SELECTING A TOUCH SCREEN TECHNOLOGY
The four most common touch screen technologies include Resistive,
Infrared, Capacitive and SAW (surface acoustic wave). Each technology
offers its own unique advantages and disadvantages as described
below. Resistive and Capacitive touch screen technologies are
the most popular for industrial applications.
RESITIVE
A resistive touch screen typically uses a display overlay consisting
of layers, each with a conductive coating on the inner surface.
The conductive inner layers are separated by special separator
dots, evenly distributed across the active area. Finger pressure
causes internal electrical contact at the point of touch, supplying
the electronic interface (touch screen controller) with vertical
and horizontal analog voltages for digitization. For CRT applications,
resistive touch screens are generally spherical (curved) to
match the CRT and minimize parallax. The nature of the material
used for curved (spherical) applications limits light throughput
such that two options are offered: Polished (clear) or antiglare.
The polished choice offers clarity but includes some glare.
The antiglare choice will minimize glare, but will also slightly
diffuse the light throughput (image). Either choice will demonstrate
either more glare (polished) or more light diffusion (antiglare)
than associated with typical non-touch screen displays. Despite
the tradeoffs, the resistive touch screen technology remains
a popular choice, often because it can be operated while wearing
gloves (unlike capacitive technology). Note that resistive touch
screen materials used for flat panel touch screens are different
and demonstrate much better optical clarity (even with antiglare).
The resistive technology is far more common for flat panel applications.
CAPACTIVE:
A capacitive touch screen includes an overlay made of glass
with a coating of capacitive (charge storing) material deposited
electrically over its surface. Oscillator circuits located at
corners of the glass overlay will each measure the capacitance
of a person touching the overlay. Each oscillator will vary
in frequency according to where a person touches the overlay.
A touch screen controller measures the frequency changes to
determine the X and Y coordinates of the touch. Because the
capacitive coating is even harder than the glass it is applied
to, it is very resistant to scratches from (SIC) sharp objects.
It can even resist damage from sparks. A capacitive touch screen
cannot be activated while wearing most types of gloves (non-conductive).
INFRARED
An infrared touch screen surrounds the face of the display with
a bezel of light emitting-diodes (LEDs) and diametrically opposing
phototransistor detectors. The controller circuitry directs
a sequence of pulses to the LED's, scanning the screen with
an invisible lattice of infrared light beams just in front of
the surface. The controller circuitry then detects input at
the location where the light beams become obstructed by any
solid object. The infrared frame housing the transmitters can
impose design constraints on operator interface products.
SAW (Surface Acoustic Wave)
A SAW touch screen uses a solid glass display overlay for the
touch sensor. Two surface acoustic (sound) waves, inaudible
to the human ear, are transmitted across the surface of the
glass sensor, one for vertical detection and one for horizontal
detection. Each wave is spread across the screen by bouncing
off reflector arrays along the edges of the overlay. Two receivers
detect the waves, one for each axis. Since the velocity of the
acoustic wave through glass is known and the size of the overlay
is fixed, the arrival time of the waves at the respective receivers
is known. When the user touches the glass surface, the water
content of the user's finger absorbs some of the energy of the
acoustic wave, weakening it. The controller circuitry measures
the time at which the received amplitude dips to determine the
X and Y coordinates of the touch location. In addition to the
X and Y coordinates, SAW technology can also provide Z axis
(depth) information. The harder the user presses against the
screen, the more energy the finger will absorb, and the greater
will be the dip in signal strength. The signal strength is then
measured by the controller to provide the Z axis information.
Today, few software applications are designed to make use of
this feature.
TOUCH SCREEN CONTROLLERS
Most manufacturers offer two controller configurations--ISA
Bus and Serial-RS232. ISA bus controllers are contained on a
standard printed circuit plug-in board and can only be used
on ISA or EISA PCs. Depending on the manufacturer they may be
interrupt driven, polled or be configured as another serial
port. Serial controllers are contained on a small printed circuit
board and are usually mounted in the video monitor cabinet.
They are then cabled to a standard RS232 serial port on the
host computer.
SOFTWARE
Most touch screen manufacturers offer some level of software
support which include mouse emulators, software drivers, screen
generators and development tools for Windows, OS/2, Macintosh
and DOS. Most of the supervisory control and data acquisition
(SCADA) software packages now available contain support for
one or more touch technologies.
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