A stylus offers a convenient way of interacting with a computing device, such as a tablet computer.
A stylus incorporating a pressure sensitive membrane (PSM) is described. The PSM is configured within the stylus to be compressed when pressure is applied to the stylus tip, as would be the case when a user is using the stylus tip for interacting with a computing device (for example, using the stylus as a writing instrument on a tablet computer). The compression of the PSM causes the PSM's electrical resistance to change. This change is sensed by electronics, which provide signals indicative of such change which may then be used to, for example, indicate when a stylus is active and thereby signal that particular stylus-sensing electronics should be activated. Or, for example, the relative degree of change could be used to indicate the pressure a user is applying, via the stylus, to a writing surface. Such information could be used, in association with coordinate information related to the stylus tip, to, for example, modify the thickness of a virtual trace drawn upon the display of a tablet computer. Particularly, if a user is pressing harder with her stylus against the tablet's display, a corresponding trace displayed by the tablet could be correspondingly darker and heavier, not unlike a line that would be drawn using an ordinary pencil but with lighter versus heavier pressure applied from the pencil to a sheet of paper.
In one embodiment, a stylus for performing writing, gesture, or command motions on the surface of a contact-sensitive device is described, the stylus comprising a pressure sensitive membrane disposed within the stylus; circuitry electrically coupled to the pressure sensitive membrane; a stylus tip; and wherein pressure encountered by the stylus tip is transferred to the pressure sensitive membrane.
This and other embodiments are more fully described herein.
Pressure sensitive membranes (PSMs) are membrane substrates that have an electrical property that changes as a function of deformation of the substrate. For example, a PSM, when deformed, may become increasingly electrically conductive and thereby allow the flow of electricity through the substrate. Such a membrane, and associated construction techniques, are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,209,967 “Pressure Sensitive Membrane and Method Therefor” (Wright, et. al.), which is fully incorporated by reference into this disclosure. PSMs are not the same as conductive inks, which have a bulk resistance that does not change under load. Such inks typically have a surface structure that prevents intimate contact to form between conductive pads to a surface of the ink itself, and increased force between conductive pads increases the contact area between one of the conductive pads and the ink surface.
Briefly, one type of such PSMs comprise a fibrillated polytetrafuoroethylene (PTFE) matrix having enmeshed therein (a) electrically conductive particles (polymeric microspheres of carbon, for example), and (b) electrically nonconductive, energy expanded polymeric particles. The PSM may be placed between two conductive surfaces, such as metal plates, and can serve as a reversible electrical circuit making element (switch) when an electrical current is provided, such as from a power supply. Flow of current is inhibited by the large bulk resistance of the PSM. When pressure is applied such that the composite article is deformed by compression, the resistance within the PSM drops by several orders of magnitude, thereby allowing for more flow of electrical current through the circuit. When the applied force is removed, the bulk resistance of the composite membrane increases and current ceases to flow or flows less readily. It has been discovered that such PSMs may be advantageously disposed as a sensor within an electronic stylus to provide useful information concerning the stylus's state. For example, an electronic stylus that is used to interact with a contact sensitive display screen may utilize information provided by the sensor to determine when the stylus is active, and thereby activate (possibly from a “sleeping” state of low energy consumption) electronics associated with identifying the position of the stylus tip. Further, information from the sensor may be deemed indicative of a particular and interesting types of user input (stylus pressure), which may be utilized by computer applications in myriad of ways. For example, a drawing program or a signature capture program may modify traces drawn on a corresponding display using a stylus based on changes in stylus pressure, generating on a display bolder traces when pressure is higher, and lighter traces when pressure is lower. Other computer applications my take advantage of a stylus's pressure-related information in other ways.
Circuit board 25 is a printed circuit assembly, including conductors 67 and 71, which couple to a first and a second conductive pad (30 and 31). As shown in
Signal conditioning electronics 60 is shown disposed on a portion of circuit board 25. Signal conditioning electronics may comprise various analog signal modifying elements, such as resistors and amplifiers, as necessary, in order to take measurements of the conductivity between pads 30 and 31, through PSM 40. In one embodiment, signal conditioning electronics 60 comprises a 1K resistor disposed on one of the conductors.
Terminal areas 80 are conductive connection points used to couple the conductors to measurement electronics, which are not shown in