1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the communication between a sender (transmitter) and a receiver over a capacitive coupling (sometimes also referred to as capacitive resistive coupling, “intrabody” coupling, RCID-coupling or PAN-coupling) in which small electrical currents which are used for the transmission of information between the transmitter and the receiver are generated in the human body, and/or in which the transmitter and the receiver interact with one another over very short distances via electric fields.
2. Description of Related Art
This method of coupling is disclosed in the U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,591,854, 5,914,701 and 5,796,827. Implementations thereof are described in the international patent application PCT/CH 2006/000518 as well as in further published specifications of various authors.
A particular advantage of the capacitive coupling through the human body or, as the case may be, over short distances is the selectivity of the data transmission. Depending on the configuration, one can determine with a high degree of certainty that the signal received by the receiver can only have been transmitted by the person who is situated in direct proximity to or in physical contact with a receiver electrode that is designated for it.
A disadvantage is, among other things, that as a result of the poor signal to noise ratio (literally: signal-to-interference ratio), only a small amount of data can be transmitted. A good signal to noise ratio is only possible with a large amplitude of the transmission signal. However, a large amplitude (i.e. high voltage) would rather not be tolerated by the user. In the international patent publication WO 2007/112609, approaches are described, with which these problems can be addressed. Despite these, the bandwidth of the signal transmission remains limited.
The layout of the electrodes in the transmitter is important for as effective a signal transmission as possible. According to the state of the art, these are designed as electrode pairs, wherein the two electrodes lie parallel and opposite one another in the manner of a plate capacitor. The electrodes should be as large as possible so as to maximize the coupling into the body and also to optimize the signal to noise ratio, in the situation in which no electrically conductive contact exists between the one electrode and the human body. However, these large electrodes have a problematic effect on the design and the dimensions of the transmitter. Furthermore, they cause the power consumption of the transmitter to be quite high, so that more frequent battery changing is necessary.
With this background in mind, it is an object of the present invention to provide solutions for the layout of transmitter electrodes which ameliorate the above-mentioned disadvantages at least partly and which mean a further step toward the commercial application of the technology and its acceptance by consumers. The solutions mentioned should in particular be usable for access control.
These objects will be achieved by the invention, as it is described in the claims.
According to the invention, a portable device or also a receiver is characterized in that at least one of the electrodes is at least partially transparent.
A portable device according to the approach according to the invention is, for example, wearable on the body of a user; it can, for example, be designed as a card-like identification medium, as a “smart card cover”, mobile telephone, watch, portable computer (for example of the “handheld computer” type). It includes at least two electrodes and means for the creation of an electrical signal between the electrodes, such that the signal is able to be coupled through the electrodes into the body of the user and is detectable from the body by at least one electrode of a second device. Such a device also makes possible a direct, short-range communication (not through the body), for example through holding of the portable device in direct proximity of a receiver electrode, i.e. applications of the invention are not limited to coupling through the human body but rather also extend to cases in which the user carries the portable device on his or her person, holds it in the vicinity of a receiver electrode or otherwise makes it possible that the communication between transmitter and receiver takes place directly and not exclusively over the body.
Transparent electrical conductors, for example of very thin layers of metal that are vacuum-metalized or applied via a sputter deposition technique on a transparent substrate, or certain doped semiconductors on an oxide base (TCOs as for example ITO-layers), are currently available. For a considerable time already, these have been well-known for certain applications, for example as components for flat-screen displays or thin-film solar cells. They have not yet been considered for information transmission, as they are known to have poor electrical conductivity and would result in unacceptably large losses when used with the high frequencies usually employed in information transmission.
However, it has now been recognized that the capacitive resistive information transmission is configurable such that the conductive capacity of transparent electrodes is adequate. In particular, the combination of comparatively low voltages (for example less than 5V or even less than 3V) and currents and low frequencies (for example less than a 2 MHz center frequency) allows the use of the electrodes with limited conductive capacity. Moreover, it has somewhat surprisingly been recognized that these conductive layers can be used as electrodes, without significantly impairing the read and write capabilities of a RFID transponder used in combination with the capacitive resistive information transmission, even if the respective RFID antenna is situated between the electrodes and, for example, is substantially surrounded by the electrodes.
Through the amazingly simple technique according to the invention, many new degrees of freedom arise with respect to the design of a receiver or a transmitter, for example of fully transparent buttons, or buttons with an underlying display mechanism.
Preferably—in particular for applications in which it is used for access control (for example the operation of door locks and/or the release of objects as for example instruments, possibly including data logging)—the transmitter (and/or possibly a receiver) is situated in a portable device. Until now, for portable devices, the design seemed to be less important, since a portable device of the type according to the invention is generally carried in a bag or otherwise covered while worn. A further realization of the invention is that with the introduction of transparent electrodes, the design possibilities of portable devices multiply considerably:
In all of these cases, elements of the transmitter electronics and/or elements of other applications can be arranged between the transparent electrodes. A special application envisions the arrangement of a RFID tag (RFID transponder with antenna) between the transparent electrodes. As already mentioned, the electrodes can even substantially cover the RFID antenna without substantially influencing the functionality of the RFID application.
Furthermore, the allowance for transparent electrodes has the particularly attractive advantage for the “access control” application that one does not notice the electrode, or even that it is an electrode and therefore a part of an electronic device. Rather, depending on the design, it seems to be simply a shell, a design element or another functional element.
According to a preferred form of the invention, the two electrodes of a portable device (transmitter) are arranged such that between the electrodes there are arranged either component parts of the transmitter electronics and/or of another application distinct from the transmitter electronics—therein can also be designated a battery—or an air gap is present, in which such a component part—for example with a “smart card” as carrier of the component part—can be inserted.
Component parts here are meant to be active or passive preferably electronic component parts, which are more than a mere separating layer between the electrodes, for example in particular active electronic component parts such as ASICs, processors, integrated circuits, memory modules, sender and/or receiver for contact-free information transmission, including active or passive RFID transponders, passive component parts such as antennas, resistors, capacitors, coils, etc. or also batteries, optical elements etc.
Of course the transmitter electronics and electronic component parts for the application which is distinct from the transmitter electronics may be integrated together with one another in at least one unified component—for example in an integrated circuit. The feature of the “component part of an application which is distinct from the transmitter electronics” is simply that between the electrodes are arranged electronic elements which can administrate functions that are entirely separate from the capacitive resistive information transmission and preferably from other contact-free information transmission methods, for example as they control or constitute the display of a mobile telephone or as they store information and/or have stored information which is not communicated with the intrabody information transmission, etc.
This approach makes use of the recent finding that for the transmission of data, the area of the electrodes is important, however not the capacitive coupling there-between. On the contrary, it has been found that for a given electrode size a large capacitance is unfavorable, because a large capacitance creates a negative effect on the life of a battery of the portable device, since larger currents flow in the generation of signals. Furthermore, as a result of the larger flowing current of larger capacitance, the requirements on the electrode conductivity are higher. It has further been found that a parallel arrangement of the electrodes is indeed a possibility, but is not necessary.
In the case of a plate capacitor, the capacitance is proportional to the area of the electrodes and to the dielectric constant of the material between the electrodes, but inversely proportional to the distance between the electrodes. As a result of the approach according the preferred embodiment, the two electrodes are in general farther apart from one another than according to the state of the art, without this precluding a compact design of the portable device. Through the larger electrode separation, the capacitance is limited. In combination with the transparent electrodes with their comparatively limited electric conductivity this results in a synergy effect, because such transparent electrodes are particularly good to use as a result of their smaller flowing current.
In embodiments in which between the electrodes there is an air gap in which the components of a distinct application—for example an identity card and/or smart card—are able to be inserted, the compatibility with existing systems as well as backwards compatibility are also a given.
According to a special embodiment of the invention, the portable device with the air gap can comprise a communications interface, over which data can be exchanged with the application that is inserted into the air gap. Such an interface can, for example, be formed like a conventional smart card reader.
According to a further special embodiment, a communication link can exist between the transmitter electronics and an input unit, wherein the signals transmitted by the transmitter electronics can be dependent on data that are input. For example, the transmitted signal can include a PIN, which the user previously has input in the input unit. In this embodiment, the portable device can, for example, be designed as a mobile telephone, wherein the input unit can correspond to the input unit of the mobile telephone (keypad, touch screen, voice recognition device etc.).
Particularly preferably, in this embodiment the display of the mobile telephone is furnished or covered with a transparent electrode.
If the portable device is a mobile telephone, the electrical supply for the transmitter electronics can be obtained by simple means: namely as the transmitter electronics are energized by the very powerful battery of the mobile telephone, for example over a 3V DC supply. The communication between the transmitter electronics and the remaining electronic component parts of the mobile telephone can be accomplished—in case these are not integrated with one another—over any known or yet to be developed interface, for example over a I2C data bus.
The receiver includes at least one receiver electrode and evaluation electronics, through which a signal that is generated by the capacitive resistive signal transmission is detectable between the receiver electrode and a further electrode or between the receiver electrode and a ground closure, and can be evaluated.
Particularly preferable is the use of an information transmission method, which relies on the spread spectrum method, wherein the signal is transmitted as an ultra-broadband signal, preferably according to the teaching of WO 2007/112609. Ultra-broadband is defined as the use of a frequency range of a bandwidth of at least 20% of the center frequency or, as the case may be, carrier frequency. According to the teaching of this document, in particular a direct sequence spread spectrum is used. The data are preferably first modulated with a method of digital data modulation and subsequently spectrum-spread. In WO 2007/112609, methods are also described for the analysis of a capacitive resistive signal.
In the following, embodiments of the invention are illustrated by means of schematic figures. Shown are:
The portable device 1 according to
According to the first aspect of the invention, now at least one of the electrodes is at least partly transparent, in the depicted example, the first electrode 3. On an upper side of the plastic carrier 5, letters, pictures, etc. can be applied by known means such that they are visible through the transparent electrode.
The transmitter comprises a compartment for a battery 6 as well as control electronics, here represented schematically by a chip 7, for the at least partly transparent electrodes 3, 4. The smart card 11 is able to be inserted into an air gap. A possible inscription area 12 of the smart card remains visible behind the transparent first electrode 3.
In
The dashboard comprises, in a known manner, display panels 21 and controls 22. In addition, it features a plurality of receiver electrodes 23, 24 which function as input surfaces. A contact upon a receiver electrode by the user—in which as mentioned a data signal is continually coupled—is registered by a controller of the receiver electrode. This controller has a communication link with the automobile electronics, through which a corresponding event can be triggered, for example the turning-on of a turn signal or a low-beam headlight etc. This event can be dependent on the user—for example a control surface can have a different function for a first user than for a second user, or it can be that other parameters, for example seat adjustments etc. are selected. The user selectivity results from the fact that the first and the second user can be assigned different transmitters and thus different capacitive resistive data signals. Obviously, it can also be imagined that a particular user is altogether not authorized to operate the vehicle functions or only authorized for specific times/for a particular number of inputs.
A transference from automobiles to other objects—for example buildings etc.—is of course also possible.
According to the invention, now at least one of the receiver electrodes 23, 24 are transparent, for example at least those receiver electrodes 24 that cover a display field. Through these surprisingly simple approaches, new possibilities for interaction arise, for example in that a set speed for a cruise control can be set directly on the speedometer. Transparent receiver electrodes—for example all receiver electrodes are transparent—can be rear-projected upon and/or labeled by a corresponding display field depending on the situation.
The integration of the transmitter electronics 7 in a mobile telephone makes possible the integration of several functionalities with one another in one portable device. The following are for example possible:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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240/07 | Feb 2007 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH08/00057 | 2/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/30/2009 |