Kiosk Solutions Oct-Nov 2018 | Page 12

screen technology behind armoured glass and still work as a touchscreen – hence the name ‘projected capacitance touch’. This type of screen is inherently more accurate as well as being the main type used for vandal-proof systems. Infrared touchscreens Infrared touchscreens are not so common and use an array of IR light emitting diodes on two adjacent bezel edges of a display, with photo sensors on the opposite sides of the display to analyse the system and determine a touch event. The LED and photosensor pairs create a grid of light beams across the display. An object, such as a finger or pen that touches the screen interrupts the light beams, causing a measured decrease in light at the corresponding photosensors. The measured photosensor outputs can be used to locate a touchpoint coordinate. Widespread adoption of infrared touchscreens has been hampered by two factors: the relatively high cost of 12 KIOSK solutions the technology compared to competing touch technologies, and the issue of performance in bright ambient light. However, one feature of infrared touch remains desirable and represents attributes of the ideal touchscreen, which is to eliminate the glass or plastic overlay that most other touch technologies require in front of the display. In many cases, this overlay is coated with an electrically conducting transparent material which reduces the optical quality of the display. The right choice The above systems form the bulk of the touchscreen technologies in use at the present time and are generally widely available. The various technologies have different attributes and are used in different applications, some much more costly than others but are needed in certain environments. Nearly all are easy to incorporate into systems and set up after manufacture. n