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| United States Patent | 4004133 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4004133.html |
| Inventor(s) | Hannan; William James (Palm Beach Gardens, FL);
Fulcher; Edwin Maxwell (Lake Park, FL);
Rhodes; Randy Deleon (Palm Beach Gardens, FL);
Saenz; Robert George (Palm Beach, FL) |
| Abstract | An article such as a plastic credit card contains concealed identifying
information. The information is in the form of a series of binary
information bits and it is stored in an electronic serial memory. The
memory is on an integrated circuit chip imbedded in the credit card with
electrical connections to two terminals on opposite surfaces of the card.
The stored information bits are read out from the credit card by an
apparatus which supplies current to the terminals to energize readout from
the serial memory. The information bits read out are in the form of
sequential variations in the current flowing to the credit card which are
detected and accumulated in a shift register for utilization by a display
device or a computer. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4004133 |
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Credit card containing electronic circuit |
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| Publication Date |
January 18, 1977 |
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| Filing Date |
December 30, 1974 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
sector:
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| Market Share |
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Estimate the percentage of the relevant market sector this invention will capture:
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An article adapted to be carried on the person of an individual and
containing concealed identifying information, comprising
an insulating substrate provided with visible indicia,
an electronic serial memory storing an identifying binary value imbedded in
said substrate, said serial memory including a counter, a decoder
responsive to the output of said counter, and a plurality of bit-storage
circuits each storing a 1 or a 0 information bit and being responsive
sequentially to the output of said decoder, and
electrical terminals on at least one surface of said substrate connected to
said memory for the application of an energizing current from an external
power source to the memory.
2. An article as defined in claim 1 wherein said substrate is a credit
card.
3. An article as defined in claim 1 wherein said electrical terminals are
solely two in number located on two opposite surfaces of said substrate,
said bit-storage circuits when sequentially energized causing sequential
information-bearing variations in said energizing current.
4. An article as defined in claim 1 wherein said memory is a read-only
memory.
5. An article as defined in claim 1 wherein said counter is an address
counter responsive to the output of an oscillator, and said bit-storage
circuits are transistor circuits.
6. An article as defined in claim 5 wherein said memory includes an
oscillator having its output coupled to said address counter.
7. An article as defined in claim 5 wherein said transistor circuits each
store a binary bit represented by the condition of a fusible link.
8. An article as defined in claim 5 wherein said transistors are connected
across two of said electrical terminals.
9. An article as defined in claim 1, and means to read out the identifying
binary number, comprising
means connecting a power supply to said terminals on the substrate of said
article to energize said serial memory, and
means connected to said terminals to detect binary information bits read
out serially from said memory.
10. The combination as defined in claim 9 wherein said means to detect the
information read from the memory comprises means to detect changes in the
power supply current supplied to the article.
11. The combination as defined in claim 10, and in addition, a shift
register receptive to said means to detect binary information bits read
out serially from the memory, to accumulate and store the bits.
12. A system useful for personal identification and credit purposes,
comprising
an article adapted to be carried by an individual and comprising an
insulating substrate containing two surface terminals connected to an
imbedded electronic serial memory storing an identifying binary value,
said electronic serial memory including an address counter responsive to a
clock pulse wave, a decoder responsive to the address counter, and
transistor bit-storage circuits connected to said terminals and responsive
sequentially to the output of the decoder, and
means to read out the binary value from the serial memory comprising means
to supply an electric current through said surface terminals to energize
said memory, and means to detect said stored information as changes in
said electric current.
13. The combination as defined in claim 12 wherein said means to read out
the binary value includes an oscillator supplying a clock pulse wave
superimposed on said electric supply current, and wherein said article
includes means to derive a clock pulse wave from said electric supply
current and supply it to said address counter. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Credit cards are now fully accepted and widely used for facilitating
purchases on credit of goods and services. The credit card identifies the
bearer by name and by the number of his account to which purchases will be
charged. The name and account number are represented by raised or embossed
letters and numbers on the plastic card. This information is customarily
recorded on a sales slip by means of a pressure printing device. Checks on
the validity of the credit card, and the entering of the sales information
into a computer system, generally have required the sales person to read
the embossed information from the card and communicate the information to
a central point by telephone or by manually operating a computer terminal
keyboard. This results in human errors and delays which contribute to
inefficiency and customer dissatisfaction.
There is a clear need for a fast and reliable apparatus for automatically
sensing the information on a credit card and communicating the information
to a central accounting computer. To this end card readers have been
proposed which employ mechanical fingers, or optical beams or focused
accoustic waves to sense the raised letters and numbers on the card. Other
proposed systems involve credit cards with holograms, or surface
corrugations, or magnetic inserts, or holes, or resistors arranged to
represent the identifying information.
The most important characteristic of a credit card system is that the
reading of information from the card be accurate. A second desirable
characteristic is that the cards should be relatively counterfeit proof. A
third desirable characteristic may be that the card should contain at
least some concealed information known only to the card owner which can be
used to verify that the bearer of the card is the legitimate owner of the
card. Finally, it is desirable that readout of stored information not
require a carefully controlled progressive movement of the card relative
to the reading apparatus.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A credit card or article includes an electronic serial memory embedded in
an insulating material with at least two exposed electrical terminals. The
serial memory stores an identifying binary number which is read out from
the terminals when an energizing current is supplied to the terminals.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIGS. 1A and 1B show opposite sides of a credit card having an embedded
electronic serial memory storing identifying binary information;
FIG. 2 is a fragmentary sectional view taken on the line 2--2 of FIG. 1B;
FIG. 3 is a diagram of the electronic circuits constituting the serial
memory embedded in the card of FIG. 1 and also included in FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a diagram of the electronic circuits included in a card reader
for reading out and accumulating the identifying binary information stored
in a serial memory embedded in a credit card;
FIG. 5 is a diagram of alternative electronic circuits, not including an
oscillator, for use in a credit card;
FIG. 6 is a diagram of electronic circuits, including an oscillator, for
use in a card reader responding to cards of the type shown in FIG. 5; and
FIG. 7 is a chart of waveforms which will be referred to in describing the
operation of the system of FIGS. 5 and 6.
DESCRIPTION OF FIGS. 1 THROUGH 4
Referring now in greater detail to FIGS. 1A and 1B, there is shown a credit
card including a plastic insulating substrate 10 having dimensions of a
standard credit card which are about 86 mm .times. 54 mm .times. 1 mm. The
area 12 of the card may have a standard thickness with raised or embossed
indicia. The area 14 of the card may have a thickness greater than the
thickness of area 12 and equal to or less than the thickness of the card
plus the embossed indicia. An electronic serial memory assembly 16 is
embedded in the thick area 14 of the card with exposed electrical
terminals 18 and 20.
FIG. 2 is a sectional view showing the electronic serial memory assembly of
hybrid package 16 embedded in the plastic insulating substrate 10. The
package consists of an integrated circuit chip 22 mounted on a ceramic
substrate 24. The chip 22 may be a C/MOS field effect transistor
integrated circuit chip having a solder or gold bump 26 fused to a thick
film metalization path 28 on the ceramic substrate 24, which is in turn in
contact with the terminal 20 exposed on one side of the credit card. The
chip 22 has another solder or gold bump 30 fused to a thick film
metalization path 32 extending from the top side of the ceramic substrate
24 and through an aperture therein to the opposite side of the ceramic
substrate where it makes contact with the terminal 18 exposed on the other
side of the credit card. The memory assembly or hybrid package may be
embedded in the thermoplastic credit card substrate 10 at the time that
the card is molded.
FIG. 3 shows the electronic read-only serial memory circuit on the
integrated circuit chip 22 in FIG. 2. The serial memory includes a
plurality of N-channel MOS transistors Q1, Q2 . . . Qn each having a drain
electrode connected through a supply voltage bus 40 to terminal 20, and
having a source electrode connected through a respective fusible link L1,
L2, . . . Ln and through a ground or reference voltage bus 42 to terminal
18. Each binary information bit stored in the serial memory is determined
by the condition of a respective one of the fusible links L. Each link may
be left intact to represent a "1" bit, or may be fused or burned out to an
open circuit to represent a "0" bit. This initial programming or insertion
of stored information may be accomplished prior to assembly of the memory
in the plastic credit card, or may be accomplished by known apparatus
connected to the terminals 20 and 18 of the completed credit card.
Each field effect transistor Q1, Q2 . . . Qn has a gate electrode connected
to a respective output of a decoder 46. The decoder is connected to
receive output signals from the plural stages of a binary counter 48. The
counter in turn receives the output of an oscillator 50 over line 51. A
first output 52 of counter 48 is connected to the gate electrode of a
synchronizing field effect transistor Qs which has drain and source
electrodes connected to the supply voltage bus 40 and the reference
voltage bus 42. The decoder 46, counter 48 and oscillator 50 may have a
circuit diagram as shown in FIG. 5.
FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a card reader apparatus for reading out the
binary information bits stored in the credit card serial memory circuit
shown in FIG. 3. A power supply 56 supplies bias current through bus 40",
42" and through a current variation sensor 58 to bus 40', 42', which has
means for connection to the terminals 20, 18 and the bus 40, 42 in the
credit card. Transistions in the value of current are passed through the
current variation sensor 58 to the credit card and detected and applied
over line 59 as input pulses to a shift register 60. The operation of the
shift register is started and controlled over line 61 by a synchronizing
logic circuit 62 which receives a start bit over line 63, and data bits
over line 65, from the current sensor 58. The binary information
accumulated in the shift register 60 is transferred in bit serial or bit
parallel form over bus 69 to a utilization device 70 such as a display
terminal or a computer.
OPERATION OF FIGS. 1 THROUGH 4
In the operation of reading out the information stored in a credit card
according to the invention, the terminals 18, 20 of the credit card in
FIGS. 1, 2 and 3 are brought into contact with the terminals 18', 20' of
the card reader of FIG. 4. This permits current from the power supply 56
to flow to the card and energize the electronic serial memory therein. The
oscillator 50 is put into operation supplying pulses to the counter 48.
The counter output 52 is energized for a short time to render transistor
Q.sub.s momentarily conductive, so that a transition or fluctuation occurs
in the power supply current supplied to the memory in the card. This
current change is detected by the current variation sensor 58 which
conditions the shift register 60 to receive the subsequently read out
information bit.
The counter 48 in the serial memory counts in binary fashion producing
changing patterns of outputs on its plural output leads connected to the
decoder 46. The decoder senses the changing combinations of input signals
and sequentially energizes its outputs enabling transistors Q.sub.1,
Q.sub.2 . . . Q.sub.n in sequence. Each transistor produces a variation in
the current through bus 40, 42 if the associated fusible link L.sub.1,
L.sub.2 . . . L.sub.n is intact, to represent a 1 information bit, and
produces no current variation if the associated fusible link is burned
out. Each variation in current is sensed by the current variation sensor
58 in the card reader apparatus, and the resulting serial information bit
signals are accumulated in the shift register 60 for utilization by a
display device or computer 70.
DESCRIPTION OF FIGS. 5 AND 6
FIGS. 5 and 6 shown an alternative credit card circuit and an alternative
credit card reader circuit differing from the circuits of FIGS. 3 and 4 in
that the oscillator 50 in FIG. 3 is not located in the credit card, but is
instead located in the card reader. The circuit in the credit card is thus
simpler, and this has a system economy advantage because there will be
relatively many more cards than card readers.
In FIG. 5, credit card circuit elements are given the same numerals as
corresponding elements in FIG. 3. The counter 48 is shown to consist of a
series of "D type" flip-flops 76. A clock pulse wave is applied over line
51 to the first of the flip-flops, and the output thereof is passed in
succession to the following flip-flops. The outputs Q of individual
flip-flops are connected to respective conductors of a bus 78. The decoder
46 consists of a plurality of coincidence gates 79 having inputs connected
to conductors of bus 78 in a pattern such that the gates 79 are enabled in
succession as the counter counts the clock pulses applied to its input 51.
The gates 79 successively turn on the field effect transistors Q.sub.1
through Q.sub.n and cause current flows through the respective
transistors, except for those transistors which have open circuited links
representing the storage of a 0 information bit. Intact fusible links,
illustrated at L.sub.1 through L.sub.n, represent 1 information bits.
The clock pulses applied over line 51 to the counter 48 are derived from an
oscillator located in the card reader as will be described in connection
with FIG. 6. The oscillations are applied to the card through the
terminals 18 and 20. A zener diode 80 and a resistor 82 are used to
convert the oscillator wave at a 6 volts to 12 volts level to a wave at a
zero volts to 6 volts level at D for application to the control input of
an inverter 84. The output at E of the inverter 84 is a wave varying
between zero volts and 6 volts and is suitable for application to the
counter 48. The inverter 84 is supplied with power by means of connections
to the bus 40, 42, which is in turn supplied with power through terminals
20, 18 from the card reader of FIG. 6. The decoder 46 and the counter 48
in FIG. 5 are similarly supplied with power from bus 40, 42 over lines not
shown.
FIG. 6 shows the circuit of a card reader suitable for activating and
reading the card circuit of FIG. 5. A ring oscillator 88 consists of an
odd number of inverters 90 provided with a feedback path 92 to cause
oscillation. Additional frequency affecting feedback is provided by a
capacitor 93. Any one of many other types of oscillators may be used in
place of the ring oscillator shown.
The output A from oscillator 88 is shown in FIG. 7 and is applied directly
to a transmission gate or switch 94, and is applied through an inverter 96
to a transmission gate or switch 98. Gate 94 is in circuit with a 6-volt
supply, and gate 98 is in circuit with a 12-volt supply. Since the two
gates are alternately enabled, the common output at C of the two gates is
a clock wave switching between a 6-volt level and a 12-volt level. This
clock wave is applied through the primary coil of a transformer 100 to the
card reader terminal 20'. A ground potential is applied to the other card
reader terminal 18'.
The secondary coil of transformer 100 is connected in the input circuit of
a transistor limiter circuit 102. The output of limiter 102 is connected
through a pulse shaping circuit 104 to an output terminal 106.
OPERATION OF FIGS. 5 AND 6
The oscillator 88 in the card reader of FIG. 6 provides oscillations A in
FIG. 7 which are inverted at B and translated at C and terminal 20' to a
clock wave switching between 6-volt and 12-volt levels relative to ground
potential. The clock wave applied to the terminal 20 of the credit card
(FIG. 5) is translated at D to a clock wave varying between zero volts and
6 volts. The inverter 84 provides a clock output E in FIG. 7 which varies
between zero volts and 6 volts and is applied over line 51 to the clock
input of counter 48. The counter is thus made to count, causing the
decoder 46 to sequentially turn on transistors Q.sub.1 through Q.sub.n.
If the associated link L.sub.1 is intact, the conduction through transistor
Q.sub.1 when turned on by the decoder 46 causes a large current flow
through conductor 40, terminals 20 and 20' and the primary coil of
transformer 100 from the transmission gates 94 and 98 in the card reader,
FIG. 6. This is represented by the pulse labeled 1 in current waveform F
in FIG. 7. If the next link L.sub.2 is open circuited, a much smaller
current flows labeled 0 in waveform F in FIG. 7. The current transistions
in the waveform F produce voltage pulses as shown by waveform G in the
input circuit of transistor limiter 102 in FIG. 6. The circuit produces a
limiting or clipping action and amplifies solely the signals exceeding a
threshold value 108. The clipped signal is then amplified and shaped to
produce the output wave H at output terminal 106. Each pulse represents a
1 stored in the memory in the card, and each absent pulse represents a 0
stored. The number-representing waveform read out from the card can then
be modified in any desired way to be recognized and operated upon by a
computer performing accounting functions.
The storage in and readout of identifying information from the credit card
is accomplished by integrated circuits which are inherently very reliable
and accurate in operation. The described credit card provides for the
storage of identifying information in a manner which is practically
counterfeit proof. The system also has the additional desirable
characteristics of permitting the storage of concealed information, and of
providing a readout of the stored information without a requirement of
carefully moving the card relative to the card reader.
Since the serial memory integrated circuit is so small, having a dimension
of about one-fourth of an inch or smaller, the serial memory can be
imbedded in an insulating article other than a credit card. The memory may
for example be imbedded in a finger ring. Such a credit ring has the
advantages of being relatively secure from being lost or misplaced, and of
being attractive as a status symbol.
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Description  |
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