This application claims priority from European Patent Application No. 03005615.4, filed Mar. 12, 2003, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The subject matter of the present invention is a transparent substrate having at least one face provided with transparent electrodes whose structure and arrangement cannot be perceived by the user in the range of wavelengths of visible light.
The invention also relates to devices including one or more substrates with transparent electrodes in which the electrodes have control or energy collector functions, and more particularly to devices of this kind disposed over the display of an electronic device when the user must be able to read the information on said display without being impeded by the structure and the arrangement of the electrodes.
The invention further relates to a method of structuring electrodes very accurately on any transparent substrate and of effecting optical compensation between the electrodes so as to make them practically invisible.
Solutions have already been proposed to make the technical interface consisting of the electrodes as discrete as possible and not to detract from the aesthetics of the electronic device, in particular in the case of a timepiece. For example, there are prior art wristwatches in which the inside face of the glass carries touch-sensitive electrodes for controlling time functions or other functions by means of a capacitive or resistive effect, as described in a non-limiting manner in the patents U.S. Pat. No. 4,228,534, EP 0 674 247 and EP 1 207 439. The glass can also be replaced by or have added to it a cell formed of two substrates with transparent electrodes between which there is an active material, for example to form a photovoltaic cell constituting a power supply, as described in the document WO 93/19479, or to form a liquid crystal cell that can have either a transparent state or a state for displaying on demand information complementary to or different from that displayed on an underlying dial, as described in the document WO 99/32945.
Transparent conductive oxides (TCO), such as indium and tin oxide (ITO), In2O3 and SnO2 doped with antimony, used in the prior art to produce the electrodes are conductive and also transparent in the visible spectrum. These materials are deposited to a thickness of 50 to 100 nm directly onto the transparent substrate or onto an intermediate layer, using any of a large number of techniques known in the art, such as spraying, evaporation, the sol-gel technique, and chemical vapour deposition (CVD) techniques, in particular the light-induced (laser-assisted) chemical vapour deposition (LICVD) technique. With regard to the structure of the electrodes, various methods used in the prior art employ at least one mask corresponding to the contour of the electrodes, either during deposition of TCO by localised crystallisation of a sol-gel film by irradiation with a UV laser or by applying to a continuous TCO film either chemical etching or localised ablation by irradiating it with UV radiation of sufficient fluence. The nature of the transparent substrate (glass or plastics material) is obviously vital from the technical and economic points of view to the choice of the process to be used. For example, localised crystallisation of a sol-gel film by a UV laser cannot be applied to a plastics material (for example PMMA) substrate, because this involves a photothermal process.
At normal incidence, a light ray passing through the TCO of refractive index n1 and the substrate of refractive index n0, or only the substrate, is not deflected and the electrodes are therefore invisible. On the other hand, at oblique incidence, the light path is modified, because of the different values of n0 and n1, with the result that the contour of the electrodes becomes visible. Obviously, it is sufficient to fill this void with a non-conductive filling material having a refractive index n2 close to n1. These materials are generally non-conductive transparent oxides (NCTO), such as SiO2 or TiO2. Various methods have been employed to achieve this objective. However, they are unsatisfactory because the filling material may form beads outside the filling area or depressions liable to modify the path of the light rays, making the contour of the electrodes even more visible, as explained below.
In a second step, depicted in
Defects of the same type may arise on filling the insulative spaces 3 with NCTO using the well-known lift-off technique. Beads 4 may then be produced on both edges 8 of the insulating space 3, as depicted in
The invention therefore provides a transparent substrate carrying electrodes whose contour is invisible to a user observing said substrate at any incidence.
To this end, the invention consists in a substrate with transparent electrodes and formed of a transparent material of refractive index n0 onto which is deposited a film of a transparent conductive material of thickness e1 and of refractive index n1. The film is structured to form a set of electrodes whose contours delimit insulating spaces adapted to be filled with a transparent dielectric material of thickness e2 and of refractive index n2. The substrate is characterised in that the ratio of the respective thicknesses of the conductive material and the dielectric material is inversely proportional to the ratio of the refractive indices of said materials, so that the materials form neither depressions nor beads at their junction. In other words, the ratios n1:n2 and e1:e2 are inversely proportional to one another so that if n1>n2 then e1<e2 and vice versa if n2>n1 then e2<e1.
The transparent conductive material is preferably a transparent conductive oxide (TCO) such as indium and tin oxide (ITO), In2O3 or SnO2 doped with Sb. The dielectric material is preferably a non-conductive transparent oxide (NCTO) such as TiO2 and SiO2.
The transparent material on which the substrate is based can be glass or a transparent plastics material such as polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) or polycarbonate (PC). In the case of a plastics material, an intermediate layer of a hard transparent material, such as a resin incorporating SiO2, is preferably disposed between the substrate and the TCO film.
The substrate as described hereinabove may further be coated with a film to protect it against mechanical attack, for example during handling to mount it in an electronic device, or against chemical attack if it constitutes a closure plate of a liquid crystal cell or a photovoltaic cell. The method of obtaining said substrate with transparent electrodes essentially consists in:
The source of UV radiation is a laser, for example a 248 nm excimer laser emitting short pulses or a 308 nm excimer laser emitting long pulses, the characteristics of the UV radiation being the fluence, the frequency and the number of pulses, all these parameters being vital for eliminating the TCO without degrading the substrate and for controlling the thickness of the NCTO deposit, as will emerge in the following detailed description.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent in the course of the following description, which is given by way of illustrative and non-limiting example and with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
How the invention provides perfect optical compensation to render the electrodes practically invisible to the naked eye is described hereinafter with reference to
The source of UV radiation is an excimer laser, such as an XeCl (308 nm) laser emitting long (250 ns) pulses at a maximum energy of 150 mJ per pulse with a rectangular beam 1.9×2.4 cm2 or a KrF (248 nm) laser emitting short (20 ns) pulses at a maximum energy of 180 mJ per pulse with a rectangular beam 1.5×4 cm3. Other excimer lasers may obviously be used.
However, as explained with reference to
It is obvious that, in this second example, the PMMA may be replaced by some other transparent plastics material, such as polycarbonate (PC), the characteristics of the laser beam being adapted if necessary.
The substrate with transparent electrodes that has just been described has many applications, not only applications to touch-sensitive screens, liquid crystal cells or photovoltaic cells, but also other applications that do not depart from the scope of the present invention and will be obvious to the person skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03005615 | Mar 2003 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4228534 | Fellrath et al. | Oct 1980 | A |
6414728 | Faris et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6489642 | America et al. | Dec 2002 | B1 |
6740807 | Ono | May 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 674 247 | Sep 1995 | EP |
0 789 295 | Aug 1997 | EP |
1 207 439 | May 2002 | EP |
9319479 | Sep 1993 | WO |
9932945 | Jul 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040238835 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |