The subject invention generally pertains to touchscreens and more specifically to means for rendering a touchscreen functional underwater.
Various waterproof enclosures have been developed for using digital devices underwater. Such enclosures, however, can limit the functionality of some devices, particularly those with capacitive touchscreen displays.
The term, “touchscreen” means a visual display that not only displays information (e.g., letters 18, numbers 20, symbols 22, icons, maps, diagrams, photos, images, etc.) at a visual display area but also provides a means for receiving input by the visual display area being in physical contact or sufficient proximity with a manually movable external element (e.g., a human finger, stylus, pointer, wand, pen, and/or pencil, etc.). Some examples of system 10 are particularly useful when touchscreen 14 is a capacitive touchscreen display, wherein such a touchscreen is responsive to changes in capacitance in the vicinity of the touchscreen's display area. Examples of capacitive touchscreens include those that operate under known principles including, but not limited to, projected capacitance, mutual capacitance, and self-capacitance.
In some examples, submerging or exposing touchscreen 14 to water adversely affects the operation of touchscreen 14 by dramatically changing the capacitance in the area where touchscreen 14 is meant to be touched for input. To overcome this problem, some examples of system 10 include various examples of a fluidic capacitive barrier overlying a touchscreen.
In the example shown in
Enclosure 24, in this example, also includes various openings and/or “cutouts” to accommodate various functional elements of device 16. For example, a hole 34 in enclosure 24 can be used for an electrical element 36 (e.g., speaker, receiver, and/or a camera) of the illustrated device 16, a cutout 38 (e.g., a notch extending from window area 32) can be used for a microphone 40 and/or a pushbutton 42 (e.g., a “home button,” a rocker arm switch emulating a joystick, or a switch emulating a mouse click), and a fixed aperture 44 can be used for a camera 46 that employs one or more signals 48 and 50 (e.g., an image, a light sensing signal, range sensing signal, etc.).
For the illustrated example, enclosure 24 includes a hermetically sealed electrical connection 48 for connecting a headset jack 50 of device 24 to external headphones 52. Enclosure 24 also includes a hermetically sealed actuator 54 for actuating an on/off switch 56 of device 24.
In this example, main body 26 and back plate 28 begin as separate pieces to facilitate the manufacture of enclosure 24 by conventional plastic injection molding; however, main body 26 and back plate 28 are subsequently joined hermetically. A clear lens 58 (e.g., flat or curved, rigid or flexible) hermetically closes aperture 44, and generally peripheral portions of fluidic capacitive barrier 12 hermetically close off window area 32, hole 34, and cutout 38. In some examples, enclosure 24 is transparent and lens 58 is an integrally formed feature thereof.
Hatch 30 for installing and removing device 16 from within an internal space 60 of enclosure 24 is shown in
It may be worth noting that device 16 includes some appropriate conventional powered electrical circuit 66 (e.g., a microprocessor, an IC integrated circuit, circuit board, etc.) that coordinates, controls, and/or powers the operation of touchscreen 14 and the various other electrical elements of device 16. When device 16 is disposed within internal space 60 of enclosure 24, the device's touchscreen display 14 is generally aligned with and adjacent to window area 32 such that fluidic capacitive barrier 12 is adjacent to touchscreen 14.
In some examples, fluidic capacitive barrier 12 comprises an outer membrane 68, an inner membrane 70 and a gap 72 therebetween. When touchscreen system 10 is immersed in water (e.g., salt water, fresh water, chlorinated water, lake, swimming pool, ocean, etc.), a fluid 74 hermetically sealed within gap 72 is such that barrier 12 reduces a detrimental capacitive effect that the surrounding water touching barrier 12 would otherwise have on the function of touchscreen 14. Given water with a dielectric constant of about 30 to 80 (depending on its temperature and mixture with other elements), it has been discovered that examples of fluid 74 having a dielectric constant significantly less than 15 allows system 10 to function underwater in that touchscreen 14 can generally identify, for example, where a person's finger 76 is touching barrier 12 with sufficient force to bring membranes 68 and 70 in localized contact at finger 76, as shown in
In some examples, fluid 74 includes a liquid (or some other generally incompressible fluid) so that surrounding water pressure from within a swimming pool, for example, will not likely compress fluid 74 to the extent that the water pressure alone pushes membrane 68 against membrane 70. In some examples, fluid 74 is part of a paste or gel (e.g., a silicone gel) interposed between membranes 68 and 70. In some examples, fluid 74 includes a mineral oil to provide fluid 74 with a dielectric constant of about 2.5 (actual value may vary depending on the concentration of mineral oil, e.g., pure mineral oil or a significant percentage of mineral oil). The term, “dielectric constant” as used in this patent refers to a material or fluid's static relative permittivity (frequency of zero). Unless otherwise specifically stated, values of dielectric constants of various fluid 74 examples mentioned herein will be with reference to the example fluid 74 being at 25 degrees Celsius. In some examples, fluid 74 includes a silicone oil to provide fluid 74 with a dielectric constant of about 2.7 (actual value may vary depending on the concentration of silicone, e.g., pure silicone or a significant percentage of silicone). In some examples, fluid 74 is a non-crystalline liquid, i.e., not a liquid crystal.
In some examples, fluid 74, inner membrane 70 and outer membrane 68 are substantially transparent. The term, “substantially transparent’ means that one can see through at some of it to view at least some of touchscreen 14. Some examples of substantially transparent liquid and substantially transparent membranes are tinted. Some examples of substantially transparent membranes are polarized. Some examples of substantially transparent membranes include opaque areas (e.g., areas with some printing or decals thereon).
In some examples, membranes 68 and 70 and/or fluid 74 are translucent or opaque. In such examples, an image is printed or projected on outer membrane 68, wherein the printed or projected image generally coincides with and/or represents the underlying image displayed on touchscreen 14.
Although membranes 68 and 70 can be made of various materials, making membranes 68 and 70 of thermoplastic polyurethane works particularly well. Variations in membrane material thicknesses (dimensions 78 and 80) and variations in gap dimension 82 are possible; however, it has been discovered that a generally good design is when gap 72 (gap dimension 82) is greater than 0.8 mm, and membranes 68 and 70 each have a material thickness of less than 0.8 mm. In some examples, gap dimension 82 is about 2 mm, material thickness 78 of outer membrane 68 is about 0.25 to 0.41 mm, and material thickness 80 of inner membrane 70 is about 0.25 to 0.41 mm.
After membranes 68 and 70 are joined, as shown in
One alternative to piercing outer membrane 68 is to ultrasonically weld the outer membrane's flange 84 to inner membrane 70 while needle 90 is between flange 84 and inner membrane 70, as shown in
In another assembly method example, membranes 68 and 70 lie horizontally while being joined, wherein outer membrane 68 is underneath inner membrane 70. Such an arrangement allows outer membrane 68 to be filled with a pool of fluid 74 prior to joining inner membrane 70 to the outer membrane's flange 84.
Once membranes 68 and 70 are joined and gap 72 is filled with fluid 74, the resulting fluidic capacitive barrier 12 of
In some examples, a touchscreen system 94 comprises a digital device 16′ that includes an integral fluidic capacitive barrier 12′, as shown in
Some examples of system 94 further include an inner membrane 70′ interposed between outer membrane 68′ and capacitive touchscreen display 14′, wherein gap 96 and the non-crystalline liquid (e.g., liquid 74) is interposed between membranes 68′ and 70′. Alternatively and/or in addition to this example, touchscreen display 14′ comprises a liquid crystal element 98 disposed outside of gap 96, as shown in
In the example shown in
Although the invention is described with respect to a preferred embodiment, modifications thereto will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. The scope of the invention, therefore, is to be determined by reference to the following claims: