figures are not drawn to scale. In practice the data is binary and is encoded using the well known “F2F” convention. The bit length created by the second magnet is typically about 0.65 mm for a binary zero, and 2×0.325 mm for a binary one. The bit length created by the first magnet or other modulation means may be of the order of 4 mm. Therefore the section of tape shown in
The modulation achieved by the first magnet will modulate the amplitude envelope of the signal due to the second magnet. In regions where there is no orientation by the first magnet, the modulation provided by the second magnet will be reduced by about 20 percent. The exact amplitude modulation can be adjusted using the orientation angle, field strength, and spatial extent (head gap) of the first magnet.
In practice, a magnetic read head reading the data stored in a magnetic record carrier according to the present invention will sense a signal similar to that shown in
After a magnetic tape according to the present invention has been made using the above method, typically 15 cms in width (i.e. the Y direction), it can be slit into 100-150 thin threads in the X direction. These can be embedded in documents, such as for example banknotes, in the same way as metal threads are sometimes embedded.
As an alternative to the above embodiment, it is possible to use three magnets. For example, the first magnet might comprise a “preliminary” permanent magnet oriented at 20 degrees to the X direction. The second magnet might comprise an electromagnet similar to the first magnet described for the first embodiment above, this second magnet being arranged to encode data using a long bit period such as 4 mm and being oriented at 40 degrees to the X direction. The third magnet would then comprise a further electromagnet arranged to encode data using a shorter bit period, such as for example 0.7 mm. In this second embodiment, the amplitude modulation is controlled by the angular difference between two regions having orientations at two different diagonal angles, namely 20 and 40 degrees in the present example. Modulation in the X direction will typically involve pulse width modulation such as F2F encoding. Such modulation can be discriminated from amplitude modulation as described above by techniques known to persons skilled in the art.
The waveforms used in the diagonal modulation can conveniently be locked to the modulation used in the X direction. Such locking would enable the read system to compare the relative phases of the pulse width (X) modulation and the amplitude modulation. From the relative phase, the read system can compute the value on the Y axis at which a given thin thread was originally manufactured in the wide tape, and convert this to a measurement of position relative to a known absolute reference such as one edge of the substrate.
The concept of locking will be described further with reference to the first embodiment described above using two magnets. The oblique (first) magnet can be locked to a signal divided down from the lower significance digits of the X modulation of the second magnet. In the case of a pre-patterned flexible substrate having diagonal strips of metal, the X modulation could be phase locked to one Y track reading the diagonal modulation. Such locking techniques are known to persons skilled in the art.
Referring to
In another alternative scheme, an arrangement of three magnets can be used to impart a greater variation in modulation depth whilst imparting positional information in the y direction. In this scheme the first two magnets are the same as magnets 4 and 6 shown in the prior art scheme of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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9922516.1 | Sep 1999 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB00/03634 | 9/22/2000 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/22411 | 3/29/2001 | WO | A |
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3873975 | Miklos et al. | Mar 1975 | A |
4023204 | Lee | May 1977 | A |
4104513 | Pearce | Aug 1978 | A |
5834748 | Litman | Nov 1998 | A |