[0001] The present invention relates to a process for the production of a laminated identification
card (I.D. card).
[0002] I.D. cards essentially comprise a card or document usually containing information
relating to the bearer. Generally, a portion of the information is in the form of
a photograph of the bearer. I.D. cards are used e.g. to establish a person's authorization
to conduct certain activities (driver's licence) or the authorization to have access
to certain areas (employee I.D. cards) or to engage in credit transactions (I.D. credit
cards).
[0003] In view of the widespread use of I.D. cards, especially in commercial transactions,
such as cashing checks, credit purchases, etc., it is important that the information
contained in the I.D card cannot be altered and that the I.D. card gives maximum protection
against counterfeiting, e.g. by photographic techniques and/or replacement of its
data.
[0004] Normally the information in the I.D. card is protected by lamination between plastic
sheets serving as support and covering sheet.
[0005] Many attempts have been made to obtain the perfect seal that is thus strong that
it resists separation, e. g. by razor blade and/or wet treatment. The use of a pouch
structure wherein only the border parts of the plastic sheets are sealed is not sufficiently
tamper-proof since after cutting around the edge of the original card the pouch can
be opened and some information such as the photograph can be removed and replaced
by other information before resealing the pouch
[0006] Ideally, to avoid said shortcoming a "security seal" is established between the information-bearing
element of the card or document and the plastic. As described in US-P 4,151,666 the
security seal makes that if one should succeed in the removal of the plastic cover
sheet also a substantial portion of the information containing part of the document
should be removed too so that a damaged part remains adhering to the support. In this
way a protection against mere substitution of information is obtained discouraging
alteration of sealed documents.
[0007] In order to improve the identification security coded information invisible to the
naked eye and being machine readable is often included into the laminate serving as
an identification card. So, e.g. badges have been made that include magnetically encoded
data to be read by a magnetic signal detector as in a magnetic tape recorder or include
infrared markings to be read with an infrared card reader as described e.g. in US-P
4,583,766.
[0008] An other identification article described in published UK Patent Application 2 109
304 A and serving as identity document comprises markings or photograph, covered by
a mask which is normally opaque but which upon applying a suitable electric field
over a masking liquid crystal layer becomes at least translucent so that the covered
material becomes visible.
[0009] Magnetic, infrared or electro-optical markings that are not visible require special
badge reading devices that are rather complicated and may be out of service for a
while. Therefore, to enhance security there is a need for a hidden verification feature
that can be made visible by man made inspection and turns back to the original hidden
state after inspection with the advantage that such reversible state cannot be reproduced
photographically which makes it impossible to duplicate the document by photographic
copying.
[0010] It is an object of the present invention to provide an identification document containing
a verification feature that cooperates with a security seal laminate and which in
non-activated state is invisible but can be easily made visible by heating below 120
°C, e.g. by a temperature raise in the range of 30 to 50 °C.
[0011] Other objects and advantages of the present invention will appear from the further
description.
[0012] According to the present invention a laminated article containing visible information
is provided comprising two plastic resin sheets or layers at least one of which is
transparent and having laminated inbetween at least one hydrophilic colloid layer
containing photographically produced information and carrying or containing thermochromic
liquid crystals of the cholesteric type in the form of a pattern or an indicium that
can be made visible or obtains a change in colour by heating above 25 °C, said liquid
crystals being arranged against a contrasting background having an optical density
of at least 0.2 in its spectral absorption range.
[0013] According to a preferred embodiment said background is black or dark blue coloured.
[0014] By liquid cristals of the cholesteric type is meant a chiral nematic liquid crystal
material that has a natural twisted structure, the pitch of the twisted structure
being of the order of the wavelengths of visible light. The pitch and period of the
helical structure (the angle between each turn and the distance between the turns)
gives rise to interference colours when light falls on said liquid crystal material
[ref. Scientific American, Vol. 222, April 1970, p. 102.]. Changes in temperature
or pressure alter the pitch and period so that new colours are produced. Cholesteric
liquid crystals can therefore serve as the active elements in devices that map the
distribution of temperatures and are used e.g. in the thermochromic industry for the
manufacture of digital thermometers and temperature indicators of one type or another.
[0015] Thermochromic liquid crystals react to changes in temperature by changing colour.
They do this by selectively reflecting a part of the visible light incident upon them,
giving rise to reflection of almost all monochromatic colours. The reflected light
varies with temperature characteristically from colourless to red at low temperatures,
then through the colours of the visible spectrum to blue/violet and finally becomes
colourless again at relatively high temperature. For best visualisation of the colour
effects, the thermochromic liquid crystal materials are viewed against a black background
to absorb the unreflected light. For maximum apparent density in the eye a colour
change producing green is preferred.
[0016] Examples of thermochromic liquid crystals showing a temperature dependent change
in colour are e.g. cholesteryl benzoate, cholesteryl chloride and anisylidene-p-aminophenylacetate.
Below 32 °C the last-mentioned substance is a solid with gray appearance. Above that
temperature it becomes a liquid crystal having colour, becoming colourless in the
liquid state at 105 °C. By raising temperature the colour may change from red over
yellow, green and blue to purple.
[0017] By using in the laminated article according to the present invention mixtures of
liquid crystal material it is possible to obtain e.g. colour effects over the temperature
range of 28 °C to 35 °C which is particularly interesting for hand checking an ID
card by normal hand temperature.
[0018] The liquid crystal material applied in the form of a pattern or indicium may more
particularly represent a fingerprint, signature, bar code, letter(s) and/or figure(s),
line drawings etc. The pattern or indicium is either or not built up by screen dots,
which means that it is present either or not as a halftone pattern.
[0019] In the laminated article of the present invention the thermochromic liquid crystals
are applied preferably onto or in a hydrophilic colloid layer, e.g. a gelatin binder
layer containing photographic information to be protected by lamination.
[0020] According to a preferred embodiment the hydrophilic colloid layer containing photographic
information is an imagewise exposed and processed (developed and fixed) silver halide
emulsion layer or is an image-receiving layer containing a photographic image obtained
by the silver complex diffusion transfer reversal process or a dye diffusion transfer
process based on silver halide photography.
[0021] In the production of a laminate according to the present invention any type of silver
halide emulsion layer may be used. Information about silver halide emulsion preparation
and composition can be found e.g. in Research Disclosure, December 1978, item 17643.
[0022] The composition of silver complex diffusion transfer reversal (DTR-) materials and
processing are known e.g. from the book: "Photographic Silver Halide Diffusion Processes"
by André Rott and Edith Weyde- Focal Press - London - New York (1972).
[0023] A survey of dye diffusion transfer materials is given in Research Disclosure, November
1976, item 15162 and by Christian C. Van de Sande in Angew. Chem. - Ed. Engl.
22 (1983) n° 3, 191-209.
[0024] In a silver halide emulsion layer or an image-receiving layer for silver complex
or dye diffusion transfer processing gelatin is used preferably as hydrophilic colloid
binder. Gelatin can, however, be replaced in part or integrallly by synthetic, semi-synthetic,
or natural polymers. Synthetic substitutes for gelatin are e.g. polyvinyl alcohol,
poly-N-vinyl pyrrolidone, polyvinyl imidazole, polyvinyl pyrazole, polyacrylamide,
polyacrylic acid, and derivatives thereof, in particular copolymers thereof. Natural
substitutes for gelatin are e.g. other proteins such as zein, albumin and casein,
cellulose, saccharides, starch, and alginates. In general, the semi-synthetic substitutes
for gelatin are modified natural products e.g. gelatin derivatives obtained by conversion
of gelatin with alkylating or acylating agents or by grafting of polymerizable monomers
on gelatin, and cellulose derivatives such as hydroxyalkyl cellulose, carboxymethyl
cellulose, phthaloyl cellulose, and cellulose sulphates.
[0025] In DTR-image-receiving materials preferably gelatin is used as sole binding agent
for its physical development nuclei or in combination with alginic acid derivatives,
polyvinyl alcohol, starch and starch derivatives, particularly carboxymethylcellulose
or gallactomannans (ref. the above mentioned book of André Rott and Edith Weyde, p.
49). Other organic binding agents of the synthetic type are e.g. poly-N-vinylpyrrolidinone,
copolymers of polyvinyl ester and maleic anhydride. As inorganic binding agent colloidal
silica has been mentioned, e.g. in US-P 2,698,237.
[0026] In dye diffusion transfer layers suited for use in the production of a laminate according
to the present invention a hydrophilic colloid binder, preferably gelatin, is used
in conjunction with a mordant for the transferred dyes. If acid dyes are to be mordanted,
the dye image-receiving layer contains basic polymeric mordants such as polymers of
amino-guanidine derivatives of vinyl methyl ketone as described e.g. in US-P 2,882,156,
and basic polymeric mordants and derivatives, e.g. poly-4-vinylpyridine, the metho-p-toluene
sulphonate of poly-2-vinylpyridine and similar compounds described in US-P 2,484,430,
and the compounds described in the published DE-A 2,009,498 and 2,200,063. Other mordants
are long-chain quaternary ammonium or phosphonium compounds or ternary sulphonium
compounds, e.g. those described in US-P 3,271,147 and 3,271,148,, and cetyltrimethyl-ammonium
bromide. Certain metal salts and their hydroxides that form sparingly soluble compounds
with the acid dyes may be used too. The dye mordants are dispersed or molecularly
divided in one of the usual hydrophilic binders in the image-receiving layer, e.g.
in gelatin, polyvinylpyrrolidone or partly or completely hydrolysed cellulose esters.
[0027] In US-P 4,186,014 and unpublished EP-A No. 89 200 708.9 filed March 20, 1989 cationic
polymeric mordants are described that are particularly suited for fixing anionic dyes,
e.g. sulphinic acid salt dyes that are image-wise released by a redox-reaction described
e.g. in published EP-A 0,004,399 and US-P 4,232,107.
[0028] The production of colour photographs by the dye diffusion transfer process is a very
convenient method especially for the production of identification cards containing
a colour photograph of the person to be identified.
[0029] The image-receiving layer can form part of a separate image-receiving material or
form an integral combination with the light-sensitive layer(s) of the photographic
material.
[0030] When the image-receiving layer is applied to a common hydrophobic resin support and
remains associated with the silver halide emulsion layer(s) after processing of the
photosensitive material, an alkali-permeable light-shielding layer, e.g. containing
white pigment particles, is applied between the image-receiving layer and the silver
halide emulsion layer(s) to mask the negative image with respect to the positive image
as described e.g. in the already mentioned book of André Rott and Edith Weyde, page
141.
[0031] The pattern or indicium of thermochromic liquid crystal material can be applied by
a spraying or printing technique to the layer containing the photographic information
or other layer to be arranged inside the laminated article. Suitable printing techniques
are offset printing, letter press printing or screen printing using an aqueous base
ink containing the liquid crystals in dispersed state in a watersoluble polymeric
binder, e.g. gelatin or polyacrylamide.
[0032] According to a preferred embodiment the liquid crystal material is encapsulated in
gelatin or gelatin derivative crosslinked with a hardener e.g. an aldehyde. The encapsulation
of the thermochromic liquid crystal material in gelatin derivatives the solubility
of which is pH dependent may proceed as described e.g. in US-P 3,328,257. Operating
with an aqueous ink containing gelatin-type microcapsules a good adherence to a hydrophilic
colloid layer of the laminate is obtained.
[0033] In order to obtain a good contrast the thermochromic liquid crystal material is arranged
against an underlying black area, e.g. obtained by printing a black ink area or spot
on the hydrophilic colloid layer prior to producing therein the photographic information.
According to another embodiment the contrasting black area is obtained by silver metal
deposition or combination of dyes formed in the production of the photographic image.
In a particular embodiment the black area is an area wherein black silver metal of
sufficient optical density of a portrait obtained by silver halide photography is
present.
[0034] In the production of an ID card laminate according to the present invention any type
of paper support coated with a hydrophobic thermoplastic resin layer or any hydrophobic
thermoplastic resin support may be used for coating thereon the imaging layer.
[0035] A preferred resin support for use in lamination by heat-sealing is made of a vinyl
chloride polymer.
[0036] The term "vinyl chloride polymer" used herein includes the homopolymer, as well as
any copolymer containing at least 50 % by weight of vinyl chloride units and including
no hydrophilic recurring units.
[0037] Vinyl chloride copolymers serving as the support may contain one or more of the following
comonomers : vinylidene chloride, vinyl acetate, acrylonitrile, styrene, butadiene,
chloroprene, dichlorobutadiene, vinyl fluoride, vinylidene fluoride and trifluorochloroethylene.
[0038] The polyvinyl chloride serving as the support may be chlorinated to contain 60-65
% by weight of chlorine.
[0039] Many properties of polyvinyl chloride and its copolymers are improved by plasticization
and their stability can be improved by stabilizers well known to those skilled in
the art (see, e.g., F.W.Billmeyer, Textbook of Polymer Chemistry, Interscience Publishers,
Inc., New York (1957) p. 311-315)).
[0040] The polyvinyl chloride support may contain pigments or dyes as colouring matter e.g.
in an amount up to 5 % by weight. An opaque white appearance may be obtained by incorporation
of white pigments, e.g. titanium dioxide particles.
[0041] As described in published EP-A 0 065 329 and corresponding US-P 4,429,032 a proper
anchorage of a DTR-image receiving layer to a corona-discharge treated polyvinyl chloride
support has been obtained by the use in the image-receiving layer of colloidal silica
in a weight ratio of from 5/1 to 2/1 with respect to a hydrophilic binder such as
gelatin. Other hydrophobic resin support and hydrophilic image layer combinations
providing security sealing in ID laminates are described in published European Patent
Applications (EP-A) 0 222 045, 0 250 658, 0 276 506 and non-published EP-A 88201426.9
filed July 7, 1988. The security sealing makes that if one should succeed in the removal
of the plastic cover sheet also a substantial portion of the information and of the
liquid crystals should be removed too with the partially torn off hydrophilic colloid
layer, so that a damaged part remains adhering to the support.
[0042] According to a preferred embodiment the hydrophilic colloid layer containing the
photographic image and containing or carrying the thermochromic liquid crystal material
is applied on an opaque polyvinyl chloride support having a thickness of only 0.150
to 0.75 mm. A sheet of that thickness can still be manipulated easily in a mechanical
printing process, e.g. screen, offset or intaglio printing. Before or after being
coated with the necessary hydrophilic colloid layer(s) for imaging purposes other
security or verification marks in the form of e.g. an electronic integrated circuit
pattern, a watermark, finger prints, printed patterns known from bank notes, coded
information, e.g. binary code information, signature or other printed personal data
or marks that may be applied with fluorescent pigments, nacreous pigments giving special
light-reflection effects, and/or visibly legible or ultraviolet-legible printing inks
as described e.g. in GB-P 1,518,946 and US-P 4,105,333 can be applied.
[0043] Other possibilities to increase security against counterfeiting are the inclusion
in the laminate of a fugitive ink pattern that becomes leached out or blurred by contact
with moisture if one should succeed in opening the laminate by a wet treatment.
[0044] Further security feature patterns can be made by mildly radioactive isotopes and
holograms as described, e.g. in DE-OS 2 639 952, GB-P 1,502,460 and 1,572,442 and
US-P 3,668,795. The holographic patterns may be obtained in silver halide emulsion
layers, normally Lippmann emulsions, especially designed for that purpose and can
either or not be combined with a photograph.
[0045] According to an embodiment the silver halide emulsion layer for producing the hologram
is applied to one side of the transparent cover sheet used in the manufacture of a
laminate according to the present invention and laminated together with the image
containing layer either or not separated therefrom by a transparent resin intersheet
made of polyethylene or a resin sheet such as a polyvinyl chloride sheet coated with
polyethylene.
[0046] When the resin sheet used as support of the laminate has to possess a thickness as
required for an identification card to be inserted in a slot of an electronic identification
apparatus, several sheets of matted polyvinyl chloride are stacked and laminated so
as to reach a final thickness of e.g. 0.075 to 1 mm. The laminar article contains
in that case preferably in the polyvinyl chloride support sheet, opacifying titanium
dioxide and a suitable plasticizing agent. The support may be provided with an embossed
structure.
[0047] The lamination of the basic polyvinyl chloride sheet carrying the information to
other polyvinyl chloride sheets in order to reach the required support thickness proceeds
with poor adherence when chemicals used in or stemming from the photographic image
processing, e.g. developing agent, are still present and soiling the sheets. Therefore,
in order to obtain a better mutual adherence of polyvinyl chloride sheets a cleaning
step is preceding the lamination for removing these chemicals.
[0048] The cleaning proceeds preferably with the aid of a dissolved detergent that diminishes
the surface tension in aqueous medium. Any commercial detergent can be used for that
purpose. A survey of detergents can be found in the book "McCutcheon's Detergents
& Emulsifiers 1978 North American Edition - McCutcheon Division, MC Publishing Co.
175 Rock Road, Glen Rock, NJ 07452 USA. Preference is given to anionic and non-ionic
surface-active agents containing a polyethyleneoxide chain in their structure. Examples
of such agents are described in US-P 3,663,229.
[0049] A preferred surfactant for the described purpose has the following structural formula
and is called hereinafter surfactant A :

[0050] In a preferred embodiment the cleaning liquid contains also the self-cross-linking
reaction product that improves in the lamination the adhesion of the information-carrying
hydrophilic colloid layer(s) to the hydrophobic resin support and hydrophobic resin
cover sheet.
[0051] The hydrophobic resin cover sheet of the laminate consists preferably of a resin
having a lower glass transition temperature (Tg) and melting temperature (Tm) than
the resin present in the support sheet. According to a preferred embodiment the cover
sheet is a polyethylene terephthalate resin sheet coated with a resinous melt-adhesive
layer, e.g. a polyalkylene layer, preferably polyethylene layer, having a glass transition
temperature at least 40°C lower than the glass transition temperature of the resin
of the support sheet of the laminar article. In this connection reference is made
to the Tg values of polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride and polyethylene
terephthalate being -20°C, +5°C, +80°C and +67°C respectively (see J.Chem. Educ.,
Vol. 61, No. 8. August 1984, p. 668).
[0052] The production of the laminar ID card proceeds by heat-sealing using heat and pressure.
For example the polyvinyl chloride support coated with the hydrophilic imaging layer
whereon the thermochromic liquid crystal has been printed is covered with a hydrophobic
resin cover sheet as described above and pressed between flat plates under a pressure
of e.g. 10 to 15 kg/m² at a temperature in the range of 120 to 150 °C or by using
a hot roller laminator known to those skilled in the art. Cooling proceeds preferably
under pressure to avoid distortion. The laminate may contain the hydrophilic colloid
imaging layer over the whole area of the support or in a part thereof, e.g. leaving
free the edge area to allow direct fusion contact of the border area as described
in US-P 4,425,421.
[0053] The following examples illustrate the present invention without, however, limiting
it thereto.
[0054] All parts, ratios and percentages are by weight unless otherwise stated. Structural
formulae of ingredients used in the preparation of the identification card laminate
according to the present invention are given after the description of the examples.
EXAMPLE 1
[0055] An opaque polyvinyl chloride sheet having a thickness of 200 µm was treated with
an electrical discharge produced by a corona-discharge apparatus operated under the
following conditions :
film-travelling speed : 20 m/min,
electrode spacing to film surface : 2 mm,
corona current : 0.55 A,
AC-voltage difference (peak value) : 10 kV,
frequency : 30 kHz.
[0056] The corona-treated surface was coated with the following composition to form an image-receiving
layer for silver complex diffusion transfer reversal (DTR-) processing:
water |
600 ml |
3 % aqueous dispersion of colloidal Ag₂S.NiS nuclei |
14 ml |
30 % aqueous dispersion of colloidal silica (average particle size 0.025 um, pH :
8) |
250 ml |
5 % solution in methanol of siloxane compound X |
50 ml |
4 % aqueous solution of formaldehyde |
10 ml |
13.4 % aqueous dispersion of casein |
200 ml |
40 % aqueous dispersion of subbing ingredient S |
100 ml |
water up to |
1234 ml |
[0057] Said composition was applied at a wet coverage of 26 m²/l and dried.
[0058] A black-and-white photographic silver halide emulsion material was exposed to produce
thereon a negative latent image (portrait and graphic information). By the common
silver complex DTR-process using the above prepared image-receiving material in a
tray-type processing apparatus a black-and-white silver image serving for identification
purposes was produced thereon.
[0059] After leaving the processing tray the image-receiving material was led through a
further tray containing an aqueous solution having the following composition :
water |
750 ml |
surfactant A |
50 g |
wet strength improving reaction product R |
200 g |
[0060] The treatment of the imaged image-receiving material with said liquid composition
was carried out at 20 °C and lasted about 4 seconds.
[0061] Within the space of a black silver image area thermochromic micro-capsules dispersed
in an aqueous solution of gelatin were applied by screen printing. The microcapsules
were prepared as described in US-P 3,328,257 using anisylidene-p-aminophenylacetate
in the hardened gelatin micro-envelopes.
[0062] Onto the dried image-receiving layer containing a liquid crystal pattern a transparent
polyvinyl chloride sheet of 60 µm previously coated at one side with a transparent
polyethylene sheet of 30 µm was laid and laminated with the polyethylene side in contact
with the image-receiving layer. Flat steel plates were used for pressing the layers
together under a pressure of 10 kg/cm2 at a temperature of 135°C.
[0063] Several sheets of matted polyvinyl chloride were stacked and laminated to the polyvinyl
chloride support sheet so as to reach a final thickness of e.g. 0.075 to 1 mm. The
polyvinyl chloride sheets used in that lamination contained opacifying titanium dioxide.
[0064] The obtained laminate contained at room temperature (20 °C) a visually hidden pattern
of liquid crystal material that by raising the temperature above 35 °C changed its
colour from red over yellow, green and blue to purple.
EXAMPLE 2
[0065] An opaque polyvinyl chloride sheet containing dispersed titanium dioxide and having
a thickness of 200 um was treated with an electrical discharge produced by a corona
discharge apparatus operated under the following conditions :
sheet travelling speed : 20 m/min,
electrode spacing to sheet surface : 2 mm,
corona current : 0.55 A,
AC voltage difference (peak value) : 10 kV,
frequency : 30 kHz.
[0066] The corona-treated polyvinyl chloride sheet was coated with the following composition,
the quantities being expressed per m2, to produce a subbing layer :
gelatin |
0.4 g |
40 % aqueous dispersion of subbing ingredient S |
5 ml |
5 % solution in methanol of siloxane compound X |
2.5 ml |
[0067] The dried subbing layer was coated with a dye image receiving layer from the following
composition, the quantities likewise being expressed per m2 :
gelatin |
0.9 g |
mordant M |
2.25 g |
[0068] The dye image receiving sheet was processed in combination with a photographic dye
diffusion transfer material as described in the Example of US-P 4,496,645. Said photographic
material was imagewise exposed and subsequently contacted for 1 minute with the dye
image receiving material having the composition described above in a diffusion transfer
apparatus COPYPROOF CP 38 (trade name of Agfa-Gevaert N.V. Belgium) ) having in its
tray an alkaline basic processing liquid of the following composition :
water |
800 ml |
sodium hydroxide |
25 g |
sodium orthophosphate |
25 g |
cyclohexane dimethanol |
25 g |
2,2′-methylpropylpropane diol |
25 g |
N-ethylbenzene-pyridinium chloride |
0.5 g |
distilled water up to |
1000 ml |
[0069] After having left the processing tray the sheets were led through another tray containing
the following aqueous composition :
water |
750 ml |
surfactant A |
50 g |
wet strength improving reaction product R |
200 g |
potassium iodide |
7.5 g |
[0070] Within the space of a black colour image area thermochromic micro-capsules dispersed
in an aqueous solution of gelatin were applied by screen printing. The microcapsules
were prepared as described in US-P 3,328,257 using anisylidene-p-aminophenylacetate
in the hardened gelatin micro-envelopes.
[0071] After drying the thus treated sheets were laminated with a transparent cover sheet
being a polyethylene terephthalate sheet having a thickness of 30 µm and being coated
at one side with a thermoadhesive layer of polyethylene having a thickness of 30 µm.
The lamination was carried out between flat steel plates pressing the polyethylene
and image-bearing layers together for 5 minutes using a pressure of 10 kg/cm2 at a
temperature of 135 °C. Said pressure was maintained during cooling to reach room temperature
(20 °C) again.
[0072] The obtained laminate had a sealing thus strong that even after having been immersed
in water for two days the sheet elements could not be peeled apart.
Formulae :
Surfactant A
[0073]

Wet strength improving reaction product R
[0074] Is "reaction product 2" obtained as a 10 % by weight solution according to GB-P 1
269 381. In the preparation of said reaction product R a mixture of the polyamide
defined as reaction product 1 in said GB-P and methyl-bis(3-amino-propyl)-amine were
reacted with epichlorohydrin.
Siloxane compound X
[0075]

Subbing ingredient S
[0076] "Subbing ingredient S" is the reaction product of :
(1) the polyester of adipic acid and hexanediol with average molecular weight 840,
(23 %),
(2) 4,4′-diisocyanato-dicyclohexylmethane (14 %),
(3) dimethylolpropionic acid (2 %),
(4) trimethylamine (1.5 %),
the given percentages are by weight.
[0077] Subbing ingredient S is used as a dispersion in water containing 7.5 % by weight
of N-methylpyrrolidinone.
Mordant M
[0078] Mordant M has the following structure (the percentage values are mole %) :

[0079] Said mordant is prepared analogously to Example 12 of US-P 4,186,014.
1. A laminated article containing visible information which article comprises two
plastic resin sheets or layers at least one of which is transparent and having laminated
inbetween at least one hydrophilic colloid layer containing photographically produced
information and carrying or containing thermochromic liquid crystals of the cholesteric
type in the form of a pattern or an indicium that can be made visible or obtains a
change in colour by heating above 25 °C, said liquid crystals being arranged against
a contrasting background having an optical density of at least 0.2 in its spectral
absorption range.
2. A laminated article according to claim 1, wherein the thermochromic liquid crystals
showing a temperature dependent change in colour are cholesteryl benzoate, cholesteryl
chloride or anisylidene-p-aminophenylacetate.
3. A laminated article according to claim 1 or 2, wherein a mixture of liquid crystal
material is used in order to obtain colour effects over the temperature range of 28
°C to 35 °C.
4. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the liquid
crystal material is applied in the form of a fingerprint, signature, bar code, letter(s)
and/or figure() or line drawings either or not built up by screen dots.
5. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the thermochromic
liquid crystals are applied onto or into said hydrophilic colloid layer.
6. A laminated article according to claim 5, wherein said hydrophilic colloid layer
contains photographic information obtained by an imagewise exposed and processed,
i.e. developed and fixed, silver halide emulsion layer or is an image-receiving layer
containing a photographic image obtained by the silver complex diffusion transfer
reversal process or a dye diffusion transfer process based on silver halide photography.
7. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the pattern
or indicium of thermochromic liquid crystal material is applied by a spraying or printing
technique using an aqueous base ink containing the liquid crystals in dispersed state
in an aqueous solution of watersoluble polymeric binder.
8. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the liquid
crystal material is encapsulated in gelatin or gelatin derivative crosslinked with
a hardener.
9. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the thermochromic
liquid crystal material is arranged against an underlying black area obtained by printing
a black ink area or spot on said hydrophilic colloid layer prior to producing therein
the photographic information or obtained by silver metal deposition or combination
of dyes formed in the production of a photographic image.
10. A laminated article according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the layer
containing photographically produced information is present on a paper support coated
with a hydrophobic thermoplastic resin layer or is present on a hydrophobic thermoplastic
resin support.
11. A laminated article according to claim 10, wherein said resin support is made
of a vinyl chloride polymer.