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Touchscreen monitors have become
more and more commonplace as their price has steadily
dropped over the past decade. There are three basic
systems that are used to recognize a person's touch:
- Resistive
- Capacitive
- Surface acoustic wave
The resistive system consists of a
normal glass panel that is covered with a conductive
and a resistive metallic layer. These
two layers are held apart by spacers, and a scratch-resistant
layer is placed on top of the whole setup. An electrical
current runs through the two layers while the monitor
is operational. When a user touches the screen, the
two layers make contact in that exact spot. The change
in the electrical field is noted and the coordinates
of the point of contact are calculated by the computer.
Once the coordinates are known, a special driver translates
the touch into something that the operating
system can understand, much as a computer mouse
driver translates a mouse's movements into a click or
a drag.
In the capacitive system, a layer that
stores electrical charge is placed
on the glass panel of the monitor. When a user touches
the monitor with his or her finger, some of the charge
is transferred to the user, so the charge on the capacitive
layer decreases. This decrease is measured in
circuits located at each corner of the monitor.
The computer calculates, from the relative differences
in charge at each corner, exactly where the touch event
took place and then relays that information to the touchscreen
driver software. One advantage that the capacitive system
has over the resistive system is that it transmits almost
90 percent of the light
from the monitor, whereas the resistive system only
transmits about 75 percent. This gives the capacitive
system a much clearer picture than the resistive system.
On the monitor of a surface acoustic wave system,
two transducers (one receiving and
one sending) are placed along the x and y axes of the
monitor's glass plate. Also placed on the glass are
reflectors -- they reflect an electrical
signal sent from one transducer to the other. The receiving
transducer is able to tell if the wave has been disturbed
by a touch event at any instant, and can locate it accordingly.
The wave setup has no metallic layers on the screen,
allowing for 100-percent light throughput and perfect
image clarity. This makes the surface acoustic wave
system best for displaying detailed graphics (both other
systems have significant degradation in clarity).
Another area in which the systems differ is in which
stimuli will register as a touch event.
A resistive system registers a touch as long as the
two layers make contact, which means that it doesn't
matter if you touch it with your finger or a rubber
ball. A capacitive system, on the other hand, must have
a conductive input, usually your finger, in order to
register a touch. The surface acoustic wave system works
much like the resistive system, allowing a touch with
almost any object -- except hard and small objects like
a pen tip.
As far as price, the resistive system is the cheapest;
its clarity is the lowest of the three, and its layers
can be damaged by sharp objects. The surface acoustic
wave setup is usually the most expensive.
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