Dual-Substrate-Sensor Stack with Electrodes Opposing a Display
In one embodiment, an apparatus includes a display and a first and second substrate. Each substrate has a surface facing toward the display; a surface facing away from the display; and drive or sense electrodes of a touch sensor disposed on the surface of each substrate facing away from the display. The drive or sense electrodes are made of a conductive mesh of conductive material. The apparatus also includes an adhesive layer between the first and second substrates.
This application is a continuation under 35 U.S.C. §120 of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/608,779, filed 19 Oct. 2009.
TECHNICAL FIELDThis disclosure generally relates to touch sensors.
BACKGROUNDTouchscreen displays are able to detect a touch within the active or display area, such as detecting whether a finger is present pressing a fixed-image touchscreen button or detecting the presence and position of a finger on a larger touchscreen display. Some touchscreens can also detect the presence of elements other than a finger, such as a stylus used to generate a digital signature, select objects, or perform other functions on a touchscreen display.
Use of a touchscreen as part of a display allows an electronic device to change a display image, and to present different buttons, images, or other regions that can be selected, manipulated, or actuated by touch. Touchscreens can therefore provide an effective user interface for cell phones, GPS devices, personal digital assistants (PDAs), computers, ATM machines, and other devices.
Touchscreens use various technologies to sense touch from a finger or stylus, such as resistive, capacitive, infrared, and acoustic sensors. Resistive sensors rely on touch to cause two resistive elements overlaying the display to contact one another completing a resistive circuit, while capacitive sensors rely on the capacitance of a finger changing the capacitance detected by an array of elements overlaying the display device. Infrared and acoustic touchscreens similarly rely on a finger or stylus to interrupt infrared or acoustic waves across the screen, indicating the presence and position of a touch.
Capacitive and resistive touchscreens often use transparent conductors such as indium tin oxide (ITO) or transparent conductive polymers such as PEDOT to form an array over the display image, so that the display image can be seen through the conductive elements used to sense touch. The size, shape, and pattern of circuitry have an effect on the accuracy of the touchscreen, as well as on the visibility of the circuitry overlaying the display. Although a single layer of most suitable conductive elements is difficult to see when overlaying a display, multiple layers can be visible to a user, and some materials such as fine line metal elements are not transparent but rely on their small size to avoid being seen by users.
Further, touchscreens are often used to overlay displays such as LCD display screens that have their own circuitry and patterns. It is therefore desirable to consider the configuration of touchscreen electrode patterns when designing a touchscreen.
SUMMARYA touchscreen includes touchscreen electrode elements distributed across an active area of a substrate, and the touchscreen overlays a display. The touchscreen electrode elements are configured to avoid creating moiré patterns between the display and the touchscreen, such as angled, wavy, zig-zag, or randomized lines. In a further example, the electrodes form a mesh pattern configured to avoid moiré patterns.
Touchscreens are often used as interfaces on small electronic devices, appliances, and other such electronic systems because the display behind the touchscreen can be easily adapted to provide instruction to the user and to receive various types of input, thereby providing an intuitive interface that requires very little user training to use effectively. Inexpensive and efficient touchscreen technologies enable incorporation of touchscreens into inexpensive commercial devices, but these inexpensive technologies should also desirably be durable and have relatively high immunity to noise, moisture or dirt, or other unintended operation to ensure reliability and longevity of the touchscreen assembly.
In a typical mutual capacitance touchscreen, the capacitance between drive electrodes and various receive or sense electrodes is monitored, and a change in mutual capacitance between the electrodes indicates the presence and position of a finger. Mutual capacitance sensor circuitry measures the capacitance between the drive electrodes and the receive electrodes, which are covered by a dielectric overlay material that provides a sealed housing. When a finger is present, field coupling between the drive and receive electrodes is attenuated, as the human body conducts away a portion of the field that arcs between the drive and receive electrodes. This reduces the measured capacitive coupling between the drive and receive electrodes. In a self-capacitance touchscreen, an array of a single type of electrode is used to determine position of a touch by monitoring the touch's influence on the self-capacitance of each of the electrodes in the array. The attached circuitry can measure the self capacitance of a single electrode, or of groups of electrodes such as rows and columns of electrodes. In a more detailed example, an amount of charge needed to raise the voltage of the electrode by a predetermined amount is measured, thereby determining the capacitance of each electrode. When a finger is present, the self-capacitance of the electrode is increased, resulting in a measurable change in self-capacitance.
The touchscreen elements that overlay a display are occasionally formed from conductive materials such as metal wire traces or fine line metal, or more commonly conductors such as Indium tin oxide which are transparent and relatively conductive in thin layers. Other materials such as PEDOT (polyethylene dioxythiophene) and other conductive polymers are also relatively transparent and used in some touchscreens.
An example touchscreen shown in
In this example, the finger 103 interferes with capacitive coupling between the X0 and X1 drive lines and the receive lines approximately equally, and similarly interferes with the capacitive coupling between the Y2 and Y3 receive lines and the X drive lines approximately equally. This indicates that the finger's touch is located between X0 and X1, and between Y2 and Y3 on the grid formed by the drive and receive lines.
Although each zone in this example comprises multiple electrodes, in other examples each zone may have a single electrode, at the cost of a greater number of electrical connections to the touchscreen. The touchscreen display of
Because the finger touch 103 is somewhat round or oval in shape, it will interact more strongly with drive lines near the center of the finger than at either the top or bottom extreme edge of the fingerprint. Further, the finger will interact to a lesser degree with adjacent drive and receive lines not directly under the area of physical contact between the finger and the screen's protective layers, where the finger is still physically near enough the drive and receive lines to interact with their capacitive coupling.
The finger's influence on multiple drive and receive lines enables the touchscreen display to detect the vertical and horizontal position of a finger on the touchscreen display with very good accuracy, well beyond simply determining in which of the four shown vertical and horizontal regions the finger is located. To achieve this result, the line spacing here is configured anticipating a fingerprint that is approximately 8 mm in diameter. In this example, the lines are spaced approximately 2 mm apart, for a 6 mm electrode pitch, such that a typical touch interacts strongly with at least three or four vertical and horizontal lines.
In operation, a user of the touchscreen display of
The distribution of lines across the touchscreen display is also generally uniform, resulting in relatively uniform brightness across the touchscreen display. But, the regular pattern and spacing of lines such as in
Configuration of touchscreen elements relative to the line or pixel configuration of a display assembly is therefore important in some applications to reduce moiré patterns, as line configurations that cover regular or repeating patterns of pixels can create interference or moiré patterns in the touchscreen display assembly. It is therefore desirable in some embodiments to configure electrodes in an embodiment such as that of
The line configuration in touchscreen displays in some example embodiments of the invention is determined to avoid creating interference or moiré patterns as a result of the line geometry interacting with the pixel geometry of the display. For example, lines that are very near but slightly offset from a line angle of the display, such as one degree, are likely to produce interference patterns. Similarly, right angles or fractions thereof such as 90 degree angles, 45 degree angles, and 22.5 degree angles may also be more likely to produce moiré patterns depending on the configuration of the display elements and the line pitch of the touchscreen element.
At 201, the lines are configured at an angle rather than square to an edge of the touchscreen display assembly and LCD display, reducing the likelihood of interference patterns. At 202, wavy lines are used to avoid long linear stretches of fine metal line, reducing the probability of causing interference patterns. Similarly, the fine metal lines at 203 zig-zag, breaking up long linear stretches of parallel lines. At 204, the lines follow a randomized pattern, and so also lack long linear portions. A randomized electrode pattern is also shown at 205, but the randomized electrode line is shifted laterally from line to line to break up vertical regularity in the electrode pattern; the amount of shifting from line to line can in itself be randomized to further suppress the ability of groups of lines to cause a moiré effect. Fractal-based or other irregular shapes are used in further embodiments to achieve a similar effect.
Although angled and wavy lines are used here to avoid creating moiré patterns, a variety of factors other than angle or direction of the lines will affect the likelihood of observing a moiré pattern when overlaying a display with a touchscreen assembly, including touchscreen element or electrode line width, frequency, and scale. In some embodiments, the touchscreen elements are formed using fine line metal on the order of 3-7 micrometers in width, which is much smaller than the typical pixel size of even high resolution LCD displays.
A high resolution LCD display pixel is typically made up of three individual red, green, and blue sub-pixels that are 100-150 micrometers in diameter, or 0.1-0.15 millimeters. This large difference in scale reduces the amount that a line can overlap a pixel, limiting the amount the pixel's apparent brightness can be attenuated by the overlapping touchscreen. Because the difference between sub-pixels obscured by overlapping touchscreen lines and sub-pixels not obscured by touchscreen element lines is small, the chances of creating a visible moiré pattern are greatly reduced. For example, a line that is only 5 micrometers wide cannot substantially obscure an LCD color sub-pixel that is 100 micrometers in diameter, resulting in little difference in visible brightness when the touchscreen element line overlaps a sub-pixel of the underlying display. Nevertheless, even a high pixel-to-line dimension ratio touchscreen can exhibit subtle moiré banding effects under the right conditions, which might be objectionable.
The frequency or density of touchscreen lines is further a factor in production of moiré patterns, as greater spacing between lines or greater differences in pitch between overlapping patterns generally tend to reduce likelihood of producing visible moiré patterns. Returning to the example of
The wavy and zig-zag lines in the examples shown include some repetition in configuration of the lines, such as repeatedly going up and down in the same pattern. The degree of repetition between adjacent lines is varied in a further example, to further reduce the chances of creating regular, repeating patterns that can contribute to moiré effects. A group of line elements such as 10, 20, 50, or some other suitable number of lines is repeated in some embodiments to form larger touchscreens, reducing the work needed to lay out larger touchscreens having large numbers of touchscreen electrode elements. Repetition of randomized lines can be used where the repeated lines are sufficiently far apart or have a sufficient number of non-repeating intervening lines as to be unlikely to contribute to moiré patterns, such as repeating every 10 or 20 lines. A designer can therefore use a standard block of 20 random lines and repeatedly use the same 20 lines to produce a large touchscreen element array such as in
In some further examples, the scale of the line pattern is also taken into consideration, such that the scale of repetition of the pixels of the underlying display is on a much smaller scale than the repetition of the anti-moiré touchscreen element pattern. For example, green sub-pixels on a touchscreen display may repeat every 100 microns, while the wavy line touchscreen electrode overlay repeats its pattern every 5 millimeters. This difference in scale greatly reduces the chances of observing a moiré pattern, especially where the electrode line size is small relative to the display's pixel size.
In other examples, the lines are random or semi-random in path, such as fractal-type lines shown at 204. These lines can be produced using a variety of methods including random number generation, use of fractal algorithms, or can be drawn by hand.
Because it is desirable to keep adjacent lines from overlapping, and to know the approximate position of the line for determining touch position, line position in a further embodiment is restricted to a certain band or range. This can be achieved in a number of ways, such as simply setting upper and lower bounds for a randomization process, normalizing a generated line to fit within a certain band, changing the probability of the next change in line direction based on line position within a band to encourage reversion to a desired mean path, and other methods.
In addition to line direction, spacing between lines and repetition of lines can also be varied to reduce the regularity of the fine line metal touchscreen element array, reducing the chances for observing moiré patterns. If the spacing between lines is varied, whether with random lines such as fractal lines or repeating lines such as wavy lines, the lines will be significantly less likely to form regular repeating patterns of obscuring pixels on an underlying display, reducing the chances of moiré patterns being formed. As with randomizing line direction, variation in line spacing can be achieved using a number of suitable techniques including randomization within a range, normalization of random numbers to a desired range, and other methods. Use of line constraints such as boundaries is again important in randomizing line spacing to ensure that adjacent lines, such as the X drive lines and Y receive lines of
The lines 301 and 302 form a two-layer mutual capacitance touchscreen array of drive and receive electrodes in a further example embodiment, much like the example of
As shown in the above examples, use of touchscreen electrode elements having complex or irregular patterns, irregular spacing, and other variations can reduce moiré effect when the touchscreen overlays a display assembly having a regular repeating pattern of pixel elements. The examples of
The touchscreen configuration shown here can be operated in one example as a mutual capacitance touchscreen, such as where the X lines are drive lines and the Y lines are receive lines. In another example, the X and Y lines are operated independently as self-capacitance electrodes.
In this example, the horizontal electrodes coupled to the X1 connection are shown within the area of region 403, and the vertical electrodes coupled to the Y2 connection are shown within region 404. Region 405 similarly shows the vertical electrodes coupled to connection Y3, and a section of the touchscreen display that overlaps these drive and receive segments is shown at 406. A “dead zone” of vertical electrodes not coupled to a vertical external connection are shown at 407 (denoted DZ), and are optionally included in various configurations in order to provide improved linearity. As shown in the magnified vertical electrode view at 408, the vertical dead zone Y electrode between the Y2 and Y3 receive electrode regions is broken up in the vertical direction to prevent propagation of fields along the electrode axis, ensuring linear response of the touchscreen assembly.
The magnified vertical Y electrode view at 408 also illustrates how the Y receive electrodes are formed in a mesh having a continuous pattern of wavy lines that are interconnected with wavy line segments, with breaks that separate the Y2 and Y3 electrode zones from the dead zone (DZ) electrode 407. These breaks are staggered here, to break up the regularity of separation between zones and prevent moiré patterns. The Y layer electrodes are formed of a series of curves, but in other embodiments are formed of polygons or other patterns. The S-shaped curves forming the Y electrode pattern here further provide a degree of redundancy in current path through the electrode, as the lines are bridged at regular intervals by crossing S-shaped curves to form the mesh shown.
The Y electrode pattern shown in the magnified section shown at 408 is overlaid in this example by the X electrode pattern shown at 409. The X electrode pattern includes an array of mixed parallelograms forming a horizontal electrode mesh, with breaks between zones formed by truncating ends of parallelograms and bridging the truncated parallelograms as shown at 410. Bridging the truncated parallelograms here prevents an open-ended line segment, providing greater conductivity and a redundant path for an undesired break or defect in the parallelograms. Further, vertices in the irregular parallelograms pattern shown at 409 are not in a straight line due to the variation in electrode element angle and mixed parallelogram shapes. Breaks between parallelograms at their vertices to form the breaks between zones therefore vary in position as shown at 410, reducing the chances of moiré effect and providing some degree of interpolative effect between zones.
Different shapes and shape variations may be used to form the mixed parallelogram array depending on the requirements of a particular application, for example pixel pitch, electrode spacing, required line density, and so on. Use of line elements having fewer than four different angles, such as a regular checkerboard pattern, can be used in some examples but may contribute to a greater likelihood of producing a moiré effect. It has been shown that a mix of parallelograms has the potential advantage of having many non-orthogonal line angles while being readily scaleable in density and pitch. Other shapes, such various types of polygons, curves, random or semi-random lines, and other such electrodes can be used in addition to the parallelograms shown, including in various combinations, and are within the scope of the invention.
The electrodes shown at 408 and 409 are overlaid in the enlarged view shown at 411, illustrating how the two electrode patterns are layered together with electrical isolation between them (not shown) to form a pattern of electrodes as shown generally in
Further, the many crossovers between X electrodes and Y electrode traces or wires when overlaid and viewed from above are approximately orthogonal, reducing the change in sensitivity of the touchscreen to small alignment changes or imperfections in the layer-to-layer assembly process. Oblique angles can cause pattern displacement errors during assembly which can cause substantial field non-linearities, and so it is desirable to reduce this form of error. In various further examples, the crossover angle between drive and receive elements is desirably at least 45 degrees, 60 degrees, or another suitable angle to manage the sensitivity of the touchscreen to pattern alignment.
Fine line patterns exhibit localized field fluctuations due to pattern granularity, which apart from layer to layer alignment errors causes regional fluctuations in sensitivity. It is desirable to align these fluctuations in a regular way, synchronized if possible with electrode centerlines. The electrode pattern here is configured such that the pitch of the electrode connections such as Y1 and Y2 align with the pitch of repetition of the Y mesh, and the pitch of the electrode connections X1 and X2 align with the pitch of the X electrode mesh. The meshes in each layer are thus repeating along each axis, in synchronicity with the electrode centers. This ensures that the electrode mesh's relation to the electrode connections is the same at each electrode connection, providing good linearity in geometry and response between electrode regions.
Construction of the touchscreen example of
The X drive and Y receive layers in
In various touchscreen configurations, the electrodes of
Touchscreens are often used in a variety of applications, from automatic teller machines (ATM machines), home appliances, personal digital assistants and cell phones, and other such devices. One such example cellular telephone or PDA device is illustrated in
The user may interact with the device by touching with a single finger, such as to select a program for execution or to type a letter on a keyboard displayed on the touchscreen display assembly 1002, or may use multiple touches such as to zoom in or zoom out when viewing a document or image. In other devices, such as home appliances, the display does not change or changes only slightly during device operation, and may recognize only single touches.
Although the example touchscreen display of
Many materials and configurations will be suitable for forming touchscreens such as those described herein, including printed or etched fine line metal, metal wire, Indium tin oxide (ITO), conductive polymers, and other such materials.
These example touchscreen assemblies presented here illustrate how a touchscreen can be formed using electrodes configured to reduce the probability of creating a visible moiré pattern when overlaying a display having a repeating pattern of pixels. Although the anti-moiré touchscreen display assembly examples given here generally rely on mutual capacitance or self-capacitance to operate, other embodiments of the invention will use other technologies, including other capacitance measures, resistance, or other such sense technologies. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the example embodiments described herein, and this invention is limited only by the claims, and the full scope of equivalents thereof.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising:
- a display;
- a first substrate and a second substrate, each substrate having: a surface facing toward the display; a surface facing away from the display; and drive or sense electrodes of a touch sensor disposed on the surface of each substrate facing away from the display, the drive or sense electrodes being made of a conductive mesh of conductive material; and
- an adhesive layer between the first and second substrates.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the conductive mesh comprises a plurality of mesh segments, each of the mesh segments having a width of approximately 10 μm.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein each of the mesh segments is substantially sinusoidal.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a dielectric layer separating the display from the second substrate.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the dielectric layer comprises an air gap.
6. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the dielectric layer comprises another adhesive layer.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the substrate is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), glass, or polycarbonate (PC).
8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the adhesive layer is an optically clear adhesive (OCA).
9. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a cover panel separated from the first substrate by another adhesive layer.
10. An device comprising:
- a display;
- a first substrate and a second substrate, each substrate having: a surface facing toward the display; a surface facing away from the display; and drive or sense electrodes of a touch sensor disposed on the surface of each substrate facing away from the display, the drive or sense electrodes being made of a conductive mesh of conductive material;
- an adhesive layer between the first and second substrates; and
- a computer-readable non-transitory storage medium embodying logic that is configured when executed to control the touch sensor.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the conductive mesh comprises a plurality of mesh segments, each of the mesh segments having a width of approximately 10 μm.
12. The device of claim 10, wherein each of the mesh segments is substantially sinusoidal.
13. The device of claim 10, further comprising a dielectric layer separating the display from the second substrate.
14. The device of claim 13, wherein the dielectric layer comprises an air gap.
15. The device of claim 13, wherein the dielectric layer comprises another adhesive layer.
16. The device of claim 10, wherein the substrate is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), glass, or polycarbonate (PC).
17. The device of claim 10, wherein the adhesive layer is an optically clear adhesive (OCA).
18. The device of claim 10, further comprising a cover panel separated from the first substrate by another adhesive layer.
19. An apparatus comprising:
- a cover panel;
- a display;
- a first substrate and a second substrate, each substrate having: a surface facing toward the display; a surface facing away from the display; and drive or sense electrodes of a touch sensor disposed on the surface of each substrate facing away from the display, the drive or sense electrodes being made of a conductive mesh of conductive material;
- a first adhesive layer separating the cover panel from the first substrate;
- a second adhesive layer between the first and second substrates; and
- a dielectric layer separating the display from the second substrate.
20. The apparatus of claim 19, wherein the substrate is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), glass, or polycarbonate (PC).
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 29, 2012
Publication Date: Jun 28, 2012
Inventor: Harald Philipp (Zug)
Application Number: 13/408,762