ZA200208063B - Transparent substrate provided with electrically conducting tracks. - Google Patents

Transparent substrate provided with electrically conducting tracks. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
ZA200208063B
ZA200208063B ZA200208063A ZA200208063A ZA200208063B ZA 200208063 B ZA200208063 B ZA 200208063B ZA 200208063 A ZA200208063 A ZA 200208063A ZA 200208063 A ZA200208063 A ZA 200208063A ZA 200208063 B ZA200208063 B ZA 200208063B
Authority
ZA
South Africa
Prior art keywords
screen
tracks
printing
paste
substrate
Prior art date
Application number
ZA200208063A
Inventor
Hahn Dieter Switalla
Josef Kummutat Rainer
Andre Beyrle
Yannick Lebail
Original Assignee
Saint Gobain
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Saint Gobain filed Critical Saint Gobain
Publication of ZA200208063B publication Critical patent/ZA200208063B/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K1/00Printed circuits
    • H05K1/02Details
    • H05K1/09Use of materials for the conductive, e.g. metallic pattern
    • H05K1/092Dispersed materials, e.g. conductive pastes or inks
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B3/00Ohmic-resistance heating
    • H05B3/84Heating arrangements specially adapted for transparent or reflecting areas, e.g. for demisting or de-icing windows, mirrors or vehicle windshields
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B2203/00Aspects relating to Ohmic resistive heating covered by group H05B3/00
    • H05B2203/002Heaters using a particular layout for the resistive material or resistive elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B2203/00Aspects relating to Ohmic resistive heating covered by group H05B3/00
    • H05B2203/017Manufacturing methods or apparatus for heaters

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Manufacturing Of Printed Wiring (AREA)
  • Surface Heating Bodies (AREA)
  • Printing Methods (AREA)
  • Surface Treatment Of Glass (AREA)

Description

TRANSPARENT SUBSTRATE PROVIDED WITH ELECTRICALLY
CONDUCTING TRACKS
The invention relates to a method of manufacturing electrically conducting tracks on a transparent substrate, by screen printing with an electrically conducting paste, and to the transparent substrate provided with said tracks.
For . several years already, it has been known to fit transparent substrates, especially glazing panels, with conducting tracks which can act as heating elements or as antenna or alarm elements.
These tracks are generally obtained by the screen- printing method using a paste containing metallic silver particles. It is known from EP-A-0 712 814 that the paste has a high silver content, that is to say from 60 to 90% by weight of the solid material.
Moreover, EP-A-0 079 854 describes a paste, capable of being deposited by screen printing on glass, which comprises from 45 to 90% by weight of metallic silver particles with a size less than 1 pm.
The electrically conducting tracks may also be obtained by methods other than screen printing, for example by extruding a conducting thermosetting paste directly on the glass in order to form narrow wires (see
DE-A-1 796 310).
The electrically conducting tracks which are obtained after baking (which baking is generally carried out at the same time as treating the glazing panels for forming and/or toughening purposes) have sufficient mechanical strength. As a result, the additional galvanizing step, which is tricky to implement because of the pollution risks associated therewith, is avoided.
Glazing panels comprising electrically conducting tracks are very widespread in the automobile field.
Most often, these tracks are employed as heating tracks, especially on rear windows, but they can also be placed on the glazing panel to provide it with an alarm and/or antenna functions. The aforementioned documents give no indication with regard to the width of the electrically conducting tracks thus produced. In practice, electrically conducting tracks are formed in industry by conventional screen printing and, after baking, they have a width of between 0.4 and 1.2 mm and a thickness which varies according to the nominal heating power and the ohmic resistance per unit area in question.
Because of the beneficial functions provided by these tracks, their number on one and the same glazing panel has tended to increase over the years, which could pose problems of overall size and of visibility. Thus, when the tracks are located in the field of vision of the glazing panel, they are «clearly visible from the inside, which may bother the driver, and secondarily from the outside, which is detrimental to the esthetic appearance of the vehicle.
Moreover, it is already known to use screen-printing stencils to form varied patterns on the glass (see
DE-A 32 31 382 and DE-A-35 06 891). Thus it 1is also possible to apply the paste in a thicker and/or wider layer at certain locations of the glass in a single step (without multiple printing), for example in order to form busbars for the electric current of the heated glazing panels. In this way, it is possible for the temperature over the entire glazed surface to be adjusted as well as possible, this temperature not having to exceed 50°C in the region of the busbars under standard ambient temperature conditions for a heating power going up to 450 watts. The examples appearing in the aforementioned patent applications are produced with a d.c. voltage commonly employed for automobiles, of about 11 to 14 volts.
Heated glazing panels and glazing panels with antenna, the conducting tracks of which consist of fine tungsten wires with a diameter of a few micrometers, are also known. These wires are only present on laminated glazing panels and they are embedded within the adhesive forming the intermediate sheet since otherwise it is not possible for them to be fastened safely directly onto the glass. Since they are finer, these wires are consequently less visible than the conducting tracks obtained by screen printing.
There 1s a requirement by automobile manufacturers, especially for top-of-the-range vehicles, to have available glazing panels made of toughened or laminated safety glass provided with conducting tracks which are barely visible to the naked eye.
The aim of the present invention is to form conducting tracks on a transparent substrate which, while being narrower than the known tracks, are capable of fulfilling the electrical conduction function which is assigned to them.
This aim is achieved by the method of the invention which consists in forming electrically conducting tracks on the surface of a transparent substrate, by applying, by screen printing, an electrically conducting paste forming a predetermined pattern, and in subjecting said tracks to baking, said method being characterized in that a thixotropic paste 1s used, having a silver content greater than 35% and of which at least 98% of the particles which form it have a size less than 25 pum, and a screen having at least 90 threads per cm, the width of the narrowest printed individual electrically conducting track being less than or equal to 0.3 mm.
To obtain the electrically conducting tracks having the required width, it has proved to be important to carefully control all the elements of the method according to the invention. In this respect, quite particular attention should be paid to the properties of the paste, especially the thixotropy and the size of the particles forming it, and to the screen parameters, . especially the mesh size, the thickness of its coating and the width of the openings (in this case, slots) to be provided in said coating which corresponds directly to the width of the tracks to be printed by screen printing. By virtue of the invention, it is possible to mass produce glazing panels fitted with a predetermined pattern of particularly fine tracks which are barely visible to the naked eye, on an industrial scale.
The opening of the meshes and also the size of the openings or of the slots provided in the screen coating for printing said pattern on the surface of a glazing panel have a direct effect on the width of said tracks.
Given that the size of the slots corresponds substantially to the width of the tracks obtained, it is necessary to form extremely narrow slots (as a general rule, of about 0.25 mm * 0.05) in said coating which itself is relatively thin. Nevertheless, the width of one of these slots may extend over more than one single mesh of the screen.
However, it cannot be excluded that there are other possibilities of producing narrow tracks by another method using a less thixotropic paste, a coarser screen (for example consisting of about 70 threads per cm), a relatively thick screen coating, etc.
In spite of the narrowness of said tracks, which it is barely possible to detect, a heating power comparable to that of the normal screen-printed heating tracks or regions is obtained. Nevertheless, the thickness of the tracks, although increased, is kept within acceptable limits. The tracks obtained using the method described herein thus have a maximum thickness on the glass surface, measured after baking, of about 35 pm, more generally about 15 to 25 pm, although the thickness of conventional tracks is about 12 pm. This larger maximum thickness may be obtained inter alia by virtue of highly thixotropic pastes used according to the invention which have the ability to recover their initial viscosity very quickly after printing on the glass.
By virtue of the method according to the invention, it is therefore possible to significantly reduce the width or the dimensions of the individual electrically conducting tracks by applying, by printing, a thixotropic paste containing at least 35% by weight of silver, having good flow properties for a high shear rate and containing very small particles, by means of a particularly fine screen, consisting of threads of a material known per se, arranged such that the opening of the mesh is small.
The importance attached to the thixotropic nature of the paste for the purpose of its application by screen printing should be specified. During application, the shear stress to which the paste is subject is high enough to cause a considerable and sudden drop in the viscosity which makes it possible for the paste to go through the orifices of the screen and be deposited on the substrate thereby forming the pattern of the tracks. Pastes which are suitable for this purpose are defined by a ratio of the viscosity in the absence of shear (starting viscosity) to the viscosity under shear stress (under screen-printing conditions) which varies from 50 to 1000 or even more, for example up to 1300- 1500. By way of comparison, this ratio is between 2 and 10 for the normal screen-printing pastes.
It is also important that, after deposition on the substrate, the paste regains a viscosity value as close as possible to the starting value in a very short time (recovery time), but also that this value remains stable over time. In this way, the drawbacks connected with plastic flow of the paste, in particular an increase in the width and a decrease in the thickness of the printed tracks, are avoided, drawbacks which become greater, the greater the thickness of paste deposited. In general, a paste whose recovery time 1is less than one second, preferably of the order of a few tenths of a second, should be chosen.
With a paste which is less thixotropic or comprising coarser particles, it is not possible to obtain conducting tracks having the indicated width, since the paste cannot pass through the narrow openings of the screen. Furthermore, it 1s not possible either to envision producing narrow conducting tracks with a paste whose recovery time (or transition time between the virtually fluid state under shear and the normal, practically solid state) 1s too high to allow the tracks to remain stable immediately after removing the screen.
When the silver content of the paste is greater than 50%, the tracks whose width is less than 0.25 mm can be used as heating tracks, without increasing the temperature at the nominal permissible power. The tracks whose silver content is lower, for example of the order of 35%, are used rather as an alarm and/or an antenna.
The combined use of a thixotropic paste consisting of very small-sized particles and of a screen with a fine mesh makes it possible to print conducting tracks with excellent resolution. Furthermore, by increasing the silver content in the thixotropic paste, it is possible to reduce the final thickness of the tracks.
- 7 =
Although particularly suitable for silver-based pastes, the invention may be extended to pastes containing metal particles capable of meeting the required electrical conduction criteria, such as copper or gold particles.
The glazing panels obtained according to the method of the invention, although being provided with narrower tracks, have electrical conduction properties comparable to those of a glazing panel fitted with tracks obtained by conventional screen printing, all other things being equal (number of tracks, distance between the tracks, arrangement, etc.). In the case especially of heated glazing panels, a similar heating power is attained with the same number of tracks.
To a great extent, the method according to the invention makes it possible to overcome the restrictions which mean having to vary the cross section of the tracks according to where they are located on the glazing panel. Such a restriction exists, for example, on trapezoidal-shaped glazing panels where the tracks located on the upper part are shorter than those of the lower part, which requires adapting the cross section of the tracks so as to maintain a comparable heating power over the entire surface of the glass. This restriction is found with glazing panels where maximum heating power is sought in the region corresponding to the driver’s field of vision. In this case, the conducting tracks have a greater width in the vicinity of the side edges than in the center of the glazing panel. By proceeding under the conditions of the invention, it is possible to form tracks of identical width without it resulting in a noticeable difference in the uniformity of the heating power. In this respect, there are grounds to think that the decrease in the electrical resistance results from the fact that the paste has a high silver content and
- 8g - that it is deposited over a larger thickness. The maximum permissible temperature values of the busbars are broadly respected without there being any need to apply a large thickness of screen-printing paste with a high conductivity. Most often, the temperature close to the busbars is 15% less than the maximum permitted temperature and does not exceed 50°C, under standard ambient temperature conditions, for a nominal power not exceeding 450 watts for a supply voltage of 11 to 14 volts.
Production on an industrial scale of the glazing panels obtained according to the method of the invention makes it possible to save on screen-printing paste, in particular when the latter is rich in silver (content greater than or equal to 80%). This 1s true for the production of heating tracks and even more SO when it involves tracks intended to operate as an alarm and/or antenna.
According to a first preferred embodiment, a thixotropic paste having a silver content greater than 35%, preferably 50% and even better 708%, the majority (at least 98%) of whose constituent particles have a size less than 25 um, preferably 12 pum, 1s used together with a screen-printing screen having at least 90 threads per cm and a coating thickness of at least pm, preferably 50 to 100 um. This way of operating makes it possible to deposit on the substrate, by 30 printing, in a single pass, a thickness of screen- printing paste which is relatively high compared with the thicknesses which are usually obtained. The deposits thus obtained have, after baking, a thickness less than 35 um, more generally of the order of 15 to 25 pm.
The screen employed within the scope of this embodiment has a coating thickness which is greater (more than 30 pum) than that of the screens with an equivalent number of threads used for the intended application (generally less than 10 um). This screen can be obtained by photographic technology, known per se, which consists in covering the surface of the screen with a layer or a film of photocrosslinkable resin and in operating by projecting a slide in order to reproduce the printing pattern on the screen. In the present case, a presensitized photocrosslinkable resin is used, which is capable of forming a coating which is solid enough to withstand the action of the screen- printing doctor blade, in a very short time, of the order of 150 seconds or even less. By way of comparison, with a conventional photocrosslinkable resin, it is necessary to have a high irradiation time, of the order of 5 to 6 minutes in order to obtain crosslinking throughout the thickness of the coating.
The term “presensitized photocrosslinkable resin” refers in this case to a precrosslinked resin which comprises one or more polymers of low molecular weight capable of reacting under the effect of light in order to form a crosslinked network. The presensitized photocrosslinkable resin can especially be used in the form of a layer of emulsion deposited directly on the screen or of a film supporting said resin, this film being moistened before being applied to the surface of the screen. By limiting the irradiation duration, it is thus possible to prevent unwanted light effects close to the edges of the printing mask, light which causes undesirable crosslinking of the resin. This results in a reduction in the size of the printed pattern with respect to that of the mask, on the face subjected to the irradiation, which then results, during screen printing, in reducing the amount of paste deposited on the substrate and in poorer resolution in the printing of the tracks.
It is advantageous to choose a screen whose edges, corresponding to the printing patterns, are substantially parallel within the thickness such that the opening designed for the passage of the paste remains substantially constant from one face to the other of the screen. In any case, it 1s desirable that the variation of the opening between both faces of the screen, for the same pattern, is less than 20%, and preferably 10%. By way of comparison, with the previously mentioned conventional photocrosslinkable resin, the high irradiation time needed for the crosslinking does not allow the desired opening corresponding to the printed pattern to be obtained {reduction of the opening or even complete blockage).
The type of thread forming the screen is not critical.
Preferably, the threads are made of polyester and each thread consists of a single (monofilament) thread with a diameter of between 30 and 60 um, preferably 40 and 50 um.
The doctor blade, which allows the paste to be pressed through the screen-printing screen, may be a normal doctor blade having a right-angled printing edge, which is chamfered or rounded. The use of the latter type of doctor blade makes it possible to obtain some increase in the shear stress, hence a reduction in the viscosity of the paste during passage through the screen.
Preferably, the doctor blade consists of a material of the polymer type, for example a polyurethane, having a
Shore A hardness of between 65 and 85.
By virtue of the invention, it is possible to obtain conducting tracks having a surface resistance less than 2.5 mohm per square for a thickness of 10 um after baking, which corresponds to a resistivity less than 2.5 pohm.cm.
Furthermore, the conducting tracks have a satisfactory abrasion resistance, even where their thickness is high. This is attributed to the higher densification of the silver particles in the paste during baking.
The manufacture of a heated glazing panel for the purpose of use as a rear heated window of a motor vehicle is described below.
Thixotropic screen-printing paste contains 80% silver, 4% glass frit and 16% of a medium which has the function of facilitating application to the substrate.
All the particles contained in the paste have a size less ‘than 15 um. The ratio of the viscosity without shear stress to the viscosity under shear stress under screen-printing conditions is equal to 200.
The screen consists of a 100 T fabric marketed by SEFAR which contains 100 threads per cm, each thread consisting of a single polyester thread having a diameter of 40 um, and has a mesh opening equal to 58 um. The screen is covered with a layer of presensitized photocrosslinkable emulsion with a thickness of 80 um and the pattern corresponding to the printing mask is reproduced on the screen by photographic technology (irradiation time: 150 seconds; blade power: 7 000 W). The edges of the coating for the patterns reproducing the tracks are parallel, which means that the opening for the passage of the paste is constant from one face to the other of the screen.
The screen pattern is printed on a sheet of glass by means of a right-angled polyurethane doctor blade with a Shore A hardness of 85. With a printing speed of 20 m/min and an off-contact of 8 mm, tracks are formed which, after a baking cycle (from ambient temperature to 650°C in 150 s), have a width of 0.2 to 0.22 mm and a thickness of 15 um. The glazing panel fitted with current busbars has the same performance in terms of strength and heating power as a glazing panel having an identical number of conducting tracks, placed in the same way, obtained by conventional screen printing (width greater than 0.5 mm).
The manufacture of a heated glazing panel according to another variant of the invention, but also intended for use as a heated rear window of a motor vehicle, will be described below.
Although the normal doctor blades have a right-angled pointed printing edge, with which the paste is printed through the screen on the surface placed thereunder, it has proved to be preferable for embodying the invention to use a modified printing edge of the doctor blade providing a certain wedge effect. An explanation for this effect, resulting from chamfering or rounding said printing edge for this specific configuration, has not yet been found, but it is possible to assume that there is a reciprocal effect with the thixotropy - that is to say the reduction in viscosity on increasing the shear stress exerted on the thixotropic medium - of the screen-printing paste.
The rate of printing by the doctor blade is slightly less compared with the normal methods because of the need to make the paste pass through the slots or the openings of considerably smaller Cross sections compared with the «cross sections of known screen coatings. Furthermore, the off-contact of the screen (that 1s to say the distance between the freely tensioned screen and the substrate to be printed, in this case the glazing panel) is set at 10 mm.
With these materials and dimensions, a resistivity less than 2.5 p *cm can be obtained after baking.
The product H 663, from DuPont, is used as a paste, the viscosity of which is equal to 17 Pa.s (pascal . sec),
It only contains particles of a size less than or equal to 10 pm. It has a ratio of the viscosity without: shear stress to the viscosity under shear stress under screen-printing conditions, equal to 100.
The screen consists of a 95 T fabric, marketed by
SAATI S.p.A., Italy, which contains 95 threads per cm, each thread consisting of a single thread made of polyester having a diameter of 40 um, and has a mesh opening equal to 65 um. The screen is covered with a layer of presensitized photocrosslinkable emulsion with a thickness of about 16 pum and the pattern corresponding to the printing mask is reproduced on the screen by photographic technology. The edges of the coating at the patterns reproducing the tracks are parallel which means that the opening for the passage of the paste is constant from one face to the other of the screen. The narrowest of the slots formed in the coating have a width of about 250 um.
The screen pattern is printed on a sheet of glass by means of a polyurethane doctor blade, whose edge is provided with a bevel at 45° over 0.2 mm and with a
Shore A hardness of 65. With a printing speed of 0.35 m/sec and an off-contact of 10 mm, tracks are formed which, after a baking cycle (from ambient temperature to 650°C in 150 s) have a width of 0.2 to 0.22 mm and a thickness of 12-15 um. The glazing panel fitted with current busbars has the same performance in terms of resistance and heating power as a glazing panel having an identical number of conducting tracks, arranged in the same way, obtained by conventional screen printing (width greater than 0.5 mm).

Claims (26)

T oo! . . CLAIMS
1. A method of manufacturing electrically conducting tracks on a transparent substrate, according to which an electrically conducting paste is applied, by screen printing, to the surface of the substrate in order to form a predetermined pattern of tracks and said tracks are subjected to baking, characterized in that a thixotropic paste is used, having a ratio of the viscosity without shear stress to the viscosity under shear stress under screen-printing conditions of at least 50 and having a silver content greater than 35%, and a screen whose coating is provided, at least partially, with slots, the narrowest width of which is at the most equal to 0.25 mm * 0.05 mm so that the width of the smallest of the electrically conducting tracks formed by printing is less than or equal to 0.3 mm.
2. The method as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the paste consists of 98% of particles having a size less than or equal to 25 um, and in that the screen comprises at least 90 threads per cm.
3. The method as claimed in either of Claims 1 and 2, characterized in that a thixotropic paste is used having a silver content greater than 50%, and of which at least 98% of the particles have a size less than 12 pm.
4. A method as claimed in claim 3 having a silver content greater than 70%. AMENDED SHEET
- 15 -~
5. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 4, characterized in that a screen is used having at least 95 threads per cm and in that individual conducting tracks are applied by printing, the smallest width of which is less than 0.25 mm.
0. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 5, characterized in that a screen is used provided with a coating having a thickness greater than or equal to pm.
7. The method as claimed in Claim 6, characterized in that the thickness of the screen coating is between 50 and 100 pm.
8. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 7, characterized in that the screen is provided with a coating, the edges of which corresponding to the printing patterns are substantially parallel within the thickness.
9. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 8, characterized in that a screen is used, the coating of which 1s obtained by irradiation of a presensitized photocrosslinkable resin.
10. The method as claimed in Claim 9, characterized in that the resin is deposited in the form of an emulsion or of a film supporting said resin applied to the surface of the screen.
11. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 10, characterized in that a doctor blade is used having a Shore A hardness of about 65 to 85 and a right-angled printing edge. AMENDED SHEET
12. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 9, characterized in that a doctor blade is used having a Shore A hardness of 65 to 85 and a printing edge chamfered at 45° or rounded.
13. The method as claimed in one of Claims 1 to 11, characterized in that a thixotropic paste is used having a silver content greater than or equal to 80% and that individual conducting tracks are formed, the smallest width of which is between 0.1 and 0.25 mm.
14. Use of a printing screen comprising at least 90 threads per cm, preferably 95 threads per cm, in order to form electrically conducting tracks according to the method ¢f one of Claims 1 to 12.
15. The use as claimed in Claim 14, characterized in that the screen has a thickness greater than or equal to 30 um.
16. The use as claimed in claim 14 characterized in that the screen has a thickness of 50 to 100 um.
17. A transparent substrate, especially a glazing panel, comprising electrically conducting tracks applied by printing on the surface by screen printing, characterized in that the minimum width of the tracks is less than or equal to 0.3 mm.
18. A transparent substrate as claimed in claims 17 in which the minimum width of the tracks is 0.25 mm.
19. The substrate as claimed in Claim 17, characterized in that the tracks consist of a screen- printing paste having a silver content greater than
35%. AMENDED SHEET
20. The substrate as claimed in Claim 19, characterized in that the tracks consist of a screen- printing paste having a silver content greater than
50%.
21. The substrate as claimed in claim 20 in which the printing paste has a silver content of 70%.
22. The substrate as claimed in one of Claims 17 to 20, characterized in that the tracks project above the surface by a height less than 35 um.
23. The substrate as claimed in one of Claims 17 to 22, characterized in that it further comprises two current busbars, between which the conducting tracks lie, at least portions of which have a width less than or equal to 0.3 mm, the temperature in the vicinity of said busbars not exceeding 50°C, under standard ambient temperature conditions, for a nominal power not exceeding 450 watts for a supply voltage of 11 to 14 volts.
24. The use of the substrate as claimed in one of Claims 17 to 23 as an automobile glazing panel which is heated, with an antenna or an alarm.
25. A method of manufacturing electrically conducting tracks on a transparent substrate substantially as described in the first preferred embodiment in the specification.
26. A heated glazing panel for use as a rear heated window for a motor vehicle substantially as described in the specification. AMENDED SHEET
ZA200208063A 2000-04-14 2002-10-08 Transparent substrate provided with electrically conducting tracks. ZA200208063B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE10018902 2000-04-14

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
ZA200208063B true ZA200208063B (en) 2004-02-04

Family

ID=7638986

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
ZA200208063A ZA200208063B (en) 2000-04-14 2002-10-08 Transparent substrate provided with electrically conducting tracks.

Country Status (3)

Country Link
DE (2) DE10038768A1 (en)
ES (1) ES2367353T3 (en)
ZA (1) ZA200208063B (en)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE102005034895B3 (en) * 2005-07-26 2006-12-07 Webasto Ag Method of applying conductive leads onto plastic especially transparent plastic components, for heated vehicle headlight applies and partly sets a scratch-resistant film, places leads onto this and completes hardening process
EP2204070B1 (en) 2007-10-26 2016-08-24 AGC Glass Europe Process for printing windows containing an enamelled pattern
DE102019111546A1 (en) * 2019-05-03 2020-11-05 Irlbacher Blickpunkt Glas Gmbh Luminaire with a coating for de-icing

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1796310C3 (en) * 1964-11-09 1974-10-31 Compagnie De Saint-Gobain-Pont-Amousson, Neuilly-Sur-Seine (Frankreich) Use of a paste containing metallic silver and a low-melting frit for the production of a heatable car window consisting of toughened glass and a device for its production. Elimination from: 1480445
US4369063A (en) * 1981-11-12 1983-01-18 Ciba-Geigy Corporation Silver containing conductive coatings
DE3231382C2 (en) * 1982-08-24 1986-11-20 Flachglas AG, 8510 Fürth Process for printing a pane of glass with heating conductors and, in contrast, busbars with a thicker layer, as well as a screen printing stencil suitable for carrying out the process
DE3506891A1 (en) * 1985-02-27 1986-08-28 VEGLA Vereinigte Glaswerke GmbH, 5100 Aachen METHOD FOR PRODUCING A HEATABLE GLASS DISC AND SCREEN PRINTING TEMPLATE FOR IMPLEMENTING THE METHOD
JP3541070B2 (en) * 1994-11-15 2004-07-07 イー・アイ・デュポン・ドウ・ヌムール・アンド・カンパニー Automotive glass thick film conductor paste

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE10038768A1 (en) 2001-10-25
DE10056777A1 (en) 2001-11-22
ES2367353T3 (en) 2011-11-02

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7582833B2 (en) Transparent substrate provided with electroconductive strips
EP2622938A1 (en) Transparent panel having a heatable coating
CN106489296B (en) Heated glass panel
CA2612097A1 (en) A vision panel having a multi-layer primer
EP1417535A2 (en) Switchable electrochromic devices
DE2533364A1 (en) COATED DISC
ZA200208063B (en) Transparent substrate provided with electrically conducting tracks.
US4283440A (en) Thermal sheet production process
EP2146548A2 (en) Transparent pane with a heatable coating and low-ohm conductive structure
DE2344616A1 (en) Laminated heated glass plate production method - is for plate with an electrically conducting layer
DE19702448A1 (en) Heated front mirror especially vehicle exterior mirror
WO2023046477A1 (en) Glazing with segmented pdlc-functional element and electrically controllable optical properties
RU2272368C2 (en) Transparent base provided with electricity-conducting tracks
WO2020025304A1 (en) Pdlc vehicle window having a highly conductive layer
DE102004052477B4 (en) Heated exterior mirror
FR2818087A1 (en) Vehicle window, etc. with screen printed electrically conductive tracks forming heater, antenna or alarm and where shortest tracks are shorter than specified length
WO2023025492A1 (en) Glazing unit having electrically controllable optical properties with temperature-dependent switching behavior
EP4353050A1 (en) Pane having patterned functional coating
FR2823454A1 (en) Electroconducting track production on transparent substrate comprises silk screen printing using electroconducting paste under conditions to produce thin tracks
EP4326548A1 (en) Glazing unit which has electrically controllable optical properties and multiple independent switching regions
DE102018110760A1 (en) INTELLIGENT WINDOW WITH FENDER REMOVAL FUNCTION