US3699294A - Keyboard, digital coding, switch for digital logic, and low power detector switches - Google Patents
Keyboard, digital coding, switch for digital logic, and low power detector switches Download PDFInfo
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- US3699294A US3699294A US144453A US3699294DA US3699294A US 3699294 A US3699294 A US 3699294A US 144453 A US144453 A US 144453A US 3699294D A US3699294D A US 3699294DA US 3699294 A US3699294 A US 3699294A
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Images
Classifications
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- H01H13/00—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch
- H01H13/70—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard
- H01H13/78—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard characterised by the contacts or the contact sites
- H01H13/785—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard characterised by the contacts or the contact sites characterised by the material of the contacts, e.g. conductive polymers
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- H01H—ELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
- H01H13/00—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch
- H01H13/70—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard
- H01H13/702—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard with contacts carried by or formed from layers in a multilayer structure, e.g. membrane switches
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- H01H—ELECTRIC SWITCHES; RELAYS; SELECTORS; EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE DEVICES
- H01H13/00—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch
- H01H13/70—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard
- H01H13/702—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard with contacts carried by or formed from layers in a multilayer structure, e.g. membrane switches
- H01H13/703—Switches having rectilinearly-movable operating part or parts adapted for pushing or pulling in one direction only, e.g. push-button switch having a plurality of operating members associated with different sets of contacts, e.g. keyboard with contacts carried by or formed from layers in a multilayer structure, e.g. membrane switches characterised by spacers between contact carrying layers
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Definitions
- ABSTRACT Electric switches are described in which a resilient, electrically conductive, elastomeric member is spaced adjacent but apart from contact meansyamong fea tures are the elastomeric connector: of sheet form; on metal contacts as a movable contact bridge; defining a simple and durable multiple switch array including a keyboard, a digital coding assembly and a detector; and as the means, especially with proper selection of distributed conductive particles in theelastomer for limited conductivity, of eliminating the electrical effects of bounce in solid state electronic logic circuitry and the like. Fabrication of the switch as a simple, thin compact laminate using printed circuit boards is shown using the preferred silicone elastomer and carbon filler.
- pressure against conductive elastomer sheet means will cause it to connect to a contact element conductively and release of pressure will cause the sheet means to disconnect.
- the sheet means can be used as a floating connection for one or more circuit elements, and in this form has particular application in a keyboard assembly, particularly in connection with replaceable printed circuit boards and in digital coding techniques with a single printed circuit board.
- the sheet means resiliently, reversibly deforms from first to second conditions, typically engaging the contacts in the deformed or bulged condition.
- the sheet means takes a planar form, positioned by a spacer layer from the contacts. And preferably the contacts are elements of a printed circuit.
- FIG I6 FIG l8 KEYBOARD, DIGITAL CODING, swITcII FOR DIGITAL LOGIC, AND LOW POWER DETECTOR SWITCHES BACKGROUNDOF INVENTION This is a continuation-in-part of my prior copending application, Ser. No. 888,758 filed Dec. 29, 1969 and of my prior copending application, Ser. No. 801,438 filed Feb. 24, 1969, now abandoned.
- One object of this invention is to provide such a switch which is bounceless in the-electrical sense of avoiding the electrical effect of initial mechanical variability of engagement.
- Another object of this invention is to provide such a switch with improved life and lower cost.
- a further object of this invention is to provide such a switch which will have reduced electromagnetic interference.
- Yet other objects of this invention are to provide a switch-which can readily utilize printed circuits as a component part to provide a keyboard assembly and to provide a digital coding assembly with changeable logic codes.
- a further object of this invention is to provide a switch which is adapted for use to provide input to digital logic circuitry.
- resilient, electrically conductive elastomer is positioned above two circuit elements to be connected, and functions as a conductive bridge.
- sheet means of an elastomer having electrically conductive particles distributed therethrough is spaced adjacent but apart from a pair of contact elements so that pressure applied against the sheet means will cause it to connect the elements, thus providing a bridging conductive path through the particle-containing elastomer, and release of pressure will cause the sheet means to disconnect from the element and open the path.
- the elastomer is carbon filled and the sheet means has substantially the electrical resistance of carbon-filled silicone and fluorosilicone elastomers.
- a keyboard utilizing bridging comprises a separator sheet below a conductive sheet means and followed by an electrical circuit board having a plurality of pairs of spaced contacts, the separator sheet having openings registrable with pairs of elements, so that pressure applied and releasedagainst the portion of sheet means above a pair will cause that portion to press against the pair to provide a bridging conductive path and to disconnect the element and open the path.
- the conductive sheet means is provided on its outer surface with an insulating layer at least in alignment with the Openings, and the conductive sheet means is provided on its outer surfaces with buttons registrable with the openings.
- a digital coding assembly utilizing bridging comprises a separator layer below the sheet means and having a selected pattern of apertures, this followed by an electrical circuit board having on its upper surface a common circuit element interlaced with a plurality of individual circuit elements, pressure against portions of the sheet means bridging the circuit elements exposed by the apertures, and release of pressure opening the bridging path.
- the conducting pattern for all circuit elements is on the upper surface of the board;
- the common circuit element comprises a series of parallel branches with each individual circuit element disposed between a different pair of branches; and apertures are arranged so that one special circuit element is always connected to the common element by depression of the conductive sheet means at any actuation point and preferably apertures for the special element are smaller than the unit apertures for the other circuit elements thus providing for a delayed action.
- an electric switch for producing a signal for use by solid state electronic digital logic circuitry employs a movable bridge means which is resilient and electrically conductive, made of elastomer with conductive particles distributed therethrough.
- the bridge means is spaced retaining adjacent but apart from the pair of contact elements so that motion of the bridge means against the contact elements will cause the elements to be connected conductively through the particle-containing elastomer and reverse motion will cause disconnect, the switch enabling production of a signal without electrical bounce effects.
- the particles are of non-metallic conductive material, limiting the conductivity of the path; the particles comprise carbon filler in the elastomer; the contact elements are printed circuits on a printed circuit board while non-moving portions of elastomer integral with the bridge means are supported by the board in insulated condition from the circuits, these portions retaining the bridge means in its spaced position absent the pressure; neighboring portions of elastomer integral with the bridge means extend to various sides of the bridge means and together therewith comprise sheet means, the direction of movement of the bridge means being normal to the direction of extent of the sheet means and the conductivity path being in the direction of such extent; and the just mentioned arrangement in which the elastomer portion defining the bridge means is sized for deflection by a finger of the human hand.
- positioning means positions the sheet means so that a first portion is adjacent but apart from the contact means and the first portion is free to move relative to neighboring portions to connect and disconnect.
- the neighboring portions support the first portion in spaced position in the absence of external operating pressure, i.e., the switch is of the normally open type;
- the portion is adapted for manual pressure, the portion being covered by an insulating layer;
- an outer member exposes the insulating layer for application of actuating pressure to the portion;
- the layer is in the form of a button accessible to the finger; this button is resiliently deformable, providing travel;
- this button is thin-walled and hollow; there are a plurality of pairs of electrical contact elements and a plurality of sheet portions free to move against respective contact elements; these contact elements are part of a printed circuit; and these contacts are all adapted for completion of the same circuit to provide a detector switch.
- portions of electrically conductive elastomer are positioned adjacent but spaced apart from respec tive circuit means carried on a non-conductive base.
- the elastomer portions are free to move and press against the printed circuit means in response to pressure applied to the portions, the portions being associated with outer insulative pressure-transmitting means for actuation by externally applied pressure.
- the elastomer portions are carbon filled so that when pressure is applied to a portion the element is connected with limited conductivity.
- the elastomer is homogeneous except for a graphite lubricant on the contacting surface.
- the contact sets to be used with the resilient, electrically conductive elastomer according to this invention may be either metal or other conductive material, metal is preferred since elastomer to metal contacting exhibits better mechanical action in most instances. Further, where the metal contact is fixed, external connections are simplified and coding readily changed, e.g., by changing the metallic contact pattern on a printed circuit board.
- Materials which can be used for the resilient, electrically conductive connecting elastomer include commercially available electrically conductive silicone or fluorosilicone elastomers. Such an elastomer when carbon filled has the following typical properties:
- conductive elastomers may be filled with finely divided metallic particles to obtain lower resistivity valves.
- silicone or fluorosilicone elastomer when filled with metallic silver particles has the following typical properties:
- the keyboard assembly comprises a sheet of resilient electrically conductive elastomeric material, a thin insulating separator mask and a board having a plurality of electrical contacts. Pressure on a selected portion causes it to extend through the mask and connect a set of contacts on the board. Release of pressure permits the portion to return to its original position.
- Low operating force values e.g., less than 6 ounces and small displacements, e.g., one-sixteenth of an inch or less, are feasible with this design.
- Such a keyboard switch design also automatically provides sufficient sealing against dirt and foreign matter.
- the switching action is bounceless, the construction simple and inexpensive and electromagnetic interference reduced.
- This switch is readily adapted for use with printed circuits and whether a single circuit or a multiplicity of such switches is used, the invention provides flexible coding by simple changing of the printed circuit boards.
- digital coding is achieved by use of a sheet of resilient, electrically conductive elastomeric material, a thin insulating separator mask coded by apertures in a selected pattern and a single circuit board printed on one side with a common circuit element interlaced with a plurality of individual circuit elements. Pressure on the conductive sheet above the selected apertures will provide connection of the common circuit element to the desired individual elements, thus providing coding.
- the coded mask is provided with the proper pattern of apertures to register only with the circuit elements required by the code.
- Such a mechanism may be comprised of separate buttons incorporating springs, pivots or levers arranged so as to translate the manually applied actuating force more evenly onto the described resilient switching device.
- the switch of this invention may also be constructed such that v the contacting action is accomplished through a sliding, wiping or rolling action of the movable member.
- a switch could be constructed of a fixed circuit element having at least one contact and a flexible, resilient, electrically conductive, non-metallic member adapted to slide, wipe or roll against said element to cause electrical connection. This can occur with resilient local deformation of a sheet-form conductive elastomer member as it progressively bulges down to engage the contact.
- FIG. 1 is a plan view of a keyboard assembly made in accordance with the present invention.
- FIG. 2 is a front end elevation, partially broken away
- FIG. 3 is a plan view of the conductive rubber sheet bearing the buttons
- FIG. 4 is a plan view of the printed circuit board
- FIG. 5 is an exploded sectional view along line 5-5 of FIG. 1;
- FIG. 6 is a plan view of a digital coding device made in accordance with this invention.
- FIG. 7 is a front elevation of FIG. 6;
- FIG. 8 is a plan view of the insulating separator mask
- FIG. 9 is a plan view of the printed circuit board
- FIG. 10 is a plan view of the printed circuit board with strobe
- FIG. 11 is a plan view of the insulating separator mask for use with board of FIG. 10;
- FIG. 12 is a vertical cross-sectional view of another switch similar to that of FIGS. 1-5;
- FIG. 19 is a plan view, partially broken away, of a further embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 20 is a cross sectional view taken on the line 20-20 of FIG. 19; and i FIG. 21 is a plan-view of still a further embodiment.
- FIGS. 1 to 5 illustrate an uncoded, simple decimal keyboard assembly made in accordance with the present invention.
- this invention is also adapted to coded keyboards.
- the keyboard assembly 11 comprises in combination a bezel plate 20 having a plurality of openings 21, an electrically conductive silicone rubber sheet 30 co-extensive with the bezel plate 20 and having a plurality of protrusions 31 each covered with an insulating button shell 32 and registerable with the openings 21, a thin insulating separator mask 40 co-extensive-with the bezel plate and rubber sheet and having a plurality of openings 41 registerable with the protrusions 31, and a printed circuit board 50 having a plurality of pairs of contacts 51 and 52 registerable with said openings 41.
- the protrusions or buttons 31 are not an essential part of the invention and may be eliminated, such that pressure is applied to the flat sheet 30 surface directly.
- a selected button 32 in this case 6, causes the protrusion 31 to extend through the openings 41 in the mask and contact the pair of contacts 51 and 52 of the 6 circuit, providing an electrical connection between them. Release of pressure on the button 32 permits the resilience of the rubber to cause the button and protrusion to rise without electrical bounce, breaking the circuit connection between 51 and 52. Similarly, pressure on selected button 101, in this case 0 causes the corresponding protrusion to extend through the mask opening and contact both or either of pairs 151/152 and 251/252 providing electrical connection for the 0 circuits.
- the printed circuit board 50 can be readily changed for some other printed circuit board with different coding, using the same bezel plate, rubber sheet and separator mask.
- a device utilizing such a keyboard can be extremely versatile and provide a great variety of flexible coding at a minimum of expense.
- a digital coding assembly 111 comprising in combination a resilient conductive polymeric silicone rubber sheet having spaced buttons 131-435 for the numerals 1 to 5.
- a co-extensive thin insulating separator mask having apertures 201, 202, 203,
- buttons 131-435 having corresponding digital indicia l, 2, 3, 4, or 5.
- a co-extensive printed circuit board 150 Below the mask 140 is 'a co-extensive printed circuit board 150.
- Board 150 has on its upper surface a printed com mon circuit element 160 in the form of parallel closely spaced branches and having a terminal 160a. Interlaced among the branches of the common electrical circuit element 160 are separate individual circuit elements 161, 162 and 163, each having its own separate terminal. Accordingly, pressure on the selected digital area of the conductive sheet directly or by use of the mounted key protrusion will cause selected and coded contacts between the common circuit element 160 and the individual circuit elements. Release of pressure permits the resilience of the conductive sheet to rise without electrical bounce, thus breaking the particular circuit connection.
- Such a digital system can be used as a keyboard for feeding manual data into a digital data processing system.
- This coding method has an advantage over other coding systems in that the printed circuit board requires no connections through the board but has all its connections on the same surface as the conductive elements printed thereon. Further, by using such an interlaced system, different coding may be readily obtained, simply by changing the aperture pattern in the mask.
- the mask may be a separate self-supporting sheet of insulating material or may be formed as a thin film deposited on the surface of the board, for example, by silk screen or photoresist technique.
- an additional circuit element is interlaced with an additional branch 160b of the common circuit element 160.
- the mask 140 is correspondingly provided with a line of additional apertures 207-211 arranged above element 170.
- Element 170 thus can operate as a strobe, to inform a receiving system that there is correct input data available and thus actuate the receiving apparatus to receive the input.
- closure of the strobe contacts be delayed with respect to the closure of the input data circuits so as to assure that the selected data circuits are already properly closed at the time the strobe circuit is closed.
- Such a delay is provided, as shown in FIG. 10, by having the strobe apertures 207-211 narrower than the unit minimal width used for the data circuit apertures, requiring proportionately greater force on the resilient member to accomplish the strobe closure.
- the transient voltages which are usually produced upon initial closing of conventional switch contacts may have undesirable effects, and these are avoided according to the present invention, as mentioned previously, by use of elastomer filled with conductive particles, and in most instances with nonmetallic conductive particles which provide connecting paths of limited conductivity.
- the voltage input to the circuitry must reach a certain threshold value before effective switching action occurs.
- the switch resistance drops rapidly and erratically, producing voltage transients which may exceed the threshold value more than once after a single depression of a key, resulting in multiple triggering of the circuitry and causing entry of a particular number where only one entry was intended.
- the production of voltage transients capable of causing multiple entry may be uniquely avoided by the use of an elastomeric material containing a distribution of nonmetallic conductive particles such as carbon or other semi-conductor.
- a commercially available carbon filled silicone or fluorosilicone elastomer has the following properties:
- FIG. 12 similar to FIGS. 1-5) having a homogeneous elastomeric conductive sheet 30 of 0.030 inch uniform thickness, an insulator sheet 40 of 0.003 inch thickness with circular apertures 41 of 0.500 inches and an external button cover 32a of 0. l 25 inch thickness together with a printed circuit board 50 in which the circuits stand approximately 0.001 of an inch above the top of the board.
- the conductive elastomeric sheet was made of carbon-filled silicone rubber of 7 ohm-centimeters resistivity.
- the button cover 32a was made of non-conductive silicone rubber.
- the contacting surface of the conductive elastomeric sheet had a lubricating film of graphite.
- a keyboard unit for use for example, in a small portable calculator, has a base 212 carrying on it a multiplicity of contact groups such as are shown at 214 and 216 arranged in a common plane. Such contacts may be printed on base 212 if desired.
- An insulating spacing element in the form of a planar mask 218 is placed adjacent and parallel to base 212, in contact therewith and provides openings 220 so positioned as to register with selected areas of the contact groups.
- Above mask 218 in contact therewith and parallel thereto is placed a carbondfilled elastomeric connecting member 222, which is, in this embodiment, about 0.030 inch thick.
- above connecting member 222 is a thin insulating sheet 224
- above sheet 224 is a cover 228, providing side portions 230 for sealing around the other elements of unit 210 to provide a durable sealed unit.
- Numbers or other symbols, as at 232 may be printed or otherwise provided on, for instance, the interior surface of transparent cover 228 at-locations corresponding to openings 220 in mask 218 and thus to specific connections between contact groups on base 212.
- Such symbols 232, andopenings 220 typically are separated center-to-center by about three-fourths inch, and preferably have an area about that of a one-half inch diameter circle.
- member 222 For obtaining good contact between member 222 and contacts 214 and 216, it is preferable to manufacture member 222 with a. matte, rather than a smooth surfaceSuch a surface is somewhat porous.
- a conductive lubricating agent comprising a fine graphite powder, is rubbed into the matte surface, and the excess powder is removed before assembly ofthe unit; the resulting surface provides excellent, non-stick connecting action for the switch upon the printed circuit contact elements.
- the several layers are sealed together by-a suitable adhesive 233 near their outer edges, and at selected portions interior to the outer edges.
- Side members 230 of cover 228 are then sealed by further adhesive 233 against the abutting edges of all the contained layers, providing a durable, sealed construction that remains substantially free of contaminants, dirt, liquid, and the like.
- Cover 234 is thin-walled and generally hollow, and composed, in this embodiment, of a soft molded elastomer. Insulating sheet 224 may be omitted when this cover is used. Upraised buttons for the switches are provided, as at 236, in the form of a hollow raised portion. Top button wall 238 is thicker than the remainder of cover 234 and provides a pressure surface 240. Thus, when the user depresses button 238 (FIG. 14), first the button elastically deforms and only after a predetermined travel does pressure surface 240 push connecting member 222 down to provide bridging contact across circuit elements 214 and 216 in the same manner as in the embodiment of FIG. 15. The cover structure thus provides a subjective feel of greater travel and positive switching action than does the cover of FIG. 15.
- desired confidence of location may be provided by the use of a bezel plate cover 270 (FIG. 16), providing apertures 272 of dimensions to admit the finger of the operator.
- Insulating sheet 274 lies over connector element 222, and is suitably marked with symbols indicating the key area; these symbols are visible through apertures 272.
- Plate 270 provides sloping aperture walls 278, which touch the finger of the operator as he pushes a key, thereby providing a positive feel of location of the key as well as of finger travel to depress the key.
- keyboard units make no provision for lock-out, that is, for preventing the simul' taneous depression of two keys.
- Such provision is generally made in the associated circuitry which is actuated by the switches (but can also be-made by additional structure of the keyboard). If two keys are depressed together, according to the invention, it is possible to ensure that the contacts of the two switches are not all shorted through the connecting sheet member and thus avoid difficulties in the associated circuitry.
- the connecting member is in the form of discrete individual connecting units insulatingly separated from one another.
- This keyboard unit 310 has a base 312, carrying circuit elements 314 and 316 to be connected together by the switch. Insulating and spacing member 318 lies above the circuit elements and provides openings 320 registering. with portions of the circuit elements.
- a cover 328 is provided as in the previously described embodiments, and the switching action is the same as has been described, i.e., finger pressure presses the portion of the member 322 registered with opening 320, into the opening. This portion of the elastomer is elastically distended downwardly while neighboring portions remain positioned at the original height by the spacing member. Removal of the finger allows the sheet member 322 to regain its original planar form due to elastic restoring forces.
- the conducting connecting element may be made of an elastomeric material such as commercially available electrically conductive silicone or fluorosilicone elastomers, filled with finely divided metallic particles, such as silver, providing a homogeneous conducting elastomer of low resistivity, similar to that of a metal.
- Such an elastomer when filled with metallic silver particles typically, as mentioned previously, has the following properties:
- Mat unit 410 in general, includes a base 412 and conductive sheet element 422 with an insulating spacing element 418 therebetween, all parallel to one another.
- Base 412 supports two sets of circuit contact elements 414 and 416, adjacent to but spaced from one another, in side by side relationship and connected to terminals 414a and 416a.
- circuit elements may be, for example, printed on a flexible sheet which is adhered to base 412, or the entire base may be flexible.
- Insulating spacing element 418 between circuit elements 414 and 416 and sheet element 422 comprises a sheet form element of e.g., 0.015 inch thickness, defines openings 420, exposing portions of circuit contact elements 414 and 416.
- Above insulating spacing element 418 in face-to-face contact therewith is a resilient, flexible, electrically conductive elastomeric sheet element 422 filled with metallic particles such as silver, as previously described.
- insulating spacing element 418 is shown here in integral form, in other embodiments it may advantageously be formed as separate pieces of material cooperating to define openings 420; such separate elements may be joined to the lower surface of the conductive sheet element 422, or to the base 412 and contacts 414 and 416.
- insulating elements may be provided in the form of a material such as varnish, applied to areas of conductive sheet element 422 or to areas of base 412 and contacts 414 and 416.
- openings 420 are provided for defining possible areas of electrical contact between sheet element 422 and contacts 414 and 416, and must be of such height as to perform its spacing function when activating force is not applied.
- Insulating elements 418 must be sufficiently thin that, when a force is applied as indicated at arrow 424, to sheet element 422, element 422 is elastically deformed in region 426 into opening 420 in a generally curved shape, convex toward circuit elements 414 and 416, and as increasing downward force is applied, an increasing area of sheet 422 moves through opening 420 and comes into contact with circuit elements 414 and 416, providing bridging electric contact between them. Since sheet 422 is elastomeric, and its portions about the opening 420 are retained at a position spaced from the contact elements, when the applied force is removed, the elastically deformed region 426 returns to its normally planar condition, above opening 420 and spaced from circuit elements 414 and 416.
- the separation 418 may be .015 inch thick, the elastomer sheet 422, .030 inch, the above foam 428, 0.125 inch thick and the outer skin 430 (either e.g., mylar (duPont Trademark) or rubber coated metal) 0.015 inch thick.
- the switching connection between circuit elements 414 and 416 may be used in any convenient way to accomplish the intended function, as for instance, to cause a door to open in response to the pressure of a foot on the mat.
- An insulating cover 427- is provided over connecting member 422, and in this embodiment is made of a soft (about 25 durometer) rubber 428, on top of which is a relatively stiff outer member 430. Local pressure even on a very small region on the stiff outer member, is spread over a relatively large area by the stiff member, compressing the low density foam which in turn presses the sheet 422 into the openings 420, as just described.
- this switch is of an extremely elongated form, length 1 being as great as ten feet or more, with a large multiplicity of openings 420 of the spacer distributed over its entire area.
- this form it is usable as on under-the-rug burglar alarm, employing a thin flexible base, providing an over-all switch thickness of less than as little as one-quarter inch with over-all flexibility sufficient to permit it to be coiled into a package for handling and shipment.
- An electric switch comprising in combination at least one pair of contact elements and resilient, flexible, electrically conductive sheet means of an elastomer having electrically conductive particles distributed therethrough, said sheet means spaced adjacent but apart from said elements so that pressure applied against said sheet means will cause it to connect said elements thus providing a bridging conductive path through the particle-containing elastomer, and release of pressure will cause said sheet means to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements.
- An electric switch for producing a signal for use by solid state electronic digital logic circuitry, said switch comprising at least one pair of contact elements and a resilient, movable electrically conductive bridge means made of elastomer with conductive particles distributed therethrough, said bridge means spaced adjacent but apart from said elements so that motion of said bridge means against said elements will cause said elements to be connected conductively through the particle-containing elastomer to provide a bridging conductive path and reverse movement of said bridge means will cause said bridge means to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements, the switch enabling production of a signal without electrical bounce effects.
- An electric switch comprising in combination contact means, resilient, flexible electrically conductive sheet means of electrically conductive elastomer and positioning means positioning said sheet means so that a first portion of said sheet means is adjacent but apart from said contact means, and said first portion free to move relative to neighboring portions of said sheet means whereby'pressure applied against said first portion will cause it to connect to said contact means conductively, and release of said pressure will cause said portion of said sheet means to disconnect from said contact means.
- the switch of claim 10 adapted for manual pressure on said portion, said portion being covered by an insulating layer.
- said insulating layer comprises an elastomer forming a button shape, said button shape being resiliently deformable, provid-' ing for travel of the finger between the time of contact with such button and the time the button is deformed against said sheet means sufficient to apply actuating pressure.
- the switch of claim 15 including an outer member having an opening exposing to the finger said insulating layer for application of actuating pressure to said portion.
- An electric switch assembly comprising in combination a non-conductive base carrying a printed circuit means which defines circuit contact elements at a spaced plurality of locations; portions of electrically conductive, resilient elastomer; means positioning elastomer portions adjacent but apart from respective contact elements; the respective elastomer portions being free to move and press against the respective contact elements in response to pressure applied to said portions, said switch adapted for actuation by externally applied pressure on said portions, said portions associated with outer insulative pressure transmitting means.
- each movable portion of conductive elastomer is integral with neighboring portions of elastomer held so that resilient deflection of said elastomer occurs between Said movable and neighboring portions during application of said externally applied pressure, providing a return force upon release of said pressure.
- An electric switch comprising in combination at least one pair of circuit contact elements and a resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means of electrically conductive silicone elastomer spaced adjacent but apart from said elements so that pressure applied against said sheet means will cause it to connect said elements conductivelythus providing a bridging conductive path and release of pressure will cause said sheet means to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements.
- a keyboard assembly comprising in combination resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means, an insulatingseparator sheet below said conductive sheet means, and an electrical circuit board below said separator sheet and having contact elements; said separator sheet having openings registrable with said elements so that pressure applied against the portion of said conductive sheet means above an opening will cause it to press against a said element causing it to connect to said element conductively, and release of said pressure will cause said sheet means to disconnect from said element.
- a keyboard assembly comprising in combination resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means, an insulating separator sheet below said conductive sheet means, and an electrical circuit board below said separator sheet and having a plurality of pairs of spaced contact elements; said separator sheet having openings registrable with said pairs of elements so that pressure applied against the portion of said conductive sheet means above an opening will cause it to press against the pair of contact elements causing it to connect said elements conductively thus providing a bridging conductive path, and release of said pressure will cause said conductive portion to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements.
- a digital coding assembly comprising in combination a resilient, flexible, electrically conductive elastomeric sheet means, an insulating separator layer below said sheet means and having a selected pattern of apertures and an electrical circuit board below said layer and having on its upper surface a common circuit element interlaced with a plurality of individual circuit elements, pressure applied against the portion of the conductive sheet means above the pattern of apertures causing that portion to provide a bridging conductive path from the common circuit element to each circuit element exposed by the apertures and release of said pressure causing opening of said path.
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Abstract
Description
Claims (32)
- 2. The switch of claim 1 wherein said elastomer is carbon filled.
- 3. The switch of claim 1 wherein said sheet means has substantially the electrical resistance of carbon filled silicone and fluorosilicone elastomers.
- 4. An electric switch for producing a signal for use by solid state electronic digital logic circuitry, said switch comprising at least one pair of contact elements and a resilient, movable electrically conductive bridge means made of elastomer with conductive particles distributed therethrough, said bridge means spaced adjacent but apart from said elements so that motion of said bridge means against said elements will cause said elements to be connected conductively through the particle-containing elastomer to provide a bridging conductive path and reverse movement of said bridge means will cause said bridge means to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements, the switch enabling production of a signal without electrical bounce effects.
- 5. The switch of claim 4 wherein said particles are of nonmetallic conductive material, limiting the conductivity of said path.
- 6. The switch of claim 5 wherein said particles comprise carbon filler in said elastomer.
- 7. The switch of claim 4 wherein said elements comprise printed circuits secured to a printed circuit board, and non-moving portions of elastomer integral with said bridge means are supported by said board in an insulated condition relative to said printed circuits, said portions retaining said bridge means in said spaced position in the absence of pressure applied against said bridge means.
- 8. The switch of claim 4 wherein neighboring portions of elastomer integral with said bridge means extend to various sides of said bridge means and, together with said bridge means comprising a sheet means, the direction of movement of said bridge means being normal to the direction of extent of the sheet means and the conductivity path between said contact elements being in the direction of said extent.
- 9. The switch of claim 8 wherein the elastomer portion defining said bridge means is sized for deflection by a finger of the human hand.
- 10. An electric switch comprising in combination contact means, resilient, flexible electrically conductive sheet means of electrically conductive elastomer and positioning means positioning said sheet means so that a first portion of said sheet means is adjacent but apart from said contact means, and said first portion free to move relative to neighboring portions of said sheet means whereby pressure applied against said first portion will cause it to connect to said contact means conductively, and release of said pressure will cause said portion of said sheet means to disconnect from said contact means.
- 11. The electric switch of claim 10 wherein said neighborinG portions support said first portion in said spaced apart position in the absence of external operating pressure.
- 12. The electric switch of claim 10 wherein there are a plurality of electrical contact elements, said sheet means including a plurality of sheet portions positioned over respective electrical contact elements, said respective portions being free to move and press against respective contact elements in response to pressure applied to said portions.
- 13. The electric switch of claim 12 wherein said contact elements comprise part of a printed circuit.
- 14. The switch of claim 12 useful as a detector wherein said contact elements when connected by said sheet means all complete the same circuit to a pair of terminals whereby pressure at any of said portions of said sheet means can complete the same circuit.
- 15. The switch of claim 10 adapted for manual pressure on said portion, said portion being covered by an insulating layer.
- 16. The switch of claim 15 wherein said insulating layer is in the form of a button accessible to the finger.
- 17. The switch of claim 16 wherein said insulating layer comprises an elastomer forming a button shape, said button shape being resiliently deformable, providing for travel of the finger between the time of contact with such button and the time the button is deformed against said sheet means sufficient to apply actuating pressure.
- 18. The switch of claim 17 wherein said button is a hollow, thin-walled member.
- 19. The switch of claim 15 including an outer member having an opening exposing to the finger said insulating layer for application of actuating pressure to said portion.
- 20. An electric switch assembly comprising in combination a non-conductive base carrying a printed circuit means which defines circuit contact elements at a spaced plurality of locations; portions of electrically conductive, resilient elastomer; means positioning elastomer portions adjacent but apart from respective contact elements; the respective elastomer portions being free to move and press against the respective contact elements in response to pressure applied to said portions, said switch adapted for actuation by externally applied pressure on said portions, said portions associated with outer insulative pressure transmitting means.
- 21. The electric switch of claim 20 wherein said elastomer portions comprise carbon filled elastomer, so that pressure applied against a said portion will cause it to connect said element with limited conductivity and release of pressure will cause said portion to disconnect from said element.
- 22. The electric switch of claim 20 wherein said elastomer comprises a homogeneous body of elastomer and electrically conductive particles distributed therethrough.
- 23. The switch assembly of claim 20 wherein each movable portion of conductive elastomer is integral with neighboring portions of elastomer held so that resilient deflection of said elastomer occurs between said movable and neighboring portions during application of said externally applied pressure, providing a return force upon release of said pressure.
- 24. An electric switch comprising in combination at least one pair of circuit contact elements and a resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means of electrically conductive silicone elastomer spaced adjacent but apart from said elements so that pressure applied against said sheet means will cause it to connect said elements conductively thus providing a bridging conductive path and release of pressure will cause said sheet means to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements.
- 25. A keyboard assembly comprising in combination resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means, an insulating separator sheet below said conductive sheet means, and an electrical circuit board below said separator sheet and having contact elements; said separator sheet having openings registrable with said elements so that pressure applied aGainst the portion of said conductive sheet means above an opening will cause it to press against a said element causing it to connect to said element conductively, and release of said pressure will cause said sheet means to disconnect from said element.
- 26. A keyboard assembly comprising in combination resilient, flexible, electrically conductive, elastomeric sheet means, an insulating separator sheet below said conductive sheet means, and an electrical circuit board below said separator sheet and having a plurality of pairs of spaced contact elements; said separator sheet having openings registrable with said pairs of elements so that pressure applied against the portion of said conductive sheet means above an opening will cause it to press against the pair of contact elements causing it to connect said elements conductively thus providing a bridging conductive path, and release of said pressure will cause said conductive portion to disconnect from said elements and open the path between the elements.
- 27. The keyboard assembly of claim 26 wherein said conductive sheet means is provided on its outer surface with an insulating layer at least in the area of said openings.
- 28. The keyboard assembly of claim 26 wherein said conductive means is provided on its outer surface with buttons registrable with said openings.
- 29. A digital coding assembly comprising in combination a resilient, flexible, electrically conductive elastomeric sheet means, an insulating separator layer below said sheet means and having a selected pattern of apertures and an electrical circuit board below said layer and having on its upper surface a common circuit element interlaced with a plurality of individual circuit elements, pressure applied against the portion of the conductive sheet means above the pattern of apertures causing that portion to provide a bridging conductive path from the common circuit element to each circuit element exposed by the apertures and release of said pressure causing opening of said path.
- 30. The device of claim 29, wherein the conducting pattern for all said circuit elements is on said upper surface.
- 31. The device of claim 29 wherein said common circuit element comprises a series of parallel branches with each said individual circuit element being disposed between a different pair of said branches.
- 32. The device of claim 29 wherein all apertures are arranged so that one special circuit element is always connected to the common element by depression of the conductive sheet means at any actuation point.
- 33. The device of claim 32 wherein apertures which provide contact with said special element are smaller than the unit aperture for the other circuit elements, thus providing for a delayed action.
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US14445371A | 1971-05-18 | 1971-05-18 |
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Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US144453A Expired - Lifetime US3699294A (en) | 1971-05-18 | 1971-05-18 | Keyboard, digital coding, switch for digital logic, and low power detector switches |
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US3911780A (en) * | 1972-07-17 | 1975-10-14 | Hammond Corp | Arpeggio keyboard |
US3806685A (en) * | 1972-10-04 | 1974-04-23 | Chromerics Inc | Linear cam slide switch with guide means and conductive sheet contact |
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US3964594A (en) * | 1972-12-01 | 1976-06-22 | Ing. C. Olivetti & C., S.P.A. | Keyboard of elastic material for office machines |
US4039068A (en) * | 1972-12-14 | 1977-08-02 | Ing. C. Olivetti & C., S.P.A. | Keyboard of elastic material for office machines |
US3789167A (en) * | 1972-12-20 | 1974-01-29 | Chomerics Inc | Multi-output level keyboard switch assembly with improved operator and contact structure |
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US3917917A (en) * | 1973-08-23 | 1975-11-04 | Alps Electric Co Ltd | Keyboard pushbutton switch assembly having multilayer contact and circuit structure |
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US4002892A (en) * | 1973-09-15 | 1977-01-11 | Zielinski Adolf H | Portable calculator |
US3862381A (en) * | 1973-10-29 | 1975-01-21 | Chomerics Inc | Keyboard switch assembly with multilayer, coextensive contactor means |
US3862382A (en) * | 1973-10-29 | 1975-01-21 | Chomerics Inc | Keyboards switch assembly with multilayer pattern contact means |
US3860771A (en) * | 1973-10-29 | 1975-01-14 | Chomerics Inc | Keyboard switch assembly with dome shaped actuator having associated underlying contactor means |
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US3908100A (en) * | 1974-03-25 | 1975-09-23 | Gen Signal Corp | Touch blend smooth surface switch assembly |
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US3930083A (en) * | 1974-07-26 | 1975-12-30 | Litton Systems Inc | Keyboard panel for an electric switch contact |
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US3944763A (en) * | 1974-11-01 | 1976-03-16 | Beierwaltes Richard R | Swimming pool touch pad |
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US4184321A (en) * | 1976-05-20 | 1980-01-22 | Kabushiki Kaisha Suwa Seikosha | Electronic wristwatch with calculator having improved conductive packing sheet switch element |
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US4201043A (en) * | 1976-07-16 | 1980-05-06 | Kabushiki Kaisha Suwa Seikosha | Wristwatch calculator imput key positioning assembly |
US4287394A (en) * | 1976-07-31 | 1981-09-01 | Wilhelm Ruf Kg | Keyboard switch assembly with printed circuit board |
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US4259551A (en) * | 1978-03-15 | 1981-03-31 | Citizen Watch Co., Ltd. | External operation device for electronic timepieces |
US4207443A (en) * | 1978-03-17 | 1980-06-10 | Mikado Precision Industries Ltd. | Key-operated switch and an assemblage of such switches for electronic desk calculators or the like |
US4261042A (en) * | 1978-03-28 | 1981-04-07 | Canon Kabushiki Kaisha | Key signal entering device for thin electronic apparatus |
US4234813A (en) * | 1978-04-10 | 1980-11-18 | Toray Industries, Inc. | Piezoelectric or pyroelectric polymer input element for use as a transducer in keyboards |
US4228329A (en) * | 1978-06-26 | 1980-10-14 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Compact keyboard structure |
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FR2441256A1 (en) * | 1978-11-08 | 1980-06-06 | Nissan Motor | ILLUSTRATED SWITCHING DEVICE |
US4258096A (en) * | 1978-11-09 | 1981-03-24 | Sheldahl, Inc. | Composite top membrane for flat panel switch arrays |
FR2446535A1 (en) * | 1979-01-10 | 1980-08-08 | Siemens Ag | Elasticised contact material for relay spring set - has flexible contact with ingrained conductor on changeover spring set |
US4317012A (en) * | 1979-04-26 | 1982-02-23 | Nissan Motor Company, Limited | Display board type switching device |
US4347504A (en) * | 1979-08-24 | 1982-08-31 | Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. | Device for detecting a burnt-out fuse |
US4314227A (en) * | 1979-09-24 | 1982-02-02 | Eventoff Franklin Neal | Electronic pressure sensitive transducer apparatus |
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US4375018A (en) * | 1980-06-16 | 1983-02-22 | Sheldahl, Inc. | Membrane switch having adhesive label as edge seal |
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US4350857A (en) * | 1980-10-03 | 1982-09-21 | Allen-Bradley Company | Illuminated industrial membrane switch |
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