This application claims priority to German Patent Application. No. 102008011611, filed Feb. 28, 2008, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Smart cards are finding more and more applications worldwide. Thus, smart cards have for example already long been known as storage cards for telephone applications.
With increasing computing power and storage capacity of the semiconductor chips, however, smart cards are finding diverse further uses, such as, for example, as a card for those with health insurance, or as an identity card.
Contactless smart cards, in particular, in which power and data are transmitted without direct electrical coupling between card and terminal, are increasingly being used.
The materials, the construction and the production of the card body are essentially determined by functional elements of the cards and by the loading of the card in the course of handling during the application.
For applications in which high strength and longevity are required, polycarbonate (PC) is often used at the present time. It is a typical material for identity cards, but has a high stress corrosion cracking sensitivity.
Embodiments are related to smart cards comprising a card body which is at least partly composed of polycarbonate, and to a method for producing such a smart card.
One embodiment relates to a smart card comprising a card body, wherein the card body has at least a first, a second and a third layer. The first and the second layer are at least partly composed of polycarbonate. The third layer is arranged between the first and the second layer and is composed of a material having a melting point Ts<150° C.
In one embodiment, a method for producing a card body for a smart card comprises constructing the card body from at least a first, a second and a third layer. The first and the second layer are at least partly produced from polycarbonate. The third layer is arranged between the first and the second layer and produced from a material having a melting point of Ts<150° C.
The invention may be more completely understood from the following detailed description of various embodiments in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Identical elements in the figures are provided with the same or similar reference symbols, and that a repeated description of these elements is omitted.
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
By virtue of the arrangement of such a third layer 13 having a low melting point in comparison with polycarbonate, polycarbonate layers can be combined with the aid of this interlayer 13 with lower temperature loadings than if the polycarbonate layers have to be directly connected to one another. By virtue of the lower melting point of the third layer 13, the polycarbonate layers 11 and 12 can be combined with the third layer 13 for example at lower temperatures by means of laminating technology. The third layer 13 thus constitutes an adhesion layer between two polycarbonate layers. By virtue of the lower temperature loading during the production of the card body, inherent stresses possibly occurring in the polycarbonate layer around a foreign body in the polycarbonate layer will correspondingly also turn out to be lower. Moreover, inherent stress cracks that normally propagate in polycarbonate on account of stress corrosion cracking are stopped at said third layer 13. The card body therefore has a lower notch sensitivity.
The arrangement of the third layer between the two polycarbonate layers significantly reduces the notch sensitivity of the card body. The use of the interlayer having a low melting point enables a card body production process with low temperatures. Inherent stresses brought about by temperature loadings can thus be reduced. The interlayer can additionally serve as a stop layer for microcracks in the polycarbonate layers.
Appropriate material for the third layer 13 includes for example a material at least from one of the groups of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), such as e.g. amorphous PET (APET), PET with glycol (PET-G), PET with fluorine (PET-F), and polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
The third layer 13 can have a thickness within the range of 3 μm to 10 μm. In possible embodiments, at least one of the polycarbonate layers 11 or 12 can be optically transparent. In exemplary embodiments, the third layer 13 can have one or a combination of the states amorphous, uncolored and transparent. However, it can also have one or a combination of the states partly crystalline, uncolored and translucent. Furthermore, the third layer can also be colored, e.g. in order to increase the contrast on the overlying layer.
The third layer 13 can additionally serve as a carrier for optical security features such as, for example, a hologram, a kinegram, a microtext, a micro-coding (barcode), one or a plurality of reflection layers (e.g. in displays) and/or a carrier for electronic security features (e.g. a structured metal film in the form of a security thread or in the form of a closed antenna).
The intermediate film 22 arranged between the two layer stacks 14 can likewise be at least partly composed of polycarbonate. In the exemplary embodiment shown, the intermediate film 22 has an interruption in which a semiconductor chip 21, for example a microcontroller, is likewise arranged between the two layer stacks 14. The semiconductor chip 21 is thus arranged in the card body and is completely enveloped by the card body in the example shown.
As illustrated in
The semiconductor chip module 317 comprises for example a chip carrier 314, a semiconductor chip 315 and a housing 316 for the semiconductor chip 315. The semiconductor chip module 317 is arranged in an interruption of the intermediate film 22 between the two layer stacks 14. Consequently, the semiconductor chip module 317 is likewise arranged in the semiconductor body and is completely enveloped by the semiconductor body.
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The composite film 40 can be produced in such a way that the third layer 42 is laminated onto the first layer 41. A further possibility for producing the composite film 40 consists in the first layer 41 and the third layer 42 being coextruded, that is to say that the materials of the first layer 41 and of the third layer 42 are brought together before leaving a profile die and a composite film as illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102008011611.4 | Feb 2008 | DE | national |