The present invention concerns a note, such as a banknote, a security note or a check, comprising a substrate having a zone of reduced thickness forming a transparent window in said substrate.
The present invention also concerns a process for treating a substrate used for forming notes, such as banknotes and securities, having a transparent zone.
In the field of banknotes and securities, there has been increasing needs for safety features protecting against counterfeiting. Indeed, in the past years, computers, scanners and copy machines have been extensively developed and today, it is possible to buy very performant devices at a reasonable price. Since these devices are more performant, it has been at the same time necessary to develop new and improved safety features for securities, such as banknotes, checks, cards (i.e. credit cards), ID cards, passports etc. which would not allow them to be copied by standard computers or scanners, or even modem color copy machines.
Such safety features include special inks, so called optical variable inks (OVI), used to print specific patterns on the substrate of the note, optical variable devices (OVD) in the shape of metallized patches or holograms, or also specific patterns, such as moire patterns and other similar patterns, all of which are very difficult if not impossible copy by actual devices, but, on the other hand, are easy to control visually.
Other safety means include combinations of superimposed lines and/or patterns with colors which are only visible under specific conditions, for example UV light or by transparency. Again, the interest of such safety means is that they may easily be printed or placed on the document to be protected and also be controlled by simple devices, even visually, but they are impossible to reproduce with actual printers, scanners or copy machines.
Another specific technique involves watermarks in which the paper substrate is marked with lines or patterns only visible in transparency. A further development of this technique concerns pseudo-watermarks consisting in the creation of a window in the substrate, especially in paper-based substrates which are normally not transparent, said window being transparent.
It is however very difficult to create or simulate a transparent window in a paper-based substrate. Transparent windows, as such, are widely used in polymer-based substrates for banknotes and securities, in order to provide a security element. These polymer based substrates are usually completely transparent, therefore, to form a transparent window, it is only necessary to leave the chosen zone free of printing. However, in the case of paper, a substrate which is not transparent, a first process has been developed according to which, it is possible to reduce locally the thickness of the paper in order to create a transparent window in the substrate. PCT application WO 99/14433 for example, discloses this process and the content of this application is incorporated by reference in the present application. According to this known process, a soaking solution is applied on at least one surface of the paper in one or several predetermined zones, then one applies pressure and heat on the soaked zone so as to evaporate and density the coated paper in said zone relative to the rest of the paper. Thus, said zones have a reduced thickness with respect to the rest of the paper and are transparent.
This first technique however has the drawback of weakening locally the paper in the zone comprising said window. In particular, the smaller the thickness of the window, the weaker the zone. Banknotes using such a technique thus have a reduced lifetime and must be exchanged, i.e. new bank notes must be printed to replace the older damaged ones.
Another technique implies to cut a hole directly in the paper in order to create the transparent window. For example, PCT application WO 95/10420, the content of which is incorporated by reference in the present application, discloses said other technique. It is of course necessary to cover the hole cut in the substrate, which is done in this case by covering the hole with a strip of transparent material, e.g. a foil or a laminate. This document specifically uses the contrast between the transparency of the window and a diffraction structure used as an additional security feature and placed inside the window. Modem copy machines and scanners are indeed unable to copy a diffraction structure and also a transparent window.
The aim of the invention is accordingly to improve the prior art.
More specifically, an object of the invention is to provide a safety feature for securities, such as banknotes, checks, ID or passports, which is very difficult to reproduce with modern printing, scanning and copying devices.
A further object of the invention is to provide a security document, such as banknotes, securities and other equivalent, comprising an improved safety feature.
The invention is defined according to the features of the claims.
An advantage of the invention is that it can be easily carried out with standard machines used in the field of producing banknotes.
Another advantage of the invention is that it provides a better support for adding further security features on the note, in particular directly on the zone with a reduced thickness, i.e. the transparent zone. One example of a safety feature which is particularly advantageous to use in the present application is disclosed in Swiss Patent application No 1661/01 filed on Sep. 7, 2001 in the name of KBA-GIORI S. A., the content of this Swiss Patent application being incorporated by reference in the present application. The safety feature for printed matter described in this application comprises a first drawing printed on one side of said printed matter, said drawing being made of a first set of geometrical shapes, and a second drawing printed on another side of the printed matter in register with a second set of geometrical shapes corresponding to the first set, but in which on of said sets comprises offset sectors so that when the recto-verso register is correct, the security feature forms zones of variable density that can be seen only in transparency.
In other words, only when the recto-verso register is correct is it possible to see the zones of variable density forming a specific shape, which has been determined by the offset sectors. The shape is usually a letter, a combination of alphanumerical characters (such as “OK”) or another geometrical shape.
The first important fact is that said offset sectors are not visible to the naked eye. Therefore, a copy machine or a scanner is not able reproduce them and a note made with a color copy machine or a scanner will not have the security feature.
The second important fact is that this security feature allows also an easy control the recto-verso register of the printing either visually or with simple optical devices. If the register is perfect or within a certain tolerance, the presence of the specific shape can be controlled. If the register is out of a certain tolerance or very bad, the specific shape will be absent of the printed matter.
In this technique, one uses mainly a set of very thin lines (with a width between 10 μm and 500 μm) spaced between 5 μm to 1000 μm. The offset sectors are thus also of this order of size. It is therefore very important that the substrate on which the lines are printed has smooth surface in order to obtain a precise printing. This is of course not the case when the substrate is made of paper and the fact that the zone in which the security element is printed is a zone of reduced thickness makes it even worse because of the fragility of said zone.
For this reason, the invention allows combinations of safety features overcoming technical difficulties and also provides a new technical result by novel features mutually supporting their technical effects. The invention also overcomes a technical prejudice according to which it was not possible to print matter on a zone of reduced thickness because of its fragility.
The invention will be better understood by the description of several embodiments with the accompanying drawings in which:
A first embodiment of the invention is described with reference to
As a variant to this embodiment, a second strip of transparent material 10 may be placed on the other side of the note 1. This second strip 10 is schematically represented in
A second embodiment is represented in
A third embodiment is represented in
As mentioned, the reinforced substrate according to the invention is particularly suitable for use in combination with the security element 9, as described in the Swiss Patent Application No 1661/01 since the strips 3, 8, 10 and the demetallized patch 4 provide a smooth surface on which such security elements 9 may be printed.
A further embodiment of the invention is represented in
This embodiment combines numerous different techniques which are all difficult, if not impossible, to reproduce with modern copy machines and scanners. It uses a substrate comprising a zone of reduced thickness, a partial optical device, a transparent window in which there is a further security element, the surface for this security element being very smooth (strip supporting the patch 11 and strip 14), thus improving the quality of the security element.
Of course, other security features/elements using the transparency of the substrate on which they are printed or applied may be used, and the embodiments described are only illustrating, by way of examples, the features of the invention.
In the fourth column, the notes 17 have received a partially demetallized patch 20, this corresponding to the second embodiment shown in
In the fifth column, the notes 17 are in the embodiment disclosed in
In the sixth column, the notes 17 have received an additional security element 23, similar to the one described here above, which can be placed in any note of the sheet, as has been described in the different embodiments of the invention.
Of course, this representation of several different embodiments is only given as an example, and normally, different embodiments of the invention would not be combined on the same sheet. Rather, depending on the complexity of the note and on the security features chosen, a particular embodiment would be selected and then all sheets would receive the proper treatment: strip on one side or both, patch on one side or both, or even in combination, with or without an additional security element as described here above.
In the present description, reference has been made mainly to banknotes, however, the principle of the invention is applicable to other similar documents (pages of passports, checks etc.) all of which comprise a non-transparent substrate in which a transparent zone has been created.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02405782.0 | Sep 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/03869 | 9/2/2003 | WO | 2/28/2005 |