Ultrasonic fingerprint sensor in display bezel
US-9984271-B1 · May 29, 2018 · US
US11144158B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11144158-B2 |
| Application number | US-201815988991-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | May 24, 2018 |
| Priority date | May 24, 2017 |
| Publication date | Oct 12, 2021 |
| Grant date | Oct 12, 2021 |
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Acoustic touch and/or force sensing system architectures and methods for acoustic touch and/or force sensing can be used to detect a position of an object touching a surface and an amount of force applied to the surface by the object. The position and/or an applied force can be determined using time-of-flight (TOF) techniques, for example. Acoustic touch sensing can utilize transducers (e.g., piezoelectric) to simultaneously transmit ultrasonic waves along a surface and through a thickness of a deformable material. The location of the object and the applied force can be determined based on the amount of time elapsing between the transmission of the waves and receipt of the reflected waves. In some examples, an acoustic touch sensing system can be insensitive to water contact on the device surface, and thus acoustic touch sensing can be used for touch sensing in devices that may become wet or fully submerged in water.
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What is claimed is: 1. An acoustic touch sensing system, comprising: a transducer; a differential electrode configuration coupled to the transducer; and an amplifier coupled to at least one electrode of the differential electrode configuration, wherein the amplifier and the differential electrode configuration are configured to perform a differential measurement to sense a touch signal at one or more spatial modulation frequencies corresponding to the differential electrode configuration and reject a spatial common mode signal having a common spatial characteristic relative to the differential electrode configuration. 2. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 1 , wherein the differential electrode configuration is configured with an alternating pattern of electrodes. 3. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 2 , wherein the alternating pattern of electrodes has a pitch corresponding to a first spatial frequency. 4. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 1 , further comprising switching circuitry configured to: group two or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a first grouping configuration having a first pitch; and group two or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a second grouping configuration having a second pitch, different from the first pitch. 5. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 1 , further comprising switching circuitry configured to: group four or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a first grouping configuration having a first pitch and a first spatial phase; and group the four or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a second grouping configuration having the first pitch and a second spatial phase, different from the first spatial phase. 6. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 5 , further comprising switching circuitry configured to: group the four or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a third grouping configuration having a second pitch, different from the first pitch. 7. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 6 , wherein the first pitch corresponds to a first spatial frequency, and the second pitch corresponds to a second spatial frequency, different from the first spatial frequency. 8. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 1 , further comprising switching circuitry configured to: couple the differential electrode configuration to drive circuitry configured to drive the transducer to produce an acoustic wave during a drive phase; and couple the differential electrode configuration to sense circuitry configured to receive electrical signals from the transducer during a sensing phase. 9. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 8 , further comprising: a first electrode and a second electrode disposed on a first side of the transducer; and a third electrode disposed on the second side of the transducer; wherein: the first electrode and the second electrode are coupled together during the drive mode; and the first electrode and the second electrode are coupled differentially to the sense circuitry during the sensing mode. 10. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 9 , wherein the third electrode is grounded during the sensing mode and the third electrode is differentially driven with the coupled first and second electrode in the driving mode. 11. The acoustic touch sensing system of claim 9 , wherein the third electrode is floating during the sensing mode and the third electrode is differentially driven with the coupled first and second electrode in the driving mode. 12. A method comprising: transmitting an acoustic wave from a transducer; receiving a reflected acoustic wave at a differential electrode configuration coupled to the transducer using an amplifier coupled to at least one electrode of the differential electrode configuration; and compensating for a spatial common mode signal having a common spatial characteristic relative to the differential electrode configuration using the received signal from the differential electrode configuration, wherein compensating comprises performing a differential measurement to sense a touch signal at one or more spatial modulation frequencies corresponding to the differential electrode configuration and rejecting the spatial common mode signal having the common spatial characteristic relative to the differential electrode configuration. 13. The method of claim 12 , wherein the differential electrode configuration is configured with an alternating pattern of electrodes. 14. The method of claim 12 , wherein the alternating pattern of electrodes has a pitch corresponding to a first spatial frequency. 15. The method of claim 12 , further comprising: grouping two or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a first grouping configuration having a first pitch; and grouping two or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a second grouping configuration having a second pitch, different from the first pitch. 16. The method of claim 12 , further comprising: grouping four or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a first grouping configuration having a first pitch and a first spatial phase; and grouping four or more electrodes of the differential electrode configuration in a second grouping configuration having the first pitch and a second spatial phase, different from the first spatial phase. 17. The method of claim 12 , wherein compensating for the spatial common mode signal using the received signal from the differential electrode configuration includes floating an electrode that is common to the differential electrode configuration. 18. The method of claim 12 , wherein compensating for the spatial common mode signal using the received signal from the differential electrode configuration includes inputting a pair of outputs of the differential electrode configuration to a common-mode feedback circuit. 19. A non-transitory computer-readable storage medium having stored therein instructions, which when executed by a processor cause the processor to perform a method comprising: coupling a differential electrode configuration to drive circuitry configured to drive a transducer to produce an acoustic wave during a drive phase; and coupling the differential electrode configuration to sense circuitry configured to receive electrical signals from the transducer during a sensing phase, wherein the differential electrode configuration is coupled to the transducer and wherein the differential electrode configuration and the sensing circuitry are configured to perform a differential measurement to sense a touch signal at one or more spatial modulation frequencies corresponding to the differential electrode configuration and reject a spatial common mode signal from a received acoustic wave having a common spatial characteristic relative to the differential electrode configuration. 20. The non-transitory computer-readable storage medium of claim 19 , wherein the sensing phase comprises a touch sensing phase and a force sensing phase. 21. The non-transitory computer-readable storage medium of claim 20 , wherein the touch sensing phase comprises an in-phase touch sensing phase and a quadrature touch sensing phase, wherein coupling the differential electrode configuration to the sense circuitry during the in-phase touch sensing phase comprises coupling the differential electrode configuration to the
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