How to create a projected electric field

AI Thread Summary
To create a projected electric field detectable by a capacitive touchscreen, the discussion suggests using a charged wire connected to a power source, such as a 9V battery or an AC signal from a computer speaker. The aim is to generate a small electric field that can trigger a touchscreen response without direct contact. Participants explore various methods, including using high-frequency AC to reduce noise and experimenting with grounding techniques. Despite initial attempts yielding no results, the user remains open to further suggestions and testing. The concept revolves around creating a "magic wand" effect to simulate touch input.
oronymo
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How to create a "projected" electric field

First of all, apologies for my naivete, it's been many years since I've studied electromagnetism or electrical engineering in detail, but here goes anyway...

I am trying to generate a small electric field (about the size of a marble). I am aware of the method of using two oppositely charged plates to create a field between them, but what I'm looking for is something more like a "projected" electric field around a point - or in other words, one that extends outward rather than inward.

My goal is to create a small electric field that can be detected by a capacitive touchscreen (projected capacitive in this case) from a small distance - for example from about 1 cm.

I don't know if this is even technically feasible or that I'm approaching it in the right way.. I am open to any and all suggestions.

Thank you!
 
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Interesting.. i will give it a try!

I'd like to use a reliable and consistent power source - like a battery. How might I get a similar effect using an electrical current?
 
oronymo said:
Interesting.. i will give it a try!

I'd like to use a reliable and consistent power source - like a battery. How might I get a similar effect using an electrical current?

There is a lot to be said for a highish frequency AC source, rather than DC. It is a superior method for many types of measurement because it eliminates DC drift and low frequency noise and hum.
Why not Google touchscreen technology and see some of the images and designs?
 
sophiecentaur said:
There is a lot to be said for a highish frequency AC source, rather than DC. It is a superior method for many types of measurement because it eliminates DC drift and low frequency noise and hum.
Why not Google touchscreen technology and see some of the images and designs?

Yes, I have, but I'm not trying to create a touchscreen. I'm actually trying to create an object which is detected by the touchscreen as finger input but through a minimal contact point (e.g. a point smaller than a typical finger tip)
 
DrZoidberg said:

Yes, but no. Actually, I've made multiple capacitive styli using various methods and materials and they work like any other capacitive stylus.

I'm actually trying to create the effect of a stylus touching a capacitive screen, but without having to make physical contact with a large conductive material (like conductive foam or metal).

I hypothesize (perhaps incorrectly) that if you could create a small electric field near the presence of a projected capacitive screen that it would affect the capacitance and thus trigger a "touch"-like response. That's the idea - a sort of "magic wand" effect.

It's just a theory... but I'm trying to figure out how to best test it.
 
I don't know any details about the design of capacitive touch screens (field strength used, frequency of the signal, etc.) but you could try and see if a weak electric field has any effect on it. Just take a 9V battery, connect one terminal with a wire to something that's grounded and the other terminal to another insulated wire. Move that wire in front of the screen. The wire produces a field because it becomes charged by the battery.
Next you could try an ac field. That is also easy to do. Just connect your two wires to the speaker output of your computer instead of the battery. Again, ground one wire and then play sounds of different frequencies.
 
DrZoidberg said:
I don't know any details about the design of capacitive touch screens (field strength used, frequency of the signal, etc.) but you could try and see if a weak electric field has any effect on it. Just take a 9V battery, connect one terminal with a wire to something that's grounded and the other terminal to another insulated wire. Move that wire in front of the screen. The wire produces a field because it becomes charged by the battery.
Next you could try an ac field. That is also easy to do. Just connect your two wires to the speaker output of your computer instead of the battery. Again, ground one wire and then play sounds of different frequencies.

Excellent thank you! I will try this out.
 
  • #10
So far these techniques are not working, although it is possible that my 9v battery is low or dead. I'll try again, but in the mean time any other ideas?
 
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