WO2005074358A2 - Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices - Google Patents
Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2005074358A2 WO2005074358A2 PCT/IB2005/050264 IB2005050264W WO2005074358A2 WO 2005074358 A2 WO2005074358 A2 WO 2005074358A2 IB 2005050264 W IB2005050264 W IB 2005050264W WO 2005074358 A2 WO2005074358 A2 WO 2005074358A2
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- image
- shim
- transitory
- relief
- relief pattern
- Prior art date
Links
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B44—DECORATIVE ARTS
- B44F—SPECIAL DESIGNS OR PICTURES
- B44F1/00—Designs or pictures characterised by special or unusual light effects
- B44F1/08—Designs or pictures characterised by special or unusual light effects characterised by colour effects
- B44F1/10—Changing, amusing, or secret pictures
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B42—BOOKBINDING; ALBUMS; FILES; SPECIAL PRINTED MATTER
- B42D—BOOKS; BOOK COVERS; LOOSE LEAVES; PRINTED MATTER CHARACTERISED BY IDENTIFICATION OR SECURITY FEATURES; PRINTED MATTER OF SPECIAL FORMAT OR STYLE NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; DEVICES FOR USE THEREWITH AND NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; MOVABLE-STRIP WRITING OR READING APPARATUS
- B42D25/00—Information-bearing cards or sheet-like structures characterised by identification or security features; Manufacture thereof
- B42D25/20—Information-bearing cards or sheet-like structures characterised by identification or security features; Manufacture thereof characterised by a particular use or purpose
- B42D25/29—Securities; Bank notes
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B44—DECORATIVE ARTS
- B44C—PRODUCING DECORATIVE EFFECTS; MOSAICS; TARSIA WORK; PAPERHANGING
- B44C1/00—Processes, not specifically provided for elsewhere, for producing decorative surface effects
- B44C1/22—Removing surface-material, e.g. by engraving, by etching
- B44C1/227—Removing surface-material, e.g. by engraving, by etching by etching
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B42—BOOKBINDING; ALBUMS; FILES; SPECIAL PRINTED MATTER
- B42D—BOOKS; BOOK COVERS; LOOSE LEAVES; PRINTED MATTER CHARACTERISED BY IDENTIFICATION OR SECURITY FEATURES; PRINTED MATTER OF SPECIAL FORMAT OR STYLE NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; DEVICES FOR USE THEREWITH AND NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; MOVABLE-STRIP WRITING OR READING APPARATUS
- B42D25/00—Information-bearing cards or sheet-like structures characterised by identification or security features; Manufacture thereof
- B42D25/30—Identification or security features, e.g. for preventing forgery
- B42D25/324—Reliefs
Definitions
- the invention relates to the replication, by moulding, hot embossing or other comparable techniques, of an optically variable transitory-image relief pattern.
- the resulting, microreplicated, optically variable relief pattern is destined for, but not limited to use as a marking for the decoration, protection and end-customer authentication of branded products.
- Optically variable devices or OVDs can be defined as markings, the visual aspects of which exhibit change when observed from different viewing angles.
- OVDs are increasingly used for the marking of goods and documents because they are - in contrast with printed labels - impossible to reproduce using widely available scanning or photocopying equipment, whether colour or monochrome and regardless of equipment resolution. Indeed copies obtained by such methods lose all the optically variable characteristics of the original due to the fixed viewing angle from which any given copy of the OVD can be made.
- OVDs provide additional security through the high technological barriers to counterfeiting for reasons which will rapidly become apparent below.
- Optically variable effects can be obtained through a variety of methods widely reported in the public domain in textbooks such as Optical Document Security" by Rudolf van Renesse (2 nd Ed. Artech House Publishers, Boston 1998), on the internet (http://pffc-online.com/ar/paper_dovids_functional_beauty/index.html) and disclosed in numerous patents such as JP411291610, US 4O33O59, US 4721 '217, or US 6'296'281.
- An exhaustive list comprises: (i) diffractive devices such as holograms and interference or electron-beam generated elements, (ii) latent or transient image relief patterns, (iii) liquid crystal polymers and (iv) optically variable inks.
- diffractive elements rely on substantially similar technological solutions to achieve optical variability. Specifically, they are always based on one or more physically imprinted relief patterns rendered optically variable by the interference of the light waves diffracted by the spacing of said relief patterns in the case of holograms and interference elements or by the dissimulation or appearance of various portions of the pattern made evident by the viewing angle of the observer with respect to the diffractive grid.
- the mass production of markings requires the reproduction of the imprinted relief on a plastic substrate on the basis of a production shim incorporating the negative of the desired relief.
- the exact replication process involves - in a first step called origination - the realisation of an initial master pattern on a suitably photosensitive substrate through holography, diffractive interference lithography or e-beam lithography.
- origination master thus obtained is unsuitable for mass-replication and is therefore copied through successive electroforming steps onto a more suitable Nickel production shim used for replication.
- diffractive devices require high-precision techniques such as electron beam lithography for the realization of the image pattern using a grid fine enough to diffract light (typically 300 - 1000 nm).
- the resulting marking layer requires additional layer structures for the protection, the visibility and the application of the desired optically variable devices as described, for instance, in PCT patent application WO 02/00445 A1. From a practical standpoint, this essentially limits diffractive devices to replication by roll-embossing on plastic sheet in order to obtain mass-produced markings in a format suitable for the application of the protective and visibility-enhancing layers previously mentioned.
- the close spacing of the relief pattern elements, the resulting markings always diffract light resulting in a characteristic and occasionally undesirable irridescent hue.
- Micromachining technology as used in the technical field of Micro electromechanical systems (MEMS), offers interesting possibilities for many areas of application where fine resolutions and precise, micrometer-scale control of structural dimensions are required. As a result a wide range of industrial machinery and technologies have been developed to exploit these possibilities, in particular on Silicon substrates.
- This technology although considerably cheaper than e-beam lithography based techniques, remains expensive due to the very small production runs of sensors and other devices it is commonly used to fabricate.
- the microreplication of micromachined master objects has been suggested more recently as a path to eliminating a large portion of the cost associated with micromachining.
- the present invention evokes the practicality of applying micromachining technology to the fabrication of OVD master shims.
- the invention consists of a novel method of replicating optically variable transitory image relief patterns in (but not limited to) plastic, by hot embossing, stamping or injection moulding through the use of a shim prepared through the judicious use of robust micromachining techniques.
- the origination master is obtained through a micromachining process on a suitable substrate such as Silicon for example. This technique is used to originate and subsequently, to obtain Nickel production shims containing transitory image type optically variable devices.
- the origination shim may be a piece of Silicon monocrystal, micro-machined using a method including one or more distinct wet chemical or dry and plasma-assisted chemical etching steps of the Silicon, through a Silicon oxide (SiO 2 ) or Silicon nitride (Si 3 N ) thin-film masking layer patterned in a previous step by photolithography and wet or dry plasma-assisted chemical etching.
- a Silicon oxide SiO 2
- Si 3 N Silicon nitride
- the Silicon origination shim which can now be used to reproduce optically variable transitory image relief patterns through the micro-replication process described previously.
- the resulting Nickel production shim drawn from the Silicon origination master can be used; as an embossing shim for the hot embossing of transitory-image OVDs in thermoplastics, a stamping shim for the hot-stamping of transitory-image OVDs in metallic foils or integrated into a plastic mould for the production - by injection moulding - of plastic parts incorporating an optically variable transitory image marking.
- the fabrication process used to obtain a Silicon shim in accordance with the present invention is specifically designed for the replication of transitory-image OVDs. It not only addresses, insofar as possible, the disadvantages inherent to the fabrication of shims for the replication of DOVIDs but also allows, the replication of various novel transitory image relief pattern-based OVD types not currently conceivable in a mass- produced industrial setting because of the time required to make a shim incorporating these effects using conventional methods.
- a very large number of relief elements of which the larger relief pattern is composed can be structured during substantially the same steps using Silicon micromachining in comparison with for instance laser machining techniques used for steel intaglio printing. This is because with conventional techniques such as laser machining or electron-beam lithography, each of the relief elements must be sequentially written onto the shim substrate. To illustrate the time saved, for a relief pattern consisting of 1'OOOOOO relief elements and allowing 0.2s for the individual writing or each element, it would require nearly three whole days to write the entire relief pattern. By comparison, the equivalent Silicon shim with 1'OOOOOO relief elements can be realized in less than four hours.
- a relief pattern replicated using a Silicon shim can exhibit a relief depth between 0.5 and 100 ⁇ m and a relief spacing, or register as tight as 1 ⁇ m.
- shims for DOVID replication obtained by holography, interference lithography or electron- beam lithography have a typical relief depth and spacing considerably less than 1 ⁇ m.
- the deeper relief of the Silicon shim has two advantageous consequences. The first is that the relief is sufficiently deep to render the resulting optically variable effects clearly visible to the naked eye without recourse to the additional metallic layers necessary to render DOVIDs apparent. The second consequence is that OVDs replicated using a Silicon shim are much more resistant to mechanical wear due to the deeper relief.
- the OVD replication method presented here through the use of a micromachined Silicon origination shim, allows a single (as opposed to multiple) layer structure and even direct application on the object to be marked by being visually apparent and more resistant to mechanical wear due to deeper relief. It is thus addresses visibility and resistance issues of OVDs while simplifying the application process.
- a further characteristic of OVDs replicated from a Silicon origination shim is that the feature size and spacing of the relief elements, as well as their disposition is entirely selectable. Thus light diffraction does not occur except from extremely acute angles of vision, or occurs only in regions of the motif where one chooses to apply a very tight relief register.
- conventional DOVIDs always diffract light and indeed the optically variable effects displayed by the latter often depend on this diffractive property. This gives conventional DOVIDs their characteristic irridescent rainbow-like hue.
- Transitory image relief patterns replicated from a Silicon origination shim are thus better suited than DOVIDs for the marking of objects, when the marking should not, for aesthetic reasons, display the irridescence caused by light diffraction. Furthermore, transitory image relief patterns replicated from a Silicon origination shim can incorporate iridescent and non-irridescent subregions while the entire image retains an optically variable character. This latter feature improves the counterfeit resistance of markings replicated according to the present invention.
- the present invention also presents inherent advantages which are entirely novel within the context of transitory image relief pattern-based OVDs. Indeed in conventional OVDs of this type as described in US 4O33O59 or in US 6'296'281 optically variable characteristics are obtained through the spatial disposition of elements having a relief perpendicular to the plane of the image. With the present invention, for each of the patterns described in US 4O33O59, an optically variable effect can be obtained in addition to those caused merely by the spatial disposition and relief of the optical elements if the wet-etching methods disclosed below are used.
- a further inherent advantage of the present invention relates to the aforementioned characteristic whereby a very large number of relief elements are structured simultaneously. Indeed, this characteristic opens many interesting possibilities when the relief elements forming the larger transitory image relief pattern are composed of discrete shapes, as described for example in US 6'296'281 as opposed to what substantially amounts to long ridges as described in US 4O33O59. Such relief patterns have been insufficiently considered to date, probably because conventional methods cannot write very large numbers of relief elements within a reasonable time frame.
- a novel type of relief structure presenting several optically variable effects and based on short interleaved prism-like relief elements (PLREs) is claimed. This novel relief structure will be described in detail in the next section.
- a Silicon origination shim is understood to mean an essentially flat object on which the physical negative of the relief elements composing the desired transitory image relief pattern to be replicated has been realized.
- a V-shaped groove on the shim will correspond to a ridge- shaped relief element of pyramidal cross section on the replica.
- micromachining methods developed specifically to manufacture the negative of the relief elements necessary to obtain a series of well- known transitory image optically variable effects as described in US 4O33O59 for instance, as well as a new type of transitory image relief pattern, are described in detail below.
- a Silicon origination shim destined for the microreplication of transitory image relief patterns is obtained through a micromachining process, essentially derived from anisotropic, wet etchant- based, methods for the realization of V-grooves as described for instance in EP0472702 or again in the textbook "Fundamentals of Microfabrication: The Science of Miniaturization” (M. Madou, 2 nd ed., CRC press) which are well known in the technical field of Silicon micromachining.
- FIGURES 1a - 1g where each subfigure represents a cross-sectional view of the Silicon substrate at different consecutive steps in the processing.
- the bulk substrate (1) from which the origination shim is made is a Silicon monocrystal wafer whose principal faces are parallel to the ⁇ 100> crystallographic planes thereof and onto which a full etch-masking layer (2) consisting of Silicon dioxide (SiO 2 ) or Silicon nitiride (Si 3 N 4 ) has been formed.
- a full layer of photosensitive resin (photoresist) (3) is applied onto the etch-masking layer and insolated through a photomask (4) such that the photoresist is selectively removed in those areas corresponding to the subsequent location of relief element negatives on the shim after development of the photoresist.
- photolithography The aforementioned method of photoresist patterning using a photomask is commonly referred to as photolithography.
- the patterned photoresist layer (5) forms a selective mask through which the etch mask (2) can in turn be patterned either by wet etching in for example Hydrofluoric acid (HF or NH 4 /HF) based solutions or by dry etching using for example CF 4 chemistry.
- the aforementioned etch-mask patterning step is usually followed by a cleaning step in which excess photoresist is removed for instance by immersion in an organic solvent bath or by exposure to a high-power Oxygen plasma.
- the bulk substrate patterned using the process steps defined above is now immersed in a wet-etchant - composed for example of Potassium Hydroxide (KOH) or of Tetra- Methyl Ammonium Hydroxide (TMAH).
- KOH Potassium Hydroxide
- TMAH Tetra- Methyl Ammonium Hydroxide
- Said wet-etchant need only have the particular property of etching the ⁇ 100> crystallographic planes of the Silicon exposed by the patterned etch-masking layer (6) at a much higher rate than the corresponding ⁇ 111> crystallographic planes of the Silicon at a given wet-etchant concentration and temperature.
- the etch rate ratio between ⁇ 100> and ⁇ 111> planes is approximately 100 which is suitable for the purposes of the present invention.
- the substrate is immersed in the aforementioned wet-etchant bath for such a time as is necessary to form V-grooves (7) in the bulk Silicon underneath the largest etch-masking layer openings, the flanks of the V- grooves corresponding to the ⁇ 111> family of crystallographic planes in the Silicon.
- the etching process is greatly slowed down once a V-groove is formed under any given etching-mask opening.
- smaller etching mask openings will result in shallower V-grooves (8) than larger ones (9) and consequently V-grooves of substantially different depths can be formed in the same wet etching step.
- the next step in the micromachining process consists of totally removing any remaining portions of the etch-masking layer by immersion in, for instance, a bath composed of an aqueous HF solution.
- the bulk substrate, now stripped of its etching-mask layer can be diced using mechanical sawing or some other equivalent technique to obtain shims of almost any desired shape, each containing the negative of a transitory image relief pattern.
- a portion of photomask used to obtain one of the types of transitory image relief pattern described in US 4O33O59 is illustrated in FIGURE 2, where the openings in the mask are represented by dark horizontal (10) or vertical (11) lines.
- the V-groove shaped relief elements composing the transitory image are formed in the Silicon substrate, at the location of each mask opening in the figure.
- the actual method subsequently used to replicate the said transitory image relief pattern from the shim described here can consist of processes necessary for microreplication using hot-embossing, hot-stamping or moulding.
- the origination shim can be used directly for the replication of a small number of markings, typically, the origination shim obtained may be used to plate-out a more durable and resistant Nickel production shim through successive electroplating operations in a suitable bath.
- production shim electroplated from the origination shim is suitable for most microreplication methods such as hot- embossing, hot stamping.
- the production shim may also be used as a mould-insert for the marking of injection moulded objects.
- steel intaglio printing it would be necessary to provide orifices in the production shim to accommodate ink injection.
- the "single wet etching step" method described above allows the patterning of a Silicon origination shim containing the negative of relief elements, which can be of different depths and which are formed during the same micromachining process.
- Said relief elements can be disposed spatially at will on the photomask, in such a way that, at the end of the entire process described above, the replicated pattern will consist of distinguishable foreground and background areas which cooperate to form the transitory images described in figs. 6,7,8, 12 and 13 of US 4O33O59 or combinations thereof.
- This first embodiment can also be used to realize transitory image relief patterns based on PRLEs as described in detail below.
- the ⁇ 111> planes forming the sides of the V-groove relief element negatives on the shim when replicated, form a mirror-like surface which yields a further optically variable contrast-switching effect between foreground and background relief patterns in comparison to those claimed by US 4O33O59 or US 6'296'281.
- This latter effect is caused by the specular reflection of the incident light off the ⁇ 111> planes towards the observer.
- the bulk substrate consists also of a ⁇ 100> oriented Silicon wafer coated with a suitable etch-masking layer as previously described.
- a first photolithography step portions of the etch- masking layer are exposed.
- the etch-masking layer is then partially thinned in those exposed portions through for instance a timed etching step. After the aforementioned mask-thinning step, the remaining photoresist is completely removed from the substrate as described previously.
- a second photolithography step using a second photomask, is then performed such that different portions of the etch-masking layer - which can be adjacent and contiguous to the portions thinned in the previous process steps - are completely removed by, for example wet etching.
- This step is followed by a cleaning step in which all the photoresist remaining after the removal of portions of the etching mask is dissolved.
- the etching mask now consists of areas where it has been completely removed, adjacent areas where it has been partially thinned and everywhere else of areas where it has retained its original thickness.
- the bulk substrate is now immersed in a wet-etchant having the properties previously described for such a time as necessary for the bulk Silicon to be etched into a U- shaped groove with flanks corresponding to the ⁇ 111 > planes of the monocrystal.
- the etching mask layer is now etched for a second time such that it is completely dissolved in the areas where it had been only thinned during the first photolithography and etching steps.
- the bulk substrate now consists of, areas where the Silicon has been etched in to a U-shaped groove, adjacent areas where the etching mask layer was removed during the previous process step to expose the original surface of the Silicon wafer and everywhere else of areas where the etching mask subsists albeit thinned compared to its original thickness.
- the bulk substrate is now immersed in wet etchant for a second time such that the areas containing U- shaped grooves are further etched until the ⁇ 111 > planes on the flank meet to form a V-shaped groove. From this point forward, the bulk substrate is stripped of all remaining etching mask material and can be diced into individual shims as described earlier for the first embodiment of this invention.
- the "two wet-etching step" method described above allows the patterning of a Silicon origination shim containing the negative of relief elements in which adjacent and contiguous portions of any of said elements can have two substantially different depths.
- the aforementioned relief elements can be disposed spatially at will on the two photomasks, in such a way that, at the end of the entire process described above, the replicated pattern will consist of distinguishable foreground and background areas which cooperate to form the transitory images described in figs. 1-4 of US 4O33O59.
- wet etching of the bulk Silicon is the preferred method for the structuring of the Silicon origination shim
- the wet etching steps described in the previous two embodiments of the present invention can also be replaced, in a third embodiment of the present invention, by dry etching of the Silicon substrate using any of several suitable dry etch chemistries well-known in the technical field of Silicon micromachining.
- One such dry etching chemistry consists of using Sulphur Hexafluoride (SF ⁇ ) gas plasma. It must be noted however that replicated markings of shims fabricated using dry etching of the Silicon substrate do not exhibit the specular reflection effect previously described for replicas of wet-etched shims.
- Micromachining processes very similar to those described above may be used to obtain an origination shim, in materials other than Silicon, containing transitory-image type relief patterns. Indeed a wide variety of materials may be patterned with relief elements through a combination of photolithography and wet or dry etching through an appropriate selective masking material which. The resulting relief elements will differ from the analogous relief elements on Silicon as described above, only by their cross-section.
- a non-exhaustive list of techniques includes: Dry or wet etching in glass substrates through a photoresist or a Chromium mask and dry or wet etching of various metal substrates, including Aluminum and Copper through a photoresist mask.
- the transitory image relief pattern is composed of a large number of prism-like relief elements (PRLEs), each PLRE being characterized by relief as well as by being rectangular in shape if viewed from a direction normal to the plane of the image.
- the aspect ratio of the PRLEs is included between 3:1 and 50:1 with a typical length of the long side between 50 and 250 ⁇ m.
- two sets of PLREs are defined in row-wise staggered grids with the elements of one set of PLREs rotated through 90° with respect to the second set such that if the two sets are placed together on the same substrate, the elements of the second grid fall in an exactly aligned and symmetrical fashion between the elements of the first grid.
- the three possible types of PLRE grid namely; a PLRE grid composed only of relief elements oriented as per the first set of relief elements (12), a grid composed only of relief elements oriented as per the second set of relief elements (13) and a third grid composed of combined first and second set relief elements (14); are assigned to separate portions - of which there may be more than three - of the image which make up the total relief pattern.
- the three types of grid and the portions of the image to which they are assigned cooperate to present (a) a contrast switching effect between areas covered by the first and second type of PLRE grid when the OVD is tilted and rotated through 90°, (b) a highlighting of the areas to which the combined grid is assigned when the OVD is viewed from directions essentially perpendicular to the plane of the image and (c) a specular reflection contrast switching effect off the imprint of the relief element faces representing ⁇ 111> planes of wet-etched Silicon, the appearance of which is dependent upon a combination of viewing angle and incident light, typically made apparent by slight lateral rotations of the tilted image about the line of sight to the observer.
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- Business, Economics & Management (AREA)
- Accounting & Taxation (AREA)
- Finance (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Diffracting Gratings Or Hologram Optical Elements (AREA)
- Casting Or Compression Moulding Of Plastics Or The Like (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US10/588,291 US20070128748A1 (en) | 2004-02-06 | 2005-01-24 | Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices |
AU2005211226A AU2005211226A1 (en) | 2004-02-06 | 2005-01-24 | Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices |
EP05702756A EP1711347A2 (en) | 2004-02-06 | 2005-01-24 | Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
CHPCT/CH2004/000070 | 2004-02-06 | ||
CH2004000070 | 2004-02-06 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
WO2005074358A2 true WO2005074358A2 (en) | 2005-08-18 |
WO2005074358A3 WO2005074358A3 (en) | 2006-09-21 |
Family
ID=34832039
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/050264 WO2005074358A2 (en) | 2004-02-06 | 2005-01-24 | Microreplication of transitory-image relief pattern based optically variable devices |
Country Status (3)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP1711347A2 (en) |
AU (1) | AU2005211226A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2005074358A2 (en) |
Cited By (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2018002366A1 (en) * | 2016-06-30 | 2018-01-04 | Banque De France | Process for manufacturing a security document comprising a security sign that produces a contrast in shininess |
Families Citing this family (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE102005061749A1 (en) | 2005-12-21 | 2007-07-05 | Giesecke & Devrient Gmbh | Optically variable security element for making valuable objects safe has an achromatic reflecting micro-structure taking the form of a mosaic made from achromatic reflecting mosaic elements |
CN105158835B (en) * | 2015-07-20 | 2017-05-03 | 厦门大学 | Optically-variable anti-counterfeit film based on single silicon material |
Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2126949A (en) | 1982-09-15 | 1984-04-04 | Rca Corp | Diffractive authenticating device |
EP0375833A1 (en) | 1988-12-12 | 1990-07-04 | Landis & Gyr Technology Innovation AG | Optically variable planar pattern |
US20020074795A1 (en) | 1999-08-09 | 2002-06-20 | Ying-Tsung | Diffractive anti-counterfeiting tag with naked-eye inspection and machine inspection |
Family Cites Families (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4033059A (en) * | 1972-07-06 | 1977-07-05 | American Bank Note Company | Documents of value including intaglio printed transitory images |
CH682528A5 (en) * | 1990-03-16 | 1993-09-30 | Westonbridge Int Ltd | Method embodiment by etching at least one cavity in the substrate and a substrate obtained by this method. |
GB9025390D0 (en) * | 1990-11-22 | 1991-01-09 | De La Rue Thomas & Co Ltd | Security device |
GB9402994D0 (en) * | 1994-02-17 | 1994-04-06 | Ici Plc | Preparation of embossing shims |
GB9806077D0 (en) * | 1998-03-20 | 1998-05-20 | Rue De Int Ltd | Latent image structure |
-
2005
- 2005-01-24 AU AU2005211226A patent/AU2005211226A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2005-01-24 WO PCT/IB2005/050264 patent/WO2005074358A2/en active Application Filing
- 2005-01-24 EP EP05702756A patent/EP1711347A2/en not_active Withdrawn
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2126949A (en) | 1982-09-15 | 1984-04-04 | Rca Corp | Diffractive authenticating device |
EP0375833A1 (en) | 1988-12-12 | 1990-07-04 | Landis & Gyr Technology Innovation AG | Optically variable planar pattern |
US20020074795A1 (en) | 1999-08-09 | 2002-06-20 | Ying-Tsung | Diffractive anti-counterfeiting tag with naked-eye inspection and machine inspection |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2018002366A1 (en) * | 2016-06-30 | 2018-01-04 | Banque De France | Process for manufacturing a security document comprising a security sign that produces a contrast in shininess |
FR3053281A1 (en) * | 2016-06-30 | 2018-01-05 | Banque De France | METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING A SECURITY DOCUMENT HAVING A BRILLIANCE CONTRAST SECURITY SIGN |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP1711347A2 (en) | 2006-10-18 |
AU2005211226A1 (en) | 2005-08-18 |
WO2005074358A3 (en) | 2006-09-21 |
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