EP0848356A1 - Substrate comprising magnetic particles, security document and method for detecting them - Google Patents
Substrate comprising magnetic particles, security document and method for detecting them Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- EP0848356A1 EP0848356A1 EP96402721A EP96402721A EP0848356A1 EP 0848356 A1 EP0848356 A1 EP 0848356A1 EP 96402721 A EP96402721 A EP 96402721A EP 96402721 A EP96402721 A EP 96402721A EP 0848356 A1 EP0848356 A1 EP 0848356A1
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- Prior art keywords
- magnetic
- substrate
- anyone
- particles
- ranging
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- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
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- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07F—COIN-FREED OR LIKE APPARATUS
- G07F7/00—Mechanisms actuated by objects other than coins to free or to actuate vending, hiring, coin or paper currency dispensing or refunding apparatus
- G07F7/08—Mechanisms actuated by objects other than coins to free or to actuate vending, hiring, coin or paper currency dispensing or refunding apparatus by coded identity card or credit card or other personal identification means
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07D—HANDLING OF COINS OR VALUABLE PAPERS, e.g. TESTING, SORTING BY DENOMINATIONS, COUNTING, DISPENSING, CHANGING OR DEPOSITING
- G07D7/00—Testing specially adapted to determine the identity or genuineness of valuable papers or for segregating those which are unacceptable, e.g. banknotes that are alien to a currency
- G07D7/04—Testing magnetic properties of the materials thereof, e.g. by detection of magnetic imprint
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a method and an apparatus for detecting the presence of particles in a substrate the base material of which has electromagnetic properties substantially differing from the corresponding electromagnetic properties of the particles.
- the invention also relates to the particles and to the substrate comprising such particles which allow to recognise easily a document as being a genuine security document in order to prevent the document from being copied or in order to contribute to its authentication.
- the invention is intended primarily to be used in the identification or authentication of all type of security documents having a paper or synthetic base material such as bank notes, cheques, passports, credit-cards, tickets, lottery-tickets and bonds which comprise the above particles, but it is also applicable to other applications in which objects need to be recognised.
- the prior art has also proposed to add to the fibrous structure of the base material of the substrate or to the surface of the document one or more security elements allowing the identification and/or making difficult the manufacturing of the document.
- US-A-4 114 032 (priority date 1973) and US-A-4 218 674 (filing date 1975) disclose a similar system where the security documents have fibres which are coated with a magnetic or magnetizable material embedded therein.
- the mere presence of the magnetic fibres inside the security documents is tested or, as an improved feature, the distribution of the magnetic fibres in the security document is measured so that every single security document can be given a unique mark.
- EP-A-0 625 766, EP-A-0 632 398 and EP-A-0 656 607 disclose a system where the fibres consist of magnetic powder as core of a polymer sheath. Magnetic detection is done by DC current used to excite a coil. Because of magnetic prehistory or disturbing of magnetic fields or deformations of the security documents, however, the repetitivity of such a magnetic scanning system is not ensured and accurate discrimination between genuine security documents and counterfeit documents is not always guaranteed. So detection is not always distinctive. Furthermore, if characters on the security document have been printed by means of a magnetic ink which is detectable by means of a sorting apparatus, there may be interference between the magnetic fibres and the magnetic ink of the characters.
- FR 2 425 937 discloses a method of dispersing metallic fibres, more particularly stainless steel fibres, inside the fibrous structure of paper in order to allow the identification by means of microwaves.
- US-A-4 820 912 discloses an alternative system where the security documents comprise randomly distributed electrically conductive fibres.
- the unique distribution of the fibres inside the security document can be obtained. Up to 64 320 different possible combinations of the mark characterising this distribution can be obtained.
- Application of this microwave technique to reproduction apparatus such as photocopying apparatus in order to prevent security documents from being copied, such as disclosed in WO-A- 95/24000 (priority date 1994) fails to distinguish security documents from printed circuit boards (PCB's) or from greeting cards having decorative metal foils on its surface.
- PCB's printed circuit boards
- greeting cards having decorative metal foils on its surface.
- the system does not discover the presence of the fibres if a metal plate is put above a genuine security document.
- a method for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles in a substrate the base material of which has magnetic properties substantially differing from the corresponding magnetic properties of the elongated particles.
- the base material is made of a non-magnetic material.
- the elongated particles have such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably 1/1000.
- Their cross-sectional diameter is smaller than 30 micrometer and their magnetic saturation field H s ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m.
- the method comprises following steps :
- EAS electronic article surveillance
- the signals which can be obtained from this approach are very distinctive and the electronics and signal processing can be straight forward.
- EAS systems have been disclosed in an extensive way in the patent literature. Some examples are FR 763 681 (filing date 1933), US-A-3 631 442 (filing date 1967), US 3 990 065 (filing date 1975) and EP-A-0 153 286 (priority date 1984).
- anti-theft labels are used to trigger alarms at the exit areas of shops if the products have not been offered at the pay-desk.
- the exit area of a shop is much larger than the volume required for detection of magnetic elongated particles in security documents.
- a typical exit gate has a width of about 1 m, while in the present invention distances of only a few cm between the magnetic field and the magnetic elongated particles are sufficient to perform the detection. This basic difference leads to a number of properties which are different for application of the present invention :
- the method comprises the additional step of :
- a detection apparatus for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles in a substrate the base material of which has magnetic properties substantially differing from the corresponding magnetic properties of the elongated particles.
- the base material is made of a non-magnetic material.
- the elongated particles have such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000. Their cross-sectional diameter is smaller than 30 micrometer and their magnetic saturation field H s ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m.
- the apparatus comprises :
- the apparatus according to the second aspect of the present invention can be used in automatic vending machines, bank note counting machines and reproduction apparatus.
- a magnetic elongated particle for being incorporated in a base material of a s0ubstrate where the base material has magnetic properties differing substantially from the corresponding magnetic properties of the particle.
- the base material is made of a non-magnetic material.
- the particle has such a long and thin form that its demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000.
- the diameter of the particle i.e. its maximum cross-sectional dimension
- N [ln (2p - 1)]/p 2 where p is the length to diameter ratio.
- N is equal to 1/22000.
- the magnetic saturation flux B s of the magnetic elongated particle ranges from 0.1 to 1 Tesla, preferably from 0.1 to 0.5 Tesla.
- the magnetic dynamic permeability ⁇ r ' of the magnetic elongated particle ranges from 100 to 10000.
- the magnetic dynamic permeability ⁇ r ' is herein defined as the ratio of the saturation flux B s to the magnetic field Hs at saturation multiplied by the constant ⁇ o or, if the elongated particles do not saturate, the same ratio at the maximum field used in the magnetometer (1000 A/m).
- magnetic elongated particle refer to an elongated particle itself made of a magnetic material and possibly being coated or encapsulated with a non-magnetic material or to a elongated particle being made of a non-magnetic material being coated or encapsulated with a magnetic material.
- the thickness of the coating may range from 1 to 5 micrometer.
- the magnetic material can be made starting from an alloy comprising components chosen among Fe, Co, Cr, Ni, Cu, Mo, Mn, Nb, B, V, Si and P and more particularly Ni, Fe, Mo, Mn, Cu.
- Soft magnetic materials have been disclosed for example in EP-A-0 295 028 and in US-A-4 298 262.
- a suitable alloy composition responds to the general formula : Ni a Fe b C o Cr c Cu e Mo f Mn g P h Nb i B j V k Si l wherein a to l represent integers.
- alloy compositions have 52 to 85 % of nickel (Ni) and varying amounts of other components and more particularly 5 to 20 % of Fe.
- compositions are:
- compositions are commercialised under names as ⁇ -metal, Permafi, Permalloy, Supermalloy, Vitrovac and Metglas.
- non-magnetic and non-metallic material glass, carbon or synthetic material such as polymers especially polypropylene and polyethylene can be mentioned.
- the elongated particle is a fibre which can be a metallic fibre, or a non-metallic fibre coated with a magnetic substance.
- the fibres can be uniformly distributed all over the substrate and therefore not easily missed by the detection system.
- the fibres can be uniformly and individually dispersed inside the base material of the substrate in order to prevent the formation of agglomerates of fibres.
- Magnetic fibres inside the fibrous structure of the paper may form a magnetic "mass" which is at least double as great as the magnetic mass of the characters in magnetic ink and may confuse completely the lecture of these characters. Additionally, since the fibres are dispersed inside the substrate, they are not easily removable by the counterfeiters who would like to remove them before making a photocopy and reinstate them inside the substrate after photocopy thereof.
- the fibres are preferably hard drawn or work hardened metal fibres, e.g. manufactured according to the technique of bundled-drawing which is well known as such. This manufacturing technique has the advantage of yielding a much higher production rate than hot melt production techniques.
- the inventors have found that the effective permeability of the hard drawn fibres can be doubled by annealing. This skill keeps the saturation field Hs sufficiently high, but makes the fibres more sensitive.
- the magnetic elongated particles may also be amorphous metal fibres.
- a substrate comprising a base material and elongated particles inside the base material.
- the magnetic properties of the elongated particles differ from the corresponding magnetic properties of the base material.
- the base material is made of a non-magnetic material.
- the elongated particles have such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000. Their diameter is smaller than 30 micrometer and their magnetic saturation field ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m.
- the base material is a non-magnetic material such as a fibrous structure like paper, paper or plastic.
- the particles have a magnetic saturation flux ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla preferably from 0.1 to 0.5 Tesla and a magnetic dynamic permeability ⁇ r ' ranging from 100 to 10000.
- the magnetic elongated particles have a D.C. magnetic remanence smaller than 0.3 Tesla.
- the magnetic elongated particles, especially the fibres have a mean cross-sectional diameter ranging from 1 to 30 micrometer particularly from 5 to 15 micrometer and a length ranging from 1 to 20 mm, preferably from 2 to 10 mm.
- the elongated particles are hard drawn or work hardened metal fibres, but can also be amorphous metal fibres.
- the magnetic elongated particles can be made of an alloy comprising components chosen among Ni, Fe, Cu, Cr, Co, Mo, Mn, Nb, B, V, Si and P, and more particularly Fe, Ni, Mo, Mn, Cu.
- the base material of the substrate can be made of paper or of a synthetic material, especially plastic as polypropylene or polyethylene.
- the magnetic particles can also be made of magnetic and non-magnetic material.
- the substrate according to the fourth aspect of the present invention has a quantity of magnetic elongated particles ranging from 0.1 to 5 per cent, most preferably from 0.5 to 1.5 per cent by weight relative to the weight of said substrate.
- the elongated particles, especially the fibres have a colour near to the colour of the base material.
- a covering or a coating providing to the fibres the wished colour.
- a method of depositing such a coating has been disclosed in French patent application FR 95 02868 and in international application PCT/FR/96 00390.
- the present invention provides security documents comprising said magnetic elongated particles uniformly dispersed inside said substrate, said substrate comprising a paper or plastic sheet. More particularly the magnetic elongated particles are made of metallic fibres, the quantity of magnetic fibres in said substrate ranging from 0,2 to 2 %, the substrate being a paper sheet, especially of 20 to 300 ⁇ m of thickness, preferably banknotes of 80 to 120 ⁇ m.
- Reference number 10 in FIGURE 1 refers to a B-H curve of an EAS label which can be designated as "very soft magnetic". It is characterised by a very low saturation field H s and a rather high level of magnetic dynamic permeability.
- Reference number 12 refers to a B-H curve of a magnetic elongated particle which is to be embedded in a substrate according to the present invention. Although being also a soft magnetic material, it is not that "very soft" as is an EAS label. The saturation field H' s is higher and the corresponding values of an EAS label.
- Reference number 14 refers to the B-H curve of a mild steel plate clearly showing a saturation field H'' s that is much larger than H s and H' s .
- FIGURE 1 It will be clear from FIGURE 1 that the low magnetic fields applied in EAS systems to saturate the EAS labels do not saturate the magnetic particles according to the present invention and do not trigger the alarm systems in shops. It will also be clear from FIGURE 1 that magnetic fields applied in the present invention to saturate the magnetic particles are still in the linear part of a B-H curve of a mild steel and will not create the same series of higher harmonics. This difference can be used in order to discriminate between the two types of materials and even to detect the marker tag in the presence of large Ferro-magnetic objects.
- the magnetic metal fibre had an a.c. remanence of 0.3 Tesla in the measurement. In practice the d.c. remanence would be lower than this so that no significant electromagnetic noise signals are generated which interfere with other magnetic code systems. In particular, the fibres did not give any significant signal with a standard magnetic character reader reading characters made in magnetic inks. In other words, using the measurement method and definition of maximum residual signal levels as defined in the International Standard for magnetic ink character recognition, ISO 1004, the effect of remanent flux is acceptable.
- the base frequency and the detection frequency or frequencies can be selected to maximise the signal from the particular fibre marker and minimise signals from other common objects and signals generated from the apparatus in which the system is installed.
- the invention system provides a good discrimination between a security document with magnetic elongated particles and paper, books, hands, printed circuit boards, foil greeting cards, non metallic bindings of documents, spiral metal bindings of documents, paper clips, metal plates and photocopier lid materials.
- a security document lying under a non-magnetic metal plate could be easily identified (this in great contrast with a microwave system where the metal plate conceals the magnetic fibres for the microwaves).
- a suitable drive and detection circuit is shown in FIGURE 2.
- a resonant drive power oscillator 16 is used to minimise harmonic generation and the oscillator 16 is driven by a frequency which is divided down from the selected harmonic.
- the 19th harmonic of 20 kHz, at 380 kHz may be a good choice as it gives good signals from fibres with very small signals from common Ferro-magnetic materials such as mild steel.
- the oscillator 16 generates an electrical source signal which is fed to a drive coil 18 which transforms the electrical source signal into a magnetic drive signal.
- a detection coil 20 suitably arranged with respect to the drive coil 18, detects any field emanating from magnetic particles and transforms this into an electrical detection signal.
- a high pass filter 22 is used to reduce the fundamental frequency, as this can be coupled between the coils by conducting metals and overload the amplifiers.
- a phase sensitive detector 24 is used to provide good signal-to-noise ratio.
- Oscillator 26 operates at the frequency of the selected harmonic, and frequency divider 28 divides the frequency in order to obtain the base frequency.
- Other high harmonics are also suitable and it is an advantage to combine several to derive the final detection signal.
- FIGURE 3 illustrates how the drive coil 18 may be advantageously arranged with respect to the detection coil 20.
- the direction of the magnetic field generated by the drive coil is shown in hatched lines, except for that part of the magnetic field that goes through the detection coil 20, which is shown by means of arrows 30 and 32.
- Drive coil 18 and detection coil 20 partially overlap and are so arranged that the part of the magnetic flux which goes in one direction (arrow 30) through detection coil 20 is almost equal to the part of the flux which goes in the other direction (arrow 32) in order to null-out the drive field in the detection coil whilst providing a region above the overlapping coils in which the magnetic field is effective in coupling into the magnetic particles.
- An equivalent nulling effect could also be provided electronically by a negative feed back of a fundamental frequency.
- FIGURE 4, FIGURE 5 and FIGURE 6 all show embodiments of arrangement of drive coil and detection coil to be used in reproduction apparatus such as high-resolution colour photocopying apparatus.
- the arrangement is such that a bank note with a width of only 7 cm can be detected on a scanning area of 21 cm x 29.7 cm (if it comprises magnetic particles).
- FIGURE 4 four pairs of a drive coil 18 with a detection coil 20 are arranged on a suitable carrier 34 at regular distances along the width of the scanning area so that the presence of any genuine bank note will be detected irrespective of its position on the scanning area.
- a plurality of drive coils 18 and a plurality of detection coils 20 form a daisy chain wherein a drive coil 18 is alternated with a detection coil 20 and vice versa.
- the drive coil 18 takes the form of an elongated eight with the height of the eight equal to the width of the scanning area.
- the detection coil takes the form of an elongated ellipse with the length of the longitudinal axis equal to the width of the scanning area.
- Drive coil 18 and detection coil 20 are arranged one above the other so that here also the part of the magnetic flux which goes in one direction through detection coil 20 is almost equal to the part of the flux which goes in the other direction in order to null-out the drive field in the detection coil.
- FIGURE 6 shows for didactical reasons a drive coil 18 and a detection coil 20 at a distance apart from each other, but they are to be arranged next to one another.
- FIGURE 7 shows schematically an embodiment with only one drive coil 18 and four detection coils 20 so arranged that the drive magnetic field balances out in detection coils 20.
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Abstract
A method for detecting the presence of magnetic particles in a substrate the
base material of which has magnetic properties substantially differing from the
corresponding magnetic properties of the particles. The_particles have such a
long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1250, they
have a diameter smaller than 30 micrometer and a magnetic saturation field
ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m. The method comprising following steps :
Description
The present invention relates to a method and an apparatus for detecting the
presence of particles in a substrate the base material of which has
electromagnetic properties substantially differing from the corresponding
electromagnetic properties of the particles. The invention also relates to the
particles and to the substrate comprising such particles which allow to recognise
easily a document as being a genuine security document in order to prevent the
document from being copied or in order to contribute to its authentication.
The invention is intended primarily to be used in the identification or
authentication of all type of security documents having a paper or synthetic base
material such as bank notes, cheques, passports, credit-cards, tickets, lottery-tickets
and bonds which comprise the above particles, but it is also applicable to
other applications in which objects need to be recognised.
The prior art has already dealt in an extensive way with the identification of
security documents.
Some prior art solutions go in the direction of recognition of possible
characteristic patterns printed at the surface of some security documents.
In order to prevent genuine security documents from being falsely copied by
means of high-resolution colour photocopying apparatus, the prior art has also
proposed to add to the fibrous structure of the base material of the substrate or
to the surface of the document one or more security elements allowing the
identification and/or making difficult the manufacturing of the document.
US-A-4 114 032 (priority date 1973) and US-A-4 218 674 (filing date 1975)
disclose a similar system where the security documents have fibres which are
coated with a magnetic or magnetizable material embedded therein. The mere
presence of the magnetic fibres inside the security documents is tested or, as an
improved feature, the distribution of the magnetic fibres in the security document
is measured so that every single security document can be given a unique mark.
Up to 500 million different possible combinations may be obtained.
EP-A-0 625 766, EP-A-0 632 398 and EP-A-0 656 607 (all filing date in 1993)
disclose a system where the fibres consist of magnetic powder as core of a
polymer sheath. Magnetic detection is done by DC current used to excite a coil.
Because of magnetic prehistory or disturbing of magnetic fields or deformations
of the security documents, however, the repetitivity of such a magnetic scanning
system is not ensured and accurate discrimination between genuine security
documents and counterfeit documents is not always guaranteed. So detection
is not always distinctive.Moreover, if characters on the security document have
been printed by means of a magnetic ink which is detectable by means of a
sorting apparatus, there may be interference between the magnetic fibres and
the magnetic ink of the characters.
Other embodiments disclosed in the prior art are based on the detection of
particular electromagnetic properties of the security elements. FR 2 425 937
discloses a method of dispersing metallic fibres, more particularly stainless steel
fibres, inside the fibrous structure of paper in order to allow the identification by
means of microwaves.
US-A-4 820 912 (priority date 1985) discloses an alternative system where the
security documents comprise randomly distributed electrically conductive fibres.
By scanning the documents by means of microwaves the unique distribution of
the fibres inside the security document can be obtained. Up to 64320 different
possible combinations of the mark characterising this distribution can be
obtained. Application of this microwave technique to reproduction apparatus
such as photocopying apparatus in order to prevent security documents from
being copied, such as disclosed in WO-A- 95/24000 (priority date 1994) fails to
distinguish security documents from printed circuit boards (PCB's) or from
greeting cards having decorative metal foils on its surface. On the other hand,
the system does not discover the presence of the fibres if a metal plate is put
above a genuine security document. Particular cover lids of photocopying
apparatus or metallic parts in the neighbourhood of the photocopying apparatus,
may disturb the system. As a consequence, these systems are not completely
reliable.
The prior art has also provided a number of optical authentication systems. Some of them have been disclosed already in US-A-3 313 941 (filing date 1963) and in US-A-3 449 585 (filing date 1966). All optical systems, however, suffer from the major drawback that wear or damage or dirt on the surface of genuine security documents can cause the security documents as being no longer recognised as authentic.
The prior art has also provided a number of optical authentication systems. Some of them have been disclosed already in US-A-3 313 941 (filing date 1963) and in US-A-3 449 585 (filing date 1966). All optical systems, however, suffer from the major drawback that wear or damage or dirt on the surface of genuine security documents can cause the security documents as being no longer recognised as authentic.
It is an object of the present invention to avoid the drawbacks of the prior art.
It is another object of the present invention to provide for a robust recognition
system that allows to distinguish genuine security documents from other objects
or documents. It is also an object of the present invention to provide for a
system which prevents genuine security documents from being copied.
It is still an object of the present invention to provide for a system that does not
interfere with conventional magnetic character readers.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide for a substrate such as a
security document, more particularly a banknote, including security elements
easily detectable in an anti-photocopy system.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a method
for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles in a substrate the
base material of which has magnetic properties substantially differing from the
corresponding magnetic properties of the elongated particles. Preferably the
base material is made of a non-magnetic material. The elongated particles have
such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than
1/250, preferably 1/1000. Their cross-sectional diameter is smaller than 30
micrometer and their magnetic saturation field Hs ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m.
The terms "cross-sectional diameter" herein refer to the maximum cross-sectional
dimension. The method comprises following steps :
Using the non-linearity of the magnetisation properties of the labelling material,
i.e. the change in magnetic flux density B with applied magnetic field H as an
effective parameter for detection is a technique which is known as such in
electronic article surveillance (EAS) or anti-theft systems. The signals which can
be obtained from this approach are very distinctive and the electronics and
signal processing can be straight forward. EAS systems have been disclosed in
an extensive way in the patent literature. Some examples are FR 763 681 (filing
date 1933), US-A-3 631 442 (filing date 1967), US 3 990 065 (filing date 1975)
and EP-A-0 153 286 (priority date 1984).
A number of substantial differences between EAS systems and the present
invention are, however, apparent.
In EAS systems anti-theft labels are used to trigger alarms at the exit areas of
shops if the products have not been offered at the pay-desk. The exit area of a
shop is much larger than the volume required for detection of magnetic
elongated particles in security documents. A typical exit gate has a width of
about 1 m, while in the present invention distances of only a few cm between
the magnetic field and the magnetic elongated particles are sufficient to perform
the detection. This basic difference leads to a number of properties which are
different for application of the present invention :
In one embodiment of the present invention the method comprises the additional
step of :
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a
detection apparatus for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles
in a substrate the base material of which has magnetic properties substantially
differing from the corresponding magnetic properties of the elongated particles.
Preferably the base material is made of a non-magnetic material. The elongated
particles have such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is
smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000. Their cross-sectional
diameter is smaller than 30 micrometer and their magnetic saturation field Hs
ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m. The apparatus comprises :
The apparatus according to the second aspect of the present invention can be
used in automatic vending machines, bank note counting machines and
reproduction apparatus.
According to the third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a
magnetic elongated particle for being incorporated in a base material of a
s0ubstrate where the base material has magnetic properties differing
substantially from the corresponding magnetic properties of the particle.
Preferably the base material is made of a non-magnetic material. The particle
has such a long and thin form that its demagnetisation factor N is smaller than
1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000. The diameter of the particle (i.e. its
maximum cross-sectional dimension) is smaller than 30 micrometer, preferably
smaller than_15 micrometer, preferably ranging from 1 to 10 micrometer and its
magnetic saturation field Hs ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m.
The magnetic field strengh inside the material is given by
Hin = Happ - N x M
where M is the magnetisation of the material Happ is the applied magnetic field
and N is the demagnetisation factor.
With uniform magnetisation this reduction in the internal field strengh can be considered as a reduction in the apparent permeability form its true value of µ, which is the so-called bulk magnetic permeability or magnetic permeability of the material, to the magnetic dynamic permeability µr', where 1/µr = 1/µr ' - N or µr ' = µr / (1 + Nµr )
With uniform magnetisation this reduction in the internal field strengh can be considered as a reduction in the apparent permeability form its true value of µ, which is the so-called bulk magnetic permeability or magnetic permeability of the material, to the magnetic dynamic permeability µr', where
The effect of the reduction in permeability therefore causes the B-H loop to
shear into a shape which has a higher saturation field and lower remanence.
In case of a sphere, the demagnetisation factor N = 1/3. Whereas for long, thin
ellipsoids (approximating to cylinders represented by the elongated particles
such as fibres) N is given by :
N =[ln (2p - 1)]/p2 where p is the length to diameter ratio.
For a fibre of 8 micrometer diameter and 3 mm length, N is equal to 1/22000.
Based on these equations, if, as an example, we take a material with a bulk
permeability µr of 100000 then a sphere of identical material would appear to
have a magnetic dynamic permeability µr' approximately 6000 times smaller than
a fibre with the dimensions shown above. This will then have a direct effect on
the magnitude of the field required to saturate the material in each case. Thus
spheres, or powders of approximately spherical form would not be suitable for
the application described herein.
Preferably, the magnetic saturation flux Bs of the magnetic elongated particle
ranges from 0.1 to 1 Tesla, preferably from 0.1 to 0.5 Tesla.
Preferably the magnetic dynamic permeability µr' of the magnetic elongated
particle ranges from 100 to 10000. The magnetic dynamic permeability µr' is
herein defined as the ratio of the saturation flux Bs to the magnetic field Hs at
saturation multiplied by the constant µo or, if the elongated particles do not
saturate, the same ratio at the maximum field used in the magnetometer (1000
A/m).
The terms "magnetic elongated particle" refer to an elongated particle itself
made of a magnetic material and possibly being coated or encapsulated with a
non-magnetic material or to a elongated particle being made of a non-magnetic
material being coated or encapsulated with a magnetic material. The thickness
of the coating may range from 1 to 5 micrometer. The magnetic material can be
made starting from an alloy comprising components chosen among Fe, Co, Cr,
Ni, Cu, Mo, Mn, Nb, B, V, Si and P and more particularly Ni, Fe, Mo, Mn, Cu.
Soft magnetic materials have been disclosed for example in EP-A-0 295 028
and in US-A-4 298 262.
A suitable alloy composition responds to the general formula :
NiaFebCoCrcCueMofMngPhNbiBjVkSil
wherein a to l represent integers.
More particularly alloy compositions have 52 to 85 % of nickel (Ni) and varying
amounts of other components and more particularly 5 to 20 % of Fe.
Typical compositions are:
Some of these compositions are commercialised under names as µ-metal,
Permafi, Permalloy, Supermalloy, Vitrovac and Metglas.
As non-magnetic and non-metallic material, glass, carbon or synthetic material
such as polymers especially polypropylene and polyethylene can be mentioned.
According to a preferable embodiment of this third aspect of the present
invention, the elongated particle is a fibre which can be a metallic fibre, or a non-metallic
fibre coated with a magnetic substance.
The fibres can be uniformly distributed all over the substrate and therefore not easily missed by the detection system. Moreover, the fibres can be uniformly and individually dispersed inside the base material of the substrate in order to prevent the formation of agglomerates of fibres. Magnetic fibres inside the fibrous structure of the paper may form a magnetic "mass" which is at least double as great as the magnetic mass of the characters in magnetic ink and may confuse completely the lecture of these characters. Additionally, since the fibres are dispersed inside the substrate, they are not easily removable by the counterfeiters who would like to remove them before making a photocopy and reinstate them inside the substrate after photocopy thereof.
The fibres can be uniformly distributed all over the substrate and therefore not easily missed by the detection system. Moreover, the fibres can be uniformly and individually dispersed inside the base material of the substrate in order to prevent the formation of agglomerates of fibres. Magnetic fibres inside the fibrous structure of the paper may form a magnetic "mass" which is at least double as great as the magnetic mass of the characters in magnetic ink and may confuse completely the lecture of these characters. Additionally, since the fibres are dispersed inside the substrate, they are not easily removable by the counterfeiters who would like to remove them before making a photocopy and reinstate them inside the substrate after photocopy thereof.
The fibres are preferably hard drawn or work hardened metal fibres, e.g.
manufactured according to the technique of bundled-drawing which is well
known as such. This manufacturing technique has the advantage of yielding a
much higher production rate than hot melt production techniques. The inventors
have found that the effective permeability of the hard drawn fibres can be
doubled by annealing. This skill keeps the saturation field Hs sufficiently high,
but makes the fibres more sensitive.
The magnetic elongated particles may also be amorphous metal fibres.
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a
substrate comprising a base material and elongated particles inside the base
material. The magnetic properties of the elongated particles differ from the
corresponding magnetic properties of the base material. Prefeerably the base
material is made of a non-magnetic material. The elongated particles have such
a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250,
preferably smaller than 1/1000. Their diameter is smaller than 30 micrometer
and their magnetic saturation field ranges from 100 to 1000 A/m. Preferably the
base material is a non-magnetic material such as a fibrous structure like paper,
paper or plastic.
Preferably the particles have a magnetic saturation flux ranging from 0.1 to 1
Tesla preferably from 0.1 to 0.5 Tesla and a magnetic dynamic permeability µr'
ranging from 100 to 10000.
Summarizing, the combination of shape, composition and structure of the
magnetic elongated particles is such that
- the magnetic field required to achieve saturation of the flux density in the particle is sufficiently greater than that produced in EAS systems and sufficiently lower than that required to saturate hard ferromagnetic material such as iron, steel or plate, and
- the magnetic remanent flux is sufficiently lower than those of magnetic ink
used in the magnetic coding system as defined in the international standard for
magnetic ink character recognition ISO 1004.
These properties are fulfilled when the combination of shape, composition
or structure of the magnetic elongated particles is such that the elongated
particles have :
- i) a saturation field ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m ;
- ii) a saturation flux density ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla, preferably 0.1 to 0.5 Tesla ;
- iii) a magnetic dynamic relative permeability µr' ranging from 100 to 10000.
Preferably the magnetic elongated particles have a D.C. magnetic remanence
smaller than 0.3 Tesla.
The magnetic elongated particles, especially the fibres, have a mean cross-sectional
diameter ranging from 1 to 30 micrometer particularly from 5 to 15
micrometer and a length ranging from 1 to 20 mm, preferably from 2 to 10 mm.
Most preferably the elongated particles are hard drawn or work hardened metal
fibres, but can also be amorphous metal fibres.
The magnetic elongated particles can be made of an alloy comprising components chosen among Ni, Fe, Cu, Cr, Co, Mo, Mn, Nb, B, V, Si and P, and more particularly Fe, Ni, Mo, Mn, Cu.
The magnetic elongated particles can be made of an alloy comprising components chosen among Ni, Fe, Cu, Cr, Co, Mo, Mn, Nb, B, V, Si and P, and more particularly Fe, Ni, Mo, Mn, Cu.
The base material of the substrate can be made of paper or of a synthetic
material, especially plastic as polypropylene or polyethylene.
The magnetic particles can also be made of magnetic and non-magnetic
material.
Preferably the substrate according to the fourth aspect of the present invention,
has a quantity of magnetic elongated particles ranging from 0.1 to 5 per cent,
most preferably from 0.5 to 1.5 per cent by weight relative to the weight of said
substrate.
Preferably the elongated particles, especially the fibres have a colour near to
the colour of the base material. This can be realised by the deposit of a covering
or a coating providing to the fibres the wished colour. A method of depositing
such a coating has been disclosed in French patent application FR 95 02868
and in international application PCT/FR/96 00390.
The present invention provides security documents comprising said magnetic
elongated particles uniformly dispersed inside said substrate, said substrate
comprising a paper or plastic sheet. More particularly the magnetic elongated
particles are made of metallic fibres, the quantity of magnetic fibres in said
substrate ranging from 0,2 to 2 %, the substrate being a paper sheet, especially
of 20 to 300 µm of thickness, preferably banknotes of 80 to 120 µm.
The present invention will now be illustrated in more detail with reference to the
accompanying drawings wherein
- FIGURE 1 compares the B-H curve of a magnetic particle according to the invention with B-H curves of other objects ;
- FIGURE 2 schematically illustrates a configuration of a detection apparatus according to the present invention ;
- FIGURE 3 shows how a drive coil and a detection coil of an invention apparatus can be arranged ;
- FIGURE 4, FIGURE 5 and FIGURE 6 all illustrate embodiments of drive coil and detection coil for use in a reproduction apparatus.
It will be clear from FIGURE 1 that the low magnetic fields applied in EAS
systems to saturate the EAS labels do not saturate the magnetic particles
according to the present invention and do not trigger the alarm systems in
shops. It will also be clear from FIGURE 1 that magnetic fields applied in the
present invention to saturate the magnetic particles are still in the linear part of a
B-H curve of a mild steel and will not create the same series of higher
harmonics. This difference can be used in order to discriminate between the
two types of materials and even to detect the marker tag in the presence of
large Ferro-magnetic objects.
The following table shows an experimental comparison of actual markers and
examples of common magnetic objects measured in a magnetometer at
between 5 to 20 kHz.
Type of material + geometric dimensions | saturation flux Bs (Tesla) | saturation field Hs (A/m) | dynamic permeability µ r ' [B s /(µ 0 H s )] |
| 0.35 | 30 | 10000 |
paper clip | > 1000 | 60 | |
| >> 1000 | 30 | |
hard drawn magnetic metal fibre 3 mm length x 8 µm diameter | 0.55 | 600 | 730 |
The magnetic metal fibre had an a.c. remanence of 0.3 Tesla in the
measurement. In practice the d.c. remanence would be lower than this so that
no significant electromagnetic noise signals are generated which interfere with
other magnetic code systems. In particular, the fibres did not give any
significant signal with a standard magnetic character reader reading characters
made in magnetic inks. In other words, using the measurement method and
definition of maximum residual signal levels as defined in the International
Standard for magnetic ink character recognition, ISO 1004, the effect of
remanent flux is acceptable.
Experimental results show that it is possible to detect a good signal amplitude at
high harmonics from the fibre mentioned in the above table and that at high
frequencies there is very low interference from harmonics from the drive
electronics. With the small cross sectional area of the fibres the eddy current
losses are small up to quite high frequencies and the output signals are
increased by the fact that the detected voltage is proportional to the rate of
change of flux. With bulk ferromagnetic materials the eddy current losses are
much higher at high frequencies and so they don't generate very high
harmonics. Using a base frequency to sweep the fibres (which are
characterised in the table above) around their B-H loop at 20 kHz, and a peak
field greater than 600 A/m it was found that at frequencies between 100 kHz
and 1 MHz there was a stream of harmonics from the fibres and very much
smaller signals from other common electrically conducting objects including for
example aluminum or steel objects, plates and slabs, printed circuit boards and
metallic foil greeting cards. In practice the base frequency and the detection
frequency or frequencies can be selected to maximise the signal from the
particular fibre marker and minimise signals from other common objects and
signals generated from the apparatus in which the system is installed.
Tests carried out by the invention have proved that the invention system
provides a good discrimination between a security document with magnetic
elongated particles and paper, books, hands, printed circuit boards, foil greeting
cards, non metallic bindings of documents, spiral metal bindings of documents,
paper clips, metal plates and photocopier lid materials. A security document
lying under a non-magnetic metal plate could be easily identified (this in great
contrast with a microwave system where the metal plate conceals the magnetic
fibres for the microwaves).
A suitable drive and detection circuit is shown in FIGURE 2. A resonant drive
power oscillator 16 is used to minimise harmonic generation and the oscillator
16 is driven by a frequency which is divided down from the selected harmonic.
As an example, the inventors have found that, amongst other harmonics, the
19th harmonic of 20 kHz, at 380 kHz may be a good choice as it gives good
signals from fibres with very small signals from common Ferro-magnetic
materials such as mild steel. The oscillator 16 generates an electrical source
signal which is fed to a drive coil 18 which transforms the electrical source signal
into a magnetic drive signal. A detection coil 20 suitably arranged with respect
to the drive coil 18, detects any field emanating from magnetic particles and
transforms this into an electrical detection signal. A high pass filter 22 is used to
reduce the fundamental frequency, as this can be coupled between the coils by
conducting metals and overload the amplifiers. A phase sensitive detector 24 is
used to provide good signal-to-noise ratio. Oscillator 26 operates at the
frequency of the selected harmonic, and frequency divider 28 divides the
frequency in order to obtain the base frequency. Other high harmonics are also
suitable and it is an advantage to combine several to derive the final detection
signal.
FIGURE 3 illustrates how the drive coil 18 may be advantageously arranged with
respect to the detection coil 20. The direction of the magnetic field generated by
the drive coil is shown in hatched lines, except for that part of the magnetic field
that goes through the detection coil 20, which is shown by means of arrows 30
and 32. Drive coil 18 and detection coil 20 partially overlap and are so arranged
that the part of the magnetic flux which goes in one direction (arrow 30) through
detection coil 20 is almost equal to the part of the flux which goes in the other
direction (arrow 32) in order to null-out the drive field in the detection coil whilst
providing a region above the overlapping coils in which the magnetic field is
effective in coupling into the magnetic particles. An equivalent nulling effect
could also be provided electronically by a negative feed back of a fundamental
frequency.
FIGURE 4, FIGURE 5 and FIGURE 6 all show embodiments of arrangement of
drive coil and detection coil to be used in reproduction apparatus such as high-resolution
colour photocopying apparatus. The arrangement is such that a bank
note with a width of only 7 cm can be detected on a scanning area of 21 cm x
29.7 cm (if it comprises magnetic particles).
According to FIGURE 4, four pairs of a drive coil 18 with a detection coil 20 are
arranged on a suitable carrier 34 at regular distances along the width of the
scanning area so that the presence of any genuine bank note will be detected
irrespective of its position on the scanning area.
In the embodiment of FIGURE 5 a plurality of drive coils 18 and a plurality of
detection coils 20 form a daisy chain wherein a drive coil 18 is alternated with a
detection coil 20 and vice versa.
In the embodiment of FIGURE 6 the drive coil 18 takes the form of an elongated
eight with the height of the eight equal to the width of the scanning area. The
detection coil takes the form of an elongated ellipse with the length of the
longitudinal axis equal to the width of the scanning area. Drive coil 18 and
detection coil 20 are arranged one above the other so that here also the part of
the magnetic flux which goes in one direction through detection coil 20 is almost
equal to the part of the flux which goes in the other direction in order to null-out
the drive field in the detection coil. FIGURE 6 shows for didactical reasons a
drive coil 18 and a detection coil 20 at a distance apart from each other, but they
are to be arranged next to one another.
FIGURE 7 shows schematically an embodiment with only one drive coil 18 and
four detection coils 20 so arranged that the drive magnetic field balances out in
detection coils 20.
Claims (32)
- A substrate comprising a base material and elongated particles inside said base material, the magnetic properties of said particles differing from the corresponding magnetic properties of said base material, the particles having such a long and thin form that their demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000, their diameter being smaller than 30 micrometer and their magnetic saturation field ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m.
- A substrate according to claim 1 wherein said elongated particles have a magnetic saturation flux ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla.
- A substrate according to claim 1 or 2 wherein said elongated particles have a magnetic dynamic permeability µr' ranging from 100 to 10000.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 3 wherein said base material is made of paper or plastic.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 4 wherein the combination of shape, composition and structure of the magnetic particles is such that they have :i) a saturation field ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m ;ii) a saturation flux density ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla ;iii) a dynamic relative permeability ranging from 100 to 10000.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 5 wherein said particle has a D.C. magnetic remanence which is smaller than 0.3 Tesla.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 6 wherein said elongated magnetic particles are made of a magnetic material, or a non-magnetic material being coated or encapsulated with a magnetic material.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 7 wherein the magnetic elongated particles have a mean cross-sectional diameter ranging from 1 to 30 micrometer and a length ranging from 1 to 20 mm.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 8 wherein the quantity of magnetic elongated particles in said substrate ranges from 0.1 to 5 per cent by weight relative to the weight of said substrate.
- A substrate according to claim 1 to 9 wherein said particles are hard drawn or work hardened metal fibres.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 9 wherein said particles are amorphous metal fibres.
- A substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 11 wherein said magnetic articles are made of an alloy comprising components chosen among Fe, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Mo, Mn, Nb, Si, V, B, and P.
- A substrate according to claim 12 wherein the said alloy comprises components chosen among Ni, Fe, Cu, Mo and Mn.
- A security document comprising a substrate as claimed in claims 1 to 13.
- An antiphotocopy security document according to claim 14 comprising said magnetic elongated particles uniformly dispersed inside said substrate, said substrate comprising a paper or plastic sheet.
- A security document comprising a substrate as claimed in claims 1 to 15 wherein the magnetic elongated particles are made of metallic fibres, the quantity of magnetic fibres in said substrate ranging from 0,2 to 2 %, the substrate being a paper sheet.
- A method for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles in a substrate according to anyone of claims 1 to 16, said method comprising following steps :(a) emitting an electromagnetic source signal of one or more particular base frequencies to said substrate so that any present magnetic elongated particles go into a non-linear part of their B-H curve for at least part of a cycle of the source signal ;(b) detecting an electromagnetic detection signal emanating from said substrate ;(c) testing the detection signal for the presence of particular higher harmonics of said base frequencies or of any linear combination of said base frequencies as well as the harmonics, said particular higher harmonics being indicative of the presence of said magnetic particles.
- A method according to claim 17 wherein said source signal has only one base frequency.
- A method according to claim 18 wherein said base frequency is higher than kHz.
- A method according to anyone of claims 17 to 19 wherein said particular higher harmonics have a frequency higher than 10 kHz.
- A method according to claim 20 wherein said particular higher harmonics are of the order of ten or higher.
- A method according to claim 20 or 21 wherein sait particular higher harmonics is of the order of 19 and has a frequency of 380 kHz.
- A method according to anyone of claims 17 to 22 wherein, in addition to said electromagnetic source signal, microwaves are emitted to said substrate to detect the presence of any present magnetic elongated particles.
- A method according to anyone of the preceding claims wherein said method comprises the following additional step :d) generating a signal which prevents from taking a true copy in case said particular harmonics are present.
- A magnetic elongated particle for being incorporated in a base material of a substrate with magnetic properties differing substantially from the corresponding magnetic properties of said particle, said particle having such a long and thin form that its demagnetisation factor N is smaller than 1/250, preferably smaller than 1/1000, a diameter being smaller than 30 micrometer and a magnetic saturation field ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m.
- A magnetic particle according to claim 25 wherein said particle has a magnetic saturation flux ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla.
- A magnetic particle according to claims 25 to 26 wherein said particle has a magnetic dynamic permeability µr' ranging from 100 to 10000.
- A magnetic particle according to anyone of claims 25 to 27 wherein the combination of shape, composition and structure of the magnetic particle is such that they have :i) a saturation field ranging from 100 to 1000 A/m ;ii) a saturation flux density ranging from 0.1 to 1 Tesla ;iii) a dynamic relative permeability ranging from 100 to 10000.
- A magnetic particle according to anyone of claims 25 to 27 wherein said magnetic particle is made of a magnetic material or a non-magnetic material coated or encapsulated with a magnetic material.
- A magnetic particle according to anyone of claims 25 to 28 wherein said magnetic particle has a mean cross-sectional diameter ranging from 1 to 30 micrometer and a length ranging from 1 to 20 mm.
- A magnetic particle according to anyone of claims 25 to 30 wherein said magnetic material is made of an alloy comprising components chosen among Fe, Co, Cr, Ni, Cu, Mo, Mn, Nb, Si, V, B, and P.
- A magnetic particle according to anyone of claims 25 to 31 wherein said particle has a D.C. magnetic remanence smaller than 0.3 Tesla.
Priority Applications (25)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP96402721A EP0848356A1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1996-12-12 | Substrate comprising magnetic particles, security document and method for detecting them |
US08/987,047 US5992741A (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-10 | Magnetic detection of security articles |
ARP970105815A AR009662A1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-11 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, A SUBSTRATE THAT INCLUDES SUCH PARTICLES, A SECURITY DOCUMENT, SECURITY ARTICLE AND A METHOD FOR PARTICULAR DETECTARTALS |
IDW980062A ID20296A (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, SUBTRATES CONSIST OF SUCH PARTICLES, SECURITY DOCUMENTS AND METHODS FOR DETECTING SUCH PARTICLES |
AT97954829T ATE217721T1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, SUBSTRATE CONTAINING SUCH PARTICLES, SAFETY DOCUMENT AND METHOD FOR DETECTING SUCH PARTICLES |
PL328599A PL191795B1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate containing such particles, piece of securities incorporating such substrate and method of detecting such particles |
CZ982517A CZ251798A3 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate in which the particles are comprised, valuable document and method of detecting such particles |
BRPI9707632-5A BR9707632B1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | substrate, process for detecting the presence of magnetic elongated particles in a substrate and magnetic elongated particle. |
AU62063/98A AU732892B2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
CA002246304A CA2246304C (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
SI9730364T SI0897569T1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
EP97954829A EP0897569B1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
JP52625698A JP4467646B2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, sheets containing such particles, protective documents and methods for detecting such particles |
PT97954829T PT897569E (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, SUBSTRATE UNDERSTANDING THE PARTICLES CONCERNED, SAFETY DOCUMENT AND PROCESS OF DETECTING THE PARTICLES MENTIONED |
DE69712614T DE69712614T2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, SUBSTRATE CONTAINING SUCH PARTICLES, SECURITY DOCUMENT AND METHOD FOR DETECTING SUCH PARTICLES |
TR1998/01561T TR199801561T1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | The method of detecting magnetic particles, the substrate containing these particles, the secure document and such particles. |
PCT/EP1997/007340 WO1998026379A2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
RU98117129/12A RU2200977C2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, base containing such particles, protected document, and method for detecting such particles |
ES97954829T ES2176817T3 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | MAGNETIC PARTICLES, SUBSTRATE THAT INCLUDES SUCH PARTICLES, SECURITY DOCUMENT AND PROCEDURE TO DETECT SUCH PARTICLES. |
UA98094783A UA64709C2 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Method and device for detecting test particles in a document substrate; test particles and a document test particle-containing substrate for determining the genuineness of the document |
CNB971922276A CN100403342C (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
SK1061-98A SK285298B6 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
HU9902281A HU225074B1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrate comprising such particles, security document and method for detecting such particles |
DK97954829T DK0897569T3 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1997-12-12 | Magnetic particles, substrates with such particles, safety document and method for detecting such particles |
JP2009184152A JP2009277244A (en) | 1996-12-12 | 2009-08-07 | Magnetic particles, sheet which contains such particles, protection document, and method for detecting such particles |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP96402721A EP0848356A1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1996-12-12 | Substrate comprising magnetic particles, security document and method for detecting them |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP0848356A1 true EP0848356A1 (en) | 1998-06-17 |
Family
ID=8225342
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
EP96402721A Withdrawn EP0848356A1 (en) | 1996-12-12 | 1996-12-12 | Substrate comprising magnetic particles, security document and method for detecting them |
Country Status (2)
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EP (1) | EP0848356A1 (en) |
AR (1) | AR009662A1 (en) |
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AR009662A1 (en) | 2000-04-26 |
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