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Title:
CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1996/023272
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A read/write head circuit that insures the equivalence between the driving signal frequency and the ressonance of the tank made up of an inductive sensor in parallel with a capcitor. The invention makes use of a voltage controlled oscillator (38) - VCO - to generate synchronism pulses (54) from the driving current generator (33), the controlling voltage being obtained from the comparison between the driving current and voltage phases through the ressonant tank made up of the sensor (11) and capacitor (17) connected in parallel. The circuit further provides an amplitude limitation of the driving signal through the control of the driving current pulses applied to the inductive sensor.

Inventors:
RICARDO CLAYTON FELIPE (BR)
SABATTINI JUNIOR NARCIZO (BR)
CAPELI JUNIOR ANTENOR (BR)
AUGUSTO MIRANDA DOS SANTOS PAT (BR)
Application Number:
PCT/BR1995/000003
Publication Date:
August 01, 1996
Filing Date:
January 23, 1995
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
BRASILIA TELECOM (BR)
RICARDO CLAYTON FELIPE (BR)
SABATTINI JUNIOR NARCIZO (BR)
CAPELI JUNIOR ANTENOR (BR)
AUGUSTO MIRANDA DOS SANTOS PAT (BR)
International Classes:
G06K7/08; G06K17/00; G07F7/08; H04M17/00; (IPC1-7): G06K7/08
Foreign References:
US3780269A1973-12-18
EP0157995A21985-10-16
DE3707173A11987-09-10
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Claims:
CLAIMS
1. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, comprising means for generation (33, 38) of the alternating driving current, said sensors (11) being located at the crossings of a matrix of electrical conductors (12,13) having m lines and n columns, the inductance of the selected sensor forming a tank circuit with a capacitor (17) connected in parallel with said sensor, characterized by the fact that the equivalence between the ressonance frequency of said tank and the frequency of the driving signal is reached by the application to said generating means, through a closed voltage feedback loop, of a correction voltage proportional to the phase difference between the sensor signal voltage (61) and its driving electrical current (56).
2. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 1 , further characterized by comprising limiting means (40) for the amplitude of the sensor driving signal.
3. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 1 , characterized by the fact that the generating means of the driving signal comprises a VCO (voltage controlled oscillator ) (38) whose frequency is controlled by an externally applied voltage.
4. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 3, characterized by the fact that the inductive sensors (11) are driven by an electrical current pulse train having a substantially symmetric triangular shape.
5. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 1 , 2 or 3, characterized by the fact that the voltage at the terminal (34) of the inductive sensor to which the driving signal is applied, has a substantially senusoidal wave shape (61).
6. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 1 , characterized by the fact that the closed loop for the control of the sensor driving signal frequency comprises: a comparator circuit (60) of the voltage (61) and current (56) phases of the driving signal at the sensor terminal (34), generating an output voltage proportional to the difference between said phases; an oscillator (38) controlled by the output voltage of the phase comparator producing a train (54) of narrow synchronizing rectangular pulses; a generator (55) of symmetric triangular pulses (56) provided with a first input terminal for the timing pulse which trigger the beginning of the upward ramp (81 ,82) of the triangular shaped wave and a second input terminal for the AGC voltage (41) which controls the width (84,85) of said triangular pulse by means of the slope variation of the upward and downward ramps of said triangular wave; an amplifier stage (57) which changes the triangular voltage pulses (56) applied to its input triangular current pulses phase synchronized with said voltage pulses for driving the inductive sensor.
7. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 2, characterized by the fact that the limitation and regularisation of the signal fed to the sensor coils when the cell is in an interrupted condition are provided by the slope variation of the upward (81 , 82) and downward ramps of the triangular pulse of the exciting current.
8. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to claim 8, characterized by the fact that the slope variations in the upward and downward ramps of the triangular driving current pulse are provided by the negative feedback loop comprising: a phase comparator (60) of the driving signal current and voltage, a timing pulse generator (38), a triangular pulse generator (55), a current amplifier (57).
9. CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS, according to any of the previous claims, characterized by the fact that the capacitance making up the ressonant tank in conjunction with the selected sensor inductance (11), is provided by a capacitor (17) connected between each line (12) of the sensor matrix and ground.
Description:
CIRCUIT FOR DRIVING INDUCTIVE SENSORS FOR READING AND DEBITING PREPAID CARDS

This invention refers to public telephone sets using debit cards having inductive cells of the kind described in patent documents BR 7804885, BR 2558917, BR 8805894, BR 8801921 and BR 9203968.

Reading and recording devices for such cells have been thoroughly studied, having in mind the decrease of manufacturing costs, increased dependability as well as size reduction of public telephone sets.

The inventions described in patent applications BR 9203968 and BR 9204434 seek to achieve such aims through a reduction in the number of electronic components used in the sensor driver circuits. Accordingly, the second of these documents describes the replacement of one of the semi- planes of inductive sensors by a slab of high permeability magnetic material, a procedure which not only halves the quantity of coils, but also eliminates the serial interconnecting elements which link each sensor coil to its correspondent opposite semi-plane. Furthermore, the number of soldered connections has been decreased and the connectors needed for said connections have been eliminated, as shown in figure 3 of said patent application. The fabrication of the circuits described in the mentioned documents by means of discrete components requires specialized workmanship which burdens its cost. Furthermore, fitting the individual components one by one results in a lack of uniformity among the devices, besides shortening their life span, which should be as long as possible in hardware designed to operate for long periods under adverse conditions, such as is the case of public telephones. Moreover, esthetic reasons require a reduction in the volume of public telephone sets.

The tecniques of large scale integration, on the other hand, are based

on automated techniques of manufacturing and device testing, ensuring an almost total uniformity at a cost many times lower than conventional circuitry, besides bringing a substantial reduction of its physical dimensions.

However, the limitations of some components turned out by the integration technique prevent the mere transposition of standard circuit configurations used in conventional assemblies. This is the case, for instance, of the ColpHt sine wave oscillators shown in figures 5 and 6 of document PI 9203968, since the application in question requires features of combined power and cut-off frequency which are beyond the capabilities of monolitic integrated devices fabricated with current production techniques.

On the other hand, the use of oscillators operating at pulsed modes, as described in document PI 8901590 may give rise to misreadings of the cell condition. This is due to the fact that the discrimination between an inductive sensor loaded with a short circuited cell and another loaded with a burned out cell is improved when such sensors are connected in parallel with capacitors so as to make up parallel resonant, or tank, circuits. Due to the variations of the inductance and capacitance values of commercially available components, the resonance frequencies of such tank circuits in a given reading/recording device are not exactly the same, bringing about a lack of coincidence between those circuits and the excitation current generated by the oscillator.

In view of the foregoing, the present invention aims to provide a reading/recording head arrangement which ensures the identity between the frequencies of the sensor driving current, and that of the tank formed by the sensor and associated capacitor, even if the latter frequency varies from unit to unit.

Another aim of the invention is to provide a reliable and efficient driver oscillator, either when assembled with discrete components or when

manufsctured through monolitc integration tecniques.

The present invention is based upon the property of tank circuits, that the phase difference between the driving current and the voltage across the tank terminals is proportional to the difference between the driving signal frequency and tank's resonant frequency, allowing to obtain, by means of comparing the phases, an error voltage which modifies the frequency of said driving signal, making it substantially equal to the tank's ressonance.

In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the error voltage is forwarded to a VCO (Voltage Controlled Oscillator) which generates the mentioned driving signal.

In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, the LC tank comprises the inductance of the selected sensor coil of the read/write head and a capacitor connected in parallel with said coil.

In accordance with a still further aspect of the invention, the circuit provides limitation of the current through the sensor coil, in order to avoid an excessive value of this currente which could lead to switching errors in the central office.

In order that the invention may be readily carried into effect, it will now be described in detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

Figure 1 shows the general schematic diagram of the reading head in a public telephone set using inductive debit cards according to the principles of the present invention.

Figure 2 shows, by means of a block diagram, the sensor selection circuit, the driving signal generator for the sensors and the discriminator of presence or absence of credit according to the principles of the present invention.

Figure 3 shows, by means of a block diagram, the stages involved in

the generation and frequency control of the sensor driving signal, according to the principles of the present invention.

Figure 4 illustrates the wave forms associated with the frequency control in the circuit of the previous figure according to the principles of the present invention.

Figure 5 shows the operation of the current limiter in the circuit of figure 3 according to the principles of the present invention.

As shown in the drawing of figure 1 , the read write head comprises a group of electrical conductors 12, 13 arranged orthogonally in a rectangular matrix having m lines and n columns; at each crossing point, an inductive sensor 11 is placed, with its lower end connected to the corresponding line and its upper end connected, by means of a series diode 14, to the corresponding column. The read/write head also comprises a line driver/selector circuit 20, having m driver current outputs 22, each one connected to a line 12, and n column enabling outputs 25 connected, by means of the lines 15, to transistor bases 16 which act as electronic switches for the selection of one among the m x n inductive sensors, the column selection being made from the address decoding of the corresponding column introduced in said circuit 20 by means of inputs 21 , and the line selection being made by enabling the oscillator connected to one of said outputs 22, starting from the decodification of the address introduced by inputs 23, capacitor 17 being connected between each line m and the ground, forming a ressonant circuit with the inductance of sensor 11 selected during the reading and recording of cells. The generation of line and column addresses, introduced by means of sets 23 and 21 , respectively, which define the position of each cell being read or recorded, is performed by a microprocessor, external to said reading head, whose function is to control the functioning of the telephone set, not being included in the present

invention.

According to figure 2, selector/driver 20 comprises the following blocks:

- a column address decoder 31 whose input is the set of lines 21 and whose n outputs are connected to the column selecting transistor bases 16 through terminals 25 and leads 15, as shown in figure 1 ;

- line drivers 33, equal in number to the number of lines, having its outputs 34 connected to the lines 12 by means of output terminals 22 and lines 12; - a line address decoder 23, whose input is the line set 23, having m outputs, each enabling the operation of one driver 33;

- a voltage controlled oscillator VCO PULS. 38, generating a pulse train whose frequency is controlled by the phase error signal introduced in input 37. This signal is supplied by output 36 of the driver stage currently enabled, as will be described later on;

- a voltage discriminator circuit 40, which monitors the sensor driving signal voltage in lines 12, to which it is connected by means of lines 35.

The value of this voltage depends on the state of the cell inductively coupled to said sensor; its rectification and filtering yields two signals, the first being an AGC (Automatic Gain Control) voltage at output 41 which is forwarded to line drivers 33 for the limitation of the sensor driving current.

The second signal, at output 42, indicates the state of the cell;

- a voltage comparator 46, comprising an operational amplifier whose first (non-inverting) input 43 receives the voltage rectified by stage 40, and whose second (inverting) input 44 is fed a reference voltage provided by power supply 45, yielding logic level output 26 showing the cell condition, i.e., whether it corresponds to a valid credit.

According to the principles of the invention, the alternating current in

each line 12, feeding selected sensor coil 11 , depends on the credit cell condition. If the cell is unbroken, the sensor coil will be loaded by the reflected impedβnce of the short circuited turn coil equivalent to said cell, resulting in a voltage in line 12 smaller than when the coil turn is interrupted (burned out cell). When the latter condition takes place, said voltage tends to a very high value which might result in an excessive current through the sensor coil as well as through line driver 33.

Due to the fact that public telephone sets are powered by the central switching office which monitors the line currents, this electrical current surge, brought about by the above mentioned condition, may be errouneousiy intepreted by the central office, bringing about a wrong call connection. To avoid this, driver stages 33 comprise controlling means activated by the AGC signal supplied through block 40 by means of its output 41 , whenever the alternate current voltage in lines 12 tends to reach values above a preset limit.

Figure 3 shows the working principle of the frequency control of the driving signal fed to inductive sensors 11. As shown, this control comprises the blocks shown in the previous figure, references 33 and 38, and its operation will be described next. Block 38 (VCO PULS.) comprises stage 51 , a free-running multivibrator producing a symmetric square wave whose period is controlled by the voltage fed back through terminal 37. This square wave is converted, by means of block 52, train of very narrow pulses 54, each pulse corresponding to the leading edge of wave 53, this pulse train is forwarded, through line 39, simultaneously to the inputs of all line drivers 33, as shown in figure 2.

Still according to figures 3 and 5, stage 55 receiving pulse train 54, generates a triangular pulse train 56, each triangular pulse comprising a

positive upward ramp up to the peak instantaneous voltage value 83 followed by a negative downward ramp having the same slope, forming a triangular pulse having width 84, as detailed in figure 5. This wave is converted by driver 57 into a series of current triangular pulses which drive the selected sensor coil. This coil is being part of a ressonant circrt, the voltage in line 34, output of said driver stage, will be a substantially sinosoidal wave 61 , as typified at the upper trace of figure 4.

Still according to the invention principles, samples of the mentioned current and voltage waves present in line 34 which feeds sensor 11, are forwarded to the first and second inputs of phase comparator 60, by means of lines 58 and 59 respectively. As shown in figure 4, these samples are used by the phase comparator to generate pulses 64 and 65 at zero crossing points 62, 63 of sinewave 61 , as well as pulse 68, at peak 83 of the triangular current wave. Since the latter wave is virtually of the same shape and simultaneous in time to signal 56 applied to input of stage 57, it can be monitored indirectly by sampling the voltage 56 applied to the input of phase comparator 60 through line 58.

Circuit 60 makes the comparison between periods 71 (a) and 72 (b) and integrates the error signal, said periods corresponding, respectively, to the intervals between pulses 64 and 68, and between pulses 68 and 65. If intervals a and b are equal, then the electrical current and voltage of the tank, formed by the selected sensor coil and capacitor 17 of the respective line , will be in phase; therefore, the correction voltage at output 36 will be equal to a rest value. If time a is longer than time b, an error signal having a positive polarity will be generated which is added to the rest value and forwarded to input 37 of free-running multivibrator 51 , increasing the oscillation frequency and shifting peak 83 of the current wave to the left so as to move it towards the center of the semi-period between pulses 64 and

65.

If, on the other hand, a is smaller than b, the signal error will be a negative voltage, reducing the base voltage and decreasing the frequency of wave 54 generated by VCO 38, which will shift the mentioned peak 83 of the electrical current wave to the right.

Figure 5 shows the working principle of the control of the sensor driving current, as generated by the driver. Wave 81 corresponds to a normal condition and wave 82 to the case in which the AGC is activated as a response to an excessive voltage sine wave amplitude in line 34. In the latter case, the rectified and filtered voltage forwarded through line 41 to the second input of the triangular pulse generators 55, will bring about a steeper slope, both in the upward and downward segments; therefore, value 83 will be reached sooner, as well as the zero return time will be shorter. Consequentely the base of the triangular electrical current pulse will be narrower, time 85, and thus the electrical current used up by the circuit will be smaller since it is proportional to the area of the triangle. In this way, the power consumption of the telephone set will not rise above the limit of 40 mA (average value), stipulated for public telephone sets.

The AGC control further allows to compensate signal amplitude differences 61 due to the "Q" variations between sensors, since the electrical current pulse control injected into the sensor coil results in the control of the amplitude of the said sine curve voltage which is related to the current through the "Q" value of the ressonant device. This results in more homogeneous amplitude values for the interrupted cell state, increasing the dependability of the discrimination between the "open" and "shortcircuitθd" conditions.

Even though the invention has been described based on a particular embodiment, it should be understood that variations and modifications can

be made, without falling outside the scope of the invention.

Likewise, the VCO circuitry may be different from the one shown here provided the resulting signal has characteristics suitable for the timing of block 33. Moreover, the described circuitry may also be assembled by the traditional methods using discrete components, as well as monolitic integrated circuit techniques, hybrid circuits or thick film, keeping within the the conceptual limits of the invention.