Dial and method for manufacturing a watch dial
11768470 · 2023-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E10/542
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A dial for a watch includes a semi-transparent photovoltaic layer having a lower face. The dial also includes an ink-based decorative layer printed on the lower face of the photovoltaic layer. The decorative layer includes a pattern including one or more time markers.
Claims
1. A dial for a watch, comprising: a semi-transparent photovoltaic layer having a lower face; and an ink-based decorative layer printed on the lower face of the photovoltaic layer, the decorative layer including a pattern, the pattern comprising one or more time markers.
2. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the pattern comprises a first area including a first ink and a second area including a second ink, the first ink and the second ink being different.
3. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes an arrangement of one or more photovoltaic cells covering between 5% and 20% of the photovoltaic cell surface.
4. The dial according to claim 3, wherein the one or more photovoltaic cells are arranged in an array.
5. The dial according to claim 4, wherein the array is a hexagonal, linear, or triangular array.
6. The dial according to claim 4, wherein the array is a mixed array comprising at least two of the following arrays: a hexagonal array, a linear array and a triangular array.
7. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the photovoltaic layer includes a protective sublayer, the protective sublayer being the lower layer of the photovoltaic layer.
8. The dial according to claim 1, comprising a shiny transparent layer, the transparent layer being arranged between the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer and the decorative layer.
9. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the photovoltaic layer comprises an active material having a different sensitivity according to the wavelength of the incident light, wherein the decorative layer is configured to reflect the incident light at a wavelength substantially equal to maximum sensitivity of the active material.
10. A watch comprising: a dial, the dial comprising: a semi-transparent photovoltaic layer having a lower face; and an ink-based decorative layer printed on the lower face of the photovoltaic layer, the decorative layer including a pattern, the pattern comprising one or more time markers.
11. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes an arrangement of one or more photovoltaic cells covering between 7% and 15% of the photovoltaic cell surface.
12. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes an arrangement of one or more photovoltaic cells covering between 9% and 11% of the photovoltaic cell surface.
13. The dial according to claim 1, wherein the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes a transparent glass substrate, a protective sublayer positioned below the transparent glass substrate, and one or more photovoltaic cells arranged between the transparent glass substrate and the protective sublayer.
14. The watch according to claim 10, wherein the semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes a transparent glass substrate, a protective sublayer positioned below the transparent glass substrate, and one or more photovoltaic cells arranged between the transparent glass substrate and the protective sublayer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other peculiarities and features of the invention will appear from the detailed description of certain advantageous embodiments presented below, by way of illustration, with reference to the annexed drawings which show:
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(10) The reader's attention is drawn to the fact that the drawings are not to scale. Further, for reasons of clarity, the proportions of height, length and/or width may not be correctly represented.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
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(12) With reference to
(13) The active material used for one or more photovoltaic cells is based on amorphous silicon. It will, however, be appreciated that, according to other embodiments, the active material can be different.
(14) It will also be appreciated that, according to other embodiments, transparent glass sublayer 12 can be replaced with a sublayer of another transparent (possibly partially transparent) material, such as, for example, sapphire or plastic.
(15) Preferably, the hexagonal array of photovoltaic cells 14 covers between 5% and 20%, preferably between 7% and 15%, still more preferably between 9% and 11% of the photovoltaic cell surface. It will be appreciated that, in this manner, most of incident light 10 illuminates decorative layer 8.
(16) Decorative layer 8 is applied to semi-transparent photovoltaic layer 6 by digital printing. Decorative layer 8 includes a pattern 18 comprising several time markers 20. Decorative layer 8 can be coloured, for example, black, white, yellow, violet, etc. and possibly comprise transparent areas. It will be appreciated that digital printing provides great flexibility as regards the printed patterns. Printing can be performed by a UV flatbed printer. The pattern can be applied in accordance with an application plan stored in a digital printer performing digital printing.
(17) It will be appreciated that the pattern can comprise a plurality of areas including different inks. In particular, according to a preferred embodiment, decorative layer 8 can include a first area 22 including a first ink and a second area 24 including a second ink. The first ink and the second ink are different in the sense that, for example, they have a different chemical composition and/or a different colour. Time markers 20 can, for example, be indicated by second area 24.
(18) Transparent layer 4 is placed between semi-transparent photovoltaic layer 6 and decorative layer 8. Transparent layer 4 can improve the interface between the ink of the decorative layer and photovoltaic layer 6, e.g. in case of physical and/or chemical incompatibility between the ink of decorative layer 8 and photovoltaic layer 6.
(19) A first example of a pattern is illustrated in
(20) A second example of a pattern is illustrated in
EXAMPLES
(21) The semi-transparent photovoltaic layer includes an array of one or more photovoltaic cells covering 10% of the surface of the photovoltaic layer. The decorative layer is printed by a UV flatbed printer.
(22) The intensity at zero voltage Isc is proportional to the illuminance received by the sample. The graphs illustrated in
(23) It appears that intensity at zero voltage Isc is only slightly affected by the application of a violet decorative layer, it is even increased by around 2%. In the case of application of a yellow decorative layer, intensity at zero voltage Isc has increased by 15%.
(24) If follows that, depending on the colours chosen for the decorative layer, photovoltaic efficiency can be improved. The improvement is due to the light backscattered at the crystal/printed layer interface and undergoing multiple reflections inside the glass sublayer. The light thus reflected improves efficiency since an additional portion of the incident light reaches the one or more photovoltaic cells. In the absence of a decorative layer, this additional portion is lost since it is not reflected and consequently does not reach the one or more photovoltaic cells.
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(28) Moreover, it follows that efficiency can be increased by increasing the proportion of white surface (reflection of substantially all the colours making up incident light) with respect to the total surface of the decorative layer or by increasing the proportion of colours whose wavelength is close to the maximum spectral sensitivity of the active material (450 to 600 nm, blue to orange in the case of amorphous silicon).
(29) It is evident to those skilled in the art, based on the present document, that the increase in efficiency with colours could differ for other active materials.
(30) The use of fluorescent inks, absorbing beyond the maximum sensitivity and emitting close to the maximum sensitivity of the active material, could also improve efficiency. In the example of amorphous silicon, the choice could concern an ink absorbing in the ultraviolet domain and emitting in the visible domain. Preferably, the emission of this fluorescence could occur at a wavelength within a range of between −150 nm to 150 nm centred on maximum sensitivity of the active material.
(31) Although particular embodiments have just been described in detail, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications and alternatives thereto could be developed in light of the overall teaching provided by the present disclosure of the invention. Consequently, the specific arrangements and/or methods described herein are intended to be given purely by way of illustration, with no intention of limiting the scope of the invention.