Patents
Literature
Patsnap Copilot is an intelligent assistant for R&D personnel, combined with Patent DNA, to facilitate innovative research.
Patsnap Copilot

88results about How to "Desired strength" patented technology

Electrically conductive adhesive tape

An electrically conductive adhesive tape used for electrical and electronic products to bond or fix an element to a support while maintaining an electrical conductibility between the element and support. The conductive adhesive tape has a structure including a resin film, a metal layer formed over one surface of the resin film by depositing a conductive metal over the surface of the resin film, and a conductive adhesive layer coated over the metal layer. The metal layer has a net-shaped structure. In some cases, the metal layer may have a planar structure. The conductive adhesive tape has a very small thickness by virtue of its metal layer deposited to a very small thickness. Accordingly, the conductive adhesive tape maintains a desired strength while exhibiting a high flexibility and a high bondability, thereby exhibiting a superior conductibility. In the case in which the metal layer has a net-shaped structure, the tape has a structure having spaces where the metal layer does not exist. Where the tape is applied to a Braun tube, accordingly, there is no influence on an electron beam emitted from a deflection yoke while a desired conductibility is maintained. The manufacture of the tape is simple. By virtue of the conductibility, the tape of the present invention also has an elecromagnetic wave shielding function.
Owner:SHIN WHA INTERTEK

Indexable insert drill and a center insert therefore

A drill for chip removing machining, including a drill body that rotates around a center axis (C1) and has a rear end, and a front end from which there extends rearward an envelope surface in which two chip flutes each having an insert pocket are countersunk, and two replaceable cutting inserts, including a peripheral cutting insert mounted in a peripheral pocket, and a center insert, which is indexable and mounted in a center pocket that opens in the front end of the drill body and is delimited by a bottom surface, a rear end support surface, a side support surface of a partition wall, and an inside of a border adjacent to the envelope surface. The center insert includes an upperside and an underside between which a through hole for a tightening screw extends, and has an elongate basic shape that is mirror-symmetrical in relation to an imaginary, longitudinal central plane (P) with which a center axis (C3) of the hole coincides. One of two opposite, longitudinal side contact surfaces of the cutting insert which run parallel to each other and to the central plane (P), are urged against the side support surface of the center pocket. One of the two opposite end surfaces which are formed adjacent to chip-removing cutting edges at the short ends of the center insert, are urged against the rear end support surface of the center pocket. The side support surface of the center pocket is inclined in relation to the center axis (C1) of the drill body at an acute angle (ε) within the range of 3-8°. At each one of two diagonally opposite corners of the center insert, an intermediate surface is formed between the side contact surface and an end surface. The intermediate surface is shorter than the side contact surface and forms an obtuse angle (α) with the side contact surface. One of the intermediate surfaces is located in an area of a clearance space between the side support surface of the center pocket and the end support surface of the center pocket.
Owner:SANDVIK INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AB

Protecting images with an image watermark

A robust means of watermarking a digitized image with a highly random sequence of pixel brightness multipliers is presented. The random sequence is formed from ‘robust-watermarking-parameters’ selected and known only by the marker and/or the marking entity. A watermarking plane is generated which has an element array with one-to-one element correspondence to the pixels of the digitized image being marked. Each element of the watermarking plane is assigned a random value dependent upon a robust random sequence and a specified brightness modulation strength. The so generated watermarking plane is imparted onto the digitized image by multiplying the brightness value or values of each pixel by its corresponding element value in the watermarking plane. The resulting modified brightness values impart the random and relatively invisible watermark onto the digitized image. Brightness alteration is the essence of watermark imparting. Detection of an imparted watermark requires knowing the watermarking plane with which the watermark was imparted. Regeneration of the watermarking plane requires knowledge of the robust-marking-parameters used in its formulation. This is generally only known to the marker and/or marking entity. Once regenerated the watermarking plane is used together with a verifying image located in a ‘visualizer’ to demonstrate the existence of the watermark.
Owner:IBM CORP
Who we serve
  • R&D Engineer
  • R&D Manager
  • IP Professional
Why Eureka
  • Industry Leading Data Capabilities
  • Powerful AI technology
  • Patent DNA Extraction
Social media
Try Eureka
PatSnap group products