DEVICE FOR CHECKING THE AUTHENTICITY OF A DATA CARRIER HAVING A ZERO-FIELD NMR FEATURE
20230375487 · 2023-11-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R33/3415
PHYSICS
G01R33/3657
PHYSICS
International classification
G01R33/3415
PHYSICS
Abstract
A device is for checking the authenticity of an areal data carrier having a zero-field nuclear magnetic resonance feature, having one or more excitation coils for producing excitation pulses for the zero-field NMR feature, an array of multiple receiver coils that are independent of the excitation coils and are at least partially arranged adjacent to each other for the spatially resolved detection of the signal response of the zero-field NMR feature, the number of receiver coils in the receiver coil array being greater than the number of excitation coils, and the area covered by the excitation coils at least partially covering the area covered by the receiver coils in the receiver coil array and exceeding the size of said area.
Claims
1.-15. (canceled)
16. A device for checking the authenticity of an areal data carrier having a zero-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) feature, having one or more excitation coils for producing excitation pulses for the zero-field NMR feature, an array of multiple receiver coils that are independent of the excitation coils and are at least partially arranged adjacent to each other for the spatially resolved detection of the signal response of the zero-field NMR feature, the number of receiver coils in the receiver coil array being greater than the number of excitation coils, and the area covered by the excitation coils at least partially covering the area covered by the receiver coils in the receiver coil array and exceeding the size of said area.
17. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coils in the receiver coil array are formed by surface coils, especially in the form of conductor loops or spiral coils.
18. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coils in the receiver coil array each have a coil radius of 500 μm or less.
19. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coil array forms a one-dimensional or two-dimensional array.
20. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coils in the receiver coil array are arranged at least partially overlapping each other.
21. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coil array includes two or more sub-arrays whose receiver coils are each configured for a fixed receive frequency, one receiver coil of each of the two or more sub-arrays arranged concentrically with each other.
22. The device according to claim 21, wherein the receive frequencies of the sub-arrays are different.
23. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coils and/or the excitation coils are each furnished with an active decoupling device for reciprocal decoupling.
24. The device according to claim 16, wherein the area covered by the receiver coils is coordinated with the size of the zero-field NMR feature to be checked, such that the covered area covers the entire width or even the entire area of the zero-field NMR feature.
25. The device according to claim 16, wherein the receiver coils in the receive circuit and/or the excitation coils in the transmit circuit of the device are each furnished with a directional coupler.
26. The device according to claim 16, wherein the device includes an additional, single calibration coil having a reference sample that is arranged at least partially overlapping with the excitation field of the one or more excitation coils.
27. The device according to claim 16, wherein the device includes two or more sub-arrangements of excitation coils and receiver coils, each sub-arrangement including a single excitation coil and an associated, overlapping array composed of multiple receiver coils that are independent of the respective excitation coil, and in the sub-arrangements, the area covered by the excitation coil being greater than the area covered by the receiver coils of the associated receiver coil array.
28. The device according to claim 16, wherein the device defines a check area for the areal data carrier to be checked, and the excitation coils and the receiver coils in the receiver coil array are arranged on the same side of the check area.
29. The device according to claim 16, wherein the device defines a check area for the areal data carrier to be checked, and the excitation coils and the receiver coils in the receiver coil array are arranged at a slight distance on opposite sides of the check area.
30. The device according to claim 16, wherein the device is configured and adapted for checking the authenticity of a nuclear quadrupole resonance feature or an NMR feature in ferromagnetic materials.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0032] Further exemplary embodiments and advantages of the present invention are explained below using the drawings, in which a depiction to scale and proportion was dispensed with in order to improve their clarity.
[0033] Shown are:
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF VARIOUS EMBODIMENTS
[0040] The invention will now be explained using the example of checking the authenticity of banknotes 10. With reference to
[0041] For checking the authenticity, the banknote specimens 10 are guided along a transport path 22 through a checking device, of which only the sensor frontend 20 is depicted schematically in
[0042] In the exemplary embodiment, the receiver coils 42 are each formed by planar micro coils that have a coil radius R.sub.E of 500 μm and, as a result, are optimized for the checking of thin banknote specimens. The excitation coil 30 can have, for example, a coil radius RA of 5 mm.
[0043] Also illustrated in the drawing are the area F.sub.A covered by the excitation coil 30 and the area F.sub.E covered by the array 40 of receiver coils 42. Here, the area F.sub.A covered by the excitation coil 30 covers the area F.sub.E covered by the array 40 of receiver coils 42 and significantly exceeds the size of said area F.sub.E especially in the lead-in and lead-out region of the specimen 10.
[0044] The transmit circuit of the excitation coil 30 and the receive circuits of the receiver coils 42 are each furnished with a directional coupler (
[0045] When checking the authenticity of areal data carriers, the checking device according to the present invention offers a range of particular advantages that will now be explained in detail.
[0046] A key parameter of pulsed NMR measurements is the signal-to-noise ratio SNR, for which the proportionality relationship
SNR˜η√Q
where η is the fill factor and Q the quality factor of the receiver coil, holds. In the device according to the present invention, the signal-to-noise ratio is especially optimized by adapting the fill factor η, which indicates the ratio of the magnetic field energy present in the sample volume to the total magnetic field energy of the receiver coil present in the space.
[0047] Here, the inventors recognized that, for thin specimens having a thickness of about 100 μm, such as banknotes or other value documents constitute, a large fill factor η and thus a high signal-to-noise ratio can be achieved by forming the receiver coils 42 as surface coils having a coil radius of R.sub.E=500 μm or less.
[0048] Thus, in the checking device according to the present invention, as a result of the fill factor optimized for the areal sample geometry of the banknote specimens 10, the array 40 of small receiver coils 42 delivers, in addition to the further described advantages, a significantly better signal-to-noise ratio than a receiver composed of a larger single coil.
[0049] As a result of the split of the sensor frontend 20 into an excitation coil 30 and separate receiver coils 42, the configuration according to the present invention also permits a reduction of the dead time τ. Since the dead time of a resonant circuit—here a receive circuit—is given by
τ=2Q/ω
where Q is the quality factor and w is the resonance frequency, the dead time can be reduced by reducing the quality factor Q. However, this stands in contrast to the likewise desired high signal-to-noise ratio, which increases in proportion to √Q.
[0050] In the device described, said contrary requirements are accommodated by an active decoupling of the excitation and receiver coils that are separated from each other. For example, during the excitation pulse, with the aid of a varactor diode, the resonance frequency ω of a receiver coil 42 can be shifted in such a way that the receiver coil circuit is not excited by the excitation pulse. The dead time τ of the receiver coil 42 is thus a function of the dynamic behavior of the switch, and the quality factor Q of the receiver can be maximized independently thereof.
[0051] The inventive structure having separate coils 30 and 42 for the transmitter and receiver thus enables a reduced dead time and thus especially a higher measurement accuracy for the free induction decay than conventional structures in which the same coils serve as the transmitter and receiver.
[0052] A particularly valuable advantage of the use of an array 40 composed of receiver coils 42 consists in the achievable spatial resolution of the signal response. In zero-field NMR, the spatial resolution of an individual receiver coil 42 or a receiver coil 42, that is, here, the sensitive region of a single surface coil 42, is inversely proportional to the coil radius R.sub.E. The above-mentioned small coil radius of 500 μm or less thus results in an appropriately high spatial resolution, where the spatial resolution of a measurement point is, for example, less than 1 mm.
[0053] Said high spatial resolution permits, on one hand, the verification of spatially encoded security features (see
[0054] To be able to measure the entire specimen 10 spatially resolved, the array 40 composed of receiver coils 42 can be configured in such a way that it covers the entire specimen. If the banknote specimen 10 is transported through the checking device 20 as in
[0055] As explained in greater detail elsewhere, for reciprocal decoupling, the receiver coils 42 can advantageously overlap and be furnished with low-impedance receiver amplifiers. Here, every receiver coil 42 is advantageously wired with an independent receive path.
[0056] As a result of in- or outflow effects of the specimen into or out of the sensitive region of the sensor frontend 20, artifacts can occur when measuring moving specimens, especially in determining the time constants. In the proposed device, such movement artifacts are suppressed by a spatially homogeneous excitation field. As evident from
[0057] In the embodiment in
[0058] When quantifying the measurement signal, the measured signal intensity of a channel, that is, the signal intensity of an individual receiver coil 42, correlates with the feature quantity in the check feature, but also depends on the intensity and length of the excitation pulse and on the characteristics of the receiver circuit.
[0059] To compensate for spatial variations in the excitation field, the excitation field amplitude is advantageously determined at attenuated transmit power or at attenuated receiver amplification directly during operation with the aid of the array 40 of receiver coils 42. Using such a measurement, a compensation factor tailored to the receiver coil can be calculated. The configurations described enable such an approach, since, according to the present invention, the excitation coil 30 and the receiver coils 42 are separate coils.
[0060] Another possibility consists in determining the return loss of the coils and any frequency drifts directly, for example with the aid of a directional coupler, in order to, from this, either determine compensation factors, generate a control signal for possible varactor diodes for counteraction, or adapt the pulse lengths and amplitudes of the excitation pulses. To compensate for temperature drifts, temperature sensors can be provided in the amplifier paths, or the actual amplification can be determined and adjusted with the aid of detector diodes.
[0061] Further, the receiver coil array can advantageously be furnished with an additional single calibration coil together with a static reference sample. Here, such a single calibration coil should not be located in the specimen path 22, but the sensitive region of the calibration coil must overlap with a portion of the excitation field. The measured signal intensities in the calibration coil then permit a compensation for interference effects, for example of temperature drift of the excitation path, on the intensities measured at the specimen 10.
[0062] In a checking device having a sensor frontend formed in this way, for a suitable NMR feature substance, measurement times below 100 ms are already sufficient for a reliable authenticity check of a specimen. Here, potential authenticity indicators are the signal intensity, the relaxation times, the spectral distribution of the Larmor frequencies, that is, the Fourier transform of a free induction decay FID or of a spin echo, and/or the spatial arrangement and formation of the feature.
[0063]
[0064] In the alternative configuration in
[0065]
[0066] First,
[0067]
[0068] A further coil configuration is illustrated in
[0069] The receiver coils 44 of each array 40-i overlap each other for reciprocal decoupling. As depicted in the figure, in each sub-arrangement 70-i, the area F.sub.A,i covered by the excitation coil 30-i is greater than the area F.sub.E,i covered by the receiver coils 44 of the associated receiver coil array 40-i. Accordingly, the total area covered by the excitation coils 30-i is also greater than the total area covered by the receiver coils 44.
[0070] In the previous exemplary embodiments, the excitation and receiver coils are depicted as conductor loops by way of example, but it is understood that the coils can also be configured to be spiral shaped or rectangular. The different coils can each be arranged on the same or on different copper layers of a board or on different boards. Also, the exterior contour form of the receiver coils arrays can generally take on any arbitrary form.
[0071]
[0072] The manipulation performed is immediately evident from the measurement data of the sensor frontend 90, shown in
[0073] For the sake of clarity, the measurement curves 98-O, 98-M, 98-U are depicted offset against each other vertically by a constant value and show, in each case, the relative signal strength Sig in dependence on the location x of the signal detection along the respective measuring track 86-O, 86-M, 86-U on the specimen. As a result of the signal drop in the measurement curve 98-M of the middle receiver coil 96-M, the local absence of the NMR feature in the region 84 of the specimen 80 and thus the manipulation of the banknote can immediately be concluded.
[0074]
[0075]
[0076]
[0077] Outside of an NMR measurement, with such a circuit, a sweep of the frequency source can be performed and thus the frequency dependence of the return loss (RL) of the excitation coil determined with the aid of the detectors P.sub.1 and P.sub.2. Using such a measurement, the resonance frequency of the excitation coil can be determined and, with the aid of the varactor diode, said excitation coil tuned to the Larmor frequency. Furthermore, with the return loss, the quality factor Q of the excitation coil can be determined.
[0078] To produce a pulse having a defined pulse angle, that is, a pulse that deflects the nuclear spins of the sample by a defined angle, the pulse length τ can be used as a parameter. The field strength of the excitation field produced at the excitation coil, on the other hand, is a function of the quality factor Q and the power in the coil P.sub.coil. The latter power can be calculated, for example, with the aid of the power determined in the detector P.sub.1 and the RL. For a known quality factor Q and known power P.sub.coil, the pulse length can be flexibly adjusted using a calibration table stored in the controller 136 or an analytical correlation, and in this way, the measurement results stabilized. Alternatively, it is also conceivable to determine the excitation field for each individual channel with the aid of receiver circuits.
[0079] Each of the receive circuits 134 shown in
[0080] To avoid saturation of the receive circuit, with the aid of the varactor diode, the receive circuit is switched into resonance only during the measurement window. If a frequency sweep occurs in the transmit circuit, then the frequency dependence of the return loss of the receiver coil can be measured with the aid of the diodes P.sub.1, P.sub.2 and P.sub.3. Here, the measurement data of the diodes P.sub.1 and P.sub.2, for example, are used to factor out the characteristics of the transmit circuit from the frequency dependence measured with diode P.sub.3. In turn, the resonance frequency and the quality factor Q of the receiver coil can be determined using the measured curve. The value of the resonance frequency can then be used as an input variable for adjusting the varactor diode, and the quality factor Q can be used to correct the signal amplitudes.