Triboelectric Nanogenerator for Powering Portable Electronics
US-2017187307-A1 · Jun 29, 2017 · US
US2016070392A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2016070392-A1 |
| Application number | US-201514818908-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | Aug 5, 2015 |
| Priority date | Aug 5, 2014 |
| Publication date | Mar 10, 2016 |
| Grant date | — |
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A tactile sensor for sensing touch from a human finger includes a triboelectric layer and includes a material that becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger. The first side of a first conductive layer is in contact with the second side of triboelectric layer. The first side of a dielectric layer is in contact with the first conductive layer and the second side of the dielectric layer is in contact with a second conductive layer. When the triboelectric layer becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger, the first conductive layer and the second conductive layer are subjected to an electric field, which has a first field strength at the first conductive layer and a second field strength, different from the first field strength, at the second conductive layer. A plurality of tactile sensors can be arranged as a keyboard.
Opening claim text (preview).
1 . A tactile sensor for sensing touch from a human finger and the like, comprising: (a) a triboelectric layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, that includes a material that becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger; (b) a first conductive layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, the first side of the first conductive layer in contact with the second side of triboelectric layer; (c) a second conductive layer, having a first side and an opposite second side; and (d) a dielectric layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, the first side of the dielectric layer in contact with the second side of the first conductive layer and the second side of the dielectric layer in contact with the first side of the second conductive layer, the dielectric layer having a width so that when the triboelectric layer becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger, the first conductive layer and the second conductive layer are subjected to an electric field, wherein the electric field has a first field strength at the first conductive layer and a second field strength, different from the first field strength, at the second conductive layer. 2 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , further comprising a substrate layer in contact with the second side of the second conductive layer. 3 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , wherein the triboelectric layer comprises fluorinated ethylene propylene. 4 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , wherein the triboelectric layer comprises a plurality of deformable nanostructures extending outwardly from the first side of the triboelectric layer. 5 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , further comprising an electrical load electrically coupled to the first conductive layer and electrically coupled to the second conductive layer. 6 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , wherein the dielectric layer comprises polyethylene terephthalate. 7 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , wherein the first conductive layer comprises indium tin oxide. 8 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , wherein the second conductive layer comprises indium tin oxide. 9 . A keyboard for sensing contact with at least one human finger, comprising: (a) a plurality of independently addressable tactile sensitive keys, each key including a different tactile sensor, wherein each different tactile sensor includes: (i) a triboelectric layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, that includes a material that becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger; (ii) a first conductive layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, the first side of the first conductive layer in contact with the second side of triboelectric layer; (iii) a second conductive layer, having a first side and an opposite second side; and (iv) a dielectric layer, having a first side and an opposite second side, the first side of the dielectric layer in contact with the second side of the first conductive layer and the second side of the dielectric layer in contact with the first side of the second conductive layer, the dielectric layer having a width so that when the triboelectric layer becomes electrically charged after being in contact with the finger, the first conductive layer and the second conductive layer are subjected to an electric field, wherein the electric field has a first field strength at the first conductive layer and a second field strength, different from the first field strength, at the second conductive layer; and (b) an interface circuit that, upon sensing an electric field difference between the first conductive layer and the second conductive layer in at least one key, generates a signal indicative thereof. 10 . The keyboard of claim 9 , wherein the interface circuit generates the signal so as to indicate an amount of pressure exerted by the finger on the key at a specific moment. 11 . The keyboard of claim 10 , further comprising a circuit that identifies a user based on changes in the signal over time. 12 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , further comprising a plurality of nano-wires extending outwardly from the first side of the triboelectric layer. 13 . The tactile sensor of claim 1 , further comprising a substrate layer disposed under the second conductive layer. 14 . The keyboard of claim 10 , further comprising a plurality of nano-wires extending outwardly from the first side of the triboelectric layer. 15 . The keyboard of claim 10 , further comprising a substrate layer disposed under the second conductive layer. 16 . The keyboard of claim 10 , wherein the triboelectric layer comprises fluorinated ethylene propylene. 17 . The keyboard of claim 10 , wherein the dielectric layer comprises polyethylene terephthalate. 18 . The keyboard of claim 10 , wherein the first conductive layer comprises indium tin oxide. 19 . The keyboard of claim 10 , wherein the second conductive layer comprises indium tin oxide.
by electromagnetic means · CPC title
using force sensing means to determine a position · CPC title
Flexible digitiser, i.e. constructional details for allowing the whole digitising part of a device to be flexed or rolled like a sheet of paper · CPC title
Manufacturing, i.e. details related to manufacturing processes specially suited for touch sensitive devices · CPC title
using a plurality of detectors, e.g. keyboard · CPC title
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