The embodiments discussed herein are related to a palm vein imaging apparatus.
Conventionally, imaging apparatuses that pick up an image of a predetermined range on an object by irradiating the object with uniform light have been widely used. Image processing systems that obtain sharp digital images for various applications by applying image processing to image data obtained by the imaging apparatus have also been widely put into practical use.
With recent developments in biometrics technology, various apparatuses have been provided that pick up an image of a feature of a living body with which an individual can be identified, e.g., fingerprints or toe prints, a retina, a face, and blood vessels, so as to authenticate the individual by recognizing the feature of the living body.
Blood vessels in the palm or fingers and palm prints in particular provide a relatively large amount of personal feature data and are thus suitable for improving reliable personal authentication. The pattern of blood vessels (veins) is suitable for personal authentication because it does not change from the time a person is a fetus until death and is said to be unique to each person.
In regard to an imaging apparatus based on a conventional blood-vessel-image authentication technique that relies on the facts described above, a user moves her/his palm closer to the imaging apparatus for registration or authentication. The imaging apparatus emits near-infrared rays onto the palm. The imaging apparatus receives near-infrared rays reflected from the palm using an image sensor.
Hemoglobin within red blood cells flowing through a vein contains no oxygen. The hemoglobin (reduced hemoglobin) absorbs near-infrared rays of about 760 nanometers. Hence, when the palm is exposed to near-infrared rays, few rays are reflected from a portion with a vein, and the position of the vein can be recognized from the strength of the reflected near-infrared rays.
The user first registers her/his palm vein image data in a server and/or on an ID card using an imaging apparatus. Then, for personal authentication, the user causes the imaging apparatus to read vein image data of the palm. The user performs personal authentication by comparing the read vein image with the pattern of the vein in a registered vein image obtained using her/his ID.
Such an imaging apparatus may be downsized so that it can be incorporated into a device such as an ATM, wherein an image sensor and a plurality of light emitting elements therearound are mounted on a circuit board, and a ring-shaped light guide body illuminates an imaging area with light from the plurality of light emitting elements.
The imaging apparatus is configured in a manner such that an imaging optical unit is accommodated in the ring of the ring-shaped light guide body, and an image sensor is located at the bottom so that the image of reflected light from the imaging area illuminated by the ring-shaped light guide body can be received. Such an imaging apparatus, i.e., a downsized imaging apparatus with a light receiving system and a light emitting system mounted on the same board, is proposed. (See, for example, Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication No. 2007-229360)
The palm vein imaging apparatus of the invention includes at least a tubular-frame-shaped housing, a printed circuit board horizontally held within the housing, an imaging system consisting of an image sensor and imaging lens module mounted on a top surface of the printed circuit board, and a top cover that covers a top opening of the housing so as to protect the imaging lens module of the imaging system. The top cover includes a recess at a portion of an inner top surface of the top cover that faces the imaging lens module, the recess being thinner than a portion therearound. The imaging lens module is located in a manner such that an upper portion thereof is in the recess.
Recently, personal authentication has also been requested to be performed for slim electronic devices such as laptop personal computers. As an example, a scheme has been put into practical use wherein fingerprint authentication is performed by touching an authentication panel with a fingertip.
Actual use of a fingerprint-authentication-based fingertip touch scheme is unexpectedly accompanied by a burdensome task. By contrast, the palm vein authentication described above is convenient owing to a scheme wherein a hand is held over an imaging apparatus.
However, according to patent document 1, an image sensor with a width of 640 dots is used. In general, an image sensor with a width of 640 dots leads to a chip size of about 6×7 mm and a size of about 9×9 mm for a package mounted on aboard.
According to the drawings of patent document 1 (e.g., a cross-sectional view of
In regard to slim electronic devices such as laptop personal computers, even a relatively thick one has a thickness of about 25 mm, and a tabular portable electronic device consisting of only a touch-panel display screen has a thickness of 10 mm or less. It is difficult to incorporate an imaging apparatus with a height of 27 mm into such devices.
The following will describe embodiments of the present invention in detail.
As illustrated in
A touch-panel-type pointing device 6 is located on a central portion of a region below the keyboard 5, and a left click button 7 and a right click button 8 are respectively located to the left of and right of the touch-panel-type pointing device 6. An imaging apparatus 9 is located at a lower-right corner of the top surface of the main body 3.
The imaging apparatus 9 is an incorporable palm vein imaging apparatus. When a user 10 holds a palm 11 at a position about 50 mm above the imaging apparatus 9, as depicted in
As depicted in
The top cover 14 is a transparent resin molding product. A recess 15 is formed on a central portion of the inner surface of the top cover 14 so as to make the entirety of the apparatus slim while maintaining a certain strength. The top cover 14 may be configured to further serve as a visible-light cut filter.
The printed board 16 is disposed and blocks the opening at the bottom of the housing 13. A plurality of chip components 17 that form a controlling g system such as a CPU or a memory are mounted on the bottom surface of the printed board 16.
An imaging system and an illumination system are disposed on the top surface of the printed board 16, the imaging system consisting of the image sensor 18 located at the center of the top surface of the printed board 16 and a lens module 19 located above the image sensor 18, and the illumination system consisting of a plurality of (in this example, eight) illumination LEDs 21 arranged in a circle around the image sensor 18 and a circular light guide body 22 located above the illumination LEDs 21.
The illumination LEDs 21 in the circular formation are divided into four blocks, and a light receiving element 23 is located at the center of each of the blocks. The light receiving element 23 is provided to control the light quantity of illumination LEDs 21 located to the right and left thereof.
In addition, a distance measurement system is disposed on the top surface of the printed board 16, the distance measurement system consisting of: a distance-measuring LED 24 for sensing a palm 11 and for measuring a distance to the palm 11; and a distance-measuring lens 25. These optical-system elements are constructed on the printed board 16, i.e., a single printed board, so as to downsize and make slim the entirety of the apparatus while decreasing the cost.
As described above, the top cover 14 is a resin molding product. Accordingly, the diameter of an outer portion of an edge surface 26 of the recess 15 is made to be greater than the diameter of an inner portion thereof so that the top cover 14 can be readily removed from a die, i.e., so that a “hangover portion” is not formed.
Note that components located around the lens module 19 are not illustrated. In consideration of operability in an authentication operation, to shoot an image of the entirety of the palm 11 from a distance of, for example, about 50 mm, the lens module 19 needs to have a wide-angle lens even if such a lens is small, and accordingly a set of three aspheric lenses such as that depicted in
The lens module 19 consists of a barrel 28 in which the set of lenses is stored, and a mount unit 27 that supports the barrel 28 and that connects the barrel 28 to the printed board 16. A first lens 29, a diaphragm 31, a second lens 32, a third lens 33, and a wavelength selection filter 26 are arranged in this order within the barrel 28, with the first lens 29 located at the highest position.
The top surface of the first lens 29 is close to the under surface of the recess 15 of the top cover 14, i.e., a top cover on which a void C for protecting a lens surface is formed. The wavelength selection filter 26 allows passage of only near-infrared ray wavelengths.
However, in a case where the top cover 14 is, as described above, configured to further serve as a visible-light cut filter, the wavelength selection filter 26 may be an IR cut filter that blocks infrared rays whose wavelength is longer than a near-infrared wavelength needed for the image sensor 18.
Irrespective of the top cover 14, a band-pass filter that blocks light other than light with a wavelength needed for the image sensor 18 may be used as a wavelength selection filter within the barrel 28.
In
Both the thickness a of the top cover 14 and the surface portion thickness b of the recess 15 need to be decreased as much as possible so as to make the apparatus slim, but the thicknesses depend on a purpose. The surface portion thickness b of the recess 15 is a limit thickness such that the recess 15 can be molded, and the thickness a of the edge portions is a limit thickness such that the strength of the top cover 14 can be maintained. The total length H of the entirety of the imaging apparatus 9 (see
The actual dimensions (mm) are b=0.6, c=0.2, d=2.7, e=0.7, f=0.6, g=1.1, and h=0.1, and hence H=6.0 mm.
In a case where the total height H of the entirety of the imaging apparatus 9 is, as described above, 6.0 mm, the imaging apparatus 9 can be incorporated into a considerably thin electronic device. A protective plate is not provided at the bottom of the housing 13. However, owing to a gap of h=0.1 mm in a vertical direction between the bottom surface of the chip component 17 and a lower end of the housing 13, a part on the imaging-apparatus-9 side and a part on the electronic-device side do not compete with each other for a space, and a failure does not occur.
The components of an imaging apparatus 35 depicted in
As depicted in
As illustrated in
Accordingly, separating and locating, as depicted in
Accordingly, in
As depicted in
Accordingly, the entirety of the recess assumes a shape of a truncated cone 42 that has an upper circumference of the original recess 15 as a top.
A dug recess such as that illustrated in
In the embodiments described above, the imaging apparatus has a thickness of 6 mm. However, needless to say, an imaging apparatus having a thickness of 6 mm or less may be achieved by, for example, making thinner the recess at the central portion of the inner surface of the top cover, the set of three aspheric lenses of the imaging lens module, the image sensor, and the chip components.
The present invention makes slim only a surface facing the imaging lens module while maintaining the strength of the top cover of the imaging apparatus so that the thickness of the imaging apparatus can be limited to 6 mm or less, thereby achieving the advantage that the imaging apparatus can be readily incorporated into a slim electronic device.
Consequently, the imaging apparatus can be incorporated into more portable-electronic-device models so that personal authentication services can be provided to more users.
Various changes may be made to the embodiments described above without departing from the spirit thereof. In addition, although the imaging apparatus is incorporated into an electronic device in the embodiments described above, the imaging apparatus may be an external one independent of the electronic device.
This application is continuation application of International Application PCT/JP2013/059828 filed on Apr. 1, 2013 and designated the U.S., the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2013/059828 | Apr 2013 | US |
Child | 14863545 | US |