Technical Field
[0001] This invention concerns the production of security documents, such as passports,
identity cards, identification badges and labels, driving licences and the like. More
particularly, it concerns a technique for providing, within a laminated structure,
a printed image that is significantly more secure than images obtained by conventional
procedures.
Background
[0002] The most common method of producing identity cards, identification badges and the
like involves the steps of (i) mounting a photograph on a backing sheet of light card,
(ii) sandwiching the card (with the photograph attached) between two sheets of a transparent
plastics material, then (iii) bonding (using heat) the transparent sheets together
at their edges. Such cards and badges, however, do not possess the degree of security
that is required for passports and for passes to regions containing secret and classified
information, for it is possible to cut the cards and badges near the edges of the
transparent sheets, remove the card, substitute a new photograph, and then seal the
modified card between two new sheets of transparent plastics material.
[0003] Passports are still produced by a technique which involves bonding a photograph to
a page of the passport, using a conventional paper glue, then covering at least part
of that page (with the photograph affixed) with either a transparent strip of a polyester
material having adhesive on one side or a glass bead laminate. In this way the photograph
is covered by the transparent strip or the glass beads and its security is improved.
However, it is possible for a determined person to separate the components of the
passport page, then substitute a fresh photograph for the photograph that has been
mounted in the passport using this technique.
[0004] To improve the security of passports and identity cards, it has been proposed to
print photographic information (including an image of the holder of the passport or
identity card) on the end sheet of a passport or on a sheet of card, rather than simply
mount photographs on the sheets, and to cover the printed image to prevent the deliberate
(or inadvertent) removal of that information. However, no reasonably economic and
technically viable technique for implementing this approach has been put forward.
[0005] In US-A-4 082 873 there is described a method of forming a laminated label by reverse
printing information on one side of a flexible transparent film such as Mylar film,
applying a layer of pressure sensitive adhesive to the printed side of the film, and
applying the adhesive coated side of the film to a substrate in the form of an article
to be labelled. The adhesive is chosen to adhere more strongly to the printing and
to the article than to the film.
[0006] US-A-3 801 183 describes a retro-reflective sheet material that is substantially
transparent when viewed under diffuse light and has embedded information that is visible
under retro-reflective conditions. The sheet material has on one face a layer of adhesive
material. To form the sheet material, a monolayer of clear glass beads embedded to
about 40% of their diameter in a polyethylene coating on paper sheet is coated with
a quarter wave layer of cryolite, printed with information using a transparent colourless
lithographic alkyd varnish, and coated then with a quarter wave layer of zinc sulphide.
Where in contact, the cryolite and zinc sulphide layer provide a transparent mirror.
The printed areas with the varnish between the cryolite and zinc sulphide provides
a less efficient transparent mirror. An adhesive layer is coated over the zinc sulphide.
The sheet thus formed is placed adhesive down against the face of a positive colour
photograph print and heated under pressure in a platen press. After cooling, the polyethylene
coated paper is stripped off to expose the glass beads.
[0007] US-A-4 006 050 describes a method of manufacturing a card by forming by xerography
a developed, transferable image on a transfer sheet consisting of a carrier sheet,
a release layer on the carrier sheet, and a laquer layer separated from the carrier
sheet by the release layer, with the image being on the face of the laquer layer remote
from the release layer, and causing the image and the laquer layer of the transfer
sheet to transfer to a base formed of a plastics material. The transfer is effected
by a combination of heat and pressure and the material of the image and base become
firmly fixed together. In particular, glassine paper is used as the carrier sheet,
and the release layer may be formed by allowing a coating of a mixture of toluene,
methyl ethyl ketone, chlorinated paraffin wax, and a polythene wax to dry.
[0008] The present invention is defined by the claims hereinafter, to which reference should
now be made.
[0009] A preferred embodiment of the present invention provides a technique for producing
an image within a laminate formed by a layer of a transparent medium and a sheet of
paper, card or the like, which satisfies the requirements for the production of more
secure passports, identity cards, security badges, identification labels and the like.
[0010] This technique uses the surprising discovery that an image can be produced on (or
in) a layer of a high temperature glue (that is, a glue having a melting point of
about 95°C) at low temperature, and that image is not destroyed, if the toner or other
carbon-containing material used to create the image has set, when the glue layer is
heated to create a bond. Thus, if a sheet of a transparent medium (for example, a
polyester material or a layer of glass beads) has one side coated with a high temperature
glue, and an image is printed on the glue layer using (for example) a laser xerography
technique or printing ink, and that transparent material is subsequently bonded to
a sheet of paper or other substrate by a thermal process, the image is presented without
deterioration within the laminate thus produced, provided the toner or ink used for
the printing of the image has set on the glue before the thermal bonding is effected.
When the image includes printing, that printing is machine readable.
[0011] It has also been found that compounds other than carbon or carbon-containing compounds
can be used to produce machine-readable characters, provided those other compounds
are highly absorbent of radiation having a wavelength in the visible spectrum or the
near infra-red region.
[0012] The preferred embodiment produces an image within a laminate by the steps of
(a) coating one side of a sheet of transparent medium with a layer of a high temperature
glue;
(b) producing an image on the glue layer using carbon or a carbon-containing or other
visible or near infrared radiation absorbent compound which does not flow when applied
to the glue layer and, if necessary, allowing or causing the image-producing compound
to set;
(c) applying a substrate to the high temperature glue layer on which the image has
been produced; and
(d) bonding the transparent medium to the substrate using a known high temperature
thermal bonding process, thus producing a laminate of the transparent material and
the substrate.
[0013] Some manufacturers produce a laminate in the form of a sheet of a transparent medium
to which a layer of a high temperature glue has been applied. Such a product can be
used in the present invention.
[0014] The thermal bonding technique for high temperature glues - that is, the bonding technique
of step(d) is well known, so that detailed discussion of that technique in this specification
is not necessary.
[0015] Since, in almost all uses of the present invention, the image (which may consist
of or include printing) will be viewed through the transparent medium, the image will
normally be printed on the glue as a reverse image.
[0016] Without limiting the generality of the carbon-containing or radiation absorbing compounds
that may be used in the present invention, the image may be created by laser xerography
or other photo-copying technique, by an ink-jet printer (provided the ink used is
chosen - or thickened - so that it does not flow on contact with the glue layer),
by a dot matrix printer using a typewriter ribbon (preferably a carbon typewriter
ribbon), or by a typewriter adapted to print mirror images of the normal characters
of the typewriter. Ink jet printers and dot matrix printers can be used to create
the equivalent of photographic images by an appropriate printing of dots. The printing
of the image is effected by programming the printer after scanning the image to determine
the density of dots in the pixels which make up the image. Clearly, if a typewriter
ribbon is the medium through which the carbon or carbon-containing compound is applied
to the glue layer, there is no requirement to allow or cause the material of the image
to set before proceeding to the thermal bonding step of the present invention.
[0017] If a programmable printer is used for the image-producing step of the present invention,
an entire page of a passport, or an entire identification card or badge, comprising
both a photographic image and lettering, may be printed by the printer.
[0018] If the printer used to produce the lettering cannot also produce a photographic image,
then the passport page or identification card or badge may be produced with two printing
steps. The first printing step will produce an image of the required lettering and
the second printing step will provide the photographic image of the bearer of the
passport or the holder of the identification card or badge. (Of course, the image
may be printed before the lettering.) The glue layer containing the two printed images
will then be brought into contact with the substrate, and the high temperature thermal
process will be used to produce the completed passport page or identification card
or badge.
[0019] The transparent sheet material is typically either a flexible, transparent polyester
material, such as the material marketed under the trade mark "Mylar", or it may be
a layer of glass beads in glue. Both such materials are available commercially with
a layer of high temperature glue applied to one face of the transparent sheet.
[0020] If greater stiffness of the final product laminate is required, one or more additional
layers of any suitable material may be bonded to the substrate of the product laminate
of the present invention, preferably (but not necessarily) using the high temperature
glue bonding technique.
[0021] Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only,
with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0022]
Figure 1 is a sectional view (partly schematic) through a sheet of transparent polyester
material that is to be bonded to a backing sheet, using glue on which an image has
been printed.
Figure 2 is a similar sectional view (partly schematic) through a sheet of a glass
bead laminate with a high temperature glue layer, that is being bonded to a substrate.
Detailed Description of the Illustrated Embodiment
[0023] Figure 1 shows a sheet 10 of a transparent polyester material, such as "Mylar" (trade
mark), or another known flexible, transparent polyester material that is available
in sheet form, to one side of which a thin layer 11 of a known high temperature glue
has been applied by the manufacturer. Thin layers of the high temperature glue are
also transparent.
[0024] Figure 2 depicts a glass bead laminate comprising a layer 20 of glass beads in glue,
to one side of which a thin layer 11 of a high temperature glue has been applied.
An optional (but usually present) sheet 26 of backing paper is included to improve
the stiffness of the laminate and to protect the glass beads at the face of layer
20.
[0025] In each case, images - usually reverse images of a photographic impression and associated
lettering to be viewed, subseqently, through the transparent sheet 10 or 20 in the
direction of the arrow A - are printed on the region 12 of the glue 11, using carbon
or a carbon-containing compound. As indicated above, laser xerography is a convenient
way of producing the images. This way of producing the images is preferred, but it
is acknowledged that increased use of scanners and programmed printers, and developments
in that technology, may result in programmable printers becoming the preferred equipment
for the image production.
[0026] If, as in the example shown in the drawings, the images are in part lettering, the
image of the lettering may be applied to the glue layer before, or after, the application
of an image of a photographic impression.
[0027] When the image is produced by a xerographic process or with printing ink, the toner
must be allowed (or caused) to set, or the ink must be dry, before the next step in
the fabrication of the product laminate is taken. The setting or drying usually takes
a very short time. Indeed, when laser xerography is used produce the image, the heat
required to set the toner is applied as part of the printing process. Surprisingly,
although the heat applied to set the toner should be sufficient to melt the high temperature
glue, the glue layer 11 is not softened during its passage through the printer.
[0028] When the toner of the image has set, or the ink used for printing the image has dried,
the transparent sheet 10 or 20 is placed on a substrate 13 of paper or other suitable
material with the glue layer 11 sandwiched between the transparent sheet 10 or 20
and the substrate 13. The substrate 13 may have information printed on it in regions
14 outside the area of the substrate which is covered by the image regions 12 of the
glue layer 11.
[0029] The sandwich of sheet 10 or 20 with the substrate 13 is then heat treated in the
conventional manner to bond the transparent sheet 10 or 20 to the substrate 13 and
form a product laminate of the two sheets. Following this step it is very difficult
to separate the sheet 10 (or 20) from the substrate 13. The surprising aspect of such
a thermal treatment (during which the temperature of the components of the sandwich
reaches at least about 95°C to enable the high temperature glue layer 11 to bond the
sheet 10 or 20 and the substrate 13 together) is that the imprinted image on or in
the glue is not destroyed or distorted, but retains its identity and clarity, despite
the melting of the glue during the high temperature bonding treatment.
[0030] After the heat treatment step, the substrate 13 of the product laminate may be bonded
to additional sheets 27 of paper or card or other suitable material to form a thicker,
and therefore stiffer, laminate. It has been found that such additional bonding does
not destroy or distort the original image on the region 12 of the basic laminate.
Indeed, tests using images produced by the present invention have shown that when
the images include alpha-numeric characters, those characters remain machine readable
to the extent required by the International Civil Aviation Organisation's specification
No 9303. Thus the present invention incorporates a stable machine-readability feature
into passports and other travel documents.
[0031] If the glass bead laminate of Figure 2 is used, the protective backing sheet 26 is
peeled off the product laminate after its formation, to expose the outer surface of
the transparent layer 20.
[0032] It will be appreciated that using the technique of the present invention, it is possible
to produce identity cards, passport pages, security passes, identification labels
and the like, which are both durable and significantly more secure than those products
made using the methods currently in use.
[0033] Those skilled in this field will acknowledge that although two specific realisations
of the present invention have been illustrated and described above, modifications
to the described embodiments can be made without departing from the present inventive
concept as defined by the claims.
1. A method of producing a security laminate having an image therein, comprising the
steps of:
(a) providing a sheet (10,20) of transparent medium having on a face thereof a layer
(11) of a high temperature glue;
(b) producing an image (12) on the glue layer (11) using carbon or a compound which
does not flow when applied to the glue layer (11) and which is absorptive of visible
or near infra-red radiation; and, if necessary, allowing or causing the compound to
set;
(c) applying a substrate (13) to the glue layer (11) on which the image (12) has been
produced; and
(d) bonding the glue layer (11) to the substrate (13) by using a high temperature
thermal bonding process, so as to form the security laminate with the image (12) disposed
between the sheet (10,20) of transparent medium and the substrate (13).
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein step (a) comprises coating the said face of
the sheet (10,20) of transparent medium with the layer (11) of high temperature glue.
3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the image (12) is applied to the glue
layer (11) by a xerographic process, and the said compound is the toner used in the
xerographic process.
4. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the image (12) applied to the glue layer
(11) is produced using a programmable printer which prints using a ribbon impregnated
with, or carrying a layer of, carbon or a carbon-containing compound.
5. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the image (12) is applied to the glue
layer (11) by an ink jet printer.
6. A method according to any preceding claim, including the additional step of bonding
at least one further layer (27) to the laminate to increase the stiffness thereof.
1. Verfahren zum Herstellen eines Sicherheitslaminats mit einem Bild, umfassend die Verfahrensschritte:
(a) Liefern einer Lage (10, 20) aus transparenten Medium, die auf einer Seite eine
Schicht (11) aus HochtemperaturKlebstoff aufweist;
(b) Herstellen eines Bildes (12) auf der Klebstoff-Schicht (11) mittels Kohlenstoff
oder einem Gemisch, das nicht fließt, wenn es auf der Klebstoff-Schicht (11) angewendet
wird, und die Strahlung im sichtbaren oder in einem nahen infraroten Bereich absorbiert;
und, wenn notwendig, Ermöglichen oder Bewirken, daß das Gemisch erstarrt;
(c) Anwenden eines Substrats (13) auf die Klebstoff-Schicht (11), auf der das Bild
(12) erzeugt worden ist; und
(d) Verbinden der Klebstoff-Schicht (11) mit dem Substrat (13) durch Verwenden eines
thermischen Hochtemperatur-Verbundprozesses, um ein Sicherheitslaminat mit dem Bild
(12) zwischen der Lage (10, 20) aus transparentem Medium und dem Substrat (13) zu
schaffen.
2. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei beim Verfahrensschritt (a) die Seite der Lage (10,
20) aus transparentem Medium mit der Schicht (11) aus Hochtemperatur-Klebstoff bedeckt
wird.
3. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 oder 2, wobei das Bild (12) auf die Klebstoff-Schicht (11)
durch einen xerographischen Prozeß angewendet wird und das Gemisch ein beim xerographischen
Prozeß eingesetzter Toner ist.
4. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 oder 2, wobei das auf die Klebstoff-Schicht (11) angewendete
Bild (12) mittels eines programmierbaren Druckers hergestellt wird, der mittels eines
Bandes, das mit Kohlenstoff oder einen Kohlenstoff enthaltenen Gemisch imprägniert
ist oder eine Schicht daraus trägt, druckt.
5. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 1 oder 2, wobei das Bild (12) auf die Klebstoff-Schicht (11)
durch einen Tintenstrahldrucker angewendet wird.
6. Verfahren gemäß einem der vorstehenden Ansprüche, wobei weiter wenigstens eine weitere
Schicht (27) mit dem Laminat verbunden wird, um deren Steifigkeit zu erhöhen.
1. Un procédé de production d'un stratifié de sécurité incluant une image, comprenant
les étapes consistant à:
(a) agencer une feuille (10, 20) de support transparent sur une face de laquelle une
couche (11) de colle à haute température est agencée;
(b) produire sur la couche de colle (11) une image (12) en utilisant du carbone ou
un composé qui ne coule pas lorsqu' il est appliqué à la couche de colle (11) et qui
est absorbant pour un rayonnement visible ou dans l'infrarouge proche; et permettre
ou provoquer, si nécessaire, une prise du composé;
(c) appliquer un substrat (13) à la couche de colle (11) sur laquelle l'image (12)
a été produite; et
(d) attacher la couche de colle (11) au substrat (13) en utilisant un processus d'attache
thermique à haute température de façon à former le stratifié de sécurité où l'image
(12) est disposée entre la feuille (10, 20) de support transparent et le substrat
(13).
2. Un procédé selon la revendication 1, dans lequel l'étape (a) comprend une étape consistant
à revêtir ladite face de la feuille (10, 20) de support transparent au moyen de la
couche (11) de colle à haute température.
3. Un procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel l'image (12) est appliquée à
la couche de colle (11) par un procédé de xérographie, et ledit composé est le toner
utilisé dans le processus de xérographie.
4. Un procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel l'image (12) appliquée à la
couche de colle (11) est produite en utilisant une imprimante programmable qui imprime
en utilisant un ruban imprégné de carbone ou d'un composé contenant du carbone, ou
un ruban portant une couche de carbone ou d'un tel composé.
5. Un procédé selon la revendication 1 ou 2, dans lequel l'image (12) est appliquée à
la couche de colle (11) par une imprimante à jets d'encre.
6. Un procédé selon une revendication précédente quelconque, qui inclut l'étape additionnelle
consistant à attacher au moins une autre couche (27) au stratifié pour augmenter sa
rigidité.