US3564268A - Document verifier using photovoltaic cell with light sensitive bars - Google Patents

Document verifier using photovoltaic cell with light sensitive bars Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3564268A
US3564268A US837060A US3564268DA US3564268A US 3564268 A US3564268 A US 3564268A US 837060 A US837060 A US 837060A US 3564268D A US3564268D A US 3564268DA US 3564268 A US3564268 A US 3564268A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
output
document
cell
verification system
amplitude
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US837060A
Inventor
Robert T Bayne
James S Nawa
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
STANDARD CHANGE MAKERS Inc
Original Assignee
STANDARD CHANGE MAKERS Inc
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 STANDARD CHANGE MAKERS Inc filed Critical STANDARD CHANGE MAKERS Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3564268A publication Critical patent/US3564268A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G07CHECKING-DEVICES
    • G07DHANDLING OF COINS OR VALUABLE PAPERS, e.g. TESTING, SORTING BY DENOMINATIONS, COUNTING, DISPENSING, CHANGING OR DEPOSITING
    • G07D7/00Testing specially adapted to determine the identity or genuineness of valuable papers or for segregating those which are unacceptable, e.g. banknotes that are alien to a currency
    • G07D7/06Testing specially adapted to determine the identity or genuineness of valuable papers or for segregating those which are unacceptable, e.g. banknotes that are alien to a currency using wave or particle radiation
    • G07D7/12Visible light, infrared or ultraviolet radiation

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT A dollar bill verifier including a photovoltaic cell having light sensitive bars approximately the same width as the black grid lines on the bill.
  • An amplifier receives the output of the 'cell and couples it through a potentiometer to a Schmitt trigger.
  • the Schmitt trigger is coupled through a differentiator, integrator and potentiometer to a switch.
  • One embodiment of this invention might include a document verification system comprising a light source, a photovoltaic cell formed in approximately the same pattern as the document to be verified, and means for causing relative movement between the document, the cell and the light source.
  • One object of this invention is to provide an improved docu ment verifier apparatus.
  • a further object of this invention is to provide a document verifier apparatus which is relatively simple and uncomplicated.
  • FIG. 1 is a section taken along the line 1-1 of FIG. 3 in the direction of the arrows.
  • FIG. 2 is a somewhat schematic front elevation of a document verifier apparatus embodying the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a partially schematic partially exploded perspective view showing the electrical circuit and portions of the mechanical components of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10,", and 12 are graphical plots ofthe wave forms of the various signals at various points throughout the present apparatus and show in serial form the manner in which the signal is operated upon by the various elements of the present apparatus.
  • FIG. 13 is a partially exploded perspective view'of a further embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 14 is a side elevation of a portion of the structure illustrated in FIG. 13. DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now more particularly to the drawings, there is illustrated a photovoltaic cell or photocell 15.
  • the cell 15 is made from a flat chip of silicon which has been cut from a grown single crystal of silicon. During the growing process, the silicon is doped with suitable impurities so that the resulting crystal is a semiconductor of the P type. The crystal is then sliced into flat chips such as for example about one centimeter in area and a few thousandths centimeters thickness. The resulting chip is of course P-type semiconductor.
  • N-type impurities are diffused into the P-type chip by a gaseous diffusion process.
  • the final result of this procedure is to form an NP semiconductor junction on one surface of the silicon chip which extends approximately angstroms into the surface of the silicon chip.
  • the entire surface of the chip is now photosensitive.
  • the next step in the process is the etching of alternating areas of the NP junction. This etching dissolves alternate spaces on the silicon surface below the level of the NP region.
  • the resulting raised portions of the silicon surface are still NP regions and are still each separately photosensitive.
  • thephotovoltaic cell includes the main portion thereof 16 which is approximately one centimeter in area and a few thousandths thick and which is doped with P- type impurity.
  • the portions 17 of the photovoltaic cell are NP semiconductor junctions where the P-type silicon has been further doped with N-type impurity. Between and outboard of the raised portions 17 there are located etched out portions 20 which are not light sensitive. In order to protect the portions 17 and the pattern made up by the light-sensitive portions 17,
  • a transparent cover glass 21 of perhaps 0.003 centimeters thickness is secured to the chip by epoxy or the like.
  • the raised portions 17 are shown as having the configuration of straight parallel bars or lines all of which are connected together by another raised portion 22.
  • the raised portion 22 is a plated conductor which may also be covered and protected by the glass cover 21 not shown in FIG. 3.
  • Wire leads 25 and 26 are connected to the conductor 22 and the P-type region 16 of the chip respectively.
  • FIG. 2 there is illustrated a bill verifier 30 which, except for the modifications effected by the present invention, may be identical to the bill verifier sold by Standard ChangeMakers, Inc. of Indianapolis, Indiana, under Model No. 25 or 25A.
  • This bill verifier incorporates a slidable tray 31 which moves toward and away from the viewer of FIG. 2.
  • the user of the bill verifier places the dollar bill in the recess 32 and pushes the tray 31 onto the bill verifier.
  • a cam indicated schematically at 35, is moved out of the way of a limit stop element 36 which is fixed to a rod 37 in turn fixed to a cart 40.
  • the rod 37 is slidably mounted for movement leftwardly and rightwardly as viewed in FIG. 2 on the frame elements 41. Acting between the cart 40 and the frame element 41 is a coiled compression spring 42. When the member 35 moves out of the path of the limit stop 36, the shaft 37 is free to move leftwardly until the limit stop 36 engages the frame 41 which also acts as a limit stop. Thus, the cart 40 is caused to move a distance leftwardly in the direction of the arrow 45 a predetermined distance.
  • the tray 31 is transparent. Mounted on the frame beneath the tray 31 is a light source 50 which shines upwardly through the aperture 51 thence through the transparent tray 3I and through the bill carried by the tray into the cart 40.
  • the cart 40 has mounted thereon at its lower end the photovoltaic cell 15. The cell is spaced fairly closely to the tray 31 and the dollar bill in the tray, this spacing being approximately 0.001 inches in a typical installation such as the one herein described and preferably as close as possible to the bill surface.
  • the cart When the tray 31 is returned to its initial position toward the viewer of FIG. 2, the cart is also returned to the illustrated rightward position with the limit stop 36 being held by the member 35 in readiness for a further cycle as above described.
  • the cart is tripped so that the spring 42 can move it through a predetermined distance leftwardly and the cell moves across the bill in the direction of the arrow.
  • the light-sensitive bars or strips 17 on the photovoltaic cell are of the same size and relative spacing as the grid lines printed on the money being examined, although the bars 17 may be somewhat thinner than the grid lines on the money.
  • the light passes through the printed grid lines on the bill, it forms a shadow pattern on the surface of the photocell adjacent to the bill. With the proper relative positioning of the bill and the photocell, the dark shadow areas will completely mask all of the light-sensitive strips of the photocell. At this point, the electrical output will be of low voltage.
  • the relative position of the bill and photocell is adjusted so that the dark or shadowed portions of the transmitted light pattern fall between the photosensitive strips of the photocell, the photosensitive strips will be illuminated at greater intensity and the voltage output of the photocell will be high.
  • the relative linear motion produced by the cart 40 across the bill causes alternate illumination and shadowing of the photocell resulting in an alternating voltage output being produced by the photocell.
  • An example of such an alternating voltage output is shown in FIG. 4.
  • Typical cell outputs can range from 0.5 to 1.5 millivolts peak to peak measured with a voltmeter having 6,000 ohms internal resistance.
  • Typical frequencies of alternating voltages generated by the photocell measure from 800 to 1,500 cycles per second on the above described representative type of mechanical transport system. The frequency of photocell output, however, could vary widely from one type of mechanical transport system to another.
  • the output of the photocell is connected by means of the wires 25 and 26 to amplifier input terminals 60 and 61 of the amplifier 62.
  • the amplifier 62 is of the integrated circuit operational type and has a differential input. The function of the amplifier is to amplify the typically 1.0 millivolt signal from the photocell to a value of I to 1.8 volts (typical) at the amplifier output 65.
  • An example of a suitable amplifier 62 might be RCA type CA3033.
  • the total voltage amplification provided at this point in the system is approximately l,200 to 2,000 times.
  • FIG. the wave form of the amplifier output is illustrated.
  • the amplifier wave form output is a faithful reproduction of the wave form shown in FIG. 4 but is much amplified in magnitude of voltage.
  • the dotted line 70 in FIG. 4 and 71 in FIG. 5 illustrates a typical variation in illumination over the area of the lighted spot of the bill 72 in FIG. 3. As suggested, this causes a low frequency modulation of the wave form at the output of the photocell. Because this modulation is in the nature of interference, it contributes no information about bill characteristics.
  • the amplifier is designed so that the maximum gain of the amplifier exists over a frequency range corresponding to the grid line frequencies of the photocell.
  • the interference signal may be attenuated with respect to the grid line signal. It is not possible or desirable, however, to totally remove this interference signal at the present point in the system. Consequently, the amplified signal from the photocell will contain both interference signals and the grid line signals at point 65 in FIG. 3.
  • the signal After being amplified, the signal is coupled into the input of a schmitt trigger 75 by means of a capacitor 76 and a potentiometer 77 so that the amount of signal transmitted into the schmitt trigger can be adjusted in voltage level.
  • the wave form of the signal at the input to the schmitt trigger is illustrated in FIG. 6
  • the wave form 76 shows the .minimum input to the schmitt trigger and the wave form 78 shows the maximum input.
  • the difference 80 is a typical range of adjustment by the potentiometer 77.
  • FIG. 7 is a double graph which shows at the lower portion of the graph in the wave forms 81 and 82 typical inputs to the schmitt trigger. At the upper portion of the graph of FIG. 7 the corresponding typical outputs of the schmitt trigger are shown at 85. Thus, it can be seen for the input 81 there is no output from the schmitt trigger. However, for the input 82 there is an output. It will be noted, however, that some of the various pulses 85 of the schmitt trigger are on for shorter periods of time than other pulses 85.
  • FIGS. 8 and 9 show the efiect of the differentiator circuit 90.
  • the signal 91 is the input to the differentiator while signal 92 is the output.
  • the dotted lines 92' indicate that the upper and lower wave forms are time synchronized. It will be noted that, even though the various schmitt trigger output wave forms 95, 96, 97, and 98 have decreasing widths, still the outputs 100, 101, 102 and 103 are of equal amplitude similarly to the schmitt trigger output 91.
  • the bill signal has been applied to the amplifier containing both grid line and interference signals.
  • the amplifier has increased the voltage magnitude of the bill signal and the interference signals and applied them to the schmitt trigger.
  • the schmitt trigger a has made all of the voltage wave forms of the amplified bill signal of the same magnitude or height. It has therefore, removed part of the interference signal but a component still exists due to the variable width factor of the schmitt trigger output.
  • the differentiator circuit then removes the variable width factor or interference from the amplified bill signal.
  • the bill signal has now been cleaned up" or scrubbed” and is ready to produce a grid line count or totalization at the integrator.
  • the output of the differentiator is coupled into an integrator 110.
  • the integrator is designed with a time constant. During the time of the time constant, the DC output voltage of the integrator circuit is proportional to the number and the area of voltage pulses at its input.
  • FIG. 10 shows an enlarged view of the differentiator output and shows that each pulse has a certain area which is determined by the constant height or amplitude 111 of the pulse and by the width or time period ofthe pulse 112.
  • the'output of the integrator DC voltage is approximately twice as high for 20 pulses ofa constant area as it is for 10 pulses of the same area, provided, of course, that the natural time constant of the integrator is much longer than the span of time occupied by the 20 pulses.
  • 11 and 12 show the above described action of adding or totalizing pulses.
  • the dotted lines betweenthe upper and lower time axes indicate time synchronization.
  • the integrator output voltage level required for bill acceptance is the voltage indicated at 121 which corresponds to 8 pulses, then 8 pulses at the input to the integrator would cause acceptance while, for example, 5 pulses indicated at 122 would not.
  • the output of the integrator circuit 110 is connected to a final trigger or switch 120 through a potentiometer 121.
  • the final trigger 120 may consist of a silicon controlled switch or SCS.
  • the input 122 to the final trigger is connected to the gate electrode of the SCS. When the gate electrode becomes positive by about 0.4 to 0.6 volts, the SCS component conducts giving a go or accept" signal which is delivered to the output 125.
  • the potentiometer 121 connected between the integrator and the final trigger make possible adjustment of the voltage level at which the SCS or final trigger is fired.
  • each grid line existing on the bill and scanned by the photocell produces one voltage pulse at the input to the amplifier.
  • These amplified pulses are made of constant amplitude and constant width by action of the schmitt trigger and the differentiator circuits.
  • the integrator sums the'se pulses, giving at least approximately equal weight to each pulse.
  • the integrator output DC level is,
  • the final trigger can be made to give an accept" signal at any desired number of grid lines detected.
  • the potentiometer 121 may be adjustedto give an accept signal after grid lines are added up by the integrator or, if desired, after grid lines are detected by the integrator.
  • the potentiometer 121 is a means of varying the selectivity of the entire grid line detection system.
  • the potentiometer 77 may be adjusted so that the schmitt trigger 75 is operating for the minimum grid line signal generated by a worn, old and wrinkled bill of genuine printing. As mentioned above, the schmitt trigger will not operate unless it receives a signal of a certain minimum value.
  • the potentiometer 77 can be adjusted so that the schmitt trigger will not operate at all for a great amount of obviously bogus money such as play money, photostats, poor quality counterfeits and the like. Thus, no signal will be generated for such items and no signal will be passed on to the differentiator for such items.
  • l. ls a grid line signal generated'f'lhis check is performed by the photocell and the spacing and width of the light-sensitive areas of the photocell.
  • a fiber optics tube or conduit 200 is used between the document or bill 201 and the photovoltaic cell 202.
  • the tube 200 may be, for example, Model No. lC-b 200-6 image conduit manufactured by The American Optical Company of Southbridge, Massachusetts, although the tube is cut and polished to a shorter length than the usual 6 -inch length of this model number.
  • one end of the image conduit contacts the bill 201 while the other end is in contact with or closely spaced to the cell 202.
  • the end surfaces of the image conduit are optically fiat and polished.
  • the image conduit is made up of at least 70,000 separate fibers for each one-fourth inch of conduit diameter. Each fiber is separately clad to individually transmit a light spot through the conduit. The size of each light spot is very small (about 12 microns). The grid line image is thus transmitted up the conduit to the cell surface.
  • the cell 202 may be located within a protective housing 205 which is identical to or corresponds to the cart 40.
  • the housing 205 shields the cell from mechanical shock, vibration, moisture and other foreign matter which might be picked up from the bill surface.
  • the housing also protects the cell from external electrical contact.
  • the conduit 200 prevents substantial diffusion of light in the area between the cell and the document so that a sharp clear image is delivered to the cell.
  • the present invention provides an improved document verifier apparatus. It will also be evident that the document verifier apparatus of this invention is relatively simple and uncomplicated and is capable of great selectivity.
  • a document verification system comprising a light source; a photovoltaic cell'formed in approximately the same pattern as the document to be verified; and means for causing relative movement between the document, the cell and the light source, said document including a plurality of bars, said photovoltaic cell also including a plurality of similar bars of light-sensitive material of the same relative size and spacing as the bars of the documents, said bars being separated by nonlight-sensitive material.
  • a document verification system as defined in claim 1 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
  • said cell includes a fiat chip of silicon doped with P- and N-type impurities, said flat chip being doped with oneof said types of impurities therethrough, said chip having a photosensitive surface thereon formed by the other of said types of impurities fused into the one type impurity chip, said chip being etched at selected portions of said surface to remove portions of said photosensitive surface providing s'aid pattern of photosensitive material.
  • a document verification system as defined in claim 2 additionally comprising first means for receiving the output of said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is constant in amplitude and time duration, integrating means for counting the output pulses of said differentiating means and producing an output directly proportional to the number of second means output pulses, and switch means receiving the output of said integrating means and arranged to be turned on by an output of given amplitude from said integrating means.
  • said means for causing relative movement comprises a spring and a pair of limit stops and a cart, said cell being mounted on said cart, said limit stops'being spaced apart a fixed distance, one of said limit stops normally acting to hold said cart at a first position, said'one stop being movable to permit said cart to move from said first position to a second position under the action of the spring, said first and second positions being a given distance apart so that the travel of said cart between said positions is always the same distance.
  • a document verification system as defined in claim 6 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit mounted on said cart and positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
  • a document verification system as defined in claim 5 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling the output of said cell to the input of said first means and making possible adjustment of said given amplitude of the first means so that said first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
  • a documentverification system as defined in claim 8 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulses from said integrating means required to turn on said switch.
  • a document verification system comprising a photovoltaic cell, a light source, said photovoltaic cell including means for comparing a pattern of the document with the document itself to provide avariation in light to said cell, first means for receiving the output of'said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is consaid first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
  • a document verification system as defined in claim 11 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulsesfrom said integrating means required to turn on said switch.

Abstract

A dollar bill verifier including a photovoltaic cell having light sensitive bars approximately the same width as the black grid lines on the bill. An amplifier receives the output of the cell and couples it through a potentiometer to a Schmitt trigger. The Schmitt trigger is coupled through a differentiator, integrator and potentiometer to a switch.

Description

United States Patent Robert T. Bayne;
James S. Nawa, Santa Barbara, Calif. 837,060
June 27, 1969 Feb. 16, 1971 Standard Change-Makers, Inc. Indianapolis, Ind.
Inventors Appl. No. Filed Patented Assignee DOCUMENT VERIFIER USING PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL WITH LIGHT SENSITIVE BARS 12 Claims, 14 Drawing Figs.
Int. Cl. ..G 01n 21/32 Field of Search 250/219 (1), 219 (N6), 219 (F,DOC), 220 (SP), 206, 214, 211 (J); 356/71; 340/149, 149 (A); I 356/209-21 l; 209/(PMSD); 194/4 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,031,076 4/1962 DeClaris et a1. 3S6/71X 3,158,748 11/1964 Laycak etal. 250/219 3,188,475 6/1965 Miller 250/211 3,206,606 9/1965 Burgo et a1. v. 250/209X 3,370,986 2/1968 Amsterdam et a1 250/211X Primary Examiner-Walter Stolwein Attorney-Woodard, Weikart, Emhardt & Naughton ABSTRACT: A dollar bill verifier including a photovoltaic cell having light sensitive bars approximately the same width as the black grid lines on the bill. An amplifier receives the output of the 'cell and couples it through a potentiometer to a Schmitt trigger. The Schmitt trigger is coupled through a differentiator, integrator and potentiometer to a switch.
TRIGGER MILLIVOLTS PATENTEUFEBIGIBH 3564.268 r j SHEET'2UF4 gaiz vvu TIME INVENTORS' ROBERT 7. BHVNE BY \/A MES 5. NA WA a/M M W29- ATTOR NEYS PAIEN'IED FEB 1 s 1971 vdurs sum 3- 0F 4 TYPI.0-
- 95 9697 98 T 'SCHM/TT' TRIGGER OUTPUT PULSE AREA 7 v ill vousJ TOR TIME
F ig.8
TIME Fig.1O
Fig.12
TIME CONSTANT OUTPUT OF DlFFERENT/HTOR OF INTE G RH TOR Fig.11
INVENTORS ROBERT T 5/? YNE ATTORNEYS 'PATENTEU FEB-1 s 1971 SHEET 0 4 I INVENTORS' ROBERT "Y. BDNNE' BY JAMES SNNNA ATT ORNEYS DOCUMENT VERIFIER USING PIIOTOVOLTAIC CELL WITH LIGHT SENSITIVE BARS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to apparatus for examining paper money and like documents for genuineness.
2. Description of the Prior Art It is known in the art to optically scan a predetermined area of a dollar bill to determine whether the parallel lines in the predetermined area are sufficiently sharp and clear for the dollar bill to be valid. This scanning has been performed by moving a transparent mask and a piece of money to be examined with respect to each other and in a linear direction while maintaining the money and the mask close to one another or in engagement with one another. The mask has thereon a predetermined pattern of parallel spaces and lines which correspond to the spaces and lines on the money. The patterns as they move into and out of coincidence produce light flashes the frequency and intensity of which is examined. If the lines are improperly spaced or have rough edges, the light from the two patterns will not wink on and off with the proper frequency and intensity and the apparatus will refuse to recognize the money.
Such prior art devices are relatively complicated and therefore expensive and subject to frequent repair. Also the electronic circuits of such prior art devices are not as selective as might be desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION One embodiment of this invention might include a document verification system comprising a light source, a photovoltaic cell formed in approximately the same pattern as the document to be verified, and means for causing relative movement between the document, the cell and the light source.
One object of this invention is to provide an improved docu ment verifier apparatus.
A further object of this invention is to provide a document verifier apparatus which is relatively simple and uncomplicated.
Another object of the invention is to provide a document verifier apparatus which is capable of great selectivity. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 7 FIG. 1 is a section taken along the line 1-1 of FIG. 3 in the direction of the arrows.
FIG. 2 is a somewhat schematic front elevation of a document verifier apparatus embodying the present invention.
FIG. 3 is a partially schematic partially exploded perspective view showing the electrical circuit and portions of the mechanical components of the present invention.
FIG. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10,", and 12 are graphical plots ofthe wave forms of the various signals at various points throughout the present apparatus and show in serial form the manner in which the signal is operated upon by the various elements of the present apparatus.
FIG. 13 is a partially exploded perspective view'of a further embodiment of the present invention; and
FIG. 14 is a side elevation of a portion of the structure illustrated in FIG. 13. DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now more particularly to the drawings, there is illustrated a photovoltaic cell or photocell 15. The cell 15 is made from a flat chip of silicon which has been cut from a grown single crystal of silicon. During the growing process, the silicon is doped with suitable impurities so that the resulting crystal is a semiconductor of the P type. The crystal is then sliced into flat chips such as for example about one centimeter in area and a few thousandths centimeters thickness. The resulting chip is of course P-type semiconductor.
In order to make the surface of the silicon chip photosensitive, N-type impurities are diffused into the P-type chip by a gaseous diffusion process. The final result of this procedure is to form an NP semiconductor junction on one surface of the silicon chip which extends approximately angstroms into the surface of the silicon chip. The entire surface of the chip is now photosensitive. The next step in the process is the etching of alternating areas of the NP junction. This etching dissolves alternate spaces on the silicon surface below the level of the NP region. The resulting raised portions of the silicon surface are still NP regions and are still each separately photosensitive. Thus, in FIG.. I thephotovoltaic cell includes the main portion thereof 16 which is approximately one centimeter in area and a few thousandths thick and which is doped with P- type impurity. The portions 17 of the photovoltaic cell are NP semiconductor junctions where the P-type silicon has been further doped with N-type impurity. Between and outboard of the raised portions 17 there are located etched out portions 20 which are not light sensitive. In order to protect the portions 17 and the pattern made up by the light-sensitive portions 17,
a transparent cover glass 21 of perhaps 0.003 centimeters thickness is secured to the chip by epoxy or the like.
Referring to FIG. 3, the raised portions 17 are shown as having the configuration of straight parallel bars or lines all of which are connected together by another raised portion 22. The raised portion 22 is a plated conductor which may also be covered and protected by the glass cover 21 not shown in FIG. 3. Wire leads 25 and 26 are connected to the conductor 22 and the P-type region 16 of the chip respectively.
Referring now to FIG. 2, there is illustrated a bill verifier 30 which, except for the modifications effected by the present invention, may be identical to the bill verifier sold by Standard ChangeMakers, Inc. of Indianapolis, Indiana, under Model No. 25 or 25A. This bill verifier incorporates a slidable tray 31 which moves toward and away from the viewer of FIG. 2. The user of the bill verifier places the dollar bill in the recess 32 and pushes the tray 31 onto the bill verifier. When the tray has moved a certain distance into the bill verifier, a cam, indicated schematically at 35, is moved out of the way of a limit stop element 36 which is fixed to a rod 37 in turn fixed to a cart 40.
The rod 37 is slidably mounted for movement leftwardly and rightwardly as viewed in FIG. 2 on the frame elements 41. Acting between the cart 40 and the frame element 41 is a coiled compression spring 42. When the member 35 moves out of the path of the limit stop 36, the shaft 37 is free to move leftwardly until the limit stop 36 engages the frame 41 which also acts as a limit stop. Thus, the cart 40 is caused to move a distance leftwardly in the direction of the arrow 45 a predetermined distance.
The tray 31 is transparent. Mounted on the frame beneath the tray 31 is a light source 50 which shines upwardly through the aperture 51 thence through the transparent tray 3I and through the bill carried by the tray into the cart 40. The cart 40 has mounted thereon at its lower end the photovoltaic cell 15. The cell is spaced fairly closely to the tray 31 and the dollar bill in the tray, this spacing being approximately 0.001 inches in a typical installation such as the one herein described and preferably as close as possible to the bill surface.
When the tray 31 is returned to its initial position toward the viewer of FIG. 2, the cart is also returned to the illustrated rightward position with the limit stop 36 being held by the member 35 in readiness for a further cycle as above described. Thus, each time the tray 31 is pushed into the bill verifier and when it reaches a certain point in its travel into the bill verifier, the cart is tripped so that the spring 42 can move it through a predetermined distance leftwardly and the cell moves across the bill in the direction of the arrow.
The light-sensitive bars or strips 17 on the photovoltaic cell are of the same size and relative spacing as the grid lines printed on the money being examined, although the bars 17 may be somewhat thinner than the grid lines on the money. As the light passes through the printed grid lines on the bill, it forms a shadow pattern on the surface of the photocell adjacent to the bill. With the proper relative positioning of the bill and the photocell, the dark shadow areas will completely mask all of the light-sensitive strips of the photocell. At this point, the electrical output will be of low voltage. When the relative position of the bill and photocell is adjusted so that the dark or shadowed portions of the transmitted light pattern fall between the photosensitive strips of the photocell, the photosensitive strips will be illuminated at greater intensity and the voltage output of the photocell will be high. The relative linear motion produced by the cart 40 across the bill causes alternate illumination and shadowing of the photocell resulting in an alternating voltage output being produced by the photocell. An example of such an alternating voltage output is shown in FIG. 4.
Since the photocell is a direct light to energy converter, no power supply or external source of voltage is required by the photocell to generate the alternating output voltage. Typical cell outputs can range from 0.5 to 1.5 millivolts peak to peak measured with a voltmeter having 6,000 ohms internal resistance. Typical frequencies of alternating voltages generated by the photocell measure from 800 to 1,500 cycles per second on the above described representative type of mechanical transport system. The frequency of photocell output, however, could vary widely from one type of mechanical transport system to another.
The output of the photocell is connected by means of the wires 25 and 26 to amplifier input terminals 60 and 61 of the amplifier 62. The amplifier 62 is of the integrated circuit operational type and has a differential input. The function of the amplifier is to amplify the typically 1.0 millivolt signal from the photocell to a value of I to 1.8 volts (typical) at the amplifier output 65. An example of a suitable amplifier 62 might be RCA type CA3033.
Thus, the total voltage amplification provided at this point in the system is approximately l,200 to 2,000 times. In FIG. the wave form of the amplifier output is illustrated. The amplifier wave form output is a faithful reproduction of the wave form shown in FIG. 4 but is much amplified in magnitude of voltage. The dotted line 70 in FIG. 4 and 71 in FIG. 5 illustrates a typical variation in illumination over the area of the lighted spot of the bill 72 in FIG. 3. As suggested, this causes a low frequency modulation of the wave form at the output of the photocell. Because this modulation is in the nature of interference, it contributes no information about bill characteristics. The amplifier is designed so that the maximum gain of the amplifier exists over a frequency range corresponding to the grid line frequencies of the photocell. In this manner, the interference signal may be attenuated with respect to the grid line signal. It is not possible or desirable, however, to totally remove this interference signal at the present point in the system. Consequently, the amplified signal from the photocell will contain both interference signals and the grid line signals at point 65 in FIG. 3.
After being amplified, the signal is coupled into the input of a schmitt trigger 75 by means of a capacitor 76 and a potentiometer 77 so that the amount of signal transmitted into the schmitt trigger can be adjusted in voltage level. The wave form of the signal at the input to the schmitt trigger is illustrated in FIG. 6 The wave form 76 shows the .minimum input to the schmitt trigger and the wave form 78 shows the maximum input. In other words, the difference 80 is a typical range of adjustment by the potentiometer 77.
The characteristic of the schmitt trigger circuit is that the output is constant in amplitude when present but is present or not present depending upon the voltage level of the input signal. FIG. 7 is a double graph which shows at the lower portion of the graph in the wave forms 81 and 82 typical inputs to the schmitt trigger. At the upper portion of the graph of FIG. 7 the corresponding typical outputs of the schmitt trigger are shown at 85. Thus, it can be seen for the input 81 there is no output from the schmitt trigger. However, for the input 82 there is an output. It will be noted, however, that some of the various pulses 85 of the schmitt trigger are on for shorter periods of time than other pulses 85. This is determined by the amount of time that the signal 82 is above the minimum on" level for the schmitt trigger which in the illustrated example is 0.5 volts schmitt input. It can be seen that the cause of the reduction in width of the signal produced in the upper portion of FIG. 7 is because of the tilt or slope of the envelope of the signal input wave form 82. A typical tilt of this type is caused by the superposition of interference signals of lower frequency on the bill signal wave form as suggested in connection with the envelope 70 and 71 in FIG. 4 and 5. The net result is that, while the output of the schmitt trigger is extremely constant in amplitude, the interference signal components are still present through their modulation of the width or time period of the schmitt trigger output pulses.
In order to eliminate the variable width factor in the schmitt trigger output pulses, the output from the schmitt trigger is fed to a differentiator circuit 90. FIGS. 8 and 9 show the efiect of the differentiator circuit 90. Thus, the signal 91 is the input to the differentiator while signal 92 is the output. The dotted lines 92', of course, indicate that the upper and lower wave forms are time synchronized. It will be noted that, even though the various schmitt trigger output wave forms 95, 96, 97, and 98 have decreasing widths, still the outputs 100, 101, 102 and 103 are of equal amplitude similarly to the schmitt trigger output 91.
To review, the bill signal has been applied to the amplifier containing both grid line and interference signals. The amplifier has increased the voltage magnitude of the bill signal and the interference signals and applied them to the schmitt trigger. The schmitt trigger a has made all of the voltage wave forms of the amplified bill signal of the same magnitude or height. It has therefore, removed part of the interference signal but a component still exists due to the variable width factor of the schmitt trigger output. The differentiator circuit then removes the variable width factor or interference from the amplified bill signal. Thus, the bill signal has now been cleaned up" or scrubbed" and is ready to produce a grid line count or totalization at the integrator.
The output of the differentiator is coupled into an integrator 110. The integrator is designed with a time constant. During the time of the time constant, the DC output voltage of the integrator circuit is proportional to the number and the area of voltage pulses at its input. FIG. 10 shows an enlarged view of the differentiator output and shows that each pulse has a certain area which is determined by the constant height or amplitude 111 of the pulse and by the width or time period ofthe pulse 112. Thus, the'output of the integrator DC voltage is approximately twice as high for 20 pulses ofa constant area as it is for 10 pulses of the same area, provided, of course, that the natural time constant of the integrator is much longer than the span of time occupied by the 20 pulses. FIGS. 11 and 12 show the above described action of adding or totalizing pulses. The dotted lines betweenthe upper and lower time axes indicate time synchronization. Thus, in FIG. 12, if the integrator output voltage level required for bill acceptance is the voltage indicated at 121 which corresponds to 8 pulses, then 8 pulses at the input to the integrator would cause acceptance while, for example, 5 pulses indicated at 122 would not.
The output of the integrator circuit 110 is connected to a final trigger or switch 120 through a potentiometer 121. The final trigger 120 may consist of a silicon controlled switch or SCS. The input 122 to the final trigger is connected to the gate electrode of the SCS. When the gate electrode becomes positive by about 0.4 to 0.6 volts, the SCS component conducts giving a go or accept" signal which is delivered to the output 125. The potentiometer 121 connected between the integrator and the final trigger make possible adjustment of the voltage level at which the SCS or final trigger is fired.
While it has not been been previously stated, each grid line existing on the bill and scanned by the photocell produces one voltage pulse at the input to the amplifier. These amplified pulses are made of constant amplitude and constant width by action of the schmitt trigger and the differentiator circuits. The integrator sums the'se pulses, giving at least approximately equal weight to each pulse. The integrator output DC level is,
therefore, an exact function of the number of grid line pulses scanned. Amplitude and frequency of the grid line pulses do not affect the count. Thus, by adjustment of the potentiometer 121, the final trigger can be made to give an accept" signal at any desired number of grid lines detected. For example, the potentiometer 121 may be adjustedto give an accept signal after grid lines are added up by the integrator or, if desired, after grid lines are detected by the integrator. Thus, the potentiometer 121 is a means of varying the selectivity of the entire grid line detection system.
The potentiometer 77 may be adjusted so that the schmitt trigger 75 is operating for the minimum grid line signal generated by a worn, old and wrinkled bill of genuine printing. As mentioned above, the schmitt trigger will not operate unless it receives a signal of a certain minimum value. The potentiometer 77 can be adjusted so that the schmitt trigger will not operate at all for a great amount of obviously bogus money such as play money, photostats, poor quality counterfeits and the like. Thus, no signal will be generated for such items and no signal will be passed on to the differentiator for such items.
Thus, the net result of the structure described above is to perform the following three checks for bill authenticity:
l. ls a grid line signal generated'f'lhis check is performed by the photocell and the spacing and width of the light-sensitive areas of the photocell.
2. If a grid line signal is generated, is it of enough amplitude to be typical of either an old or a new genuine billZThis is accomplished by the schmitt trigger and the threshold adjustment of the potentiometer 77.
3. If the grid line signal is of sufficient amplitude so that it might be genuine, what is the total grid line count over the length of the scan? ls it of sufficient number so that it is typical of a genuine'bill? This check is accomplished by the combination of the schmitt trigger, differentiator, integrator, the adjustment of the potentiometer 121 and the final trigger 120.
Referring now to FIGS. 13 and l4,there is illustrated an alternative embodiment of the invention which is identical to the apparatus described in FIGS. 1l2, except as described below. In place of the cover glass'21, a fiber optics tube or conduit 200 is used between the document or bill 201 and the photovoltaic cell 202. The tube 200 may be, for example, Model No. lC-b 200-6 image conduit manufactured by The American Optical Company of Southbridge, Massachusetts, although the tube is cut and polished to a shorter length than the usual 6 -inch length of this model number. As shown one end of the image conduit contacts the bill 201 while the other end is in contact with or closely spaced to the cell 202. The end surfaces of the image conduit are optically fiat and polished. The image conduit is made up of at least 70,000 separate fibers for each one-fourth inch of conduit diameter. Each fiber is separately clad to individually transmit a light spot through the conduit. The size of each light spot is very small (about 12 microns). The grid line image is thus transmitted up the conduit to the cell surface.
The advantages of replacing the cover glass 21 with the conduit 200 are that the cell 202 may be located within a protective housing 205 which is identical to or corresponds to the cart 40. The housing 205 shields the cell from mechanical shock, vibration, moisture and other foreign matter which might be picked up from the bill surface. The housing also protects the cell from external electrical contact. Also the conduit 200 prevents substantial diffusion of light in the area between the cell and the document so that a sharp clear image is delivered to the cell.
It will be evident from the above description that the present invention provides an improved document verifier apparatus. It will also be evident that the document verifier apparatus of this invention is relatively simple and uncomplicated and is capable of great selectivity.
We claim:
1. A document verification system comprising a light source; a photovoltaic cell'formed in approximately the same pattern as the document to be verified; and means for causing relative movement between the document, the cell and the light source, said document including a plurality of bars, said photovoltaic cell also including a plurality of similar bars of light-sensitive material of the same relative size and spacing as the bars of the documents, said bars being separated by nonlight-sensitive material.
2. A document verification system as defined in claim 1 wherein said bars are parallel.
3. A document verification system as defined in claim 1 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
4. A document verification system as defined in claim 2 wherein said cell includes a fiat chip of silicon doped with P- and N-type impurities, said flat chip being doped with oneof said types of impurities therethrough, said chip having a photosensitive surface thereon formed by the other of said types of impurities fused into the one type impurity chip, said chip being etched at selected portions of said surface to remove portions of said photosensitive surface providing s'aid pattern of photosensitive material.
5. A document verification system as defined in claim 2 additionally comprising first means for receiving the output of said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is constant in amplitude and time duration, integrating means for counting the output pulses of said differentiating means and producing an output directly proportional to the number of second means output pulses, and switch means receiving the output of said integrating means and arranged to be turned on by an output of given amplitude from said integrating means.
6. A document verification system as defined in claim 5 wherein said means for causing relative movement comprises a spring and a pair of limit stops and a cart, said cell being mounted on said cart, said limit stops'being spaced apart a fixed distance, one of said limit stops normally acting to hold said cart at a first position, said'one stop being movable to permit said cart to move from said first position to a second position under the action of the spring, said first and second positions being a given distance apart so that the travel of said cart between said positions is always the same distance.
7. A document verification system as defined in claim 6 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit mounted on said cart and positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
8. A document verification system as defined in claim 5 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling the output of said cell to the input of said first means and making possible adjustment of said given amplitude of the first means so that said first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
9. A documentverification system as defined in claim 8 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulses from said integrating means required to turn on said switch.
10. A document verification system comprising a photovoltaic cell, a light source, said photovoltaic cell including means for comparing a pattern of the document with the document itself to provide avariation in light to said cell, first means for receiving the output of'said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is consaid first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
12. A document verification system as defined in claim 11 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulsesfrom said integrating means required to turn on said switch.

Claims (12)

1. A document verification system comprising a light source; a photovoltaic cell formed in approximately the same pattern as the document to be verified; and means for causing relative movement between the document, the cell and the light source, said document including a plurality of bars, said photovoltaic cell also including a plurality of similar bars of light-sensitive material of the same relative size and spacing as the bars of the documents, said bars being separated by non-light-sensitive material.
2. A document verification system as defined in claim 1 wherein said bars are parallel.
3. A document verification system as defined in claim 1 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
4. A document verification system as defined in claim 2 wherein said cell includes a flat chip of silicon doped with P- and N-type impurities, said flat chip being doped with one of said types of impurities therethrough, said chip having a photosensitive surface thereon formed by the other of said types of impurities fused into the one type impurity chip, said chip being etched at selected portions of said surface to remove portions of said photosensitive surface providing said pattern of photosensitive material.
5. A document verification system as defined in claim 2 additionally comprising first means for receiving the output Of said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is constant in amplitude and time duration, integrating means for counting the output pulses of said differentiating means and producing an output directly proportional to the number of second means output pulses, and switch means receiving the output of said integrating means and arranged to be turned on by an output of given amplitude from said integrating means.
6. A document verification system as defined in claim 5 wherein said means for causing relative movement comprises a spring and a pair of limit stops and a cart, said cell being mounted on said cart, said limit stops being spaced apart a fixed distance, one of said limit stops normally acting to hold said cart at a first position, said one stop being movable to permit said cart to move from said first position to a second position under the action of the spring, said first and second positions being a given distance apart so that the travel of said cart between said positions is always the same distance.
7. A document verification system as defined in claim 6 additionally comprising a fiber optics image conduit mounted on said cart and positioned between the light source and the cell and conducting an image of the document from the document to the cell.
8. A document verification system as defined in claim 5 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling the output of said cell to the input of said first means and making possible adjustment of said given amplitude of the first means so that said first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
9. A document verification system as defined in claim 8 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulses from said integrating means required to turn on said switch.
10. A document verification system comprising a photovoltaic cell, a light source, said photovoltaic cell including means for comparing a pattern of the document with the document itself to provide a variation in light to said cell, first means for receiving the output of said cell and for converting those portions thereof which are above a given amplitude into pulses of constant voltage of varying time duration which is determined by the time that said portions are above said amplitude, second means for differentiating the output of said first means to produce for each input pulse an output pulse that is constant in amplitude and time duration, integrating means for counting the output pulses of said differentiating means and producing an output directly proportional to the number of second means output pulses, and switch means receiving the output of said integrating means and arranged to be turned on by an output of given amplitude from said integrating means.
11. A document verification system as defined in claim 10 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling the output of said cell to the input of said first means and making possible adjustment of said given amplitude of the first means so that said first means will respond to a signal of the amplitude produced by a worn old genuine document but will not respond to lesser amplitudes.
12. A document verification system as defined in claim 11 additionally comprising a potentiometer coupling said integrating means to said switch and making possible adjustment of the number of pulses from said integrating means required to turn on said switch.
US837060A 1969-06-27 1969-06-27 Document verifier using photovoltaic cell with light sensitive bars Expired - Lifetime US3564268A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US83706069A 1969-06-27 1969-06-27

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3564268A true US3564268A (en) 1971-02-16

Family

ID=25273404

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US837060A Expired - Lifetime US3564268A (en) 1969-06-27 1969-06-27 Document verifier using photovoltaic cell with light sensitive bars

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3564268A (en)

Cited By (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3749471A (en) * 1970-07-16 1973-07-31 Fj Warren Ltd Method of producing an irridescent pattern on the surface of a sheet or other object and sheets or objects having patterned surface produced by this method
US3876304A (en) * 1973-09-06 1975-04-08 Ardac Inc Phase reticle design
US3922539A (en) * 1974-04-02 1975-11-25 Pitney Bowes Inc Improved circuit for detecting the passage of an article beating a repetitive marking
US3938663A (en) * 1974-04-02 1976-02-17 Pitney-Bowes, Inc. Circuit for sorting currency
US3988612A (en) * 1973-04-19 1976-10-26 General Dynamics Corporation Photodetector array and method of manufacturing same
US4056731A (en) * 1973-11-07 1977-11-01 Ardac/Usa Reticle protective structure and radiation sensitive validation apparatus
EP0088169A1 (en) * 1982-03-08 1983-09-14 Compagnie Industrielle Radioelectrique System and apparatus to detect intaglio printing
GB2164442A (en) * 1984-09-11 1986-03-19 De La Rue Syst Sensing the condition of a document
US5542518A (en) * 1994-05-25 1996-08-06 Toyo Communication Equipment Co., Ltd. Method of identifying the denominations of pieces of paper
US6078683A (en) * 1997-11-20 2000-06-20 De La Rue, Inc. Method and system for recognition of currency by denomination
US6234294B1 (en) 1998-10-29 2001-05-22 De La Rue International Ltd Method and system for recognition of currency by denomination
US20100128934A1 (en) * 2007-04-23 2010-05-27 Shanchuan Su Method and device for testing value documents
CN106170824A (en) * 2014-04-17 2016-11-30 巴斯夫欧洲公司 Checking device, checking system and the method for checking article identity
US10353049B2 (en) 2013-06-13 2019-07-16 Basf Se Detector for optically detecting an orientation of at least one object
US10412283B2 (en) 2015-09-14 2019-09-10 Trinamix Gmbh Dual aperture 3D camera and method using differing aperture areas
US10775505B2 (en) 2015-01-30 2020-09-15 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for an optical detection of at least one object
US10890491B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2021-01-12 Trinamix Gmbh Optical detector for an optical detection
US10948567B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2021-03-16 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for optically detecting at least one object
US11041718B2 (en) 2014-07-08 2021-06-22 Basf Se Detector for determining a position of at least one object
US11060922B2 (en) 2017-04-20 2021-07-13 Trinamix Gmbh Optical detector
US11067692B2 (en) 2017-06-26 2021-07-20 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for determining a position of at least one object
US11125880B2 (en) 2014-12-09 2021-09-21 Basf Se Optical detector
US11211513B2 (en) 2016-07-29 2021-12-28 Trinamix Gmbh Optical sensor and detector for an optical detection
US11428787B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2022-08-30 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for an optical detection of at least one object
US11860292B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2024-01-02 Trinamix Gmbh Detector and methods for authenticating at least one object

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US303176A (en) * 1884-08-05 john c
US3158748A (en) * 1961-11-21 1964-11-24 Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp Electronic surface inspection system employing full frame scanning
US3188475A (en) * 1961-11-24 1965-06-08 Raytheon Co Multiple zone photoelectric device
US3206606A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-09-14 Eastman Kodak Co Photosensitive inspection method and apparatus
US3370986A (en) * 1963-12-10 1968-02-27 Westinghouse Electric Corp Photovoltaic series array comprising p/n and n/p cells

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US303176A (en) * 1884-08-05 john c
US3206606A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-09-14 Eastman Kodak Co Photosensitive inspection method and apparatus
US3158748A (en) * 1961-11-21 1964-11-24 Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp Electronic surface inspection system employing full frame scanning
US3188475A (en) * 1961-11-24 1965-06-08 Raytheon Co Multiple zone photoelectric device
US3370986A (en) * 1963-12-10 1968-02-27 Westinghouse Electric Corp Photovoltaic series array comprising p/n and n/p cells

Cited By (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3749471A (en) * 1970-07-16 1973-07-31 Fj Warren Ltd Method of producing an irridescent pattern on the surface of a sheet or other object and sheets or objects having patterned surface produced by this method
US3988612A (en) * 1973-04-19 1976-10-26 General Dynamics Corporation Photodetector array and method of manufacturing same
US3876304A (en) * 1973-09-06 1975-04-08 Ardac Inc Phase reticle design
US4056731A (en) * 1973-11-07 1977-11-01 Ardac/Usa Reticle protective structure and radiation sensitive validation apparatus
US3922539A (en) * 1974-04-02 1975-11-25 Pitney Bowes Inc Improved circuit for detecting the passage of an article beating a repetitive marking
US3938663A (en) * 1974-04-02 1976-02-17 Pitney-Bowes, Inc. Circuit for sorting currency
EP0088169A1 (en) * 1982-03-08 1983-09-14 Compagnie Industrielle Radioelectrique System and apparatus to detect intaglio printing
GB2164442A (en) * 1984-09-11 1986-03-19 De La Rue Syst Sensing the condition of a document
US5542518A (en) * 1994-05-25 1996-08-06 Toyo Communication Equipment Co., Ltd. Method of identifying the denominations of pieces of paper
US6078683A (en) * 1997-11-20 2000-06-20 De La Rue, Inc. Method and system for recognition of currency by denomination
US6234294B1 (en) 1998-10-29 2001-05-22 De La Rue International Ltd Method and system for recognition of currency by denomination
US20100128934A1 (en) * 2007-04-23 2010-05-27 Shanchuan Su Method and device for testing value documents
US8837804B2 (en) * 2007-04-23 2014-09-16 Giesecke & Devrient Gmbh Method and device for testing value documents
US10353049B2 (en) 2013-06-13 2019-07-16 Basf Se Detector for optically detecting an orientation of at least one object
US20170039793A1 (en) * 2014-04-17 2017-02-09 Basf Se Verification device, verification system and method for verifying the identity of an article
CN106170824A (en) * 2014-04-17 2016-11-30 巴斯夫欧洲公司 Checking device, checking system and the method for checking article identity
US11041718B2 (en) 2014-07-08 2021-06-22 Basf Se Detector for determining a position of at least one object
US11125880B2 (en) 2014-12-09 2021-09-21 Basf Se Optical detector
US10775505B2 (en) 2015-01-30 2020-09-15 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for an optical detection of at least one object
US10412283B2 (en) 2015-09-14 2019-09-10 Trinamix Gmbh Dual aperture 3D camera and method using differing aperture areas
US11211513B2 (en) 2016-07-29 2021-12-28 Trinamix Gmbh Optical sensor and detector for an optical detection
US10890491B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2021-01-12 Trinamix Gmbh Optical detector for an optical detection
US11428787B2 (en) 2016-10-25 2022-08-30 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for an optical detection of at least one object
US10948567B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2021-03-16 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for optically detecting at least one object
US11415661B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2022-08-16 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for optically detecting at least one object
US11635486B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2023-04-25 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for optically detecting at least one object
US11698435B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2023-07-11 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for optically detecting at least one object
US11860292B2 (en) 2016-11-17 2024-01-02 Trinamix Gmbh Detector and methods for authenticating at least one object
US11060922B2 (en) 2017-04-20 2021-07-13 Trinamix Gmbh Optical detector
US11067692B2 (en) 2017-06-26 2021-07-20 Trinamix Gmbh Detector for determining a position of at least one object

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3564268A (en) Document verifier using photovoltaic cell with light sensitive bars
US3725667A (en) Bank note testing apparatus
US5476169A (en) Bill discriminating apparatus for bill handling machine
US3790759A (en) Pitch matching detecting and counting system
US6172745B1 (en) Sensing device
US3966047A (en) Paper currency acceptor
US4192613A (en) Contour detecting and dimension measuring apparatus
JPH02502863A (en) Device for identifying coins, etc.
JPH0315794B2 (en)
US3456155A (en) Photosensitive circuit for controlling the intensity of a lamp
US3890221A (en) Translucency/opaque sorting
US3692983A (en) Automatic threshold control circuit for optical card readers and sorters
US3994583A (en) Noncontacting method and apparatus for monitoring the speed and travel of a moving article
US4281243A (en) Apparatus for detecting postage stamps on envelopes
JPH02168372A (en) Bundle number detector
US3497304A (en) Document color analyzing apparatus including two detectors
US3170100A (en) Automatic indicating device for measuring scales in machine tools
CA2057290A1 (en) Device to assess the dimensions of a possibly moving object
US3340978A (en) Bill acceptance and detection system
JPS6230370B2 (en)
JPH07107506B2 (en) Filamentous fluorescent substance detection device
JPS5853854B2 (en) Shikichiyoukenshiyutsusouchi
US3889136A (en) Signal stripping circuit
US3492490A (en) Integrator circuit for security validation
GB836504A (en) Card width sensing device