This application pertains to the field of optics, more particularly optically responsive materials as applied to anticounterfeiting. An embodiment discussed herein applies specifically to anticounterfeit marking of projection cinema screens.
There is a huge public demand for projection cinema screens, which can be used as electronic viewing spaces at a home, at a business, at a cinema theater, at an outdoor concert venue, and many other locations. In view of these diverse consumer environments, there are a wide assortment of screens available, which are made of a variety of materials and have a broad range of features as well as prices. Notably, screen quality is a major factor in both the cost of production and the selling price of the screen, so screen manufacturers are very interested in protecting their designs and merchandise from being copied and sold without permission.
As with many other popular consumer goods, counterfeiting of these projection screens has become a significant world-wide problem. Although some of the screens have designs and markings for identification purposes, most of those designs can be easily copied by other parties. In this unfortunate situation, the unknowing purchasers of the counterfeit goods receive a lower-performance screen than the genuine screen they wanted; the certified manufacturer loses sales and gains a tarnished reputation for allegedly providing lower quality goods; and the overall market loses the clarity that connects a specific screen to a specific performance. Therefore, an optically-responsive anticounterfeiting system and a method for detecting counterfeit screens are critically needed. This application addresses those critical needs.
Provided herein is a novel anticounterfeiting system for projection screens. The system employs an anticounterfeiting taggant that includes an optically-active layer of material patterned with a design, a code, or an image. The taggant can be embedded in or attached to the projection screen and can be detected by the use of a certain unique light that is matched to the taggant's specific optics. The system has a light source capable of providing a matching coded optical stimulus with respect to the taggant. The system also includes a detector capable of detecting the image output.
In a method for authenticating a projection screen, an optical taggant can be interrogated with a coded optical stimulus matching the taggant from the light source to provide a coded optical response that is registered by the detector to authenticate the screen. The taggant is unique to the screen manufacturer.
The taggant can be at least one fluorescent dye, fluorescent ink, fluorescent particle, or mixtures thereof or can be a computer-generated hologram (CGH) or both a fluorescent moiety and a CGH.
Another embodiment is the use of multiple fragments of a CGH as a taggant, which fragments can be placed randomly or in a predetermined pattern in or on the screen. The CGH fragments themselves can include a unique pattern as well.
The anticounterfeiting taggant can be added during the screen fabrication process, or can be added later. The positioning and design of the anticounterfeiting taggant can be selected to avoid any change in the optical, physical, or acoustic performance of the screen.
This application is directed to an anticounterfeiting system for projection screens, and more specifically, to an optically-readable taggant system for a projection screen. The taggant is an optically-active layer that is patterned with a design, a code, or an image unique to the screen manufacturer, which is attached to or integrated into the screen. More than one taggant can be used on the same screen with each taggant having the same or different coded optical responses. The system is set up so that the taggant is covert or practically invisible to the naked eye but provides a coded optical response when interrogated by a matched coded optical stimulus to provide a coded optical response that is registered by the detector to authenticate the screen. The coded optical response normally is a design, a code, an image, or combinations thereof, and the detection thereof serves as proof of authenticity of the screen.
In addition to the taggant, the system includes a light source capable of providing a matching coded optical stimulus and a detector capable of detecting the image. In one embodiment, the light source is a laser.
The taggant can be a computer-generated hologram or fragments of a CGH, which CGH fragments themselves can contain a unique pattern. The fragments also can be placed in a predetermined pattern or placed randomly. The taggant can be at least one fluorescent dye, fluorescent ink, fluorescent particle, or mixtures thereof. In one embodiment, the taggant includes nanoparticles made of a lead sulfide core surrounded by an adjacent cadmium sulfide layer and an outer alkane coating layer adjacent to the cadmium sulfide layer. In another embodiment, the taggant can be an optically-transmissive medium with a modulation of an index of refraction. The taggant can be added during the screen fabrication process, or added later.
The matching coded optical stimulus encompasses wavelengths in the visible, ultraviolet, or infrared spectral region. The matching coded optical stimulus includes application of coherent or non-coherent light and the coded optical response is reflected, fluorescing, and/or diffracted light. The matching coded optical stimulus can be ultraviolet light or infrared light.
This disclosure also includes a method of authenticating a projection screen that encompasses interrogating an optical taggant-bearing layer of the screen by applying coherent or non-coherent light to the screen and detecting any reflected and/or diffracted light. In this embodiment, the light can be ultraviolet, infrared, or visible light. In the method, the reflection occurs when the light has a specific wavelength matching the taggant optics. The taggant-bearing layer can be made of a multitude of computer-generated hologram flakes.
In one embodiment, the taggant is a computer-generated hologram (CGH) having a specific code. In another embodiment, the taggant can be multiple fragments of a CGH. The multiple fragments of a CGH can be placed randomly or in a predetermined pattern on or in the screen that can be interrogated in a specifically coded sequence. The CGH fragments themselves may include a specific pattern as well. The positioning and design of the CGH fragments can be selected to avoid any change in the optical, physical, or acoustic performance of the screen.
In another embodiment, the taggant having an optically-active layer is based on fluorescent nanodots or microdots designed to fluoresce only under specific wavelengths. These fluorescent nanodots or microdots fluoresce in the visible spectrum when illuminated by specific wavelengths of ultraviolet or near infrared light, and can be placed randomly or in a predetermined pattern. When implemented with a random pattern, the optically-active layer read-out light is carefully designed to respond to specific peak wavelength, spectral bandwidth and/or time domain (pulse frequency, amplitude and/or modulation) dependence. As above, the positioning and design of the fluorescent nanodots or microdots can be selected to avoid any change in the optical, physical, or acoustic performance of the screen. A typical fluorescent nanoparticle would be a lead-sulfide (PbS) core, with an adjacent cadmium sulfide (CdS) layer and over those two layers would be an alkane coating that would prevent clumping but would be dissolvable in an epoxy solvent or other solvent carrier.
The taggant can be incorporated during the screen fabrication process or can be added later to the screen, The taggant can be in the screen's substrate, on the back or unused surface of the screen, or embedded as a watermark into the screen surface.
Trademarked content, aesthetic patterns, or coding patterns (such as serial numbers that can be validated, positional dependence, and the like) can be used for taggant design. In addition, the taggant can be a surface relief structure.
Referring to
A standard method of creating the CGH itself is shown in
An embodiment of this invention is also a transparent layer where the taggant is a modulation of the refractive index. Like phase holographic optical elements that are based on controlled perturbations of the refractive index of a volume, any optical function can be encoded using the index modulation. In this embodiment, the index modulation would have encoded within either a logo or other trademarked or recognizable image and/or codes that enable verification of authenticity. These index modulation-based codes are recorded outside of the parameters of cinema operations (i.e. different wavelength, divergence and/or angular range) to facilitate authentication without affecting the normal use of the projection screen.
While the disclosed subject matter has been described in conjunction with a number of embodiments, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications, and variations would be, or are, apparent to those of ordinary skill in the applicable arts. Accordingly, Applicant intends to embrace all such alternatives, modifications, equivalents and variations that are within the spirit and scope of the disclosed subject matter.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. Nos. 62/722,245 and 62/722,284, both filed Aug. 24, 2018, whose disclosures are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62722284 | Aug 2018 | US | |
62722245 | Aug 2018 | US |