1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a method of manufacturing precisely formed taggant materials or particles of uniform size and information content, preferably formed from polymeric, protein, or carbohydrate materials. Specific combinations of shape, size, color, reflectivity, refractive index, surface geometry, imprinting, optical effect, and electromagnetic properties can be used to uniquely tag manufactured articles.
Taggant materials or particles can be mixed into bulk products (foods, explosives, pharmaceuticals, paper, polymers), applied to the surface of articles, or incorporated into inks, paints, or coatings.
A relatively small amount of optically or electronically readable information can be carried by the taggant materials and larger amounts of information can be distributed among a multiplicity of taggant materials.
2. Description of Related Art
Low viscosity polymer materials can be precisely formed by casting or molding against a master tool bearing a microstructured pattern. Under suitable process conditions the polymer article thus formed will retain an accurate impression of the microstructure pattern of the mold. Cast or molded polymeric articles are commonly manufactured at large scale, with dimensions ranging from millimeters to meters.
In contrast, the dimensions of the subject invention are in the micrometer range, typically between one micron and 500 microns in their largest dimension. An exemplary taggant material or particle of the present invention might be roughly fifty microns in diameter and ten microns thick.
The subject invention is to manufacture micron-scale identical polymer objects, which we refer to herein as taggant particles, which can be dispersed into or onto an article as a means of verifying the article's authenticity. By micron-scale, it is meant polymer objects typically between one micron and 500 microns in their largest dimension. The taggant particles can be designed, for example, to have unique shapes, sizes, colors, coatings, indicia, optical functions, and electromagnetic functions to be used for the unique identification of another article. Furthermore, combinations of taggant particles can be used as a signature, or code, for identifying the article. In addition, a single taggant particle can combine a number of identifying properties to increase the accuracy of detection and authentication.
The taggant particles can carry information in human readable form, such as text or images, which can be authenticated by means of microscopic examination of the article. Scannable information, such as barcodes and data patterns, can also be carried by the taggant particles, thereby enabling optical detection and readout of the information. Digital information carried by such a taggant particle can be encrypted by a digital signature and can only then be read by a scanning device which is equipped to decrypt the signed information, thereby providing additional security and data privacy. A single taggant particle can combine a number of identifying properties to increase the accuracy of detection and authentication.
The quantity of information which can be carried by a single taggant particle is limited by a number of factors, including the readout wavelength of the scanning system and the size of the taggant particle, but the total quantity of information can be increased at will by dividing the information into smaller ‘packets’ that can be carried by any number of taggant particles. This approach is similar to the packet transmission protocol used on the Internet. As applied to taggant particles, the desired information is first fragmented into packets small enough to be carried on individual taggant particles along with a packet sequence number. The packet labeled taggant particles are then applied to the article to be authenticated.
Authentication of taggant particles is accomplished by scanning the article and reading the taggant sequence number and packet data, and storing this information in computer memory until multiple instances of all packets have been read. Reading errors are then corrected by comparing the packet data for the multiple instances of each packet sequence number and retaining the information held by the largest number of agreeing packets. The complete message can then be assembled by arranging the corrected packet data in packet sequence order. The packet labeled taggant particles thereby enable an article to be tagged with a large amount of information dispersed as packets across many small taggant particles.
Additional security can be obtained through the use of the packet labeled taggant particles in combination with packet information carried by the substrate itself. In this case the packet labeled taggant particles do not carry the complete message; some of the message packets are borne by the substrate. This further impedes counterfeiting attempts because both the substrate and the packet labeled taggant particles have to be copied and combined to create an article which will authenticate. Differences in the quantity, type, or encoding of the information carried by the substrate and carried by the packet labeled taggant particles can be used to detect counterfeiting attempts to incorporate all of the information into either the substrate or the taggant particles.
Taggant particles according to this invention can be distinguished by a great variety of identification schemes, including size, shape, stencil perforation, surface embossment, imprinting, optical function, electromagnetic function, and combinations of two or more of these identification schemes.
Taggant particles of any particular type, according to this invention, can be distinguished by size. For example: as illustrated in
As illustrated in
The third dimension, the thickness dimension, of taggant particles according to this invention can also be uniquely engineered. Taggant particles can be flat, rounded, filleted, sculpted, and embossed to further enhance their value for authentication.
Another method for distinguishing taggant particles according to this invention is by partially or fully perforating the particles with holes of chosen shape and size or groups of such holes forming stencil patterns.
In like manner, the surface of taggant particles according to this invention can be designed to bear embossed patterns that present bitmap images, text, barcodes, data patterns, logos, and virtually any geometrical design. The surface embossment of these taggant particles may be raised (as the taggant particle 260 bearing a raised embossed surface pattern 280 illustrated in
Information can also be imparted to the taggant particles according to this invention by imprinting as illustrated in
As illustrated in FIGS. 6(A)-(G), taggant particles according to this invention can also be endowed with unique optical properties that can be easily detected for authentication. Taggant particles can be mixed into a dispersing medium, such as an ink base, polymer coating, or lacquer base, which has a particular optical index of refraction, as in
Taggant particles according to this invention can also be tinted or colored by incorporating a pigment or dye into the base polymer.
Different metals can be deposited onto taggant particles according to this invention by, for example, sputtering, thermal evaporation, or plasma spraying, producing unique visual, optical, and magnetic effects. Taggant particles can be coated with aluminum, gold, chromium, nickel, and other metals to impart specific optical reflection spectra to them. Nickel, cobalt, iron, and alloys of these and other ferromagnetic metals can be deposited on formed polymer particles to produce taggant particles which have a unique magnetic or electromagnetic signatures. Highly conductive metals, such as gold, copper, silver, and aluminum and metals and metal alloys engineered to a specific electrical impedance can be used to coat taggant particles formed into micro antenna geometries to enable radio frequency induction and induced infrared emission for detection and authentication. As an example,
As shown in
Detection of taggant particles according to this invention can be facilitated by incorporating retro reflective optical structures into their form. These retro reflective optical structures can be of any of the well known geometries, including corner cube, spherical, and enhanced backscatter. Illumination of a surface containing retro reflective taggant particles will cause them to reflect light strongly back in the direction of illumination. Viewing the illuminated material from the same direction as the illumination will then reveal the taggant particles as bright spots of light against a darker background.
Additional optical effects can be incorporated into taggant particles according to this invention by diffractive microstructures. Holographic and computer generated hologram diffractive patterns can be used to form images in the reflected illumination. The optical intensity of the image thus formed can be controlled by the size and concentration of the taggant particles on the tagged article. Other diffractive surface relief structures can be incorporated which produce designed patterns of reflected diffractive orders, such as is produced by a Damann grating. These taggant particles can be authenticated by illuminating the tagged particle with a laser, laser pointer, LED illuminator, or other narrow bandwidth light source.
Effectively two-dimensional, planar optic systems can be created in polymer by forming waveguides and optical elements from materials having a different index from the polymer surrounding them. In some cases a shaped hole can be used to form an optical element, utilizing indexes of refraction of air or the dispersing medium to perform the refraction. A planar optic system incorporated into a taggant particle could be used, for example, to collect light falling on its periphery and to concentrate and redirect it to be emitted from the center of the taggant in a particular design or pattern. Such planar optic systems are described in more detail in co-pending U.S. Provisional application Ser. No. 60/381,325 filed May 17, 2002 for which a conventional U.S. application was filed on or about May 16, 2003, which is incorporated herein in its entirety as if fully set forth.
Compound optical systems, incorporating a plurality of optical elements, can be incorporated into taggant particles according to this invention to perform designed light control functions. Such a compound optical system may, for example, incorporate focusing elements, apertures, stops, images and patterns arranged such that the optic axis of the system is disposed substantially perpendicular to the base plane of the taggant particle and the optical elements are arranged along the optic axis at different distances from the base plane of the taggant particle. Compound optical systems incorporated into taggant particles according to this invention can be used to control the color and brightness of the particle as viewed from different angles and as illuminated from different angles. For example, a taggant particle incorporating a cylindrical lens in its top surface and an image of a black line against a white background (aligned with the long direction of the cylindrical lens) in its lower surface, with the distance between the lens and the image being substantially the same as the focal length of the lens, will appear to be dark when viewed from directly above but lighter when viewed from a more oblique angle. Such compound optical systems are described in more detail in co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/351,285 filed Jan. 24, 2003 referenced above in relation to the NanoBlack™ microstructures, incorporated herein in its entirety as if fully set forth.
Taggant particles according to this invention can incorporate combinations of the features listed above, either in multiple layers or on opposite sides of each tag. Thus a taggant particle could, for example, incorporate multiple layers of planar optics plus a diffractive optical surface structure. Another example of combining features is illustrated in
The range of applications for taggant particles according to this invention is nearly boundless. These taggants can be incorporated into inks for printing secure, counterfeit resistant, authenticatable currency, identification cards, financial transaction cards, vital records, and other high security, high value documents. The taggant particles can alternatively, or additionally, be incorporated into the paper and polymer substrates these documents are printed on. Such tagged materials can be used as labels for lot tracking, tamper prevention and indication, product authentication, covert barcoding, and distributed packetized authentication information.
These taggant particles can be incorporated into bulk products for authentication and lot tracking, including foods, chemicals, and explosives.
Taggant particles according to this invention can be manufactured from a base material consisting of inert polymers or biodegradable materials so that they can be ingested by humans and animals without harm. Suitable inert polymers for forming the taggant particles include polypropylene, polyethylene, and PMMA. Gold, platinum, and aluminum can be used to provide metallization, if desired. Gelatin, starch, and starch-based biopolymers can also be used to form the taggant particles. Inert, ingestible taggant particles can be used to authenticate foods and medicines.
Taggant particles according this invention can also be used as ‘secret spy dust’. For example, anyone handling a high security document that has been dusted with taggant particles will be contaminated by those particles. Identification of those particles on a person, on their clothing, or on their furniture or home furnishings provides evidence that they have had contact with that document.
Methods for authenticating taggants made as described herein include use of an optical microscope, optical/laser (laser pointer) diffraction, micro laser scanning, bar code scanning, use of a video/computer microscope, magnetic field detection and electromagnetic induction, resonance, or emission.
Taggant particles according to this invention can be manufactured by molding molten or softened base material between a tool bearing the desired taggant structure and another surface, forming a closed cavity that the material solidifies within. Separation of the two surfaces exposes the taggant particle, which can then be removed from the surface it remains attached to.
Another method for manufacturing taggant particles according to this invention is to cast liquid monomers or oligimers into a closed cavity formed in the manner describe above, then to cause the liquid material to solidify by suitable means, such as by ionizing radiation. The taggant particles can then be removed as described above.
Metallization and other coating of the taggant particles is best performed after solidification but before the particle is removed from the second surface. In this case it may be desirable to form the taggant particle on a sacrificial sheet or web of material that can be removed from the taggant particle manufacturing system.
An additional method for manufacturing taggant particles according to this invention is to manufacture a continuous sheet or web of film bearing the desired surface microstructure patterns, then to die-cut the resulting sheet into small particles large enough to contain at least one complete instance of the surface microstructure.
All metal taggant particles according to this invention can be formed by directed metal deposition onto a polymer tool bearing posts which are capped by the desired taggant geometry. The deposited metal forms a thick layer on these caps and on the lands between the posts, but virtually no deposition on the sides of the posts. The metal caps can then be lifted off the posts as separate taggant particles.
Having now described the invention, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many changes and modifications can be made thereto without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as set forth herein.
This application is a divisional of U.S. Utility application Ser. No. 10/441,173 filed May 19, 2003 and claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/381,293 filed May 17, 2002.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10441173 | May 2003 | US |
Child | 11858804 | US |