DYNAMICALLY-VARIABLE GRAPHIC MATERIAL USING ELECTROSTATICALLY ATTRACTED PARTICLES
20170255004 ยท 2017-09-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T428/24802
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
B42D25/328
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B44F1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M3/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M5/0064
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G09G3/344
PHYSICS
B44F7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02B26/007
PHYSICS
International classification
B44F1/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B44F1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B42D25/328
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41M3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Dynamically-variable graphic displays, including a panel comprised of a plurality of electrostatic particles and a plurality of electrodynamic contacts supported within a nonconductive substrate, wherein each electrostatic particle is situated within a channel in the nonconductive substrate such that the nonconductive substrate comprises a plurality of channels oriented in one direction. Also included within the invention are dynamically-variable graphic display panels comprising electrostatic particles that each comprise a plurality of sectors, each having a different color and a fixed magnetic polarity relative to said sectors, and a plurality of electrodynamic contacts, each contact located adjacent to an electrostatic particle and positioned for interaction with one of the electrostatic particles.
Claims
1. A visual display apparatus comprising: a plurality of electrostatic particles; a plurality of electrodynamic contacts, each electrodynamic contact located adjacent to one electrostatic particles; and a nonconductive substrate; wherein the plurality of electrostatic particles and the plurality of electrodynamic contacts are supported within the nonconductive substrate; wherein the nonconductive substrate forms a panel, said panel having a plurality of perforations to define a perforation pattern and a non-perforated area, said perforation pattern and non-perforated area being complementary areas of the panel; wherein said perforation pattern is substantially transparent and is between 25% and 75% of the panel's total area; and wherein each electrostatic sphere of the plurality of electrostatic spheres is situated on one side of the panel within the non-perforated area of the panel such that the nonconductive substrate comprises a plurality of pixels, all said pixels being oriented in one direction.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein, each particle comprises at least two sectors, each sector being a color, wherein no two sectors on a given electrostatic particle are an identical color.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein each said pixel of the plurality of pixels contains a plurality of electrostatic particles.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the perforation pattern is roughly 50% of the panel's total area.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein, each particle comprises at least two sectors, each sector being a color, wherein no two sectors on a given electrostatic particle are an identical color.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein each said pixel of the plurality of pixels contains a plurality of electrostatic particles.
7. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein said plurality of electrostatic particles comprises a first group of electrostatic particles having a first electrical dipole and a second group of electrostatic particles having a second electrical dipole.
8. A visual display apparatus comprising: a first plurality of electrostatic spheres; a plurality of electrodynamic contacts, each electrodynamic contact located adjacent to one electrostatic sphere of said first plurality of electrostatic spheres; and a nonconductive substrate; wherein the first plurality of electrostatic spheres and the plurality of electrodynamic contacts are supported within the nonconductive substrate; and wherein the nonconductive substrate forms a panel, said panel having a plurality of perforations to define a perforation pattern and a non-perforated area, said perforation pattern and non-perforated area being complementary areas of the panel, and said perforation pattern being substantially transparent; wherein said perforation pattern is substantially transparent and is between 25% and 75% of the panel's total area; and wherein each electrostatic sphere of the plurality of electrostatic spheres is situated within the non-perforated area of the panel such that the nonconductive substrate comprises a plurality of pixels, all said pixels being oriented in one direction.
9. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein each electrostatic sphere comprises at least two sectors, each sector being a color, wherein no two sectors on a given electrostatic particle are an identical color.
10. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein each said pixel of the plurality of pixels contains a plurality of electrostatic spheres.
11. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the perforation pattern is roughly 50% of the panel's total area.
12. The apparatus of claim 11, wherein each electrostatic spheres comprises at least two sectors, each sector being a color, wherein no two sectors on a given electrostatic particle are an identical color.
13. The apparatus of claim 11, wherein each said pixel of the plurality of pixels contains a plurality of electrostatic spheres.
14. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein each said pixel of the plurality of pixels contains a second plurality of electrostatic spheres, said second plurality being a subgroup of said first plurality of electrostatic spheres, said second plurality of electrostatic spheres comprising more than one electrostatic sphere of said first plurality of electrostatic spheres.
15. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein said second plurality of electrostatic spheres comprises a first group of electrostatic spheres having a first magnetic polarity and a second group of electrostatic spheres having a second magnetic polarity.
16. The apparatus of claim 15, wherein said first group of electrostatic particles is a first color and said second group of electrostatic particles is a second color.
17. A visual display apparatus comprising: a plurality of electrostatic particles, each electrostatic particle comprising a plurality of sectors, each sector being a unique color for said particle, each said particle having a fixed magnetic polarity relative to said plurality of sectors; a plurality of electrodynamic contacts, each electrodynamic contact located adjacent to one of the electrostatic particles, positioned for interaction therewith, and connected to a control switch; a nonconductive substrate; and a programmable control module, operably connected to the electrodynamic contacts, wherein the nonconductive substrate forms a panel, said panel having a plurality of perforations to form a perforation pattern and a non-perforated area, said perforation pattern and non-perforated area being complementary areas of the panel, and said perforation pattern being substantially transparent; wherein said perforation pattern is substantially transparent and is between 25% and 75% of the panel's total area; and wherein the plurality of electrostatic particles and the plurality of electrodynamic contacts are situated on one side of the panel, within the non-perforated area of the panel of the nonconductive substrate and supported by the panel.
18. The display of claim 17 wherein each electrostatic particle is encased in a transparent shell.
19. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein each transparent shell is fixed within a pixel of a plurality of pixels evenly distributed across a surface of said panel.
20. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein the perforation pattern is roughly 50% of the panel's total area.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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[0049] Each of the microspheres is adhered in proximity to tiny electrodes to a substrate or base. The electrodes are bonded, printed onto or otherwise adhered to the substrate (5).
[0050] In one embodiment of the invention, the microspheres rotate through an electrostatic method. In this method, a substrate is covered with a pattern of tiny electrodes. Next, the microspheres are charged with static electricity, and the electrodes are charged with an opposite charge. Since the opposite charges attract one another, the microspheres are attracted to the areas of the surface where the electrodes are. Either the microspheres or the substrate would have an adhesive means for bonding the two together. Alternatively, in another embodiment, adhesive is attracted to the electrodes when droplets of adhesive are charged with an opposite charge than that of the electrodes. The adhesive droplets are attracted to the areas of opposite charge and adhere there. The microspheres are then bonded to the areas of adhesive.
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[0052] As the microspheres rotate in response to the electrodes' varying electrical charges, the different colored sectors become visible to the viewer. As there would typically be thousands or millions of tiny microspheres adhered to a given substrate, each microsphere would be a single pixel in an overall picture. Each pixel of color becomes part of the graphic image displayed.
[0053] In one embodiment, shown in
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[0057] Microspheres can be made by various methods. In one such method, the microspheres are produced by building layer upon layer of different materials. The interior ball is first produced and can be painted by a number of different methods, such as powder coating, stamp painting, roller painting, spray-painting, or other similar methods. If the paint, ink, or colored material has an embedded electrostatic charge or magnetic properties, the balls can be rotated into position by electrostatic and/or magnetic forces for preparation for the application of the next colored material. The balls can be rotated and aligned for each additional color as desired. Thousands or millions of balls can be quickly coated with multiple colors this way.
[0058] Once the interior ball is colored, it can be coated with a material that changes phases from a liquid to a solid and then back from a solid to a liquid. This coating would produce an intermediate medium. The coating process can use either a liquid or a powder that uniformly adheres to and coats the interior colored ball. Once the colored ball has been uniformly coated, a similar coating process can produce the exterior shell. After the exterior shell is produced and has cured, the intermediate medium is made to change phase to a liquid. This allows the microsphere to rotate freely within the exterior shell lubricated by the liquid intermediate medium.
[0059] Another method of creating the microsphere consisting of a colored ball surrounded by a liquid lubricating layer within a transparent shell is as follows. First, any number of means or methods is used to create a colored ball. Next, the colored ball is placed into a two-part mold in the shape of a tiny sphere, oval, egg, oblong or other desired shape surrounded by an intermediate medium liquid. The filled mold is cooled until the intermediate medium turns solid or reasonably solid. The mold is opened and the colored ball encased in a solidified liquid in the shape of the mold is removed. This object is then either coated with the transparent shell material, placed into sections of shell material that are bonded around the colored ball encased in the solidified intermediate medium liquid, or placed into another mold where the shell material is molded around it.
[0060] Many other methods of producing such microspheres may be created or otherwise developed.
[0061] The colored balls of the microspheres need not be sphericaloblongs, ovals, egg shapes, cylinders, rounded cubes, and other such shapes may be used.
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[0064] Additionally, in a preferred embodiment of the invention, tiny cylindrical objects encased inside of small tubes comprise the microspheres. These tiny cylindrical objects could have segments that are different colors and have different embedded electrostatic and/or magnetic charges. These may be produced through the extrusion method where each segment consists of a different material or a material that differs solely in color or embedded electrostatic and/or magnetic charge. The diameter of the cylindrical objects can be reduced to a very small state through such methods as rolling, squeezing, stretching, or other such well-known processes. Once the diameter of the cylinder is reduced to the desired thickness, it can be cut, sliced, or otherwise divided into short cylindrical pieces. These short cylindrical pieces can then be encased in a transparent tube that holds the short cylindrical pieces in place and protects them. The backside of the transparent tube would have a pattern of electrodes in order to properly orient the short cylindrical pieces. These tubes can be placed closely together to create a solid graphic material, or the tubes can be spaced apart to create a one-way graphic material. By adhering the tubes to a mesh, window, transparent substrate, or other such support structure that allows the passage of light, a one-way graphic material can be made.
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[0069] In another embodiment of the invention, the graphic display is created using microspheres shaped like bubbles, pouches, or pillows. Such bubbles, pouches, or pillows could be filled with particles of a certain color with an embedded positive charge, particles of a different color with a negative embedded charge, and a liquid of a third color. These particles are attracted or repelled in a manner similar to the sectors of the colored interior balls inside of the microspheres by a pattern of electrodes that are charged or neutral as desired. These bubbles, pouches, or pillows can be created by sealing a material to the substrate such that bubbles, pouches, or pillows filled with the desired liquids and/or compounds are created.
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[0073] In another embodiment of the invention, illustrated by
[0074] When the invention is practiced utilizing pouches, the pouches can be made in many different shapes sizes and configurations, for example, circular, linear as a section of tube, rectangular, or other polygons, or they can be made in random shapes, as desired. During the forming process, the material between the pouches can be pressed and bonded to other elements in the assembly. For example, a press may both mold and bond the transparent material to either the electrodes or to the underlying substrate. The pouches in the transparent material can be pre-formed before the bonding process or the pouches can be formed as part of the bonding process, as desired.
[0075] Many different orientations of the colored sectors of the microspheres are possible. As shown in
[0076] All microspheres described in this specification can be made in different sizes ranging from several inches across for large billboards to a microscopic size for fine detail.
[0077] The electrodes can be constructed by such methods as printing of conductive inks or other conductive materials, plating or etching processes, vapor deposition, adhesion of conductive films, or other such processes. The polarity of the electrodes can be changed by an energy source transmitting electrical charge to the electrodes through any of the following means: e.g., wires, printed conductive lines or areas that are transparent, induction, laser, electron gun, electronic discharge, capacitor, electrolytes, electrophosphorus, and/or particle gun.
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[0079] For example,
[0080] In one embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in
[0081] The electrodes can be controlled by user-directed energy. Such energy can come from a laser, electron gun, electronic discharge, particle gun or the like. The electrodes can have elements that absorb such energy and convert it into electrical charges. One such method would have photovoltaic elements bonded to, or deposited on, the electrodes. When a laser light strikes such photovoltaic elements they produce either a positive or a negative charge depending on their configuration. These photovoltaic elements could be made so that they were unaffected by ambient light levels or by direct sunlight, and only the desired laser wavelength and energy level. This configuration would allow the rapid change of the image through the use of a scanning laser beam.
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[0083] Alternatively, the electrodes can be controlled temporarily through the use of a removable control module. In this instance, the image is programmed onto the surface where the image remains after the removal of the control module. With this, the graphic image can be quickly changed to adapt to the need to update the graphics. This feature is especially important for advertisements that must be updated or changed to remain current. Often it is desirable to promote specials or sales and a graphic that can be quickly changed without removal and reinstallation has great benefits. The control is plugged into the graphic assembly to change the graphic and then the control module is removed.
[0084] Another method of changing the graphic involves the application of a plate or screen with charged areas, over the microsphere assembly. The areas of the plate or screen charge the electrodes through induction and the image remains after the plate or screen is removed. Alternately, a charging device may be moved across the surface of the microsphere assembly to change the charges of the electrodes, or to change the orientation of the solid colored balls inside the microspheres. Such a device can use such means as printed conductive lines or areas, wires, printed conductive lines or areas that are transparent, electrostatic induction, laser, electron gun, electronic discharge, capacitor, electret, electrophosphorus, particle gun, or the like.
[0085] The invention may utilize many different substrates and may be created in many different sizes. For example, desirable substrates include thin paper-like material, opaque plastic material, glass, Lexan, Plexiglas, mesh, fabric, or other transparent or semi transparent or opaque material. Any dielectric material capable of supporting microspheres can be used as the substrate. Conductive materials such as metals or conductive plastics can be used if coated with a dielectric coating. Color changing microspheres bonded to a fabric or mesh can be used to create color changeable fabrics, materials, clothing, draperies, screens, curtains, fashion accessories, or the like. Such material may also be used for creating products with one-way properties. Additionally, the products may incorporate light transmitting fibers for illumination effects and, like the other products described herein, may be formed, constructed, made, or otherwise made to conform to a three dimensional shape.
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[0088] Use in One-Way Graphics
[0089] In another embodiment of the invention, the microspheres consist of transparent material to create a one-way graphic display. The one-way graphic display would consist of a transparent substrate with either transparent electrodes covering it or covered by light-absorbing areas or light-absorbing electrodes. The microspheres would then be adhered to those areas that contain the transparent electrodes with the light-absorbing areas or the light-absorbing electrodes. The areas of the transparent material around the stacked assembly of microspheres, light-absorbing areas, and electrodes are left transparent, creating a pattern of visual perforation. When a viewer looks closely at one side of the assembly, the viewer sees a transparent material covered with the pattern of tiny black areas. Standing at a distance, a viewer typically would not see the black areas but would look through the pattern of perforation created by the transparent material to where there is color and pattern. The assembly from this view would be a semi-transparent screen that tends to dim or tint the view. From this view, the microspheres are behind the light-absorbing areas or the light-absorbing electrodes and are not generally visible. This would be considered the see-through side of the one-way graphic material with microspheres.
[0090] On the other side of the assembly, one sees the multicolored microspheres on the surface of the transparent material. The colored microspheres, through the attraction and repulsion of charges on the electrodes, can be rotated so that a particular colored side is presented. Dozens, hundreds, thousands, or millions of these colored microspheres are made to represent pictures or other graphic images. Since the multicolored microspheres create color and pattern on the surface of the transparent material and the image is perceived on the surface of the transparent material, objects, images, or views beyond the surface of the transparent material are generally not perceived. With continuous control of the electrodes a constantly moving and changing image can be presented, such as a movie, TV image, slide show, video presentation, animation, or other such moving, changing, graphic image or images. Since the colored sides of the microspheres are visible with or without power or energy being connected to the display, the graphic can be disconnected from power and still be readable. Power is needed only when the graphic or portions of the graphic are to be changed. For devices that require batteries to power a graphic screen, the use of such a microsphere graphic screen can result in much longer battery life.
[0091] As used herein, one-way graphic materials refers to materials that appear essentially opaque and non-transparent from the image side, but appear substantially transparent when viewed from the non-image side under appropriate light conditions. The direction of one-way vision may change with environmental conditions, such as when night falls and lights are turned on inside a building. Images are typically placed on the light side of the one-way material. People viewing from that side will see the image. People viewing the material from the back side of the material do not see the image, but instead see the environment on the far side of the one-way graphic. Generally, one-way graphic materials are constructed using films or sheets that have multiple gaps or perforations in their non-transparent surface, thereby allowing light to permeate through the material.
[0092] Non-printable area or non-bonding area refers generally to any area of print medium which does not bond permanently to ink used during printing, such that any ink on that area may be physically removed during the printing process, leaving behind a gap, absence, or perforation in the target image. The non-printable or non-bonding area may be continuous or discontinuous, and may be of varying sizes or patterns, including holes, dots, grids, matrices, lattices, or random patterns.
[0093] Perforation or void refers generally to any void or area of complete transparency in a panel of one-way graphic material. A perforation may be physical, as in the case of a hole cut through or from a material, or visual, as in the case where a physically non-perforated substrate contains areas of transparency. Perforations may be of varying sizes or patterns, including holes, dots, grids, matrices, lattices, or random patterns.
[0094] Perforation pattern refers to the collective area of perforations and/or voids in a one-way graphic panel. The perforation pattern generally constitutes 25% to 75% of the surface area of a panel, and is usually around 50% of the area. For example, in commercially available perforated PVC films for one-way graphics such as SuperVue, ImageVue, and ImageJetVue films distributed by Clear Focus Imaging, Inc., and Avery HP MPI 2728 perforated 65/35 film, the perforated area generally constitutes 50% or 35% of the total surface area of the film.
[0095] Persons of skill in the art will recognize that the one-way graphic material applications described herein are not limited to the microsphere arrays and other embodiments described above. The non-emissive technologies which could be used within this invention include previously known non-emissive display technologies such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,930,026 (commonly known as E Ink), which may be adapted to use in the apparatus and method of the invention by constructing sufficiently small non-emissive display units and embedding them with the transparent substrate in a pattern and distribution sufficient to create a see-through perforation pattern. In yet other embodiments of the invention, the non-emissive display units could be sized and spaced within a physically perforated structure to create the same effect.
[0096] Another method of producing one-way graphic material using microspheres is to apply the microspheres onto a perforated surface. The perforated surface would be of a light-absorbing material or a dark color on the backside, or the opposite side from the microspheres. The ratio of holes, or open area, to that of the solid material would be in the range of 25% to 75%. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the ratio of open area would be around 50%. A woven material or screen can be used in place of the perforated material; such screen can incorporate conductive elements in the woven mesh. The woven mesh could be pressed flat, which would aid in the application of an adhesive layer and in the installation of the material to another surface. Pressing the material flat would eliminate the variation of thickness of the warp and weave of the woven material. The pressing could be done any number of ways including using combinations of heat and pressure. This could include passing the material through heated rollers that would flatten and bond the individual filaments.
[0097] The one-way graphic material with microspheres can be combined with graphic material with microspheres (without the one-way properties) for many different applications. For applications with areas of both transparent and opaque areas, the one-way material can be used on the transparent areas while the graphic material without the one-way properties can be used on the opaque areas. Such an application could be a storefront, where the exterior of the store building consists of solid wall areas and areas of glass. Another possible application is that of a transit bus, school bus, city bus, or the like, which consists of window areas and solid, opaque areas. Other applications include, but are not limited to, changeable camouflage for buildings, vehicles, changeable wallpaper that can be a TV wall or an interactive visual media for stress reduction. Since the material can be made thin, it can be wrapped around three-dimensional objects, or it could be molded into different shapes as desired. Alternately, the microspheres can be adhered to three-dimensional objects. For example, buildings can be wrapped with this material and can change their appearance as often as a TV screen changes.
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[0099] Any of the embodiments can additionally include a protective coating or layer. This layer would be applied to the face of the graphic material over the microspheres. This layer can include such layers and coatings as a laminated plastic film, a lenticular lens assembly, a sprayed or painted on coating, an epoxy-type coating, a coating or layer with ultraviolet shielding properties, a layer or coating with resistance to cleaning compounds and other chemicals, a layer or coating to protect against scratching and shocks, a coating to protect against electromagnetic or electrostatic interference, and a liquid resistant layer or coating. The protective layer or coating can be perforated or not as desired.