The invention relates to the field of chip cards. Chip cards are well known to the public, who have many uses for them: payment cards, SIM cards for mobile telephones, transport cards, identity cards, etc.
Chip cards have transmission means for transmitting data from an electronic chip (integrated circuit) to a card-reader device (reading) or from this device to the card (writing). These transmission means may be “contact”, “contactless”, or else dual interface when they combine the two abovementioned means. In particular, the invention makes it possible to produce dual-interface chip cards. Dual-interface chip cards are referred to as “dual” cards if the “contact-based” and “contactless” modes are managed by a single chip, or “hybrid” cards if the “contact-based” and “contactless” modes are managed by two physically separate chips.
Dual-interface chip cards generally consist of a rigid carrier made of plastic, such as PVC, PVC/ABS, PET or polycarbonate, forming most of the card, into which are incorporated an electronic module and an antenna that are manufactured separately. The electronic module has a, generally flexible, printed circuit board equipped with an electronic chip and contact lands connected electrically to the chip and exposed to view on the electronic module and on the surface of the carrier that forms the card, for connection by electrical contact with a card-reader device. Dual-interface chip cards furthermore have at least one antenna for transmitting data between the chip and a radiofrequency system, enabling data to be read or written contactlessly.
In the prior art, the electronic module comprising the contacts and the chip, on the one hand, and the antenna possibly integrated into an inlay, on the other hand, are generally manufactured separately, and then the antenna is connected to the module on which the chip is mounted and connected. The antenna and the module are connected using complex methods that have a negative effect on productivity, manufacturing yield and the reliability of the cards during use thereof.
One aim of the invention is to render this type of method more simple and reliable.
This aim is achieved at least in part by virtue of a method for manufacturing a chip card as claimed in claim 1.
The deposition of solder or brazing material (consisting for example of a tin-bismuth alloy), for example in the form of drops, on the connection pads of the antenna makes it possible to produce an antenna inlay product (inlay with an antenna) that can be marketed as is, in order to be inlaid into layers of plastic and connected to a module mounted in the card at a later point. This product is ready to use and facilitates the operations of the card manufacturer. Indeed, this card manufacturer now needs only to assemble a number of elements (inlay with an antenna, module and sheets of plastic), which may be supplied separately. The operation of connecting the module to the antenna is greatly simplified by the use of the solder material that is already in place on the connection pads of the antenna. Furthermore, this operation may take place at the same time as that of fixing or bonding the module in its cavity, either using only the solder material itself or using a bonding material such as a heat-reactivatable adhesive (hotmelt), a single heating operation then being necessary in order both to connect the module to the antenna and to fix the module in its cavity.
Moreover, a double-sided module (that is to say with contacts on one side and conductive tracks on the other) may also be produced and marketed separately. The antenna is connected to the chip via the solder joint between the connection pads of the antenna and the conductive tracks of the back side of the module.
Additionally, the drops of solder material are possibly also deposited on those conductive tracks of the module which are intended for the connection of the antenna.
The method according to the invention may include any one of the features of claims 2 to 12, taken separately or in combination.
The method according to the invention may be implemented reel-to-reel.
According to another aspect, the invention is an antenna inlay for a chip card as claimed in one of claims 13 to 17. According to yet another aspect, the invention is a method for manufacturing such an antenna inlay as claimed in claim 18. According to yet another aspect, the invention is a chip card as claimed in one of claims 19 to 26.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the detailed description and from the appended drawings, in which:
According to one mode of implementation of the method for manufacturing a chip card according to the invention, modules 100, on the one hand, and antennae 200 on an inlay 210, on the other hand, are produced (see
As shown in
The antenna 200 is also produced, for example in a known manner, on a double-sided substrate with plated through-holes between the ends of the antenna on one side of the inlay 210 and connection pads 220 produced on the other side (see
A solder material 230, for example in the form of drops of solder, is placed on each of the connection pads 220 of the antenna. Each drop of solder material 230, after it has been deposited on a connection pad 220 and prior to the heating operation used to form the solder joint between the antenna 200 and the module 100, forms a dome having a height of between 0.02 and 0.5 mm. Advantageously, as can be seen in
The antenna inlay 210 is then laminated between layers of plastic (PVC for example) 300, 310, 320, 330, 340, while leaving cavities 400, in each of which a module 100 may be housed, unobstructed. Each cavity 400 is such that the connection pads of the antenna and its drops of solder material 230 remain accessible (
The various layers of plastic are for example (see also
The total thickness of all of layers 300-340, and therefore of the card, is approximately 0.7 mm after lamination.
As an alternative, rather than producing the cutouts in the various layers 310, 320, 330, 340 laminated above the inlay 210 of the antenna 200 in order to produce the cavity 400, the cavity 400 is milled prior to the module 100 being connected and fixed in the cavity 400.
A module 100 is then positioned in each cavity 400 such that two connection tracks 110 intended for the connection of an antenna 200 to a chip 120 are each situated opposite a connection pad 220.
The zones of the module 100 situated at the level of the drops of solder material 230 are then heated in order to melt the solder material 230 and to solder the connection pads 220 of the antenna 200 to these connection tracks 110. This heating operation is for example carried out at the same time as that of heating the dots of heat-reactivatable adhesive that make it possible to bond each module 100 in its cavity 400. These dots of heat-reactivatable adhesive are in fact very close to the drops of solder material 230 positioned on the connection pads 220 of the antenna 200. They may therefore possibly both be heated during the same operation. By selecting a solder material 230 having a melting point of between 120° C. and 230° C., and more preferably between 160° C. and 190° C., it is possible to perform the operation of heating the solder material 230, by applying a temperature of between 120° C. and 250° C. to a zone of the module 100, using a thermode for example.
On account of the thickness of the module 100 and of the dome height of a drop of solder material 230, when the solder material melts, it wets the corresponding connection pad 220 (see
Another embodiment of the invention is described hereinbelow.
This structure 500 has drops of solder material 230 at the level of the connection pads of the antenna 200 and an aperture (milled or cut out of the various layers 310, 320, 330, 340 beforehand) intended for the production of the cavity 400. When the cavity 400 is milled, the various layers 310, 320, 330, 340 are advantageously laminated above the inlay 210 of the antenna 200, without a cutout corresponding to the cavity 400. The cavity 400 is in effect milled through these various laminated layers 310, 320, 330, 340 before the module 100 is connected and fixed in the cavity 400 thus milled. As a variant, it is possible to produce a similar structure from a wired antenna inserted into a inlay (for example using a “wire embedding” technique). The ends of this antenna have pads that receive drops of solder material, making it possible to solder the ends of this antenna to conductive tracks of the module.
According to another variant illustrated by
Advantageously, during the milling of the cavity 400, a part of each drop of solder material 230 is removed in order to ensure that the plastic in which the milling is carried out will not prevent the surfaces to be soldered from being brought together or the material that forms the drops of molten solder material 230 from wetting the conductive tracks 110. Thus, for example, the milling is carried out in a circular manner all around each drop of solder material 230.
According to another mode of implementation of the method for manufacturing a chip card according to the invention, illustrated by
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
Moreover, as shown in
A soldering unit 235 is positioned (and possibly bonded) on or in the inlay 210 and the ends of the antenna 200 are connected (for example by thermocompression) to the first portions 260 of the connection pads 220. This assembly, consisting of the antenna 200 and of the soldering unit 235 on their inlay 210, is coated with a layer of plastic 212. This structure (the antenna 200, the soldering unit 235, the inlay 210 and the layer 212) forms an antenna inlay that may be sold in order to be inserted into a more complex multilayer structure intended for the production of a chip card.
Thus, for example after insertion of this structure into a complex multilayer such as that described in relation to
The first portions 260 of the connection pads 220, to which the ends of the antenna 200 have been connected, are situated outside of the milled zone and remain protected by the layer 212 and the layers laminated on the latter. Only the second portions 262 of the connection pads 220 that are covered with the solder material are accessible in the cavity 400 after milling. Once the module 100 has been housed in the cavity 400, the conductive tracks 110 and their fastening structures 112 are situated opposite the solder material 230 deposited on the second portions 262 of the connection pads 220.
A thermode is then applied to the front side of the module 100 in order to melt the solder material 230 between the conductive tracks 110 and the connection pads 220.
The respective area of the conductive tracks 110 (without considering the holes of the fastening structures 112) and of the connection pads 220 is for example between 2 and 20 mm2, but it will be understood that a land of solder material 230 having an area approaching or close to 20 mm2 may enable more solid fixing of the module 100 in the cavity 400, but, as the amount of soldering material to be melted is greater, it is necessary to provide more heat.
The holes of the fastening structures 112 have a diameter of between 0.1 and 2 mm, for example.
A pull-off force of the module 100 that is great enough to meet the specifications for this type of product is therefore obtained. The solder material 230 thus makes it possible not only to establish an electrical connection between the conductive tracks 110 and the connection pads 220, but also to fix the module 100 in the cavity 400 without the aid of any other adhesive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14 59310 | Sep 2014 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2015/052621 | 9/30/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2016/051092 | 4/7/2016 | WO | A |
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