Piezoelectric user interface
09865142 ยท 2018-01-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G08B3/10
PHYSICS
G06F3/0488
PHYSICS
H04W68/00
ELECTRICITY
G10K9/00
PHYSICS
G08B6/00
PHYSICS
B06B1/0215
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G08B7/06
PHYSICS
G06F3/0202
PHYSICS
H04M19/02
ELECTRICITY
G06F3/016
PHYSICS
H01H13/84
ELECTRICITY
International classification
G08B3/10
PHYSICS
B06B1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G08B7/06
PHYSICS
G08B6/00
PHYSICS
G06F3/02
PHYSICS
Abstract
An apparatus includes a touchscreen keypad and one or more devices that generate a tactile response to a user of the apparatus when a key in the keypad is pressed. In order accomplish a simple construction requiring a minimum of space, the one or more devices that generate that tactile response may include at least one piezoelectric element configured to generate vibration which is forwarded to the user in response to a key of the touchscreen keypad being pressed.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: one or more piezoelectric elements; and a controller coupled to the one or more piezoelectric elements, wherein each of the one or more piezoelectric elements is separately controlled by the controller, the controller configured to cause the apparatus to: detect the occurrence of a defined type of event associated with an operation of the apparatus, wherein the defined type of event comprises an incoming call; select at least one waveform from a set of waveforms based on the detected type of event, wherein the set of waveforms provides different alerting sound signals each representing the occurrence of the defined type of event; and provide the selected at least one waveform to the one or more piezoelectric elements to emit a particular alerting sound signal and provide a vibration in response to the incoming call, wherein the particular alerting sound signal comprises a multichannel stereo signal based on the one or more piezoelectric elements separately controlled by the controller.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the one or more piezoelectric elements are arranged to contact a lower side of a surface and the particular alerting sound signal is generated by vibration of the surface when the one or more piezoelectric elements are driven.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the set of waveforms are frequency modulated to provide the different alerting sound signals.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the one or more piezoelectric elements are further configured to generate the vibration and wherein the controller is configured to cause the apparatus to generate a vibrating alert signal in addition to the particular alerting sound signal.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the particular alerting sound signal is modified by synchronizing vibrations of a plurality of the piezoelectric elements.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the apparatus comprises a plurality of separately controlled piezoelectric elements and the plurality of separately controlled piezoelectric elements are used to generate the multichannel stereo sound signal.
7. A method comprising: detecting, via a controller, the occurrence of a defined type of event associated with an operation of an apparatus, wherein the defined type of event comprises an incoming call; selecting, via the controller, at least one waveform from a set of waveforms based on the detected type of event, wherein the set of waveforms provides different alerting sound signals each representing the occurrence of the defined type of event; and providing the selected at least one waveform to one or more piezoelectric elements to emit a particular alerting sound signal and provide a vibration in response to the incoming call, wherein each of the one or more piezoelectric elements is separately controlled by the controller, wherein the particular alerting sound signal comprises a multichannel stereo signal based on the one or more piezoelectric elements separately controlled by the controller.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the particular alerting sound signal is produced via vibrations caused by the one or more piezoelectric elements in contact with a lower side of a surface of the apparatus.
9. The method of claim 7 wherein the set of waveforms are frequency modulated to provide the different alerting sound signals.
10. The method of claim 7 further comprising generating a vibrating alert signal to provide a tactile alert in addition to the particular alerting sound signal.
11. The method of claim 7 further comprising modifying the particular alerting sound signal by synchronizing vibrations of a plurality of the piezoelectric elements.
12. The method of claim 7 further comprising generating the multichannel stereo sound signal via a plurality of separately controlled piezoelectric elements of the apparatus.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the following, the present invention will be described in closer detail by way of example and with reference to the attached drawings, in which
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(15) The apparatus also includes a piezoelectric element 3 arranged to contact a lower side of the keypad 2. The piezoelectric element 3 is, in the example of
(16) The piezoelectric element 3 includes a metallic plate 6 to which a piezo transducer 7 has been attached. Many materials, such as quartz, lithium niobate and lead-zirconate-lead-titane (PTZ) exhibit some form of piezoelectric effect and can thus be used in a piezoelectric element.
(17) There are several piezoelectric elements commercially available which can be used in an apparatus according to the present invention. An alternative is to use a piezoelectric element GPB-A-25 0.9E available from Union Enterprise Co., 1326, Life Officetel, 61-3 Yoido-Dong, Yeoungpo-Ku, Seoul, Korea. In this case, the thickness of the piezoelectric element 3 in
(18) The piezoelectric element 3 is supported by a soft foam frame 4 whose back side is supported by a hard layer 5. The hard layer 5 might be a part of the body of the apparatus 1.
(19) When the controller 8 detects that the user has pressed one of the keys on the keypad 2, the controller feeds an electrical impulse to the piezoelectric element 3. This impulse causes the piezoelectric element 3 to vibrate. As the keypad 2 is a flexible membrane keypad whose lower side is in direct contact with the piezoelectric element, the user of the keypad 2 feels the vibration with his finger. The user thus receives tactile feedback informing the user that the key has been pressed hard and long enough in order for the apparatus to register the keystroke.
(20) Suitable vibration can be generated when the voltage of the signal fed to the piezoelectric element is around 150 . . . 200 VDC and a piezo transducer whose diameter is 25 mm is used. The capacitance of the piezoelectric element may in this case be around 60 nF in order to produce vibration which can be felt by the user. If the apparatus is a media terminal, the previously mentioned voltage is not usually available in the media terminal. A way to produce the required voltage is to include a piezoelectric transformer in the apparatus.
(21) Two kinds of piezoelectric effect exist: direct effect and inverse effect. With the direct effect, placing a force or vibration (stress) on the piezoelectric element generates a charge. The inverse piezoelectric effect means that applying a field at the same polarity of the element results in a dimensional increase, and fields of opposite polarity result in a decrease.
(22) A piezoelectric transformer (known from the prior art) uses both the inverse and the direct piezoelectric effect. The inverse effect is used such that a sine-wave voltage is fed to a first piezoelectric element. This voltage causes this first piezoelectric element to vibrate. A second piezoelectric element is attached to the first element such that the vibration generated by the first piezoelectric element places stress on the second piezoelectric element, thus enabling an output voltage to be obtained at the output of the second piezoelectric element. Suitable dimensioning of the piezoelectric elements enables a desired output voltage to be obtained. Practical implementations exist where a piezoelectric transformer with dimensions of: 20 mm6 mm1 mm can be used to obtain an output voltage of 150 V (effect 1 W) when the input voltage is 3V. Such a piezoelectric transformer can be used for instance in a multimedia terminal in order to achieve the voltage required for the piezoelectric element of the present invention.
(23) In an embodiment of the present invention the controller 8 can be programmed to generate different kinds of vibration depending on the situation. A possibility is that the controller 8 is programmed to check, at each keystroke, whether the pressed key has been available as an option at that particular moment. If the key has been available as an option, the controller can control the piezoelectric element 3 to generate first kind of vibration, in other words tactile response, to the user. If, however, the pressed key has not been available as an option, the controller can control the piezoelectric element 3 to generate second kind of vibration. The user, by sensing the second kind of vibration with his finger or by hearing the sound of the second vibration with his ears, then knows that he has pressed the wrong key. If the apparatus 1 is a multimedia terminal that can be used for telecommunication connections, the piezoelectric element 3 (or elements, if the multimedia terminal includes several piezoelectric elements) can be used to generate an alerting vibration signal. The prior art elements used in known mobile phones can thus be eliminated by a much smaller and lighter piezoelectric element. In this case, the controller 8 controls the piezoelectric element (or elements) to generate vibration of a frequency and intensity that can be felt by the user who has the multimedia terminal in his pocket. It is also possible to use the piezoelectric element 3 to generate an alerting sound signal. No extra buzzer is then needed in the multimedia terminal for this purpose.
(24) The same piezoelectric element can easily be used for the above-mentioned different tasks in practice since the only necessary change is to program the controller to feed different kinds of waveforms to the piezoelectric element 3.
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(26) The keypad in the embodiment of
(27) Controller 8 is programmed in a slightly different manner than the corresponding controller in the embodiment of
(28) The keys on the keypad 2 of
(29) When a user presses a key on the keypad, the controller 8 identifies the pressed key. When the key has been identified, the controller checks to which group of keys the pressed key belongs, and after that, the controller further checks which piezoelectric element is located closest to the identified group of keys. This closest piezoelectric element is then controlled by the controller to generate tactile feedback to the user as explained in connection with
(30) The other functions of the controller 8 are similar to those explained in connection with the embodiment of
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(32) Only the parts of the apparatus which are associated with the keypad are shown in
(33) A touch-sensitive transparent cover 2 forms an upper surface of the touch screen keypad. Each corner of the rectangular cover 2 is supported by a piezoelectric element 3. The piezoelectric elements 3 are similar to those shown in
(34) The PCB 10 also supports a display circuit 9. This display can be used both to display information to the user of the apparatus and to display the numbers or letters of the keys, which, in the embodiment of
(35) Tactile feedback given to a user in connection with a keystroke is generated by one or more of the piezoelectric elements 3 generating vibration that causes the entire cover 2 to vibrate.
(36) The piezoelectric elements can be controlled as explained in connection with
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(38) A waveform as depicted in
(39) When a piezoelectric element is to be used to generate a vibrating alarm, the used frequency is lower and the audible sound is subdued. A way to achieve a more silent alarm is to make the leading edge of the waveform somewhat slanted. A typical simple vibration signal with this leading edge slant 15 is depicted in
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(41) In
(42) The power supply 16, as well as the controller 8, are both preferably powered from the same low voltage power supply 17, which typically is the battery of a portable terminal.
(43) Each piezoelectric element is connected to at least one switch 21 controlled 22 by the controller 8 or contained in the controller. Each piezoelectric element can also be controlled by multiple switches and the controller can also independently control multiple piezoelectrical elements.
(44) The controller 8 controls the operation of a piezoelectric element with the help of a switch. The switch 21 is typically a high-voltage transistor. The controller operates the switch to generate such waveforms over the piezoelectric element 3 that were depicted in
(45) In order to vary the leading edge of the waveform waveform and give it a slant, a variable serial resistor 19 can be inserted in the circuit. Only manual adjustment is shown in
(46) The voltages acting on the piezoelectric element 3 are shown by way of examples in
(47) The serial resistor 19 adjusts the level of the audible vibrations by changing the slant 31 of the leading edge, as indicated in
(48) In
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(50) In
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(52) Although not shown, the controller 8 can independently control additional piezoelectric elements. Each independent element will have its own switch or switches separately controlled by the controller through additional control lines like the set of control lines 22, 24 depicted in
(53) It is to be understood that the above description and the accompanying drawings are only intended to illustrate the present invention. It should thus be understood that the invention is not restricted to be used only in connection with media terminals even though the invention has been explained by way of example in connection with media terminals. It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that the invention can be varied and modified also in other ways without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed in the attached claims.