Spiral Grain Coatings for Glass Structures in Electronic Devices
20200181007 ยท 2020-06-11
Inventors
- Tyler A. Marshall (Sunnyvale, CA, US)
- Martin Melcher (Mountain View, CA, US)
- Matthew S. Rogers (San Jose, CA, US)
Cpc classification
C01B21/0602
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C03C2217/78
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09D1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C14/225
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C01B21/06
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09D1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09D5/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
An electronic device may include electrical components mounted within a housing. The device may have a display on a front face of the device that is covered with a glass structure and may have a glass structure that forms part of the housing on a rear face of the device. The housing may also have a sidewall formed from glass, metal, or other materials. The glass structures of the electronic device may have a surface that is covered with an antiscratch layer, an antireflection layer, or other coating. A spiral grain polycrystalline material may form a coating on the surface of the glass structures to help avoid fracturing of the glass structures when the electronic device is dropped or otherwise subjected to stress.
Claims
1. An electronic device, comprising: a housing comprising a glass structure; electrical components in an interior of the housing; and a spiral grain polycrystalline coating on the glass structure.
2. The electronic device defined in claim 1, wherein the electronic device has opposing front and rear faces, wherein the electronic device comprises a display, wherein a portion of the housing on the front face forms a display cover layer that overlaps the display, and wherein the glass structure forms a glass rear housing wall on the rear face.
3. The electronic device defined in claim 2 wherein the glass rear housing wall has an interior surface facing the interior and has an opposing exterior surface and wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is on the exterior surface.
4. The electronic device defined in claim 3 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises a nitride.
5. The electronic device defined in claim 4 wherein the nitride comprises a metal nitride.
6. The electronic device defined in claim 5 wherein the metal nitride comprises titanium aluminum nitride.
7. The electronic device defined in claim 3 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises interlaced spiral grains that each have 2-10 spiral turns.
8. The electronic device defined in claim 3 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises spiral grains having widths and having lengths that are at least 3 times larger than the widths.
9. The electronic device defined in claim 1 further comprising a display, wherein the glass structure has an exterior surface and covers the display and wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is on the exterior surface.
10. The electronic device defined in claim 1 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is configured to form an antireflection layer.
11. The electronic device defined in claim 1 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is configured to form an antiscratch layer.
12. The electronic device defined in claim 1 further comprising a display, wherein the glass structure has an exterior surface and covers the display and wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating forms an antireflection layer on the exterior surface.
13. The electronic device defined in claim 1 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises interlaced spiral grains formed from a nitride.
14. An apparatus, comprising: a glass member; and a spiral grain polycrystalline coating on a surface of the glass member.
15. The apparatus defined in claim 14 wherein the glass member comprises a display cover layer.
16. The apparatus defined in claim 15 further comprising a pixel array overlapped by the display cover layer, wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises an antireflection layer.
17. The apparatus defined in claim 14 wherein the glass member comprises an electronic device housing wall and wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating comprises an antiscratch layer on the electronic device housing wall.
18. A portable electronic device having opposing front and rear faces, comprising: a display on the front face that has a pixel array configured to display an image; glass housing structures having a first glass portion that overlaps the display and having a second glass portion on the rear face; and a spiral grain polycrystalline coating on a surface of the glass housing structures.
19. The portable electronic device defined in claim 18 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is formed on the first glass portion, is configured to from an antireflection coating, and has a thickness of at least 50 Angstroms.
20. The portable electronic device defined in claim 18 wherein the spiral grain polycrystalline coating is formed on the second glass portion, is configured to from an antiscratch coating, and has a thickness of at least 1000 Angstroms.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] Electronic devices and other items may be provided with structures that are formed from glass. For example, an electronic device may include a display on a front face of the device. The display may have an array of pixels for displaying images for a user. To protect the pixel array from damage, the display may be covered with a layer of glass that serves as a display cover layer. Other portions of electronic devices may also include glass structures. For example, a rear face and edge portions of an electronic device may be covered with a layer of glass. In this type of arrangement, the glass forms a housing surface that is pleasing to the touch. Glass structures may also be used as optical windows, buttons, and/or other structures in an electronic device.
[0015] It may be desirable to form a coating layer on a glass structure to provide the glass structure with desired optical and/or physical attributes. As an example, it may be desired to reduce light reflections from a glass structure by providing the glass structure with an antireflection coating. An antireflection coating may be formed from a dielectric stack such as a stack of thin-film dielectric layers of alternating refractive index values. One or more thin-film layers may also be deposited on a glass structure to form an antiscratch coating. Cosmetic coating layers may also be formed (e.g., a glass structure may be covered with a blanket coating layer or a patterned coating layer in the shape of a logo, decorative trim, text, or other shape). Cosmetic coating layers may be opaque and/or may have other appearances. In some configurations, thin-film coatings may serve multiple functions. For example, an antireflection layer may incorporate hard materials that allow the antireflection layer to serve as an antiscratch layer.
[0016] In general, thin-film coatings for an electronic device may include dielectric materials (e.g., polymer, inorganic dielectrics such as oxides, carbides, nitrides, etc.), metals, and/or semiconductors and may be formed on any suitable substrate (e.g., substrates such as electronic device structures formed from glass, metal, crystalline material such as sapphire, polymer, etc.). Illustrative arrangements in which thin-film coatings for an electronic device are formed on an outer surface of a glass housing structure may sometimes be described herein as an example.
[0017] An illustrative electronic device of the type that may include glass structures is shown in
[0018] In the example of
[0019] Display 14 may include an array of pixels formed from liquid crystal display (LCD) components, an array of electrophoretic pixels, an array of plasma pixels, an array of organic light-emitting diode pixels or other light-emitting diodes such as light-emitting diodes formed from crystalline semiconductor dies, an array of electrowetting pixels, or pixels based on other display technologies. For example, display 14 may be an organic light-emitting diode display or a liquid crystal display.
[0020] Device 10 may have a housing such as housing 12. Housing 12, which may sometimes be referred to as an enclosure or case, may be formed of plastic, glass, ceramics, fiber composites, metal (e.g., stainless steel, aluminum, titanium, gold, etc.), other suitable materials, or a combination of any two or more of these materials. Housing 12 may be formed using a unibody configuration in which some or all of housing 12 is machined or molded as a single structure or may be formed using multiple structures (e.g., an internal frame structure, one or more structures that form exterior housing surfaces, etc.).
[0021] Housing 12 may include one or more transparent portions. For example, a portion of housing 12 may be formed from a layer of transparent material such as glass that serves as a display cover layer. The display cover layer may cover and protect the pixels of display 14. Display 14 may be formed on front face F of device 10 or other portion of device 10.
[0022] Other structures in device 10 may also be formed from glass. For example, portions of housing 12 on rear face R and/or portions of housing 12 forming a sidewall W that extends between the portion of housing 12 on front face F and the portion of housing 12 on rear face R may be formed from glass. Glass structures in device 10 such as glass portions of housing 12 may include planar glass layers and glass members with non-planar shapes such as shapes with curved cross-sectional profiles, glass layers with bends along the peripheral edges of device 10, glass window structures for cameras and other optical components, and/or other glass members with planar and/or curved shapes.
[0023]
[0024] In the illustrative configuration for device 10 of
[0025] Display 14 may include display layer 18 (e.g., a rigid or flexible display layer that forms an array of pixels configured to present images for a user on front face F of device 10). Display layer 18 may be overlapped by a transparent portion of housing 12 such as housing portion 12-1. Housing portion 12-1 may be, for example, a glass layer that serves as a display cover layer that protects the pixel array in display layer 18.
[0026] Housing portion 12-3 may form a rear housing wall for device 10. In one illustrative arrangement, housing portion 12-3 may be formed from a layer of glass. The inner surface of the layer of glass may be coated with one or more layers of material (e.g., colored ink, thin-film inorganic coating layers, metal layers, etc.) to make housing portion 12-3 opaque and thereby hide internal components from view or housing portion 12-3 may form a display cover layer for a rear-facing display. Portion 12-2 may extend between housing portion 12-3 on rear face R of device 10 and housing portion 12-1 on front face F of device 10 and may form sidewall W. Sidewall W may be formed from a metal band or other structure that is separate from portions 12-1 and 12-3 and/or some or all of sidewall W may be an integral portion of portion 12-1 and/or 12-3. If desired, sidewall W or a portion of sidewall W may be formed from a transparent material such as glass.
[0027] If desired, housing portion 12-3 may be formed from an opaque material (e.g., polymer, metal, etc.) and may contain one or more window openings filled with transparent material such as glass window material. As shown in
[0028] If desired, optical components such as light-emitting and/or light-detecting components may operate through one or more transparent portions of housing 12. As an example, a transparent window formed from glass or other material in portion 24 of housing portion 12-3 may be aligned with one or more optical components such as optical component 22. Component 22 may be a light-emitting diode for a camera flash or other light-emitting device and/or may be a light detecting component such as an ambient light sensor, proximity sensor, or digital image sensor (as examples).
[0029] Glass structures in device 10 such as one or more portions of housing 12 (e.g., one or more parts of portions 12-1, 12-2, and/or 12-3) may be provided with coatings. The coatings may serve as antireflection layers, antiscratch layers, cosmetic coatings (e.g., opaque layers to hide internal components from view and/or patterned coatings forming logos, text, trim, etc.), and/or other coatings.
[0030] A coating with a vertically aligned grain structure will tend to fracture vertically. This can cause a crack to propagate from the coating into an underlying glass structure, thereby damaging the glass structure. To avoid undesirably weakening glass portions of housing 12, glass structures in device 10 may be coated with materials that have spiral grains. As shown in
[0031]
[0032] As shown in
[0033] Using an arrangement of the type shown in
[0034] In some configurations, coating 30 may be formed on the outer surface of housing 12 (e.g., the outer surface of one or more glass structures in housing 12, etc.). Particularly when formed in this location, coating 30 may be formed from a hard material such as a nitride (e.g., carbon nitride, silicon nitride, a metal nitride such as titanium nitride or titanium aluminum nitride, etc.), a carbide, a carbon nitride, an oxide (e.g., a metal oxide, silicon oxide, etc.), an oxynitride, etc. Dielectric coatings may form thin-film interference filters. For example, coating 30 may include multiple sublayers (e.g., alternating higher and lower refractive index layers) and may be used to form a thin-film interference filter mirror, a thin-film interference filter with a desired passband and/or stop band, an infrared-light-blocking thin-film interference filter, a thin-film antireflection layer coating, and/or other suitable thin-film interference filter. Coating 30 may also be used to prevent excess wear on glass structures (e.g., coating 30 may form an antiscratch layer for a glass portion of housing 12), an antismudge layer, and/or an antireflection layer.
[0035] The foregoing is merely illustrative and various modifications can be made to the described embodiments. The foregoing embodiments may be implemented individually or in any combination.