This application claims the priority benefit of Taiwan application serial no. 105144020, filed on Dec. 30, 2016. The entirety of the above-mentioned patent application is hereby incorporated by reference herein and made a part of this specification.
The disclosure relates to a coating method and a coating system thereof, and relates to a coating method of a non-Newtonian fluid material and a coating system thereof.
The manufacture of a functional thin film product via a wet coating process is a highly efficient and fast technique. A wet coating process is very competitive against a dry process such as PVD (physical vapor deposition) and CVD (chemical vapor deposition) in terms of cost and yield, and can be applied in the process of, for instance, a photoresist of a lithography process, the manufacture of a color filter via a dye pigment dispersion method, a liquid crystal display alignment film, and the low dielectric organic layer of an integrated circuit.
Former coating materials mostly have low viscosity, and in recent years, due to the rise of the flexible substrate, a high-viscosity fluid, i.e., non-Newtonian fluid, is also used as a coating material. However, the coating process of the non-Newtonian fluid has the issues of narrow coating process window, prone to film breakage, and poor film properties. Therefore, the research for a reliable coating method and coating system of a non-Newtonian fluid is still widely underway.
The disclosure provides a coating method of a non-Newtonian fluid material suitable for coating the non-Newtonian fluid material on a substrate using a coating apparatus. The coating method of the non-Newtonian fluid material includes the following steps. An equation of shear rate and shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material represented by equation (1) is obtained,
wherein η is shear viscosity, η0 is zero shear viscosity, {dot over (y)} is shear rate, and n is power-law index. An initial gap between a coating apparatus and a substrate and a thickness of a film of the non-Newtonian fluid material to be formed are set. The non-Newtonian fluid material is coated on the substrate in a non-constant coating velocity manner using the coating apparatus. The shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material is obtained from equation (1) according to the coating velocity and thickness of the non-Newtonian fluid material. The gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate is adjusted according to the shear viscosity, coating velocity, and thickness.
The disclosure provides a coating system of a non-Newtonian fluid material including a coating apparatus, a gap adjustment unit, a velocity adjustment unit, a coating material supply unit, and a control unit. The coating apparatus is used to coat the non-Newtonian fluid material on a substrate. The gap adjustment unit is connected to the coating apparatus to adjust the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate. The velocity adjustment unit is connected to the coating apparatus to adjust the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material using the coating apparatus. The coating material supply unit is connected to the coating apparatus to supply the non-Newtonian fluid material to the coating apparatus. The control unit is connected to the velocity adjustment unit and the gap adjustment unit to control the velocity adjustment unit and to control the gap adjustment unit according to the value of the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate obtained in the coating method of the non-Newtonian fluid material described above.
Several exemplary embodiments accompanied with figures are described in detail below to further describe the disclosure in details.
The accompanying drawings are included to provide further understanding, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate exemplary embodiments and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
In the following detailed description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the disclosed embodiments. It will be apparent, however, that one or more embodiments may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are schematically shown in order to simplify the drawing.
Referring to both
The coating apparatus 110 is used to coat a non-Newtonian fluid material 114 on a substrate 112. The coating apparatus 110 is, for instance, a slit coating apparatus. The gap adjustment unit 102 is connected to the coating apparatus 110 to adjust a gap H between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112. The velocity adjustment unit 104 is connected to the coating apparatus 110 to adjust the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 using the coating apparatus 110. The coating material supply unit 106 is connected to the coating apparatus 110 to supply the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 to the coating apparatus 110. The coating material supply unit 106 can include a quantitative motor and a quantitative syringe (not shown). The quantitative motor is connected to the quantitative syringe such that the quantitative syringe takes in the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 and provides the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 to the coating apparatus 110. The control unit 108 is connected to the velocity adjustment unit 104 and the gap adjustment unit 102 to control the velocity adjustment unit 104 and to control the gap adjustment unit 102 according to the value of the gap H obtained in the following coating method of the non-Newtonian fluid material.
The non-Newtonian fluid material 114 includes a polymer, photoresist, or liquid crystal material. For instance, the polymer can include high-temperature polyimide (PI), the photoresist can include an acrylic photoresist coating material, and the liquid crystal material can include a polarized liquid crystal material (such as a polarized liquid crystal material made by OPTIVA). In an embodiment, the viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 at 10° C. to 40° C. is, for instance, 50 cp to 6000 cp, and in particular, the viscosity at 20° C. to 30° C. is, for instance, 50 cp to 6000 cp.
The coating method of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 includes the following steps.
In step S100, an equation of the shear viscosity and shear rate of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 is obtained. The equation is as represented by equation (1) below:
wherein η is shear viscosity, η0 is zero shear viscosity, {dot over (γ)} is shear rate, and n is power-law index. Moreover, the shear rate {dot over (γ)} in equation (1) can be represented by equation (1-1) below:
wherein U is the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 and h is the thickness of the film to be formed (such as a thickness h of the film to be formed shown in
In equation (1), the zero shear viscosity is the shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 when the shear rate approaches zero. Different non-Newtonian fluid materials have different power-law indexes that can describe the fluid behavior of the fluid material. In an embodiment, the graph of shear rate to shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material can be obtained using a rheometer or viscometer at a fixed temperature, and then the power-law index and zero shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material are obtained using a power regression method. It should be mentioned that, since the fluid material in the disclosure is a non-Newtonian fluid material, the power-law index is a value greater than 1 or less than 1.
Therefore, during the coating process of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114, the shear rate can be obtained by the thickness h of the film to be formed and the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 at this velocity, and the shear viscosity at this velocity is obtained by the shear rate.
Next, in step S102, an equation of the capillary number and critical dimensionless thickness of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be obtained. The equation is represented by equation (2a) and equation (2b) below:
when Ca<0.1, t0=XCaY (2a)
when Ca≥0.1, t0=Z (2b),
wherein X is a real number of 35 to 53, Y is a real number of 1.7 to 1.9, Z is a real number of 0.6 to 0.7, Ca is the capillary number, and t0 is the critical dimensionless thickness. Moreover, the capillary number Ca in equation (2a) and equation (2b) can be represented by equation (2-1) below:
wherein σ is surface tension. Moreover, the critical dimensionless thickness t0 in equation (2a) and equation (2b) can be represented by equation (2-2) below:
wherein H0 is the critical gap between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112.
The critical dimensionless thickness and critical gap can be used to determine the quality of the film formed by coating the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 on the substrate 112, such as whether the issue of film breakage occurs, or the uniformity of the film thickness.
The capillary number and critical dimensionless thickness of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be obtained by the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114, the shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 at this velocity and the surface tension of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 measured by a surface tension tester via equation (2a), equation (2b), and equation (2-1). Then, the critical gap corresponding to the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be calculated from equation (2-2). In an embodiment, the different critical gaps corresponding to different coating velocities of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 obtained from step S102 can be stored in the control unit 108.
Next, step S104 is performed to set the initial coating parameters. Specifically, in this step, the initial gap (not shown) between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112 and the thickness h of the film to be formed are set. In an embodiment, the initial gap can be 2 to 4 times the thickness h of the film to be formed, and the thickness h of the film to be formed is, for instance, greater than or equal to 5 μm or between 10 μm and 1000 μm.
After the setting of the initial coating parameters is complete, step S106 is performed to coat. The velocity adjustment unit 104 is controlled via the control unit 108 in
Then, step S108 is performed, and the gap H between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112 is adjusted according to the shear viscosity, coating velocity, and the thickness h of the film to be formed. Specifically, different coating velocities can cause the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 to have different shear viscosities and capillary number, and different capillary number correspond to different critical dimensionless thicknesses and different critical gaps. In other words, during the coating process of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114, the shear viscosity, capillary number, critical dimensionless thickness, and critical gap are all changed with different coating velocities. Moreover, the critical dimensionless thickness and critical gap are related to the quality of the film formed on the substrate 112 by the non-Newtonian fluid material 114. Therefore, in step S108, the gap H between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112 can be adjusted with different coating velocities to make the gap H less than or equal to the critical gap corresponding to the coating velocity, and therefore the film-forming quality can be adjusted.
Specifically, referring to equation (1) and equation (1-1) in step S100, the corresponding shear viscosity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be obtained according to the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 and the thickness h of the film to be formed. Next, referring to equation (2a), equation (2b), and equation (2-1) in step S102, the corresponding capillary number and critical dimensionless thickness of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be obtained from the surface tension of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 and the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 and the corresponding shear viscosity thereof. Then, referring to equation (2-2) in step S102, the critical gap corresponding to the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be obtained. Next, the gap H between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112 is adjusted to make the gap H less than or equal to the critical gap to ensure the quality of the film. In an embodiment, the value of the critical gap corresponding to the coating velocity of the non-Newtonian fluid material 114 can be stored in the control unit 108 in step S102. Moreover, in step S108, the control unit 108 can be used to control the gap adjustment unit 102 to adjust the gap H between the coating apparatus 110 and the substrate 112 to make the gap H less than or equal to the critical gap.
Referring to
It can be known from the above that, when the dimensionless thickness is greater than or equal to the critical dimensionless thickness, coating should occur in the film-forming region R1 in
Therefore, during the coating process, when the non-Newtonian fluid material is coated on the substrate (such as the front end and back end of the coating process) in a non-constant velocity manner, by adjusting the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate during the coating process, the coating of the non-Newtonian fluid material can be ensured to be kept in the film-forming region R1 in
Moreover, since the coating system of the non-Newtonian fluid material of the disclosure controls the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate via the coating method of the non-Newtonian fluid material described above, performing a coating process using the coating system of the non-Newtonian fluid material of the disclosure can have the advantages of good film-forming quality and high process window.
Experiments are provided below to verify the efficacy of the disclosure. However, the disclosure is not limited to the following content.
Referring to
According to step S102, the surface tension measured using a surface tension tester (such as KRUSS) and different coating velocities and corresponding shear viscosities thereof of the high-temperature polyimide can be entered into equation (2a), equation (2b), and equation (2-1) to obtain critical dimensionless thicknesses corresponding to different coating viscosities. Then, critical gaps corresponding to different coating velocities can be obtained from equation (2-2).
Next, step S104 is performed. In the present experimental example, the gap (i.e., initial gap) between the coating apparatus and the substrate before the start of coating is set to 350 μm, and the thickness h of the film to be formed is set to 144 μm. Then, step S106 is performed to begin coating. In the present experimental example, the coating velocity of the polyimide is constant acceleration. Specifically, the coating velocity is 0 mm/s at 0 seconds, and the coating velocity is increased to 5 mm/s until 1 second at a constant acceleration of 5 mm/s2. Then, step S108 is performed to adjust the gap H via the shear viscosity, coating velocity, and the thickness h of the film to be formed to make the gap H less than or equal to the critical gap obtained in step S102. The parameters above are as shown in Table 1 below, wherein the gaps in Table 1 refer to the gaps adjusted in step S108.
The difference of comparative example 1-1 and experimental example 1 is only in that in comparative example 1-1, the gap is not adjusted according to the method of step S100 to step S108, and the gap of comparative example 1-1 is fixed at 180 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 1. The parameters of comparative example 1-1 are as shown in Table 2 below, wherein the gaps in Table 2 are not adjusted during the coating process.
The difference of comparative example 1-2 and experimental example 1 is only in that in comparative example 1-2, the gap is not adjusted according to the method of step S100 to step S108, and the gap in comparative example 1-2 is fixed at 300 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 1. The parameters of comparative example 1-2 are as shown in Table 3 below, wherein the gaps in Table 3 are not adjusted during the coating process.
Referring to
Based on the above, experimental example 1 can have the advantages of greater error tolerance for the control of the gap, reducing ink stains to the coating apparatus, and keeping the non-Newtonian fluid material in the film-forming region R1 during the coating process.
Referring to
The difference of comparative example 2-1 and experimental example 2 is only in that in comparative example 2-1, the gap is not adjusted during the coating process according to the method above, and the gap (fixed) of comparative example 2-1 is 50 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 2. The parameters of comparative example 2-1 are as shown in Table 5 below, wherein the gaps in Table 5 are not adjusted during the coating process.
The difference of comparative example 2-2 and experimental example 2 is only in that in comparative example 2-2, the gap is not adjusted during the coating process according to the method above, and the gap (fixed) of comparative example 2-2 is 130 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 2. The parameters of comparative example 2-2 are as shown in Table 6 below, wherein the gaps in Table 6 are not adjusted during the coating process.
Referring to
Referring to
The difference of comparative example 3-1 and experimental example 3 is only in that in comparative example 3-1, the gap is not adjusted during the coating process according to the method above, and the gap (fixed) of comparative example 3-1 is 6 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 3. The parameters of comparative example 3-1 are as shown in Table 8 below, wherein the gaps in Table 8 are not adjusted during the coating process.
The difference of comparative example 3-2 and experimental example 3 is only in that in comparative example 3-2, the gap is not adjusted during the coating process according to the method above, and the gap (fixed) of comparative example 3-2 is 10 μm and the other parameters are all the same as experimental example 3. The parameters of comparative example 3-2 are as shown in Table 9 below, wherein the gaps in Table 9 are not adjusted during the coating process.
Referring to
Based on the above, in the disclosure, a thin film having uniform film thickness can be formed when the non-Newtonian fluid material is coated on the substrate in a non-constant velocity manner by adjusting the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate during the coating process, and the issue of film breakage does not readily occur. Moreover, the disclosure can further increase the error tolerance of the gap between the coating apparatus and the substrate in the coating process, and therefore the process window can be increased.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the structure of the disclosed embodiments without departing from the scope or spirit of the disclosure. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the disclosure cover modifications and variations of this disclosure provided they fall within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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105144020 | Dec 2016 | TW | national |