The invention relates to a method for manufacturing a physical security element having a spatially appearing printed image and to a corresponding security element. In particular, the invention relates to a card made of plastic, for example a credit card or a payment card having a spatial printed image which forms a security feature.
From EP 2593314 B1 a method for manufacturing a plastic card having a printed image is known, in which onto a substrate there is first printed a coating containing metallic, organic or non-organic pigments. Onto the coating there is printed a lacquer layer which forms a pattern and which is thinner than the coating. The lacquer layer is cured. The coating possesses a higher plasticity than the lacquer. On top of the lacquer layer there is applied a cover layer. Subsequently, the construction is laminated under pressure and temperature. During lamination, the harder lacquer is completely pressed into the softer coating, the lacquer maintaining its form. The lacquer notched into the coating in this way makes the visibility of the pattern formed by the lacquer dependent on the viewing angle. The manufacturing of the coating in this known method requires the employment of special materials as well as the performance of special steps, which makes the performance of the method elaborate. Further, the possible penetration depth of the lacquer into the coating is limited by the height thereof. This is normally very low compared to the height of the substrate.
From U.S. Pat. No. 7,455,235 B2 there is known a method for manufacturing a chip card having a visual relief effect. According to this method, a full-area layer of metallic ink is applied onto a core. On top of this a lacquer layer is applied with a greater thickness, which forms a pattern. The lacquer layer is hardened by means of UV light, subsequently an even thicker cover layer is applied. Thereafter, this construction is laminated. During lamination, the lacquer layer becomes dull, while the regions of the card not covered by the lacquer layer remain brilliant. This results in a three-dimensional effect. The partial additional height caused by the lacquer layer is compensated by the cover layer. The resulting dull regions appear to be engraved into the card surface. The known solution supplies an independent card feature. However, it cannot easily be combined with other card features and requires the configuration of a sufficiently soft and sufficiently thick cover layer.
From EP 2886357 A2 there is known a security document having a security feature, which is constructed from several foils laminated together, is based on a relief structure and produces a three-dimensional impression. The relief structure is produced with the aid of a relief lacquer and/or by embossing the surface of the foil carrying the relief lacquer.
From WO 2004/065135 A1 there is known a method for manufacturing a three-dimensional image on a card body, in which first a reflective layer is configured on the back side of a transparent core layer and on top of this an image-forming material is applied, which can be driven into the core layer. A transparent cover layer is laid over the image-forming material. The layer arrangement given thereafter is laminated into a card body. In doing so, the image-forming material is driven into the reflective layer and core layer and produces an embedded image. Upon subsequent viewing from the front side of the core layer, an intensified reflection arises at the contoured edges of the resulting embedded image, which reflection supports a three-dimensional visual impression.
It is the object of the invention to provide a method for manufacturing a spatially appearing pattern on a security element, which can be implemented without any special demands on the materials to be utilized or on the method steps to be performed and which supplies a feature which can be easily combined with other features.
This object is achieved by a method and a security element with the features according to the independent claims.
The method according to the invention has the advantage that it can be carried out with common manufacturing methods and does not place increased demands on the materials to be utilized. The method supplies in a simple manner shapes and symbols that appear spatially. The feature manufacturable by the method is particularly suitable for common payment cards, credit cards and ID cards.
A special advantage of the method according to the invention is that when it is carried out no other structural components of the security element, which are provided specifically for the manufacturing of features, are damaged or impaired. In particular, no feature-forming layers are damaged during the manufacturing of cards.
The method according to the invention is based on the approach of configuring, on a multi-layer security element, a structural layer which includes a pattern. The structural layer is pressed into the core layer of the security element by lamination, thereby also deforming a design layer connected to the core layer. In doing so, the thickness of the design layer is not or only insignificantly changed. By the deformation of the design layer, the pattern contained in the structural layer becomes recognizable as a spatially perceptible image structure.
In a particularly advantageous configuration, the structural layer is applied as a lacquer layer in a printing method. The lacquer used is preferably transparent.
Further advantageous developments and expedient configurations of the method according to the invention result from the features of the dependent claims.
Embodiment examples of the invention will hereinafter be explained in more detail with reference to the drawing.
There are shown:
The method according to the invention is described below by the example of a plastic card in a standard format, as they are commonly used as payment cards, credit cards or ID cards.
A design layer 3 is placed above the carrier 1. The design layer 3 is opaque or semi-transparent. It is usually applied over the full area of the surface 11 of the carrier 1 and possesses a thickness h2 of 5 to 25 μm. Typically, the design layer 3 is applied onto the carrier 1 by screen printing. Expediently, a usual design ink is used which is based on a transparent solution furnished with color particles. In addition, it may contain e.g. metallic particles which generate a particular optical effect, for example a glitter effect.
In an alternative embodiment, the design layer 3 can also be provided as a separate layer in the form of a foil.
As indicated in
In the embodiment example of
As an alternative to an embodiment as a lacquer layer, the structural layer 5 can also be executed as an independent foil in which the pattern 10 is incorporated in the form of a structure of recesses.
Above the structural layer 5 there lies a cover layer 7. Its top side is smooth and forms the surface 21 of the card 20. The cover layer 7 is also see-through transparent, i.e. transparent or semi-transparent. It is expediently provided as a foil and possesses a thickness h4 of 50 to 100 μm. Expediently, its thickness is between 60 and 80 μm.
Compared to the other components, the carrier 1 possesses a higher plasticity, i.e. its shape can be permanently changed at a lower temperature than with the other components. The glass transition temperature of the carrier 1 is lower than that of the cover layer 7.
The cover layer 7 behaves hard in comparison to the carrier 1 and also in comparison to the other components and experiences no or hardly any shape changes by a usual lamination, i.e. it can be compressed by at most 15%.
The structural layer 5 possesses a greater or a similar dimensional stability under heat as the carrier 1. Under pressure and heat during lamination it experiences a change of shape in its edge regions 15, while for the rest it substantially maintains its shape and is compressed by at most 10%.
Likewise, the design layer 3 possesses a higher dimensional resistance under heat than the carrier 1. The design layer 3 can hardly be compressed under usual laminating conditions, i.e. its thickness changes by at most 15%. However, the design layer 3 can be deformed by the action of pressure without its thickness being changed. Connecting the components represented in
During lamination, the carrier 1 behaves softly towards the design layer 3 and the lacquer layer 5. The carrier 1 also behaves softly towards the cover layer 7 and the structural layer 5. This means that while cover layer 7, structural layer 5, design layer 3 and lacquer layer 5 completely or at least fundamentally maintain their shape during lamination, the carrier 1 changes its shape. During lamination, the lacquer layer 5 is pressed into the carrier 1. Together with the lacquer layer 5, the design layer 3 is pressed into the carrier 1. The carrier 1 is thus compressed and reshaped wherever the lacquer layer 5 is located.
The lacquer layer 5 remains basically unchanged during lamination, but the edge regions 15 change their shape. The inner zones 16 of the lacquer layer 5 remain substantially unchanged. In particular, in the inner zones the thickness of the lacquer layer 5 remains substantially unchanged; the laminating can result in at most a low homogeneous compression of the thickness of max. 10%. In the edge regions 15, however, the lacquer layer 5 is reshaped lenticularly. When viewed in cross-section, the lower surface 18 of the lacquer layer 5 which faces the carrier 1 and the upper surface 1 which faces the cover layer 7 extend tangentially towards each other after reshaping and form an acute angle. And the lower surface 18 rises in the edge regions 15 towards the upper surface 17.
During lamination the design layer 3 is deformed where the lacquer layer 5 is located, but this does not or only insignificantly change its thickness, i.e. less than 10%, and the design layer 3 remains contiguous.
The gentle transitions between regions with lacquer layer 5 and regions without lacquer layer 5, which arise in the edge regions 15 of lacquer layer 5, lead to an, in plan view, optically perceptible effect, because light in the edge zones 15 is reflected differently than in the inner zones 16 and in the zones outside the pattern 10 in which only the design layer 3 is present. The impact of the effect produced by the edge regions 15 is that the pattern 10 represented by the lacquer layer 5 appears to be spatial.
During the lamination of the arrangement shown in
On the side 6 facing away, the carrier 1 presses on the design layer 3 and the further cover layer 8. The design layer 3 is deformed by the carrier 1 but again substantially maintains its thickness h2, i.e. changes by at most 10%, and remains contiguous. This results in the design layer 3 in turn reproducing the contour of the structural layer 5 and being pressed into the further cover layer 8.
Unlike in the embodiment example of
While maintaining the basic idea of configuring a pattern 10 having a spatial effect on a multi-layer security element 20 by deforming an inner layer of the security element 20, which carries a design layer 3, with the aid of a structural layer 5, whereby the structural layer 5 itself is reshaped lenticularly at its edge regions 15, the method described allows a series of reasonable and obvious modifications. For example, it is possible to provide further layers in the layer constructions which are either also deformed or not deformed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 006 040.1 | Jun 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/000314 | 6/22/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2019/001763 | 1/3/2019 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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20219788 | Apr 2003 | DE |
2886357 | Jun 2015 | EP |
2593314 | May 2016 | EP |
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0162516 | Aug 2001 | WO |
2004065135 | Aug 2004 | WO |
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Entry |
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“Identification Cards—Physical Characteristics,” ISO/IEC 7810, Third Edition, Nov. 1, 2003. |
“Identification Cards—Physical Characteristics, Amendment 1: Criteria for Cards Containing Integrated Circuits,” ISO/IEC 7810, Dec. 15, 2009. |
“Identification Cards—Physical Characteristics, Amendment 2: Opacity,” ISO/IEC 7810, Jan. 15, 2012. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200147992 A1 | May 2020 | US |