Systems and methods for creating optical effects on media
09844968 · 2017-12-19
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
C09D11/50
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B42D25/387
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C09C1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y10T428/24901
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
C09C1/3063
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y10S428/916
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
Y10T428/25
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
Y10S428/913
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
G07D7/005
PHYSICS
B42D25/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/24893
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
C09C3/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B42D25/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B42D25/387
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G07D7/005
PHYSICS
C09C1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09C3/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C09D11/50
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Methods and systems for optical effects in pigments, inks, and on media. One aspect of this disclosure involves a pigment particle which includes a core, having a fluorescent material and having a spherical shape, and a shell surrounding the core; the shell includes a photochromic material which has a first optical property in a first light source and a second optical property in a second light source which includes a set of wavelengths not sufficiently present in the first light source. The second optical property attenuates an emitted radiation from the fluorescent material. Other aspects are also described.
Claims
1. An object comprising: a substrate; and an indicia comprising a plurality of first particles coupled to the substrate, each first particle including a shell covering a core, wherein the shell includes a first material, and wherein the core includes a second material, wherein the first material comprises a photochromic material having a first optical appearance without ultraviolet (UV) excitation and a second optical appearance after receiving UV excitation after a first response time, wherein the second material comprises a fluorescent chromophore which emits fluorescent radiation in response to UV illumination, wherein the second material is capable of providing a color after receiving UV excitation after a second response time, the second response time being less than the first response time, and wherein the indicia appears to radiate a first color upon initial UV excitation after the second response time and before the first response time while the first material has the first optical appearance and then appears to radiate a second color upon continued UV excitation after the first response time as the first material has changed to the second optical appearance, wherein the photochromic material, when having the second optical appearance, attenuates the fluorescent radiation from the fluorescent chromophore, and wherein the first color is based on the fluorescent radiation from the fluorescent chromophore.
2. The object as in claim 1, wherein the second color is based on reflections from the first material in the second optical appearance, and wherein the photochromic material changes from the first optical appearance to the second optical appearance, while under UV excitation, after the first response time, the first response time being in a range of more than one-third second to less than 20 seconds, and wherein the second response time is immediately upon receiving the UV excitation such that the first color is visible after the second response time and before the first response time for at least one-third second to as long as 20 seconds.
3. The object as in claim 1, wherein the indicia further comprises a third material, wherein the second color is based on fluorescent radiation from the third material, and wherein the photochromic material changes from the first optical appearance to the second optical appearance, while under UV excitation, after the first response time, the first response time being in a range of more than one-third second to less than 20 seconds, and wherein the second response time is immediately upon receiving the UV excitation such that the first color is visible between the second response time and the first response time for at least one-third second to as long as 20 seconds.
4. The object as in claim 1, wherein the object is currency, and wherein the shell surrounds the core.
5. The object as in claim 4 further comprising a plurality of second particles, each second particle including the second material.
6. The object as in claim 5, wherein the plurality of first particles and the plurality of second particles are disposed in a single layer on the substrate.
7. The object as in claim 6, wherein the single layer was formed from an ink printed on the substrate, and wherein the plurality of first particles and the plurality of second particles are mixed in the single layer.
8. The object as in claim 6, wherein each first particle further comprises a further shell covering the shell, and wherein the further shell comprises a second fluorescent chromophore.
9. The object as in claim 5, wherein the plurality of second particles are disposed in a first layer on the substrate and the plurality of first particles are disposed in a second layer layered over the first layer, and wherein the first and second layers form patterns on the substrate.
10. The object as in claim 4, wherein the first material surrounds the core.
11. The object as in claim 4, wherein the first material reversibly returns to the first optical appearance after the UV excitation is stopped.
12. The object as in claim 4, wherein the plurality of first particles are disposed in a single layer on the substrate, and wherein the single layer was formed from an ink.
13. A method to authenticate an object, the method comprising: exposing a material on the object to a set of wavelengths for a period time longer than a first response time and a second response time, the first response time longer than the second response time, wherein the material appears to radiate a first color upon initial exposure to the set of wavelengths after the second response time and before the first response time, and wherein the material appears to radiate a second color upon continued exposure to the set of wavelengths after the first response time, wherein the material comprises a plurality of particles, each particle including a shell covering a core, wherein the shell includes a first material comprising a photochromic material, and wherein the core includes a second material comprising a fluorescent chromophore which emits fluorescent radiation in response to UV illumination; observing radiation of the first color in response to the exposing after the second response time and before the first response time; and observing radiation of the second color in response to the exposing after the first response time and after the observing of radiation of the first color, wherein the observing radiation of the first color and the second color is used to determine an authenticity of the object.
14. The method as in claim 13, wherein the material has an initial color prior to the exposing, wherein the material appears to change from the initial color then to the first color and then to the second color in response to the exposing and, after the exposing is stopped, the material reversibly returns to the initial color, and wherein the time between changing from the first color after the second response time to the second color after the first response time is more than one-third second to less than 20 seconds, such that the first color is visible for at least one-third second to as long as 20 seconds.
15. The method as in claim 14, wherein the object is a currency.
16. The method as in claim 13, wherein exposing the material to the set of wavelengths causes a visible spectrum of the material to dynamically shift after the second response time and before the first response time from a first color spectrum having the first color to a second color spectrum having the second color.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present inventions are illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings. The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Patent and Trademark Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(18) The subject inventions will be described with reference to numerous details set forth below, and the accompanying drawings will illustrate the inventions. The following description and drawings are illustrative of the inventions and are not to be construed as limiting the inventions. Numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of the present inventions. However, in certain instances, well known or conventional details are not described in order to not unnecessarily obscure the present inventions in detail.
(19) This disclosure describes methods and techniques for creating dynamic color-changing effects on substrate material that can be induced by exposure to, for example, ultraviolet radiation. A substrate thus prepared can be readily differentiated from ones that contain only reflective regions or UV fluorescent regions. Such effects can be used to produce security and identification features on currency, branded products, documents, and other substrate material. They can also be used to produce decorative or attention-grabbing features on, for instance, products and packaging.
(20) At least certain embodiments described herein provide a means of using UV light, under either steady-state conditions or intensity varying conditions, to excite visible light (and IR) with a color spectrum that changes quickly with time (e.g. in as short as about one-third of a second to as long as about 30 seconds). Such features can be used to provide a greatly enhanced overt feature for currency and other secure documents and branded products. For example, such features applied to currency may allow for the detection of counterfeit currency.
(21) The pigments, inks/coatings, and printing/coating processes that make up the color-changing features of at least certain embodiments of these inventions provide unique ways to enable a person with a low-cost radiation source, such as a UV light, to interrogate a secure document such as a bank note or currency. Unlike existing UV induced features, which merely fluoresce with a constant color spectrum under UV illumination, the color changing embodiments described herein provide a dynamic color changing effect that is very unique and not currently available on any document. When these features are integrated onto substrate material via printing or coating with an ink (varnish, etc.) using one (or a combination) of the described methods, and subsequently exposed to UV light, they will provide an unmistakable overt or semi-covert feature where applied. (Various methods for integrating the features into a substrate, beyond printing, such as injection molding, casting, painting, dipping, etc. can also be used to produce the feature and as such, the embodiments are not limited merely to printing applications.)
(22) The fundamental properties of the materials to be integrated onto substrates and used for these embodiments may include four fundamental types. The first is fluorescent materials, which emit visible and/or IR light upon absorption of UV light. The second is photochromic materials, which darken or otherwise change their absorption spectrum in response to UV. Both positive and negative photochromic materials may be used. In certain embodiments, thermochromic substances may be used in place of or in addition to the photochromic substances. The third is saturable absorbers, which initially absorb but become transparent as the transitions become saturated. The fourth is materials that undergo an internal energy transfer mechanism in the presence of UV as a function of intensity. Intensity, defined as energy per unit time per unit area, provides the control variables for effecting the fourth change.
(23) Materials with the above mentioned properties can be synthesized into pigments, small particles, coatings, sprays, inks, or other media, which can be applied to substrates to create objects with indicia which may be used to authenticate or identify the object. Application processes include mixing small particles of materials with these properties into inks and coatings, and printing them onto surfaces. Multiple materials can be mixed together to provide a coating with combined features. Additionally, multiple layers can by applied on top of one another to provide dynamic responses to UV excitation. Additionally, coated regions having different responses to UV can be applied in close proximity to provide an even larger array of dynamic responses. Photochromic materials are described in an article titled “Organic Photochromism” by H. Bouas-Laurent and Heinz Durr, Pure Applied Chem., 73:4, pp. 639-665 (2001); this article is incorporated herein by reference.
(24) Categorization of Color-Changing Effects
(25) The concepts disclosed in the following figures (
(26) These categories can be further broken down into monolithic vs. mixed pigment types, and even further into single layer vs. multi-layer application requirements. 1. Monolithic pigments (a single pigment exhibits all of the effects) i. in conjunction with UV induced photochromic/saturable absorbers ii. in conjunction with UV induced photochromic/saturable reflectors iii. multiple emission/reflection wavelengths iv. multiple emission lifetimes v. involving intensity dependent cross sections and/or energy transfer vi. single emission/reflection wavelengths 2. Mixed pigments (multiple pigments are used to achieve the effect) i. in conjunction with UV induced photochromic/saturable absorbers ii. in conjunction with UV induced photochromic/saturable reflectors iii. multiple emission/reflection wavelengths iv. multiple emission lifetimes v. involving intensity dependent cross sections and/or energy transfer vi. single emission/reflection wavelengths
(27) The following charts categorically detail these various concepts for integrating color-changing effects into pigments and printed/coated media. Each concept is shown in the corresponding figure which is labeled with the same number; for example, concept 16 is shown in
(28) a. Change Occurs Upon Moving Pigments/Substrate from Ambient (Room) Light to UV Light
(29) TABLE-US-00001 Pigment Type Monolithic Mixed fluores- reflec- fluor/ fluores- reflec- fluor/ Print Layers Performance Concept cent tive refl cent tive refl Single Multiple I ii iii iv v vi 1 x x x x 3 x x x x 5 x x x x 7 x x x 8 x x x x
b. Color Change Occurs Upon Extended (Few Seconds) Exposure to UV Light.
(30) TABLE-US-00002 Pigment Type Monolithic Mixed Concept fluores- reflec- fluor/ fluores- reflec- fluor/ Print Layers Performance # cent tive refl cent tive refl Single Multiple I ii iii iv v vi 2 x x x x 4 x x x x 6 x x x x 9 x x x x x 10 x x x x 11 x x x x 12 x x x
c. Color Change Occurs Upon Moving Pigment/Substrate from UV to Ambient Light or from UV to no Light.
(31) TABLE-US-00003 Pigment Type Monolithic Mixed Concept fluores- reflec- fluor/ fluores- reflec- fluor/ Print Layers Performance # cent tive refl cent tive refl Single Multiple I ii iii iv v vi 13 x x x 14 x x x x 15 x x x x
d. Color Change Occurs Upon Exposure to Varying Intensities of UV Light, ie, Focused vs Nonfocused.
(32) TABLE-US-00004 Pigment Type Monolithic Mixed Concept fluores- reflec- fluor/ fluores- reflec- fluor/ Print Layers Performance # cent tive refl cent tive refl Single Multiple I ii iii iv v vi 16 x x x x
(33) In addition to undergoing the described change in appearance, it may be necessary or desirable in some instances for the feature to revert to the original (or closely thereto) condition that it existed in prior to UV exposure. Additionally, it may be desirable for the feature to undergo the cycle of changing under UV and returning closely to its original condition a large number of times. In order for this to happen, the fluorescent materials should emit their absorbed energy and return to their unexcited states. The photochromics and saturable absorbers must also lose any stored or trapped energy and return close enough to their original states so that the process can be cycled. The ability to undergo multiple numbers of cycles of the feature is thereby a component of exemplary embodiments of at least some of these inventions.
(34) In other instances, it may be desirable for the feature to remain, at least partially, in its altered state. Photochromics with very stable open forms can provide very long-lived features for such a performance requirement. Thus, permanently altered or long-lived alterations to the color spectrum of the feature upon UV excitation is a further aspect of at least certain embodiments of the inventions. In many of the embodiments described herein, a phosphorescent material may be used in place of a fluorescent material. The primary difference between these materials is that the phosphorescent material continues to emit radiation for a short period of time after the excitation illumination (e.g. UV) has been stopped.
(35) The embodiment of
(36) The use of a saturable absorber in place of the photochromic would effectively cause the intermediate layer between the colors to bleach from opaque to transparent yielding an exposure induced color spectrum that combined the fluorescent emission (shown green) with the reflected spectrum (shown red), rather than only the fluorescent color. In this case, the emission presented to the observer would start out with the reflected color of the saturable absorber, then turn to green (fluorescence) then to yellow as the absorber faded and red could show through. Though the following concepts will be described in terms of photochromics, the effects can also be induced with the use of saturable absorbers used in place thereof.
(37) It should be noted that in addition to visible emission lines, each of these embodiments can incorporate non-visible emission lines (UV and IR) that can be detected with appropriate photodetectors, thereby providing additional functionality for the material as a security feature.
(38) The embodiment of
(39) If a saturable absorber is used instead of a photochromic, then the spectrum will shift in the reverse order, namely from fluorescent green to fluorescent yellow as the red fluorescence is enabled.
(40) This embodiment has advantages over the one described in connection with
(41) The embodiment of
(42) If a saturable absorber is used instead of a photochromic material, and a transition from reflected blue to transparent occurs in this layer, then the color spectrum will shift from aqua (fluorescent green+reflected blue) to yellow (fluorescent green+reflected red).
(43) The embodiment of
(44) As with the previous embodiments, a saturable absorber or reverse-saturable absorber can be used in place of or in addition to a photochromic to provide a different shift in the color spectrum. Combining features thusly would enable for instance, two (or more) features in the same vicinity on a substrate to undergo opposite color shifts simultaneously. An example might include a red to green shifting region next to a green to red shifting region on the same object.
(45) The embodiment of
(46) The embodiment of
(47) An additional manner in which this feature can be used is to filter out a part of the fluorescent spectrum so that other portions of it continue to emit. Appropriate control of the concentration of the photochromic pigment in the carrier can provide for some amount of continuous through put of UV to the underlying fluorescent layer, allowing it to continuously absorb and emit light. The UV induced colored photochromic layer can be selected to absorb only a portion of this spectrum, passing the remainder. In this manner, fluorescence from the under layer can always constitute a portion of the dynamic spectrum, both before and after the photochromic layer changes between its optical properties.
(48) The embodiment of
(49) The embodiment of
(50) This pigment contains an inner reflective (shown red) core, coated with a photochromic material that will (reversibly) change from transparent to colored (shown blue for particle 82 or green for particle 84) when exposed to ultraviolet radiation of the appropriate wavelength and intensity. The particles are applied to the substrate in sufficient manner and quantity to achieve the desired effect under the requisite exposure conditions. The particle 80 shows the appearance of the particle in ambient room lighting (e.g. conventional incandescent bulbs or fluorescent tubes) which lacks a sufficient amount of UV radiation or wavelengths to cause fluorescence or to cause darkening of the photochromic material.
(51) The embodiment of
(52) The photochromics that change color can act as a filter to the fluorescent light, absorbing some of it and transmitting other frequency bands so as to cause the initial (yellow) spectrum to shift to green (as in the case of particle 92) as the red component of the multi-component spectrum is absorbed and the green is transmitted. Photochromics that darken in more of a neutral density (broad spectrum) manner, rather than filtering out specific bands, can be used to reduce the overall brightness of the pigment. Thus the effect would be to reduce the brightness of the original color rather than to change it by very much (which is shown as the case of particle 92).
(53) The core may be formed using any one of a variety of methods for forming a carrier substance with a pigment such as a fluorescent chromophore. Examples of such methods are described in the following articles: “Monodisperse Colloidal Silica Spheres from Tetraalkoxysilanes: Partial Formation and Growth Mechanism,” A. Van Blaaderen, J. Van Geest, and A. Vrij, Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 154:2, (December 1992); and “Synthesis and Characterization of Colloidal Dispersions of Fluorescent, Monodisperse Silica Spheres,” A. Van Blaaderen and A. Vrij, Langmuir, 8:12, (1992). The shell may be formed using any one of a variety of methods for depositing or precipitating the materials of the shell onto the core. Examples of shell formation methods are described in: “Photochromic Behaviour of a Spirobenzopyran chemisorbed on a Colloidal Silica Surface,” M. Ueda, K. Kudo and K. Ichimura, J. Mater. Chem., 5:7, pp. 1007-1011 (1995); and “Luminescence Lifetime Temperature Sensing Based on Sol-Gels and Poly(acrylonitrile)s Dyed with Ruthenium Metal-Ligand Complexes,” G. Liebsch, I. Klimant, and O.S. Wolfbeis, Advanced Materials, 11:15, (1999).
(54) The embodiment of
(55) The embodiment of
(56) Saturable and reverse-saturable (s/rs) absorbers could also be integrated into the mixed particle system causing it to shift from a darker color to a reflected/fluorescent color as the transitions saturated and the s/rs absorbers became transparent.
(57) The embodiment of
(58) Upon excitation with UV, the fluorescent particles will begin to emit light at their characteristic wavelengths. As the photochromics begin to change their absorption properties, typically with a slightly longer response time on the order of a few seconds, they will begin to block UV from the fluorescent particles somewhat, and to filter out some of the emitted fluorescence. This change in the absorption of the photochromic particles will thereby alter the spectral constituents of the light that is delivered to the observer from the fluorescers. In addition, the photochromic particles will contribute an altered reflectivity (shown blue) to the observed color spectrum delivered to the observer.
(59) As with the other embodiments, it is possible to integrate non-visible emission lines into the light-emitting particles (fluorescers) to increase their utility as security pigments, as such invisible lines can generally only be detected with electronic means (photodetectors), and not the eye.
(60) The embodiment of
(61) As with previous embodiments described herein, multiple UV induced color-changing effects can be integrated onto a substrate in close proximity to provide not only enhanced features, but interesting ones as well. Patterning of multiple such features in, for instance, concentric circles, stripes, checks and squares, etc. can provide unique indicia which can be used to identify or authenticate the object which includes the indicia.
(62) The embodiment of
(63) The embodiment of
(64) The embodiment of
(65) In the foregoing specification, the inventions have been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will be evident that various modifications may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the inventions as set forth in the following claims. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative sense rather than a restrictive sense.