Device for the direct optical recording of skin prints
10839241 ยท 2020-11-17
Assignee
Inventors
- Philipp Riehl (Jena, DE)
- Joerg Reinhold (Jena, DE)
- Juergen Hillmann (Jena, DE)
- Tom MICHALSKY (Leipzig, DE)
- Daniel Krenzer (Wutha-Farnroda, DE)
- Holger Femel (Rothenstein, DE)
- Wolfgang Jaehne (Rothenstein, DE)
Cpc classification
H04N1/02815
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/0068
PHYSICS
G02B6/0076
PHYSICS
G02B6/0038
PHYSICS
G02B6/002
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A device for direct optical recording of skin prints offers recording of human skin prints for personal identification permitting a display layer directly below the placement surface. A light guide layer arranged below the sensor layer has at least one LED at a narrow side and light out-coupling structures which, by means of an inclination angle c and differences in the refractive indices relative to neighboring layers, permit a directed coupling out of light at a defined angle which results in total internal reflection at the placement surface at the air interface and with a small divergence angle range of +/15. A first adhesion layer between cover layer and sensor layer and a second adhesion layer between sensor layer and light guide layer are provided, the refractive indices of which are 1% to 30% lower than the refractive indices of light guide layer and sensor layer.
Claims
1. A device for direct optical recording of skin prints, the device comprising: a layer body comprising a placement surface formed by a cover layer of the layer body; a sensor layer having light-sensitive elements arranged in a sensor grid and transparent areas; a light source unit formed as a light guide layer and arranged below the sensor layer; the light guide layer having at least one LED for coupling in of light at a narrow side and being provided with light out-coupling structures permitting directed coupling out of light from the light guide layer at a defined angle based on an inclination angle of the light out-coupling structures and on differences in refractive indices between the neighboring layers of the light guide layer up to the cover layer; the light out-coupling structures having an inclination angle coupling light out from the light guide layer at the defined angle in such a manner that the out-coupled light, after having passed through all layers up to the cover layer, undergoes a total internal reflection (TIR) at an air interface of the placement surface and has a divergence angle range of +/15; and a first adhesion layer between the cover layer and the sensor layer and a second adhesion layer between the sensor layer and the light guide layer, wherein the second adhesion layer has a refractive index which is at least 1% lower and at most 30% lower than refractive indices of the light guide layer and of the sensor layer which are between 1.45 and 1.8, and wherein the first adhesion layer has a refractive index which is at least as high as that of the second adhesion layer.
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein the LED light in-coupling has precollimation optics at the narrow side of the light guide layer, the precollimation optics being arranged downstream of the at least one LED and serving to adjust a horizontal divergence between 2.5 and 30 in a beam bundle coupled into the light guide layer.
3. The device according to claim 2, wherein the precollimation optics is a refractive optical element which is incorporated at the narrow side of the light guide layer.
4. The device according to claim 3, wherein the precollimation optics is a convex lens or a GRIN lens incorporated at the narrow side of the light guide layer of.
5. The device according to claim 3, wherein the precollimation optics is a concave lens of a medium with a lower refractive index than that of the light guide layer formed inside the light guide layer.
6. The device according to claim 2, wherein a plurality of closely adjacent LEDs is arranged along a narrow side of the light guide layer to bring about an adjusted light intensity in the light guide layer after a defined coupling-in length depending on the horizontal divergence of the beam bundles of the LEDs in the light guide layer.
7. The device according to claim 1, wherein the light guide layer has a cut corner to provide a corner coupling-in of light with at the least one LED arranged at least at one narrow side, and wherein a drop in intensity of a divergent beam bundle coupled into the light guide layer is compensated by an increasing fill factor of a magnitude and density of the light out-coupling structures.
8. The device according to claim 7, further comprising a diffuser arranged between the at least one LED and the narrow side of the cut corner of the light guide layer for uniform distribution of the coupled-in light in all solid angles.
9. The device according to claim 1, wherein the refractive index of the first adhesion layer is the same as the refractive index of the second adhesion layer so that a component of stray light exiting from the skin areas placed on the placement surface is totally internally reflected within the cover layer and is prevented from propagating to the sensor layer.
10. The device according to claim 1, wherein the layer body comprises a display arranged under the light guide for displaying user information.
11. The device according to claim 10, wherein the display is fastened to an underside of the light guide layer either removably or with a further low-refracting adhesion layer having a refractive index at least as high as that of the second adhesion layer.
12. The device according to claim 1, wherein the light out-coupling structures are formed such that only between 50% and 95% of illumination light coupled out of the light guide layer at the air interface at the placement surface is a light component totally internally reflected in the cover layer and a remaining residual light component can be utilized for illuminating documents.
13. The device according to claim 1, wherein a fill factor of the light out-coupling structures formed by the magnitude and spacing of the light out-coupling structures is at least large enough for each location on the light guide layer that the light out-coupling structures are not visible in a print image of skin areas to be recorded.
14. The device according to claim 13, wherein the light out-coupling structures have a spacing s smaller than a resulting beam divergence of the light out-coupling structures of the light guide layer.
15. The device according to claim 1, comprising a further light guide layer arranged under light guide layer and is connected to transparent light guide layer by a further adhesion layer having a refractive index similar to the first adhesion layer and second adhesion layer.
16. The device according to claim 15, wherein the light guide layer and the further light guide layer have the light in-coupling on opposite narrow sides of the layer body.
17. The device according to claim 15, wherein the light guide layer and the further light guide layer have the light in-coupling at the same narrow side of the layer body and have the light out-coupling structures with the same orientation, and wherein the light guide layer and further light guide layer can have the light out-coupling structures with inclination angles c that differ from one another to the extent that these differing inclination angles respectively generate illumination angles which result in total reflection at the placement surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be described more fully in the following with reference to embodiment examples. The drawings show:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(22) In a basic construction, shown in
(23) The light emitted by the LED(s) 142 is conveyed at a light guiding angle based on the light guide characteristics of the light guide layer 141. Because of the light out-coupling structures 144 of the light guide layer 141 which will be described in detail in the following, components of the light propagating in the light guide layer 141 at light guiding angle are coupled out at a defined angle such that an illumination angle for total internal reflection (TIR) is adjusted at the placement surface 11 at the air interface after passing all of the layers of the layer body 1 up to cover layer 12. The light out-coupling structures 141 permit light beams to be coupled out with a small divergence angle range of +/15 in order to achieve a high spatial resolution of the skin print to be recorded.
(24) It should be noted here that the above-defined refractive indices which should deviate slightly from that of the light guide layer 141 lose their significance precisely when the thickness of the adhesion layers approximates the order of magnitude of the utilized light wavelength. In this specific case, the light does not see the adhesion layers, and the refractive indices of the subsequent layers which define the light refraction or total reflection are applicable.
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(26) Adhesion layers 15, 16, 18 are transparent for at least components of illumination light from the light guide layer 141 and of an optional display 17 arranged under the light guide layer 141. This can be an optically transparent double-sided adhesive tape (OCA) or a liquid adhesive which has been cured, for example, by heat or UV radiation (LOCA). For example, these adhesives can be silicones, acrylates or epoxies.
(27) Polycarbonate (PC), polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), glass or other optically transparent materials with a refractive index n1.5 are utilized as light guide layer 141. However, other materials with a refractive index between 1.45 and 2.0 can also be used as light guide layer 141. The light-guiding effect at the locations on the light guide layer 141 without light out-coupling structures 144 is realized through the difference in refractive indices between light guide layer 141 and second and further adhesion layers 16, 18.
(28) Sensor layer 13 has light-sensitive elements 131 arranged in a grid with a resolution of 100 ppi to 1000 ppi and, depending on the detected light intensity, passes on electronic signals which are converted into a grayscale image. The light-sensitive elements 131 of sensor layer 13 are photodiodes with a defined sensitivity for a determined spectral region of the light. In a preferred embodiment form, the sensitivity of the light-sensitive elements 131 is spectrally adapted to the emitted illumination light of the light guide layer 141 in order to increase the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
(29) It should be noted that all of the materials and parameters of the adhesion layers 15, 16 and 18, light guide layer 141 and sensor layer 13 indicated above also apply to all of the other arrangements described.
(30) Due to the semitransparency of the sensor layer 13 in which the transparency is advantageously achieved in that every sensor element 131 within the regular pixel raster of the sensor layer 13 contains a transparent area 132, instructions or other user information can be seen by the user of the device with sufficiently high intensity at the placement surface 11 of the cover layer 12.
(31) The information on the display 17 can be displayed without distortions, opacity or color limitations as a result of the fill factor of nontransparent sensor elements 131 and transparent areas 132, which fill factor is uniformly defined over the entire sensor layer 13.
(32) In order to improve the resolution of a recorded skin print 21 and, further, to reduce the influence of stray light 4 (shown only in
(33) Nontransparent diaphragm materials are needed to effectively block stray light or illumination angles which are not to be detected. Materials which are used because of their favorable amenability to structuring in photolithographic exposure processes, for example, metals such as chromium, aluminum, gold, molybdenum, copper, silver, silicon, are preferred for the individual diaphragms in the diaphragm layer 133. However, owing to the reflective characteristics of these materials, unwanted reflections can come about at the surfaces of the diaphragms which can have a limiting effect on the contrast of the image recording, can increase noise or can produce double images. Therefore, absorbent organic materials, e.g., polytetrafluoroethylene, and absorbent inorganic materials such as diamond-like carbon layers, black chrome, copper indium disulfide or materials with a specific microstructure are preferably used. Materials which can be arranged as structured diaphragm layer 133 over the light-sensitive elements 131 of the sensor layer 13 via printing methods, e.g., screen printing, are particularly preferred because they can be produced quickly, flexibly and inexpensively. In printing methods, chiefly organic materials are used for this purpose.
(34) In a further embodiment form, the light-sensitive elements 131 of the sensor layer 13 have an electronic control unit for controlling the exposure time (not shown), e.g., as rolling shutter or global shutter, as is disclosed in US 2017/0085813 A1. This makes it possible for the exposure time and, accordingly, the integration time of the light-sensitive elements 131 to be adapted to the various brightnesses of the display 17 and ambient light. This exposure time varies depending on the circumstances under which the device according to the invention is used by the user and depending on different ambient light conditions. As a result of this electronic shutter control, it is not compulsory for the display 17 to be switched off during the recording of skin prints 21 and it is nevertheless possible to record high-contrast skin prints 21.
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(37) With respect to the type and shape of the light out-coupling structures 144 in the material of the light guide layer 141, two examples for the shaping and distribution for a section of the light guide layer 141 are shown in
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(40) I: Guided rays (>71) must undergo total reflection at light out-coupling structure 144
(41) II: The ray which is deflected through the light out-coupling structure 144 and which impinges at the surface of the light guide layer 141 with exit angle =2.Math. may not undergo total reflection
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(43) III: Total reflection must take place at the cover layer/air interface (assuming n=1.49 for cover layer 12)
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(45) The diagram in
(46) In the embodiment form with light out-coupling structures such as is shown in
(47) In a preferred embodiment form shown in
(48) For example, if glass (n1.5) and a first adhesion layer 15 with a refractive index of 1.4 are used as cover layer 12, stray light 4 with angles greater than 70 orthogonal to the placement surface 11 will then undergo total reflection at the interface of cover layer 12 and first adhesion layer 15 and does not reach the sensor layer 13. Accordingly, components of stray light 4 are not detected by the light-sensitive sensor elements 131 and the contrast of the skin prints 21 is improved. In a particularly preferred embodiment form, a material with a higher refractive index is used for the cover layer 12. Flint glass or sapphire, for example, have a refractive index of n>1.7 so that even more stray light components are totally reflected inside of the cover layer 12 and do not reach the sensor layer 13. At a refractive index of n=1.7, all of the stray light components with an angle greater than 56 undergo total reflection. The greater the difference in the refractive indices between cover layer 12 and first adhesion layer 15, the more stray light 4 will be totally reflected within the cover layer 12 and not detected by the light-sensitive elements 131 of the sensor layer 13.
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(50) Owing to the high transparency of light guides, a plurality of light guide layers 141, 141 can optionally be arranged one above the other and connected to one another through a further low-refracting adhesive. A further adhesion layer 18 of this kind should have the same refractive index as the second adhesion layer 16 between the light guide layer 141 and the sensor layer 13. First, there are various possible ways for light to be supplied to the light guide layers 141 and 141. In a first variant shown in
(51) Further, considered from the top, the light rays which are coupled out parallel to one another are offset relative to one another and contribute to the homogenization of the illumination in that each light guide layer 141 illuminates only a determined portion of the placement surface 11 so that larger placement surfaces 11, for example, for recording entire hand surfaces or more than one hand, can also be illuminated very well.
(52) The second advantage consists in that a plurality of recordings with exclusive illumination with one of the similar light guide layers 141, 141, etc. in each instance can be made consecutively, the images can be compared and the better images selected. Apart from measures for liveness detection, this is of interest for the recording of dry and moist skin prints 21. Illumination light with other wavelengths, (e.g., UV, IR) in addition to VIS spectral regions can be used in the further light guide layer 141 for liveness detection.
(53) A third advantage results when the two light guide layers 141 have different inclination angles c of their light out-coupling structures 144 and the further light guide layer 141, for example, causes an illumination angle which is not suitable for TIR but, rather, exits outward directly through the placement surface 11 of the cover layer 12 and can illuminate a document 3 which is placed on the placement surface 11. The first light guide layer 141 can be switched off additionally for this document reading mode so that no TIR light at all is generated. This makes possible a higher-contrast recording of documents 3 because the illumination light of the light guide layer 141 undergoing total internal reflection does not interfere during the recording when it can be switched off.
(54) In a modified variant in
(55) In this alternative case, the rays which are coupled out of the light guide layers 141 and 141 result in two different images with an offset that can be subtracted out, and the two fingerprint images are accordingly compared with one another for purposes of improving quality, and the better image is selected or both images are fused with one another by subsequent image processing.
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(57) Further, a filter layer which, above all, can carry out an additional elimination of ambient light and which is shown, for example, as full-surface area spectral filter layer 19 is added above the sensor layer 13.
(58) The spectral filter layer 19 can preferably be applied in a structured manner only over the light-sensitive elements 131 of sensor layer 13 so that the light of a light-emitting display 17 arranged under the device remains unaffected by the spectral filter layer 19. In a preferred embodiment form, the spectral filter layer 19 is a narrowband filter and is adapted to the wavelength of the illumination light of the light guide layer 141 so that it is transparent to most parts of the illumination light and acts absorbently for residual light components.
(59) As will further be appreciated from
(60) In this invention, the signal spreading or widening of the beam bundles is closely related to a fill factor of the light out-coupling structures 144 of light guide layer 141. If the fill factor is 1%, for example, and each light out-coupling structure 144 has a length of approximately 10 m (or has a diameter of 10 m), the average length to the next light out-coupling structure 1144 is around 1 mm. The signal spreading depends on the divergence (FWHM of, e.g., 10 or +/5 under illumination angle ) and on the distance between the light out-coupling elements 144 and the placement surface 11 (e.g., 5.5 mm) and, in this example, gives a signal spreading of a coupled-out light point of approximately 8.5 mm. This means that the maximum distance between the light out-coupling structures 144 in this example should not exceed approximately 4 mm. As is shown above, however, the distance is only approximately 1 mm so that every point on the placement surface 11 is illuminated by a plurality of light out-coupling elements 144 and the sensor layer 13 does not see the individual discretely emitting light points of the light out-coupling structures 144 of light guide layer 141.
(61) There are two variants available for the simultaneous illumination of the placement surface 11 without intensity peaks through individual light out-coupling structures 144.
(62) On the one hand, it is possible that the light out-coupling structures 144 have a spacing s (not shown) which is very much smaller than their signal spreading up to the placement surface 11 because the beam bundles of the individual light out-coupling structures 144 then overlap before they impinge on the placement surface 11 of the cover layer 12 or subsequently reflect in direction of sensor layer 13. On the other hand, in a second variant, it is possible that the light out-coupling structures 144 have a spacing s which is very much smaller than the mean spacing of the light-sensitive elements because, in this case, the signal spreading of the beam bundles is not compulsory.
(63) A further preferred embodiment form without display 17 is shown in
(64) When the device according to the invention has a display 17, the light emitted by the display 17 is utilized as illumination light for recording documents 3, since this light is coupled out of the cover layer 12 toward the air and no adaptation of light out-coupling structures 144 of the light guide layer 141 is required. When the device is operated as shown in
(65) If the vertical divergence at the light guiding angle of the light guided in the light guide layer 141 is large enough, illumination angles , are automatically coupled out in direction of cover layer 12 for illuminating skin prints 21 (illumination angle ) and documents 3 (illumination angle ). When cover layer 12 comprises a material with a refractive index of 1.5 (for example, glass) and illumination angle is 50 and has a divergence of +/10, illumination angles between 40 and 42 are coupled out into air and utilized to illuminate a superposed document 3.
(66) This procedure can also be realized as shown in
(67) In a further embodiment form, a first area of the placement surface 11 is provided only for recording documents 3 and is illuminated with illumination angles 13 from the light guide layer 141, and a second area of the placement surface 11 is provided exclusively for the recording of a skin print 2 and is illuminated with illumination angles 13 from the light guide layer 141, wherein the illumination light undergoes total reflection at the interface between cover layer 12 and air.
(68) Accordingly, different objects, e.g., skin, documents, etc., can be recorded by selecting the configuration of the light out-coupling elements 144 of the light guide layer 141. In this way, it is also possible to adapt the structures to the different reflection behavior and scattering behavior of individual objects.
(69) Various ways of coupling in illumination light at a narrow side of the light guide layer 141 by means of a plurality of LEDs 142 and light bundles thereof which are emitted with varying degrees of divergence are shown in
(70) Various embodiment forms can be used as source for the illumination light. If a plurality of LEDs is used without collimation of the beam bundles 147, the individual beam bundles 147 overlap and, as a result, an illuminated object point of a finger 2 placed on the placement surface 11 is illuminated by different beam bundles 147 and imaged (so as to be distributed) on a plurality of image points of the scanned image recording or on a plurality of points of the sensor layer 13 (not shown here). The possible imaging of an object point on a plurality of image points is indicated in
(71) As a result of the mixing of the beam bundles 147 of the plurality of light-emitting LEDs 142, it comes about in a compulsory manner that a plurality of image points is generated in the sensor layer 13 from an object point at the placement surface 11 so that the same object information of a superposed finger 2, for example, is detected on a plurality of light-sensitive elements 131 and the resolution of the imaged skin print 21 decreases. The smaller the horizontal and vertical divergence of the beam bundles 147, the higher the resolution.
(72) In
(73) In case this type of coupling in does not suit the requirements for the spatial resolution of the image recording, the constructional variants with additional precollimation optics 143 according to
(74) In
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(76) It is advantageous that the beam bundles 147 of the plurality of LEDs 142 are sufficiently mixed before the illumination light of the plurality of LEDs 142 illuminates an object (finger 2 or document 3) placed on the placement surface 11 so that the placement surface 11 is uniformly illuminated. This is realized in a preferred embodiment form by means of coupling-in areas for the beam bundles 147, which coupling-in areas are upstream of the placement surface 11. For this purpose, a plurality of LEDs 142 which are arrayed close to one another with a minimum mean spacing A and with divergent beam bundles 147 are arranged at a narrow side of the light guide layer 141 according to
(77) As was described earlier, a precollimation of LEDs 142 is helpful in order to realize a good resolution of the skin print 21.
(78) A homogeneous illumination is realized in that precollimated LEDs 142 are packed as close as possible to one another and, as is shown in
(79) The coupled-in adjacent divergent beam bundles 147 accordingly overlap particularly in horizontal direction only after the first coupling-in length B at the points marked by circles. Consequently, there is a better distribution of light in the next area of the light guide layer 141. The beam bundles 147 of the second neighborhood of LEDs 142 overlap after the second coupling-in length C so that a virtually perfect homogenization of the illumination is realized.
(80) The smaller the divergence of the LEDs 142, the better the resolution of the skin print 21 because local object information is imaged on fewer image points (distributed and mixed). However, if the beam bundles 147 are limited (collimated) too much, the placement surface 11 is illuminated unevenly or, in the extreme case, is not illuminated at all in some places. In this case, a sufficiently large coupling-in length B or B+C is necessary, and this is dependent on the mean distance A between two adjacent LEDs 142 and on the degree to which they are precollimated. Under normal circumstances, a coupling-in length B or B+C of several millimeters, preferably between 2 mm and 20 mm, is sufficient to realize a sufficient overlapping and mixing of the beam bundles 147.
(81) With a divergence of 10 and a distance of 10 mm as mean spacing A of the LEDs 142, a coupling-in length B of 57 mm is required so that the emitted beam bundles of the adjacent LEDs overlap (tan 85=A/5). In order to satisfy stricter requirements respecting homogeneity, full width at half maxima (FWHM) of the LEDs 142 after next should also overlap before their light impinges on a superposed skin print 21. For this purpose, the coupling-in length would have to be 114 mm (tan 85%=A/10). This also shows that the LEDs 142 are preferably arranged as tightly as possible, i.e., the mean spacing A of the LEDs 142 is as small as possible, especially when the light cone is sharply limited by the precollimation optics 143, i.e., when the FWHM is small.
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(84) With a corner illumination provided in this way, reflections at the edge areas of the adjacent narrow sides of the light guide layer 141 can be disadvantageous because they can result in double images and in impaired resolution. Therefore, a preferred construction consists in that the light guide layer 141 has absorbent coatings at the further narrow sides at which no light is coupled in, which absorbent coatings absorb or couple out light impinging on these further narrow sides.
(85) Further measures in addition to those in
(86) It is possible with the embodiment forms of the invention described herein to make high-resolution, high-contrast recordings of skin prints 21 and also documents which are based on a selective coupling out of light from a light guide layer 141 at defined angles for total internal reflection (TIR) or for light output for document illumination. Further, diaphragm structures are associated with the individual sensor elements 131 as diaphragm layer 133 in the sensor layer 13, and these diaphragm structures allow exclusively the TIR angle ranges coupled out of the light guide layer 141 in a defined manner to be detected. Further optimization of image recordings of skin prints 21 and security-relevant documents 3 can be achieved by additional measures of sensor control for adjusting electronic shutter functions (rolling shutter or global shutter).
REFERENCE CHARACTERS
(87) 1 layer body 11 placement surface 12 cover layer 13 sensor layer 131 light-sensitive elements 132 transparent areas 14 light source unit 141 light guide layer 141 (further) light guide layer 142 LED 143 precollimation optics 144 light out-coupling structure 145 cut corner 146 diffuser 147 beam bundle 15 first adhesion layer 16 second adhesion layer 17 display 171 terminating layer 172 substrate 173 luminous element layer 18 further adhesion layer 19 spectral filter layer (bandpass) 2 finger 21 skin print (to be recorded) 3 document 4 stray light light guiding angle (of the light guided in the light guide layer) , illumination angle (at the placement surface) exit angle (from the light guide layer) , inclination angle (of the light out-coupling structure) , reflection angle (of the light out-coupling structure) refraction angle (of the light out-coupling structure)