TruePrint™ TruePrint™ Technology The Fundamentals DRS \\ 7jun02 1 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology Starting from first principles, connect an AC signal generator to 2 parallel conductive plates, generating an electric field between the plates. The wavelength will be much larger than all dimensions of the plates, so the field will be purely electric with no magnetic component, and no electromagnetic effects. The system can be treated as a quasi-static electric field with the equipotential contours (shown in dashed red) representing lines of constant signal amplitude. Conductive plates Equipotential contours DRS \\ 7jun02 2 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology If we now corrugate one of the conductive surfaces, the RF electric field will follow the shape of the conductive boundary. As illustrated here, the equipotential contours within the field will take on shapes that are an attenuated form of the shape of the conductive plate. A planar array of RF electric field sensors, essentially very small antennas, placed in the electric field region will acquire voltages that represent the shape of the corrugated conductive surface. Corrugated Conductive plate Shaped Equipotential contours An E-field sensor array can measure that shape DRS \\ 7jun02 3 Antenna array techieDetail16.ppt The Structure of the Skin z Now let’s examine the structure of the skin to see how to apply this RF imaging mechanism z Dry dead skin cells have low electrical conductivity. This region behaves as a dielectric z The boundary region where the live cells begin turning into keratinized skin is moist and electrically conductive. DRS \\ 7jun02 Air Dead dry skin Live skin 4 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology Applying the principle to fingerprint imaging. An signal generator on chip applies a small RF signal between the finger and the adjacent semiconductor. The signal is coupled into the live conductive layer of the skin by a conductive surface (called the finger drive ring) positioned around the outside of the active imaging region of the sensor. Finger drive Part of a finger Conductive layer just beneath surface of skin Ridges and valleys on finger surface Semiconductor DRS \\ 7jun02 5 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology RF Field (between finger and chip) mimics shape of conductive (live) skin layer Conductive layer just beneath surface of skin DRS \\ 7jun02 6 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology Sensors near ridges measure higher signals DRS \\ 7jun02 Sensors near valleys measure lower signals 7 techieDetail16.ppt TruePrint RF Imaging Technology The pixel antennas have characteristic impedances in the teraohm range. Therefore ultra high input-impedance sense amps are used under pixel to read the antennas’ voltages and drive the switched data busses. Cross section of finger skin Live skin cell layer Outer dead skin layer (dielectric) surface of the skin Pixel antennae array Semiconductor substrate Excitation signal reference plane Excitation Generator Hi input impedance sense amps Cross section of antenna array reading finger skin. DRS \\ 7jun02 8 techieDetail16.ppt Backup DC Capacitive Overview For comparison purposes, this diagram shows the pixel structure and electric field geometry for a typical DC capacitive fingerprint sensor. In one mode of operation, a fixed charge is placed on the active pixel plate and the voltage generated is measured. Note that this is a capacitive fringing field, so the field geometry is hemispherical and it is confined to a region very close to the sensor surface. Cross section of finger skin Capacitive sensors measure the difference in permittivity between the ridge surface skin and the air in the valleys. Live skin cell layer Outer dead skin layer (dielectric) surface of the skin Electric field geometry Air gaps at valleys Pixel sensor plate array Currently active pixel sensor plate c Semiconductor substrate Classic capacitive fingerprint sensor - cross section of sensor array reading finger skin. DRS \\ 7jun02 9 techieDetail16.ppt Advantages of TruePrint Technology over standard DC capacitive sensing TruePrint imaging does not depend upon air in the valleys z If the valleys are worn away, filled with oil or dirt, or if they are smashed flat, the sensor still images z Even very dry skin can be imaged successfully TruePrint technology uses coherent planar field structures between the finger and the sensor z Minimizes crosstalk between sensors, 250 sensors per inch in TruePrint technology generates a real 250 ppi information content. Most other sensors lose information due to crosstalk. z The sensing fields penetrate thick and callused skin z The sensors can work through thicker protective coatings TruePrint technology is very flexible and can be automatically adjusted to adapt to a wide range of different skin types and environments. DRS \\ 7jun02 10 techieDetail16.ppt Dynamic optimization™ -- How it works Uses the flexibility of the TruePrint technology to adapt to the person’s current skin condition The system takes several image frames in sequence z each one better optimized than the previous Process continues until the image is good enough to accept or reject confidently DRS \\ 7jun02 11 techieDetail16.ppt Dynamic optimization Example of a typical dry finger 4 This example took 4 frames 3 Executed in about ½ second on a PC 2 4 In Slow Motion . . . Adjust A/D references 3 1 Increase amplifier gain 2 Increase drive signal 1 DRS \\ 7jun02 12 techieDetail16.ppt For more information … Click here to learn about fingerprint Matching methods Click here to learn how very small fingerprint sensors work Back to Beginning DRS \\ 7jun02 13 techieDetail16.ppt
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