Photo-identification card

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 4245035
  • Patent Number
    4,245,035
  • Date Filed
    Monday, January 22, 1979
    45 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 13, 1981
    43 years ago
Abstract
A photo-identification card comprises a plastic laminate permanently encasing a photographically-exposable film chip that is developable by a single processing fluid. The laminate includes a core spacer having a compartment for receiving the chip with the spacer surrounding substantially the entire edge perimeter of the chip. Transparent cover panels, fused to the spacer by plastic-to-plastic bonds, physically protect the chip while permitting exposure and viewing through the laminate. Access ports are provided leading from the exterior of the laminate to the compartment for delivering the processing fluid to the chip.
Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a photo-identification card, and more specifically to such a card comprising a plastic laminate encasing sheet film that can be photographically exposed and processed in the laminate.
2. Brief Description of the Prior Art
Identification cards have become very popular in recent years. Retail outlets use them for charging merchandise, governmental agencies for licenses, and businesses for entrance passes. Extensive use is not surprising when the many advantages of the cards are considered. They are thin, substantially flat, and relatively stiff, making them easy to handle and carry. They typically support information identifying the bearer, the issuer and the subject matter to which the card pertains, in a format that discourages forgeries. In many cases the information is both visibly recognizable and machine readable. An embossed card with a magnetic stripe, for example, can be used to withdraw cash from a particular bank account through an unattended dispensing machine, or to print information onto a charge slip under a pressure plate.
Although identification cards take a number of popular forms, there are two of particular interest in connection with the present invention. The first comprises a laminate, typically three layers, of an embossable polymeric material, such as a rigid vinyl. Polyvinyl chloride, or a copolymer of polyvinyl chloride and polyvinyl acetate, are typical examples. The central layers of the laminate are opaque and carry visible information, while the outer layers are transparent, may be embossed, may support a magnetic stripe, and provide security against tampering with the information carried by the central layers. Such a card can be made essentially tamperproof by fusing the respective layers together under suitable heat and pressure to melt the respective plastic layers together. Ultrasonic or dielectric sealers frequently are used to create a weld that cannot be broken without destroying the card. There are disadvantages to such cards, however. Ultrasonic and dielectric sealing generally require sophisticated equipment that cannot be provided easily to the numerous locations desirable for interfacing with the intended issuers of the cards. This, in turn makes it difficult to employ photographs with the cards.
The other type, frequently referred to as a photo-identification card, includes a picture of the intended bearer encased in a plastic laminate along with other information. In this case, the cards are usually supplied in pieces which are assembled on location, after the photograph is taken, and laminated with transparent plastic panels to discourage tampering. In the more convenient products, the photograph is of the instant-processing type, so there is minimal delay between taking the photograph and delivering the finished card to the user. Such cards have the advantage of the photograph, but many are not as secure against forgeries compared to the first-mentioned type of card. This disadvantage results most probably from the requirement of assembly on location, where controls are subject to variance, and the equipment is not sufficiently sophisticated to provide plastic-to-plastic bonding between the respective layers.
These and other problems that are alleviated by the present invention will become more apparent from an examination of the prior art in connection with the following description.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the present invention, an identification card is provided that includes a photographically-exposable piece of sheet film, sometimes called a chip, encased in a permanently fused laminate, such that exposure, processing and viewing of the chip can be accomplished without removing it from the tamperproof environment of the laminate. More specifically, in accordance with a preferred embodiment, the exposable film chip is carried in a compartment in a plastic core, which is covered by one or more transparent plastic panels. An access port delivers processing fluid from the exterior of the card to the compartment, to develop the film chip, while a venting port releases the air from the space filled by the fluid. The film is of the self-processing, self-timing type, which requires only a single development fluid, and provides a final color picture in under ten minutes with relatively unsophisticated supporting equipment.
Still other aspects of the invention and more specific features will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings.





DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the detailed description of the preferred and alternate embodiments of the invention presented below, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a photo-identification card, in accordance with the present invention, including an unexposed film chip encased in a three-layer lamination having an access port for delivering processing fluid to the chip.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view, taken along line 2--2 in FIG. 1, depicting the laminations and the compartment in which the film chip is received.
FIG. 3 is an exploded perspective view of the identification card of FIG. 1, illustrating the respective layers of the lamination including a core spacer and two cover panels over opposed faces of the core.
FIG. 4 is a schematic illustration of developing apparatus suitable for use with the identification card of FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is an exploded perspective view of an alternative embodiment of a photo-identification card, similar to the card of FIG. 1, but in which the film-chip compartment is open to only one surface of the core.
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of the identification card of FIG. 5, depicting the compartment in which the film chip is received.
FIG. 7 is a schematic illustration of an alternative device for introducing a developing fluid to the film-chip compartment.
FIG. 8 is an exploded perspective view of yet another embodiment of a photo-identification card, similar to the card of FIG. 1, but in which the film-chip compartment occupies a major portion of the laminate for recording written information as well as the image of the intended bearer of the card.
FIG. 9 is a schematic perspective illustration of a pack for containing a plurality of the cards of FIG. 8, and including a covering template for exposing information, carried by the template, onto the film.
FIG. 10 is a schematic perspective illustration depicting exposure of the identification card of FIG. 8 in a pack with a template as depicted in FIG. 9.





DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED AND ALTERNATIVE EMBODIMENTS
Referring first to FIGS. 1-3, the preferred embodiment of the invention is depicted as including a film chip 11 (FIGS. 2 and 3), a core spacer 13 and first and second covering panels 15 and 17, respectively.
The film chip 11 comprises a piece of photographic sheet film having first and second opposed parallel faces, 18 and 19 (FIG. 3), and an edge-perimeter 20. The chemistry of the chip is not described in detail here, since it can be selected from a number of alternatives outlined, for example, in Research Disclosure No. 15,162, Volume 151, published in November of 1976. Briefly, however, the chip is a fluid-permeable structure including a plurality of photosensitive layers for recording a developable latent image and a mordant layer for receiving a dye image in accordance with development of the latent image. When an appropriate high-pH fluid composition is distributed over the structure, it permeates the respective layers, develops the latent image and releases an image-wise distribution of the dyes which migrate to the mordant layer. At the same time, the fluid hydrolizes appropriate timing layers to reduce the pH at a controlled rate, stopping the reaction. In this embodiment, the film chip is adapted to be exposed from one face, 18, and viewed from the opposite face 19. In other embodiments, exposure and viewing are from the same direction. This embodiment also locates the timing and neutralizing layers on a separate supporting piece 21, superposed over the photosensitive layers, but it should be noted that other arrangements of the respective layers, not employing such a separate piece, may be desirable under certain circumstances.
The core spacer 13 comprises an opaque, relatively stiff, plate which includes opposed, parallel surfaces 22 and 23 suitable for receiving printed information. The core is somewhat thicker than the film chip, and defines a shallow compartment 25, open through both faces of the core, for receiving the chip. The compartment is configured to surround substantially the entire edge perimeter of the chip in close proximity thereto, while accommodating the timing-layer piece and a quantity of the developing fluid over at least one face of the film chip without exceeding the thickness of the core.
Fluid delivery means in the form of an access port 27, is provided for introducing the developing fluid from the exterior of the identification card to the interior of the film-chip compartment. Similarly, a venting port 29, opposite the access port, releases air displaced by the fluid. As depicted in FIGS. 1-3, the ports are arranged to deliver the fluid to the exposure face 18, and the thickness of the core, relative to the chip, is sufficient to receive a quantity of the fluid in a layer adequate to develop the latent image and diffuse the dyes as outlined above.
Cover panels 15 and 17 are thin, transparent sheets flexible enough to conform to the core spacer, yet tough enough to protect the card from abuse. The panels are permanently laminated to opposite faces of the core spacer, and cover at least the compartment 25, encasing the film chip physically therebetween while, at the same time, permitting exposure and viewing of the chip.
The core spacer and covering panels are formed of a tough plastic suitable for embossing, usually referred to as a polymeric material. Films known as rigid vinyls are particularly effective, including polyvinyl chloride, or a high chloride content copolymer of vinyl acetate and vinyl chloride. Semi-rigid vinyls are also suitable. These are similar to the rigid vinyls, but include suitable plasticizers.
The card is fully assembled and permanently laminated at the time of manufacture with the film chip captured inside. This is accomplished under appropriate conditions of heat and pressure to melt the plastic at the interfaces between core and panels, fusing or welding the card together with plastic-to-plastic bonds. A dielectric welder employing radio-frequency waves can be used, for example, to excite the molecular structure of the laminate, heating the respective layers to the melting point around substantially the entire periphery of the film chip or over substantially the entire laminate. Care is required not to melt the whole card or destroy the photosensitive properties of the film chip. Other sealing techniques may employ ultrasonic vibrators to melt only the interfaces between the respective layers.
The thickness of the respective layers should be controlled to provide a final desired thickness. With the film chip 11 secured to one of the cover panels 17, and the timing-layer support secured to the other cover panel 15, the final core thickness should provide a space above the photosensitive layer sufficient to accommodate the desired thickness of the fluid developing composition. At the same time, the overall dimensions of the card should conform to present commercial standards for such cards.
By way of a preferred example, the core spacer is twenty thousandths of an inch thick, the cover panels are each five thousandths thick, and the access and venting ports are seven thousandths square in cross-section. The film chip and timing materials are the same as presently available commercially in Kodak PR-10 Instant-Print Film, as is the processing liquid, except the liquid is lower in viscosity, much like water.
Thus assembled, the card is a durable laminate permanently encasing an unexposed or light-exposable film chip. The laminate surrounds substantially the entire chip, except for the access and venting ports, and cannot be delaminated without destroying the card, making attempted forgeries easily detectable.
In use, the card is supplied in a light-tight package and loaded into a camera in a light protected environment. The film chip is then exposed to the intended subject and ejected, perhaps directly from the camera, into a reservoir 31 of the processing fluid 33, as shown in FIG. 4. The access port and the film compartment are submerged in the fluid while the venting port extends thereabove. The developing fluid then flows from the reservoir, through the access port, and fills the compartment, displacing any air through the venting port. Development proceeds automatically to completion, as described above, and the card is removed to view the final image. Thusly, the chip is exposed through the laminate, developed by a single solution and viewed through the laminate without ever having been removed from its protected environment.
In order to facilitate processing, the access and venting ports should be sufficiently large to deliver the fluid from the reservoir to the film compartment with only a slight differential in pressure therebetween. At the same time, however, once the compartment is filled, the respective ports should restrict draining of the fluid from the compartment so the card can be removed from the reservoir before processing is completed. Appropriate gelatin layers on the film chip 11 or piece 21 can be used to hold the fluid once it reaches the compartment. Should the card be left in the solution, and once the pressure equalizes, the ports should sufficiently isolate the compartment for the mechanism in the chip to neutralize the fluid in the compartment and end the development cycle.
In FIGS. 5-7, an alternative embodiment of the invention is depicted, which is similar in many respects to the preferred embodiment, but includes a film chip 51 that is exposed and viewed from the same side. In this case, the compartment 52 is open to only one face of the core 53, and only one transparent covering panel 55 is required. The portion of this panel that covers the chip is coated with transparent timing and neutralizing layers, eliminating the need for the separate piece 21 employed in the preferred embodiment. Such coatings do not extend over the areas where the laminate is sealed together, however, or at least they are such as not to weaken the plastic-to-plastic bonds between the respective layers.
Processing is accomplished, in a light protected environment, by injecting the single-solution developing fluid from a syringe 56 into the access port 57. Air is released through the venting port 59.
Still another embodiment is depicted in FIGS. 8-10. In this case the film chip 101 is much larger and is received in a compartment 102 that subtends a substantial portion of the card. The compartment is open to both faces of the core 103 and is covered by two transparent panels 105 and 106, as in the preferred embodiment. Such an enlarged chip is suitable for exposing written information onto the card as well as the image of the intended bearer. A split-image exposure device could be used, for example, to sequentially or simultaneously expose the information and the bearer's image onto the chip. Illustrated, however, is a template 110 adapted to be interposed between the subject and the chip for applying the information.
FIG. 9 depicts a plurality of the cards in a film pack 111 including dark slide 113, an exposure aperture 115 and an exit slot 117. The template 110 is aligned over the exposure aperture of the pack for photographically imprinting the informaton onto the cards in the pack.
As depicted in FIG. 10, the pack is loaded into a suitable camera that will expose the image of a subject 121 onto some portion 123 of the film chip while simultaneously exposing the written information from the template onto the same or some other portion 124 of the chip. The exposed card is then ejected from the camera by a picker 125 (FIG. 9) and immersed in the developing fluid for processing as described above in connection with the preferred embodiment.
It should now be apparent from the above description that the structure of the present invention provides significant advantages not available from the teaching of the prior art. A photo-identification card is provided that can be fully assembled at the time of manufacture with an unexposed film chip permanently encased in a protective laminate. The chip is exposable and viewable through the laminate, is easily developed on location by a single fluid, and produces a final color print in minutes with little attention to the process by which it is produced. The final product is fused together so it cannot be delaminated without destroying the card, making any attempted forgeries obvious.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred and alternative embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims
  • 1. A photographic card developable by a fluid, said card comprising:
  • a thin laminate including at least two vinyl layers permanently fused together, said laminate including a shallow compartment surrounded substantially entirely by said layers, and a narrow port extending from the exterior of said laminate to said compartment for introducing developing fluid to said compartment; and
  • an unexposed film chip received in said compartment and protected against tampering by said layers, said chip being exposable through said laminate to record a latent image developable by the developing fluid to establish a print viewable through said laminate.
  • 2. A photo-identification card comprising:
  • a film chip exposable for recording a latent image developable by a fluid to establish a visible print, said film chip having opposed faces and an edge perimeter;
  • a planar core including a compartment for receiving the film chip, said core surrounding substantially the entire edge-perimeter of said film chip in said compartment;
  • a transparent covering panel permanently laminated to said core over said film chip, said panel permitting photographic exposure of said film chip through said panel while physically protecting said film chip from tampering; and
  • means for delivering developing fluid to said film chip to develop the latent image and establish the visible print.
  • 3. An embossable, plastic laminate for bearing information including photographically-recorded, fluid-developable images; said laminate comprising:
  • a piece of photographic film exposable to record a latent image developable by the fluid to establish a visible print, said film piece having opposed parallel faces and an edge perimeter;
  • a generally flat, plastic spacer surrounding substantially the entire edge-perimeter of said film piece;
  • first and second generally flat, plastic panels permanently laminated to said spacer over the opposite faces of said film piece, respectively, containing said film piece therebetween, said panels permitting photographic exposure and viewing of said film piece therethrough while physically protecting said film piece from tampering; and
  • means for directing the developing fluid to said film piece to develop the latent image and establish the visible print.
  • 4. An identification card comprising:
  • a vinyl plate having opposed parallel faces, at least one of such faces adapted for carrying information;
  • means defining a shallow compartment in said plate open to said face, said plate surrounding substantially the entire edge perimeter of the compartment;
  • a piece of sheet film in said compartment, said film piece being photographically exposable to record a latent image developable by a fluid to establish a visible image;
  • a transparent, vinyl panel covering said face, including the compartment, for protecting said film piece from alteration;
  • said panel and said plate being bonded together by a vinyl-to-vinyl weld to provide a permanent lamination; and
  • means defining an access port for introducing the developing fluid from the exterior of said card to said compartment to develop the film piece.
  • 5. A photo-identification card comprising:
  • a thin, vinyl plate having opposed parallel faces, and an open section extending between said faces, at least one of said faces adapted for carrying information,
  • a piece of film in said open section, said film piece being photographically exposable to record a latent image developable by a liquid to establish a visible image;
  • first and second transparent, vinyl panels covering said faces of said vinyl plate, including the open section, for protecting said film piece from alteration;
  • said first and second panels being laminated to said plate by permanent vinyl-to-vinyl bonds, and cooperating with said plate to surround substantially said entire film piece to protect said piece from alteration and,
  • means for introducing a development initiating fluid to said film piece to develop the film piece.
  • 6. An embossable photo-identification card comprising:
  • a plastic spacer having a flat face and a shallow compartment open through said face, said spacer surrounding substantially the entire edge perimeter of the compartment;
  • a flat, unexposed photosensitive element received in said compartment and adapted to record a latent image photographically processable to establish a reflection print visible through said opening in said face;
  • a transparent, plastic panel covering said face at least over said opening, said panel physically protecting said photosensitive element from tampering while permitting viewing of said element through said opening;
  • said panel and said spacer being permanently laminated together by a plastic-to-plastic bond and,
  • means defining an access port extending from the exterior of said card to said compartment for introducing a processing fluid to said photosensitive element.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Number Name Date Kind
2951304 Herte Sep 1960
2982650 Land May 1961
3069266 Land Dec 1962
3249033 Cobb et al. May 1966
3275439 Battison et al. Sep 1966
3498788 Haas Mar 1970
3541938 Harvey Nov 1970
3614839 Thomas Oct 1971
3674622 Plasse Jul 1972
3696716 Pasieka Oct 1972
3893854 Honjo et al. Jul 1975