Patent ID: 12208599

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Referring now to the figures,FIGS.1and3show, respectively, the front and back sides of an exemplary transaction card.FIGS.2A and2Bare non-limiting cross-sectional schematic illustrations of exemplary card constructions.

As shown inFIG.1, a typical transaction card10has a front surface12having an optional contact chip14and various indicia that may be printed, embossed, or otherwise disposed on the front surface of the card. Exemplary indicia include but are not limited to the name of the card issuer (e.g. a bank, a department store, etc.)15, a first set of branding16(e.g. VISA®, MASTERCARD®, AMERICAN EXPRESS® and/or logos or graphics associated therewith), a card number17, an expiration date18, and the card owner name19. As shown inFIG.3, the back surface32of card10typically includes a magnetic stripe34, a signature block33, and may also include additional indicia, such as a security code35, bar code36, photograph of the cardholder37, one or more additional sets of branding38(such as, for example a co-issuer's brand, or the same or different brand relating to the brand owner or issuer found on the front of the card), and one or more security features, such as a hologram39. Additional indicia (not shown), such as graphic designs in various parts of the background of the card, may also be provided, and not all embodiments may have all of the indicia depicted herein. It should be understood that the locations (including whether on the front or back of the card) and type of indicia (and other features) may vary from card to card, and the invention is not limited in any way to specific indicia, their locations, or manner of providing them (e.g. printing, laser treatment, embossing, or the like).

Notably, a non-provisioned (i.e. “blank” card) typically lacks indicia such as the card number17, expiration date18, card owner name17, and security code35(all of which are typically present provisioned cards as issued) as well as certain optional indicia that may be present only on certain cards, such as the photograph32and barcode36. Certain other of the indicia mentioned above may be lacking as well, such as for example, if a card issuer has multiple types of branding on otherwise similar cards, or the same type of transaction card has multiple card issuers of otherwise identical cards. Non-provisioned cards also do not yet have information encoded on the magnetic stripe34or the chip14. The term “non-provisioned card” as used herein means a card that is in any state in which it has not yet been fully personalized for issuance to an end-user, such as but not limited to the state at which a card blank is provided by a card manufacturer to a card issuer, such as a credit card company.

FIG.2Cillustrates a first exemplary card construction, comprising a multilayer card comprising a core22, and a decorative layer26.FIGS.2A-2Care intended to show only a slice of the cross-section (not extending across the entire card from edge to edge) and are not to scale (i.e. the relative thickness of the layers is not depicted). Surface28of decorative layer comprises a patina or has been activated to promote patination. As is known in the art, a patina is “a thin layer that variously forms on the surface of stone; on copper, bronze and similar metals (tarnish produced by oxidation or other chemical processes); on wood (a sheen produced by age, wear, and polishing); or any such acquired change of a surface through age and exposure.” Wikipedia. On a metal surface, the patina may comprise a naturally occurring coating of various chemical compounds, such as but not limited to oxides, carbonates, sulfides, sulfates, and chlorides of that metal formed on the metal surface. For example, the composition of exemplary copper patinas are known to comprise cupreous and cupric sulfide, cupric oxide, copper sulfate, copper chloride, and combinations thereof, depending upon the environmental exposure of the copper. The patinas are not limited to any particular compositions. In preferred embodiments of the invention, decorative layer26is a metal, such as but not limited to copper, brass or bronze, most preferably copper, but decorative layer may comprise other surfaces that have been patinated or that have been treated to promote patination. Any techniques known in the art for treating a surface to create a patina or for making the surface patina-ready by activating to the surface to promote patination may be used, some of which are further described herein.

In the alternate embodiment illustrated inFIG.2B, rather than comprising a multi-layer construction, the card may comprise a solid206, such as a solid metal or metal alloy, such as copper, having front208and back209patinated surfaces. As used herein the term “multi-layer card” refers to a card having multiple layers between the patinated surface and an opposing surface of the card.

As shown inFIG.2A, the patinated surface28preferably further has a protective layer29applied thereon, such as any of the protective layers or combinations thereof disclosed in U.S. Published Application No. 20150180229, titled “CARD WITH METAL LAYER AND ELECTROSTATIC PROTECTION,” listing John Herslow as the inventor, and owned by the Applicant of the present invention. Although shown only inFIG.2A, it should be understood that similar protective layers (not shown) may be present over layers208and209inFIG.2Band over both the patinated layer28and back surface of the metal core22, shown inFIG.2C.

In certain multi-layer card embodiments, such as shown inFIG.2A, core22may comprise a non-metal structure, such as but not limited to plastic, ceramic, wood, or a combination thereof. As used herein, any reference to a “plastic layer” should be understood to comprise any compound known in the art and typically referred to as a plastic, polymer or resin, and in particular, such compounds known for use in the manufacture of transaction cards, such as but not limited to polyvinyl chloride (PVC). Furthermore, any reference to a plastic “layer” may actually comprise multiple layers of plastic, such as layers of the same or different plastics that are fused together to become permanently bonded to one another during a lamination step. In other embodiments, core22may comprise a metal, and in particular, core22may comprise a first metal, such as but not limited to stainless steel, and decorative layer26may comprise a second metal, such as but not limited to copper. In one embodiment, layer24shown affixed to the back of core22may comprise a plastic layer24. In another embodiment, layer24may comprise another metal (e.g. copper) layer, such that the layers comprise copper/stainless/copper.

Embodiments having only one patinated side, typically on the front of the card (but not limited thereto), may be more desirable than embodiments with two patinated sides, as patination or tarnishing may be desirable on only one of the surfaces. To prevent unwanted or further tarnishing, a surface coating (e.g. a patina retardant) can be provided on a patinated (or unpatinated) surface to prevent further (or any) patination or tarnishing. For example, the protective coating referred to herein provides at least some patina retardation relative to a surface with no such coating, and in particular, the protective coatings as described in the prior pending application incorporated by reference above are expected to almost fully prevent further patination. Other coatings, however, that are more permeable to gases such as oxygen and/or moisture, which promote patination, may permit continued patination after application of the coating. Thus, once a desired degree of patination has been achieved, the patinated surface(s) is then treated, coated, or covered to prevent (or retard to a desired degree) further patination. Accordingly, in embodiments with two metal sides, one side may have a patinated or patina-ready surface, and the opposite side may be treated to prevent patination or restrict further patination. Thus, the patinated surfaces referred to herein may have a desired degree of patination and protected from additional patination, or partially patinated and exposed to additional patination. It should be understood that certain treatments may facilitate rapid patination, whereas others may significantly deter but not completely prevent some patination, and that even an already-patinated surface may undergo further patination over time at a normal rate, if not treated to accelerate or deter such patination.

Thus, aspects of the invention include embodiments in which different sides of a card may comprise identical patina-susceptible materials with different surface treatments to facilitate different rates of patination and/or different surface treatments over the patinated or patina-susceptible surfaces (e.g. the front side may comprise copper with a relatively high degree of patination with a treatment that will permit some further patination at a first rate that is relatively less than would occur on an untreated surface, and the back side may have relatively minimal or no patination with a treatment intended to fully prevent patination after issuance or minimize patination by permitting patination at a second rate that is relatively less than the coating on the front side of the card permits, or both sides treated to retard patination, but one side treated with a compound that is more patina retardant than the other).

Thus, some embodiments may have portions covered with a protective coating where a patina is not desired, and other portions left uncovered (or differently covered) where a patina is desired. The covered and uncovered/differently covered portions may be on the same (e.g. front) surface of the card. For example, it may be desirable not to have substantial patina in areas of the card in which critical information is provided (such as the card number and name of the card holder), and to freely permit patination in otherwise blank and decorative areas of the card. In certain embodiments, the same side of a card may have a first portion covered with a first coating having a first degree of patina-retarding performance and a second portion covered with a second coating having a second degree of patina-retarding performance. In one exemplary manufacturing process, the entire surface may first be covered with a patina-retardant or patina-preventative coating, and then the coating removed in areas in which a patina is desired. The removal may be performed, for example, with a laser, or with a chemical removal step, but the removal is not limited to any particular action. Similarly, a uniform coating over a single surface of the card may have certain sections rendered less protective (but the coating not fully removed).

One exemplary manufacturing process comprises patinating copper through an acid activation in the presence of a reductant, followed by exposure to a sodium bicarbonate solution. Patination may also be provided by a flame patina process or an electrolytic process. A patina-ready surface may be provided by activating the metal (e.g. copper) surface by physically removing any oxide off of the surface, such as through mechanical means, such as wet or dry blasting. The step of providing the patina-ready surface may be performed before the patination steps described herein, the patina created, and then the card issued to the card holder, or the card may be issued to a cardholder in its patina ready state to permit personalized patination by the user over time. The process for creating the patina is not limited to any particular process, however, and may comprise any process known in the art, including, for example, processes discussed inThe Colouring, Bronzing and Patination of Metals, by Richard Hughes and Michael Rowe, Watson-Guptill Publications (Feb. 1, 1991), incorporated herein by reference.

To the extent that prior art cards may have been capable of forming some degree of wear that can be characterized as a patina over time in the hands of a card holder, what distinguishes the process described herein, is that a desired degree of patination is created before providing the card for issuance to a card holder, or the card is intentionally treated to accelerate patination relative to a card that has not been so treated. What distinguishes the card itself from prior art cards that have undergone some degree of natural patination, is that the non-provisioned card (prior to issuance to the cardholder and as delivered to the card issuer has a desired degree of patination or a surface treatment to permit accelerated patination, and in some embodiments has a certain degree of patination on at least one visible surface or layer that has been preserved by a patina retardant layer or coating. The desired degree of patination may be any amount of intentionally created patination that is noticeably visible to the human eye. Prior art cards or substrates on which cards are made comprising materials susceptible to patination, if ever inadvertently created or received with some degree of unintentional patination during the manufacture process, would have been rejected, and no amount of unintentional patination can ever be characterized as a desired degree of patination. Rejected in-process substrates or cards would have resulted in the cards or substrates being scrapped or processed to remove undesirable visible patination prior to receiving any protective coatings thereon or further processing toward making a final non-provisioned card, and would not even reach the stage of being provided for provisioning.

By contrast, a card in accordance with the present invention in its non-provisioned state (i.e. the card “blank” that has not yet been personalized with user-specific information but is otherwise ready for such provisioning and providing to a card issuer for such provisioning) has a patinated or patina-ready surface having a desired degree of patination, preserved by a surface coating that at least retards further patination. It should be understood that the phrase “providing the card for issuance” means the step of providing a blank card to a card issuer for further provisioning to configure the card to make it ready to conduct transactions. Thus, additional steps, carried out by one or more parties, are expected to occur between the step of providing the non-provisioned card for issuance and actual issuance and delivery of a provisioned card to the cardholder, in accordance with processes and methods well known in the art.

EXAMPLES

Example 1: Hybrid (Metal-Plastic) Card

As shown inFIG.2C, metal decorative layer26comprises copper cladding 28 (rolled) onto a stable core22, such as stainless steel. The patinated surface has a protective layer29, such as the transferable, protective hard coat described herein. Although no additional layers are shown in the embodiment illustrated inFIG.2C, it should be understood that various other embodiments may have additional layers. For example, in one exemplary embodiment, a 0.002″ layer of copper may be rolled onto a 0.018″ stainless steel core, and a plastic layer24(such as is shown inFIG.2A) (˜0.01″) may be applied to the non-copper-clad surface of the core. In other embodiments, decorative layers, which may comprise different materials, may be provided on both the front and back of the card, such as copper cladding on both sides of the core. The multiple decorative layers may then be treated identically (e.g. both patinated), or differently (e.g. one significantly patinated, and one not or not as much), as described further herein.

Example 2: All Metal Card

As shown inFIG.2B, a solid metal or metal alloy card206may have patinated surfaces207and208on both the front and back surface, and each of the patinated surfaces has a protective layer29or29′, such as a transferable, protective hard coat as shown and described herein. Although illustrated in this embodiment with both the front and back surfaces patinated, it should be understood that different degrees of patination (including no patination on one surface) may be provided on the front and back surfaces, and the protective layers29and29′ may be the same or may be different on the front and back. So, for example, assuming layer208is visible from the front of the card and layer209is visible from the back of the card, layer208may have a greater degree of patination than layer209(and layer209may not be present at all in some embodiments), and layer29disposed over layer208may provide a lesser degree of patina retardation than layer29′ disposed over layer209. Thus, for example, in a copper card (which may be a solid card as depicted inFIG.2Bor may have layers of copper on the front and back as described herein), the front surface may be significantly patinated, and the back surface may remain an unpatinated shiny copper color or may be only slightly patinated, with the back protective layer having a coating designed to prevent or significantly retard further patination over the expected life of the card. By contrast, the front protective layer may have a coating designed to retard significant further patination, but to retard or prevent patination to a lesser degree than the coating on the back surface, so as to permit some additional personalized patination over time during use by the end user. In non-solid card embodiments, the metal layer on one side may be different than the metal layer (or exposed metal core) on the other side, and each metal may have different susceptibilities to patination (including relatively no susceptibility) and/or different degrees of patination.

Example 3: Cu Veneer (Metal-Plastic) Card

As shown inFIG.2A, a thin copper foil (on avg. 0.003″-0.005″) is laminated with an adhesive (adhesive layer not shown) to a stainless steel core22(˜0.015″), and plastic back24is laminated to the Cu/SS. This 3 part lamination may be performed in a single process combining the3components, or stepwise2components at a time. Plastic layer24may actually comprise several layers of plastic that fuse to become permanently bonded during lamination. The copper surface further has a protective hard coat29disposed thereon, as described herein.

Example 4: Exemplary Patination

An exemplary patination process may include surface treatment, salt exposure, and lamination with protective coating. For surface treatment, the copper material is wet blasted with crushed glass or other appropriate media such as aluminum oxide. The sheet is then wiped with a solution containing thiourea and sulfamic acid. The sheet is then sequentially wiped with methyl ethyl ketone and isopropanol alcohol and dried with air. The sheet is then submerged into a sodium bicarbonate solution (0.5 ounces/quart-m/v) for 30 minutes. The sheet is then rinsed with RO water and dried with air. A protective hard coat is transferred to the outer facing side of the sheet by platen lamination, thereby essentially freezing the patination process at the degree of patination acquired at the time the hard coat is applied. The sheet is now ready for further processing into cards ready for provisioning.

In all of the above examples, the visible surfaces of the cards may have various indicia disposed on them, such as but not limited to by lasering or inkjet printing. The indicia may include, for example, decorative or informational markings, including graphics, patterns, textures, and the like, made in or disposed over the decorative layer by any method known in the art. Although not illustrated in the figures, it should be understood that in multi-layer embodiments, each patinated decorative layer may stretch over the entire front or back surface of the card, or may be disposed in a pocket surrounded by a frame, such as is illustrated inFIGS.10A-10Cof US20150339564. In such embodiments, the materials of the frame may comprise metal or non-metal construction, and the card may have any number of additional layers below the frame or above the decorative layer disposed in the pocket. It should also be understood that in such a construction, the decorative layer typically comprises a majority of the surface on the side of the card that it faces, and to the extent metal contacts may be present thereon for a chip card, the decorative layer comprises a different material or a differently treated material than the contacts, with the decorative layer having a greater degree of patination than the contacts. Thus, to the extent that known metal contacts on chip cards may patina over time, such contacts do not constitute a majority of the card (or the entire surface of the card, like the decorative surface in some embodiments), and they are not patinated in the non-provisioned state of the card and covered with a protective layer, as is the case with the decorative layer described herein.

Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention. In particular, although certain combinations and permutations of layers have been shown, it should be understood that the card may have any number of layers, including various layers known in the field of transaction cards but not described here, including adhesive layers (which may or may not comprise a carrier film for the adhesive) disposed between functional layers, and that any single layer described herein may actually comprise a composite of multiple layers of the same or different materials. It should also be understood that the term “layer” as used herein may refer to a layer that is disposed upon another layer by any method known in the art, including but not limited to adhesive bonding, lamination, fusing, cladding, coating, or deposition processes (such as chemical or physical vapor deposition). Furthermore, although described herein with respect to a transaction card, it should be understood that the invention may be applied to any type of card, including but not limited to identification cards, loyalty cards, pass cards, and the like, all of which generally have a non-provisioned state in which they are provided for issuance and provisioning (e.g. personalized in some manner) before being issued to a user.