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| United States Patent Application |
20090071055
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Kley; Victor B.
|
March 19, 2009
|
Firearm with multiple targeting laser diodes
Abstract
All or some of the component parts of a firearm are made of synthetic
diamond materials. Some firearms include a specially designed trigger
capable of verifying a user's identity so that only an authorized user
can discharge the firearm. Some firearms include a diamond barrel
designed to impart a unique pattern of grooves to any bullet leaving the
barrel, thereby facilitating reliable identification of the firearm that
fired a particular bullet.
| Inventors: |
Kley; Victor B.; (Berkeley, CA)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
TOWNSEND AND TOWNSEND AND CREW, LLP
TWO EMBARCADERO CENTER, EIGHTH FLOOR
SAN FRANCISCO
CA
94111-3834
US
|
| Assignee: |
Metadigm LLC
Berkeley
CA
|
| Serial No.:
|
236214 |
| Series Code:
|
12
|
| Filed:
|
September 23, 2008 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
42/114 |
| Class at Publication: |
42/114 |
| International Class: |
F41G 1/00 20060101 F41G001/00 |
Claims
1-12. (canceled)
13. A firearm having two or more distinguishable laser diodes that are
pointed to be exactly on target, compensating for bullet trajectory, at
two or more different distances.
14. A firearm according to claim 13 wherein the distinguishable laser
diodes each emit a beam of a different color.
15. A firearm according to claim 13 wherein the distinguishable laser
diodes each emit a beam of a different projected shape.
Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001]This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No.
11/091,016, filed Mar. 25, 2005, entitled "Firearm with Force Sensitive
Trigger and Activation Sequence," which claims the benefit of U.S.
Provisional Application No. 60/557,470, filed Mar. 29, 2004, entitled
"Diamond and/or Silicon Carbide Molding of Small and Microscale or
Nanoscale Capsules and Other Objects Including Firearms." The respective
disclosures of both applications are incorporated herein by reference for
all purposes.
[0002]The present disclosure is related to the following commonly-assigned
co-pending U.S. patent applications: [0003]Application Ser. No.
11/046,526, filed Jan. 28, 2005, entitled "Angle Control of Multi-Cavity
Molded Components for MEMS and NEMS Group Assembly"; [0004]Application
Ser. No. 11/067,517, filed Feb. 25, 2005, entitled "Diamond Capsules and
Methods of Manufacture;" [0005]Application Ser. No. 11/067,609, filed
Feb. 25, 2005, entitled "Apparatus for Modifying and Measuring Diamond
and Other Workpiece Surfaces with Nanoscale Precision"; and
[0006]Application Ser. No. ______ (Attorney Docket No. 015772-001910US)
filed Mar. 11, 2005, entitled "Silicon Carbide Stabilizing of Solid
Diamond and Stabilized Molded and Formed Diamond Structures."The
respective disclosures of these applications are incorporated herein by
reference for all purposes.
RELATED DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
[0007]The following U.S. patents are incorporated by reference:
[0008]U.S. Pat. No. 6,144,028, issued Nov. 7, 2000, entitled "Scanning
Probe Microscope Assembly and Corresponding Method for Making Confocal,
Spectrop
hotometric, Near-Field, and Scanning Probe Measurements and
Forming Associated Images from the Measurements"; [0009]U.S. Pat. No.
6,252,226, issued Jun. 26, 2001, entitled "Nanometer Scale Data Storage
Device and Associated Positioning System"; [0010]U.S. Pat. No. 6,337,479,
issued Jan. 8, 2002, entitled "Object Inspection and/or Modification
System and Method"; and [0011]U.S. Pat. No. 6,339,217, issued Jan. 15,
2002, entitled "Scanning Probe Microscope Assembly and Method for Making
Spectrophotometric, Near-Field, and Scanning Probe Measurements."
[0012]Attached hereto is a document entitled "Appendix A: Background
Information" (16 pages) with the following subsections:
[0013]ASTM F2094 Si.sub.3N.sub.4 CERBEC BALL SPECIFICATIONS;
[0014]Surface Finish--Finishing of Silicon Nitride Balls;
[0015]PI piezoelectric web page; and
[0016]Germanium on silicon near infrared p
hotodetectors.
[0017]This document is to be considered a part of this application and is
hereby incorporated by reference.
[0018]Also attached hereto is a document entitled "Novel Low-Temperature
CVD Process for Silicon Carbide MEMS," by C. R. Stoldt, C. Carraro, W. R.
Ashurst, M. C. Fritz, D. Gao, and R. Maboudian, Department of Chemical
Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, Calif. 94720 USA (4
pages). This document is also to be considered a part of this application
and is hereby incorporated by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0019]The present invention relates in general to firearms, and in
particular to a firearm made from a molded diamond material.
[0020]From s
hotguns to rifles to handguns, firearms have proven to be a
valuable tool for law enforcement and self defense. Sadly, however,
firearms have also proven to be a valuable tool for criminals, who use
them to threaten, injure, or murder their victims. Too often, the
criminals cannot be identified, either because the weapon that fired a
bullet cannot be reliably identified or because the weapon was stolen
from its owner and the shooter cannot be reliably connected to the
weapon. In addition, many people are injured or killed each year through
accidental discharge of firearms, including children playing with a
parent's gun.
[0021]Attempts to solve these problems include trigger locks and ballistic
fingerprinting. While they are of some help, both solutions are
imperfect. Trigger locks, for example, keep unauthorized users
(particularly children) from operating a firearm, but they can also
interfere with legitimate users' ability to respond quickly to a deadly
threat. Further, because a criminal can steal a firearm and remove the
lock at his or her leisure, trigger locks do little to prevent stolen
firearms from being used in further crimes.
[0022]Ballistic fingerprinting attempts to match grooves imparted to a
bullet by a gun barrel to the barrel of a particular firearm. The
technique is sometimes successful; however, it has been demonstrated that
over time, the grooves imparted by a particular barrel can change (e.g.,
due to wear and tear if the gun is repeatedly fired); moreover, firearms
manufacturers generally do not design their barrels to provide a unique
signature, so differences are largely accidental, making ballistic
fingerprinting, at best, an inexact science.
[0023]Therefore, it would be desirable to provide firearms with improved
protection against unauthorized use and improved ability to identify a
particular firearm as the source of a bullet.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0024]Embodiments of the present invention provide firearms in which all
or some of the component parts are made of synthetic diamond materials.
In some embodiments, the firearm includes a specially designed trigger
capable of verifying a user's identity so that only an authorized user
can discharge the firearm. For example, the firearm can be programmed
with a time sequence of pressures (which may vary or remain constant)
that a user exerts on the trigger to activate the firearm.
[0025]In some embodiments, the firearm also includes a diamond barrel
designed to impart a unique pattern of grooves to any bullet leaving the
barrel, thereby facilitating reliable identification of the firearm that
fired a particular bullet.
[0026]In still further embodiments, numerous other features are provided.
For instance, in one embodiment, the firearm is held in the user's palm
with the barrel extending between the user's second and third fingers. In
another embodiment, the firearm has a cylinder with radially oriented
chambers that can be loaded with a powder charge and a bullet (or s
hot
wad or other type of ammunition) as the chamber rotates past a powder
aperture and a bullet tube. The amount of powder in the charge can be
regulated by regulating the speed at which the chamber rotates;
piezoelectric or other suitable motors can be used to control rotation of
the chamber.
[0027]In still other embodiments, the powder (or other propellant) charge
is ignited by passage of a current through an electrically sensitive
material at the base of the bullet (or other ammunition). An insulating
diamond member that is made conductive through application of an
ultraviolet light pulse can be used to gate or switch the current in
response to operation of the firearm's trigger, initiating combustion of
the propellant charge. In conjunction with the user recognition
mechanisms described herein, this technique provides a reliable safety
for the firearm.
[0028]The following detailed description together with the accompanying
drawings will provide a better understanding of the nature and advantages
of the present invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029]FIGS. 1A and 1B are schematic illustrations of diamond and graphite
atomic lattices, respectively; and
[0030]FIGS. 2A-2E are views of a firearm according to an embodiment of the
present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
[0031]The related patent applications incorporated by reference above
describe, inter alia: [0032]various techniques and apparatus for
growing diamond materials on suitably shaped substrates to create diamond
structures having arbitrary shapes, including but not limited to
spherical capsules suitable for use as ball-bearings, non-spherical
shapes such as cylindrical gear-tooth bearings, and angled probe tips for
atomic force microscopy (AFM), scanning probe microscopy (SPM) and
similar applications (see, e.g., application Ser. No. 11/046,526 and
application Ser. No. 11/067,517); [0033]various techniques for joining
together separately fabricated diamond parts into an assembly, including
the shaping of parts with interference members capable of holding the
assembled parts together and use of various bonding materials for
different operating temperatures (see, e.g., application Ser. No.
11/067,517); [0034]various techniques and apparatus for coating carbon
diamond parts with silicon carbide to stabilize the parts against
oxidation (see, e.g., application Ser. No. ______ (Attorney Docket No.
015772-001910US)); and [0035]various techniques and apparatus for
measuring and modifying surfaces of such parts at nanoscale precision
(see, e.g., application Ser. No. 11/067,609).
[0036]In embodiments of the present invention, such techniques can be used
to fabricate a firearm with all or some parts being made of synthetic
diamond materials. In some embodiments, the firearm includes a specially
designed trigger capable of verifying a user's identity, e.g., via a
pressure-sensitive trigger coupled to computing and logic circuitry
capable of recognizing a preprogrammed pattern of pressures on the
trigger, so that only an authorized user can discharge the firearm. In
some embodiments, the firearm also includes a diamond barrel designed to
impart a unique pattern of grooves to any bullet leaving the barrel,
thereby facilitating reliable identification of the firearm that fired a
particular bullet.
[0037]As used herein, the term "diamond" or "diamond material" refers
generally to any material having a diamond lattice structure on at least
a local scale (e.g., a few nanometers), and the material may be based on
carbon atoms, silicon atoms, boron atoms, silicon carbide, silicon
nitride, boron carbide, boron nitride, or any other atoms or combination
of atoms capable of forming a diamond lattice.
[0038]For example, a diamond material may include crystalline diamond. As
is well known in the art, a crystal is a solid material consisting of
atoms arranged in a lattice, i.e., a repeating three-dimensional pattern.
In crystalline diamond, the lattice is a diamond lattice 100 as shown in
FIG. 1A. Diamond lattice 100 is made up of atoms 102 connected by sp3
bonds 106 in a tetrahedral configuration. (Lines 108 are visual guides
indicating edges of a cube and do not represent atomic bonds.) As used
herein, the term "diamond" refers to any material having atoms
predominantly arranged in a diamond lattice as shown in FIG. 1A and is
not limited to carbon atoms or to any other particular atoms. Thus, a
"diamond material" may include predominantly carbon atoms, silicon atoms,
boron atoms, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, boron carbide, boron
nitride, and/or atoms of any other type(s) capable of forming a diamond
lattice, and the term "diamond" as used herein is not limited to
carbon-based diamond.
[0039]In other embodiments, the diamond material is an imperfect crystal.
For example, the diamond lattice may include defects, such as extra
atoms, missing atoms, or dopant or impurity atoms of a non-majority type
at lattice sites; these dopant or impurity atoms may introduce non-sp3
bond sites in the lattice, as is known in the art. Dopants, impurities,
or other defects may be naturally occurring or deliberately introduced
during fabrication of a diamond part.
[0040]In still other embodiments, the diamond material is made of
polycrystalline diamond. As is known in the art, polycrystalline diamond
includes multiple crystal grains, where each grain has a relatively
uniform diamond lattice, but the grains do not align with each other such
that a continuous lattice is preserved across the boundary. The grains of
a polycrystalline diamond material might or might not have a generally
preferred orientation relative to each other, depending on the conditions
under which the material is fabricated. In some embodiments, the size of
the crystal grains can be controlled so as to form nanoscale crystal
grains; this form of diamond is referred to as "nanocrystalline diamond."
For example, the average value of a major axis of the crystal grains in
nanocrystalline diamond can be made to be about 100 nm or less.
[0041]In still other embodiments, the diamond material is made of
amorphous diamond. Amorphous diamond does not have a large-scale diamond
lattice structure but does have local (e.g., on the order of 10 nm or
less) diamond structure around individual atoms. In amorphous diamond, a
majority of the atoms have sp.sup.3-like bonds to four neighboring atoms,
and minority of the atoms are bonded to three other atoms in a
sp.sup.2-like bonding geometry, similar to that of graphite; FIG. 1B
depicts graphite-like sp.sup.2 bonds 114 between an atom 110 and three
other atoms 112. The percentage of minority (sp.sup.2-bonded) atoms may
vary; as that percentage approaches zero over some area, a crystal grain
becomes identifiable.
[0042]Thus, it is to be understood that the terms "diamond material" and
"diamond" as used herein include single-crystal diamond, polycrystalline
diamond (with ordered or disordered grains), nanocrystalline diamond, and
amorphous diamond, and that any of these materials may include defects
and/or dopants and/or impurities. Further, the distinctions between
different forms of diamond material are somewhat arbitrary not always
sharp; for example, polycrystalline diamond with average grain size below
about 100 nm can be labeled nanocrystalline, and nanocrystalline diamond
with grain size below about 10 nm can be labeled amorphous.
[0043]A diamond part may include multiple layers or components made of
diamond material, and different layers or components may have different
composition. For example, some but not all layers might include a dopant;
different polycrystalline oriented layers might have a different
preferred orientation for their crystal grains or a different average
grain size; some layers might be polycrystalline oriented diamond while
others are polycrystalline disoriented, and so on. In addition, coatings
or implantations of atoms that do not form diamond lattices may be
included in a diamond material.
[0044]A diamond part, such as the firearm described herein, may be
fabricated as a unitary diamond structure, which may include crystalline,
polycrystalline or amorphous diamond. Alternatively, the part may be
fabricated in sections, each of which is a unitary diamond structure,
with the sections being joined together after fabrication.
[0045]FIG. 2A-2E illustrate a muzzle loading firearm according to an
embodiment of the present invention. FIG. 2A is a side cutaway view of
the firearm 200. A user grips firearm 200 by slipping two fingers through
each grip opening 206 and wrapping his or her thumb around the body so
that the user's first (index) finger rests on trigger 201 and barrel 205
extends between the user's second and third fingers. Firearm 200
advantageously includes a control and battery unit 214 operatively
coupled to trigger 201 and to a cylinder 209 into which bullets 220 are
loaded with a radial orientation as cylinder 209 rotates about an axis
transverse to the plane of FIG. 2A. FIG. 2B is an exploded view showing
further detail of cylinder 209 from both sides and the front. FIG. 2C is
a side view showing barrel designs. FIG. 2D is a cross sectional view of
barrel 205 at the interface to cylinder 209. FIG. 2E illustrates a
rifling pattern that may be used in barrel 205.
[0046]In operation, a force sensing trigger 201, which may include a
piezoelectric or piezo resistive element (not shown but well known to
those skilled in the art), is pressed one or more times in an activation
sequence. The activation sequence includes a specific pattern of
pressures or pulses on the trigger 201, and the pattern may be defined by
reference to a relative duration of the pulses and/or relative force on
the trigger as a function of time. The activation sequence is
advantageously preprogrammed by the user, e.g., upon purchasing the
firearm, and stored in memory in control and battery circuit 214. When
trigger 201 is operated, signals representing the force as a function of
time are transmitted to control and battery unit 214, which compares them
to the activation sequence, with the firearm becoming usable only when
the trigger operations match the preprogrammed activation sequence. This
sequence acts as a "password" to prevent the firearm from being used by
anyone other than an authorized user. In other embodiments, other user
identification techniques, such as fingerprint or DNA matching, could be
used instead of or in addition to the activation sequence described
herein.
[0047]When the activation sequence is recognized by control and battery
unit 214, a force and time pattern LED 204 is turned on, signifying that
the user has been recognized and that the arm is ready for use. If there
is no bullet or s
hot wad aligned with the barrel 205, then a portion of
the light from LED 204 will be visible at 218. In some embodiments, light
from LED 204 may also be visible at the muzzle end of barrel 205.
[0048]Targeting laser diodes 202, 203 may also be turned on at this time.
In one embodiment, laser diodes 202 and 203 provide laser beams of
different colors to guide the user's aim, compensating for trajectory, at
two different distances. In another embodiment, laser diodes 202 and 203
may be distinguished by the projected shapes of their light beams (e.g.,
one might be round while the other is rectangular).
[0049]Pressing the trigger 201 again with a user-selected "loading" force
will cause control and battery system 214 to load the firearm.
Specifically, control and battery system 214 activates a rotation
mechanism 210 (e.g., a piezoelectric motor that acts on a boss 211 on a
surface of cylinder 209) to rotate the cylinder 209 at a predetermined
speed past a powder column 208. As cylinder 209 rotates past column
opening 208, an empty chamber 219 in cylinder 209 is charged with powder;
the charge can be controlled by regulating the rotation speed of cylinder
209. A bullet 220 is then loaded on top of the powder charge in chamber
219. Further rotation puts the bullet in contact with a first set of
bumps 213a at the inner end of barrel 205, which further seat the bullet
until a bump 213b on the chamber comes into electrical contact with a
third (center) bump on barrel 205 or with another electrical contact
element, which may be located in barrel 205 or chamber 219 or on the
surface of cylinder 209. In other embodiments, bumps and/or other contact
elements are advantageously arranged on surfaces of barrel 205, cylinder
209, and/or chamber 219 such that a circuit is completed only when a
bullet in a chamber 219 is properly aligned with barrel 205. When the
circuit is completed, the weapon is ready to fire.
[0050]When trigger 201 is pressed again, a feedback signal (e.g., a
vibration, acoustic wave, electrical signal, thermal change or any or all
of the above) is advantageously passed through the trigger 201; where
trigger 201 includes a piezoelectric element, the feedback signal can be
driven electrically by the controller/battery 214. At this time the
controller 214 also sends a high voltage pulse through the rotatable
cylindrical section 209 that now contains bullet(s) 220 and powder in the
radial chambers 219 along its circumference. Only the bullet aligned with
the barrel 205 can complete the electrical circuit and ignite the powder,
which drives the bullet 220 down the barrel 205.
[0051]In preferred embodiments, barrel 205 is rifled with a pattern unique
to an individual firearm 200. An example rifling pattern 212 using
grooves of two different widths is shown in FIG. 2E. As a bullet 220
passes through barrel 205, the rifling pattern imparts to the bullet
casing a pattern of fine lands and grooves of varying widths and
spacings, along with a stabilizing rotation. For a .50 caliber weapon
with circumference of .pi.*diameter, a 64 bit bar code word (allowing
10.sup.19 distinct serial numbers) could be used, with a space of 0.025''
for each narrow land (0.008'') or wide land (0.016'') representing a one
or zero These dimensions are consistent with known "microgroove" rifling
techniques used in the art. In some embodiments, where barrel 205 is made
of a diamond material that is optically transparent at some wavelength,
it is possible to read the rifling pattern using various optical
measurements at that wavelength without discharging the firearm.
[0052]After a bullet is fired, the process can be repeated, with control
and battery unit 214 operating piezoelectric rotator 210 in response to
trigger 201 to rotate cylinder 209, thereby loading and positioning the
next round. To unload firearm 200, operating trigger 201 by applying an
"unload" sequence of pressures causes bottom flap 215 to open. Cylinder
209 is then rotated such that bullets 220 are passed down an ejection
path 217 and ejected as shown.
[0053]The main body and other components of firearm 200 are advantageously
made of a diamond material such as carbon-based diamond or silicon
carbide. In some embodiments, the components are made of carbon-based
diamond materials coated with silicon carbide. Various fabrication
techniques can be used, including fabrication on sacrificial (e.g.,
barrel forms 205a, 205b, 205c) or reusable (e.g., half-cylinder form
205d) substrates formed to the desired shape of the component. The barrel
is evenly coated with diamond to a sufficient depth (typically 150
microns) to provide adequate burst strength, machined at one end to match
the curvature of the cylinder form, then put in place with other
components that can be made by similar techniques. A final diamond
coating may be grown to integrate and fix the various parts in position.
[0054]While all components of firearm 200 can be made of diamond material,
this is not required. Barrel 205 and firing mechanism 209 are
advantageously made of diamond materials; other components can be made of
other materials, including steel and other metals conventionally used in
firearms. Bullets 220 may be of generally conventional design and
materials. In preferred embodiments, the body of firearm 200 includes at
least some metal elements large enough to be readily detected by
conventional metal detectors (e.g., as used in airports); such elements
help to deter unauthorized concealed carrying of firearm 200.
[0055]In another embodiment, a spiral bullet feed tube may be placed
around a central powder column 208. If the dimensions of the spiral are
about 1.75 inches by 4 inches for a typical arm of .5 caliber, the total
tube length is about 20 inches. If there are 10 inches of spring or 20
bullets, a constant force spring would produce a capacity of about 40
rounds.
[0056]While the invention has been described with respect to specific
embodiments, one skilled in the art will recognize that numerous
modifications are possible. One skilled in the art will also recognize
that the present invention provides a number of advantageous techniques,
tools, and products, usable individually or in various combinations.
These techniques,
tools, and products include but are not limited to:
[0057]a firearm barrel or firing mechanism constructed of diamond,
silicon carbide coated diamond, any combination of oxides, nitrides or
carbides coating diamond, silicon carbide, or silicon nitride; and/or
[0058]a firearm in which the barrel is mounted between the second and
third fingers with the action in the palm; and/or [0059]a firearm in
which a unique pattern of rifling is specifically made for each
individual firearm; and/or [0060]a firearm with a unique pattern of
rifling in which the rifling is in a transparent or nearly transparent
barrel and can be read, recognized or recorded by external means not
requiring a discharge of the weapon; and/or [0061]a firearm in which
light can be directed down the barrel and will be visible (from at least
one end opposite the light injection) only if there is no bullet,
cartridge or powder in the barrel; and/or [0062]a firearm controlled by a
pressure or force sensitive trigger; and/or [0063]a firearm in which a
particular time series of pressures on the trigger (which may be varying
or non-varying pressures) causes a particular action including but not
limited to making the arm operational for firing; and/or [0064]a firearm
consisting of at least one rotating member with radially bored chambers
or cavities into which powder and shot or bullets are loaded; and/or
[0065]a firearm in which powder is fed from an aperture, in which the
powder charge is regulated by controlling the aperture size and/or the
speed of passage of the chamber past the aperture from which the powder
is fed; and/or [0066]a firearm in which the chambers in a revolving
element are driven by a piezoelectric rotator; and/or [0067]a firearm in
which a bullet is aligned with the barrel by detecting its position vis a
vis the barrel electrically, acoustically or optically; and/or [0068]a
firearm having two or more laser diodes of different colors or projected
shapes which are pointed to be exactly on target compensating for bullet
trajectory at two or more distances; and/or [0069]a firearm in which the
proper user is determined by finger print recognition; and/or [0070]a
firearm in which the proper user is determined by DNA recognition; and/or
[0071]a firearm in which the proper user is determined by any combination
of full or partial finger print recognition, and/or full or partial DNA
recognition and/or full or partial pressure pattern recognition; and/or
[0072]a muzzle loading firearm in which the powder charge is ignited by
passage of a current through an electrically sensitive material on the
base of the bullet or shot wad; and/or [0073]a firearm in which the
powder charge is ignited by passage of a current through an electrically
sensitive material on the base of the bullet or shot wad, wherein one
element of the control switch is a section of insulating diamond made
conductive by a pulse or continuous ultraviolet light; and/or [0074]a
firearm or similar device in which the pressure or force sensing member
can also send force, pressure, acoustical, electrical, or thermal changes
back to the operator's finger; and/or [0075]a firearm in which the bullet
feed tube is spiral around a centrally located powder compartment.
[0076]It should be noted that several of the features of firearms
described herein do not require that any part of the firearm be made of
diamond material or any other particular material. Such features can be
applied to firearms made of other materials, including conventional
materials.
[0077]Thus, although the invention has been described with respect to
specific embodiments, it will be appreciated that the invention is
intended to cover all modifications and equivalents within the scope of
the following claims.
* * * * *