The present invention relates to an electronic component mounting board, and to a method of fabricating such a board; more specifically, the invention relates to an electronic component mounting board suitable for a surface-mounting LED, and to a method of fabricating such a board.
In a known electronic component mounting board (see, for example, Patent Document 1 listed below), as shown in
Patent Document 1: JP-A-2005-229003
In the conventional electronic component mounting board described above, the leg portions 137 of the metal frame 107 fitted to the circuit board 106 and formed from a metal block is firmly fitted to the board with solder or the like, so that the heat the LED elements 111 generate as they emit light is dissipated via the leg portions 137 of the metal frame 107 to the board, thereby achieving enhanced heat dissipation performance. The structure here is such that, with the circuit board 106 formed of a resin laminate or the like serving as a supporting plate, the metal frame 107 is fitted thereto with the adhesive layer 108 and then the LED elements 111 are amounted and sealed in resin. The heat generated by the LED elements 111 conducts via the obverse-side electrodes 102, which are formed as metal members having high thermal conductivity (typically formed of Cu, having a thermal conductivity of 403 W/m·K). Laid on the obverse-side electrodes 102, however, is the adhesive layer 108, which is formed of a resin, such as epoxy resin or acrylic resin, having a low thermal conductivity of 1.0 W/m·K or less; in addition, the structure involves sealing with the resin 114, such as epoxy resin or silicone resin, which has a low thermal conductivity of 1.0 W/m·K or less. Thus, the top side of the obverse-side electrodes 102 is shut off with a member having a low thermal conductivity, and this hampers efficient conduction of the heat generated by the LED elements 111 to the metal frame 107. This makes it impossible to make efficient use of the high thermal conductivity of the metal frame 107, and imposes definite limits, ascribable to the rise in the temperature of the LED elements 111, in terms of brightness and lifetime.
Moreover, the circuit board 106 and the frame 107 are typically fitted together with an adhesive layer 108, and the light emitted from the LED elements 111 is transmitted through the adhesive layer 108, causing leakage of light and resulting in a loss in the brightness of a surface-mounting LED.
An object of the present invention is to provide an electronic component mounting board so structured as to be free from the inconveniences discussed above, and to provide a method of fabricating such a board.
According to the invention of claim 1, an electronic component mounting board has a heat-conductive frame on the top surface of a circuit board having a plurality of conductors formed thereon, and the frame is heat-conductively connected to, among the plurality of conductors, a semiconductor element mount conductor on which a semiconductor element is to be mounted. The heat generated by a LED element (hereinafter referred to as a “semiconductor element” as a notion including a LED element) is efficiently dissipated to outside air from the surface of the frame, directly or indirectly via the conductor heat-conductively connected to the frame. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
According to the invention of claim 2, an electronic component mounting board has, on the top surface of a circuit board having a plurality of conductors formed thereon, a frame formed of a metal layer deposited by plating, and the frame is heat-conductively connected to, among the plurality of conductors, a semiconductor element mount conductor on which a semiconductor element is to be mounted. Thus, as in the foregoing, heat is dissipated to outside air from the surface of the frame, and thus the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 3, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1 or 2, the frame on the circuit board has no electrical polarity. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
According to the invention of claim 4, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1 or 2, the frame has one electrical polarity. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
According to the invention of claim 5, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1 or 2, an opening is formed in an end surface of the circuit board, and the semiconductor element mount conductor is heat-conductively connected to a conductor formed on a bottom surface of the circuit board; the frame and the conductor formed on the bottom surface of the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together via a metal layer formed in the board opening. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
According to the invention of claim 6, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1 or 2, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together by being coated with a metal layer. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 7, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together by being mechanically connected. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 8, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together by being welded together. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 9, in the electronic component mounting board, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together as a result of an electrically conductive projection being formed on the frame or the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board and the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board being connected together via the projection. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
According to the invention of claim 10, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 9, the projection is formed around a bottom opening formed in the frame, or is formed so as to close the bottom opening formed in the frame. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 11, in the electronic component mounting board of claim 1 or 2, an LED element is mounted on the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. Moreover, no leakage of light occurs in the electronic component mounting boards of particular claims.
According to the invention of claim 12, a method for fabricating an electronic component mounting board includes: forming a barrier metal layer on the top surface of a circuit board having a plurality of conductors formed thereon so that the plurality of conductors are each coated with the metal barrier; then forming a plated-metal layer over an entire surface including the barrier metal layer; then forming a mask layer on the part of the plated-metal layer where a frame will be formed; then etching the part of the plated-metal layer where the mask layer is not formed; and then removing the mask layer and forming a frame. This makes it possible to provide an electronic component mounting board in which the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced and in which, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 13, a method for fabricating an electronic component mounting board includes: fitting, among a plurality of conductors formed on a top surface of a circuit board, a semiconductor element mount conductor on which a semiconductor element is to be mounted and a heat conductive frame; and then forming a plated-metal layer on the plurality of conductors on the circuit board and on the frame so that the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board and the frame are heat-conductively connected together by the plated-metal layer. This makes it possible to provide an electronic component mounting board in which the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced and in which, when an LED element is mounted, no leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards occurs.
According to the invention of claim 14, in the electronic component mounting board described in any one of claims 1 and 3 to 7, an adhesive layer is formed between the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board such that, between the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board, there are a region where the adhesive layer exists and a region where the adhesive layer does not exist and the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor make contact with each other. By use of this electronic component mounting board, it is possible to enlarge the region in which heat can conduct from the semiconductor element mount conductor to the frame directly without passing through adhesive. Thus, the efficiency with which heat is dissipated from the frame is increased, and the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 1, the heat generated by a semiconductor element conducts to a heat-conductive frame directly or indirectly via a semiconductor element mount conductor formed on a circuit board and is then dissipated from the surface of the frame to outside air. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. In particular, with a surface-mounting LED, the rise in the temperature of the LED element is reduced, resulting in high brightness proportional to current and in enhanced lifetime.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 2, on the top surface of a circuit board having a plurality of conductors formed thereon, a metal frame is formed from a metal layer deposited by plating, and the metal frame is, in terms of heat conduction, integral with, among the plurality of conductors on the circuit board, a semiconductor element mount conductor. When a semiconductor element is mounted on the semiconductor element mount conductor, the heat generated by the semiconductor element conducts via the semiconductor element mount conductor to the frame, and is dissipated from the surface of the frame to outside air, achieving the same effect as in the foregoing. In particular, with a surface-mounting LED, the circuit board and the metal frame are shielded from each other without an adhesive layer 108, resulting in enhanced brightness.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 3, the frame on the circuit board has no electrical polarity. Thus, the frame can be heat-conductively connected to a chassis having a higher heat-dissipating effect, resulting in a higher heat-dissipating effect.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 4, the frame on the circuit board has an electrical polarity. Thus, the frame offers an effect of dissipating the heat generated by the semiconductor element and can also be used as a connection terminal related to the driving of the semiconductor element.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 5, a board opening is formed in an end surface of the circuit board, so that any conductor formed on the obverse or reverse side of the circuit board can be heat-conductively connected to the frame through the board opening. Thus, as in the foregoing, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 6, the frame and the surface of the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together by being coated with a metal layer. This permits heat to conduct from the semiconductor element mount conductor to the frame via the metal layer without being thermally obstructed by an adhesive layer or the like. Thus, as in the foregoing, the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element is reduced. In particular, with a surface-mounting LED, an adhesive layer, which causes leakage of light, is coated with the metal layer, and this offers a light-shielding effect, resulting in enhanced brightness.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 7, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board can be heat-conductively connected together without an adhesive layer by being mechanically connected as with a rivet, screw, or the like. Thus, the heat generated by the semiconductor element can be dissipated efficiently from the surface of the frame to outside air.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 8, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board can be heat-conductively connected together with, instead of an adhesive layer, a metal diffusion layer formed by welding such as brazing, soldering, ultrasonic welding, or the like. Thus, the heat generated by the semiconductor element can be dissipated efficiently from the surface of the frame to outside air. In particular, with a surface-mounting LED, the absence of an adhesive layer, which causes leakage of light, permits the circuit board and the frame to be shielded from each other, resulting in enhanced brightness.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 9, the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board are heat-conductively connected together via an electrically conductive projection formed on the frame or the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board. Thus, the heat generated by the semiconductor element can be dissipated from the surface of the frame to outside air.
In the electronic component mounting board of the invention described in claim 10, the projection mentioned in claim 9 is formed around a bottom opening formed in the frame, or is formed so as to close the bottom opening formed in the frame. In particular, with a surface-mounting LED, the heat generated by the LED element can be dissipated from the surface of the frame to outside air; moreover, the light emitted from the LED element is shielded by the projection, resulting in enhanced brightness.
As described in claim 11, the electronic component mounting boards of the invention described in the foregoing are suitable for surface-mounting LEDs. The heat generated by the LED element is efficiently dissipated to outside air from the surface of the frame via the semiconductor element mount conductor on the circuit board. Thus, the rise in the temperature of the LED element is reduced, resulting in high brightness proportional to current and in enhanced lifetime.
The electronic component mounting boards of particular claims described in the foregoing also offers a light-shielding effect, resulting in enhanced brightness.
Thus, by employing an electronic component mounting board of the invention in a surface-mounting LED, it is possible to obtain enhanced functionality and enhanced reliability in terms of product quality, and to obtain enhanced light emission efficiency per LED element. Thus, it is possible to reduce the number of unit elements conventionally needed to secure a given level of brightness, exerting a great economic effect.
By use of the method for fabricating an electronic component mounting board described in claim 12, it is possible to reduce the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element and, in a case where an LED element is mounted, to provide an electronic component mounting board free from leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards.
By use of the method for fabricating an electronic component mounting board described in claim 13, it is possible to reduce the rise in the temperature of the semiconductor element and, in a case where an LED element is mounted, to provide an electronic component mounting board free from leakage of light as experienced in conventional electronic component mounting boards. By forming the metal layer thicker, it is possible to obtain a higher heat-dissipating effect.
By use of the electronic component mounting board described in claim 14, in the region where adhesive exists in between, it is possible to obtain satisfactory adhesion strength between the circuit board and the frame; in the region where the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor make contact with each other, it is possible to achieve electrical and heat-conductive connection between the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor. Thus, the heat generated by the semiconductor element conducts to the semiconductor element mount conductor, and then efficiently conducts to the frame in the region where the frame and the semiconductor element mount conductor make contact with each other. This reduces the rise in the temperature of the LED element, resulting in high brightness more proportional to current and in enhanced lifetime.
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
1 Insulating base member
2 Obverse-side electrode having a polarity (conductive)
3 Obverse-side electrode having no polarity (conductive)
4 Reverse-side electrode having a polarity (conductive)
5 Reverse-side electrode having no polarity (conductive)
6 Circuit board
7 Heat-conductive frame
8 Adhesive layer
9, 9a, 9b Metal layer
10 Die-bonding resin or die-bonding sheet
11 LED element (semiconductor element)
12 Fine metal wire
13 LED element electrode
14 Resin
15 Through hole
16, 16a, 16b, 16c Metal surface-treatment layer
17 Insulating resin
18 Welded portion
19 LED mounting hole
21 Metal frame
22 Chassis
24 Board
25 Board opening
26 Frame opening
27 Rivet
28, 28a Electrically conductive projection
29 Heat-conductive frame bottom opening
30 Metal diffusion layer
31 Barrier metal layer
32 Plated-metal layer
33 Etching resist layer
34 Swaged portion
35 Frame depression
36 Contact portion
37 Divide portion
38 Zener element
101 Insulating base member
102 Obverse-side electrode having a polarity (conductive)
104 Reverse-side electrode having a polarity (conductive)
106 Circuit board
107 Metal frame
108 Adhesive layer
110 Die-bonding resin or die-bonding sheet
111 LED element
112 Fine metal wire
113 LED element electrode
114 Resin
137 Metal frame leg
Hereinafter, with reference to the accompanying drawings, electronic component mounting boards and their fabrication methods according to the invention will be described in detail.
A detailed description follows. A circuit board 6 has, formed on the top surface of an insulating base member 1, a plurality of conductors—a plurality of obverse-side electrodes 2 each having a positive or negative polarity (hereinafter referred to as the obverse-side electrodes 2 having a polarity) and one or more obverse-side electrodes 3 having no polarity. The circuit board 6 further has, formed on the bottom surface of the insulating base member I and electrically connected to the obverse-side electrodes respectively, a plurality of reverse-side electrodes 4 each having a positive or negative polarity (hereinafter referred to as the reverse-side electrodes 4 having a polarity) and one or more reverse-side electrodes 5 having no polarity. Next, on the circuit board 6, on the top surface of the obverse-side electrodes 3 having no polarity, a frame 7 that conducts heat (hereinafter referred to as the heat-conductive frame 7) is adhered by use of an adhesive layer 8.
A metal layer 9 (of which part 9a is for heat conduction and a part 9b is for surface treatment) is formed to coat the surface of the heat-conductive frame 7, of the obverse-side electrodes 3 having no polarity, and of the adhesive layer 8 formed in between, so that the heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 having no polarity are heat-conductively connected with the metal layer 9 (see
According to
As will be understood from the drawings mentioned above, since the interfaces of the adhesive layer 8 used to fit together the circuit board 6 and the heat-conductive frame 7 is coated with the metal layer 9, no leakage of light occurs, and thus the problem that invites a loss in the brightness of a surface-mounting LED is improved; in addition, since the structure is such that the heat-conductive frame 7 and the circuit board 6 are connected together by the metal layer 9, the adhesion strength between the heat-conductive frame 7 and the circuit board 6 is enhanced.
In a case where, as shown in
As shown in
Instead of completely removing the circumferential part of the obverse-side electrode 3 as described above, a step may be provided so that, on a similar principle, on the floor part of the step, an adhesive layer 8 is applied or adhered and a heat-conductive frame 7 is bonded and thereby fixed (unillustrated).
The heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 of the third example may be heat-conductively connected together with the metal layer 9 used in the first and second examples. This enhances the heat-dissipating effect (unillustrated).
Even in a case where, as shown in
As shown in
By mounting LED elements 11 on the electronic component mounting board structured as described above and then applying sealing with resin 14 as shown in
In a case where, in
According to the invention, including the first to fifth examples described above, used as the circuit board 6 is one having conductors formed on an insulating base member 1, or one composed of a plurality of insulating base members 1 laid together and each having conductors formed thereon, or one having an insulating material adhered to a leadframe, or the like.
The heat-conductive frame 7 is formed largely as a metal member of Al (having a thermal conductivity of 236 W/m·K), Fe (having a thermal conductivity of 83.5 W/m·K), Cu (having a thermal conductivity of 403 W/m·K), Mg (having a thermal conductivity of 157 W/m·K), or the like; or is a frame formed of ceramic or insulating resin having a thermal conductivity less than 10 W/m·K, with a metal layer deposited on the surface of the frame; or is a frame formed of a board material or the like containing a combination of a metal member, ceramic, and insulating resin, with a metal layer deposited on the surface of the frame.
To form a metal layer on the surface of the above-mentioned frame formed of ceramic or insulating resin having a thermal conductivity less than 10 W/m·K, or frame formed of a board material or the like containing a combination of a metal member, ceramic, and insulating resin, it is preferable to use sputtering, vapor deposition, electrolytic plating, electroless plating, or a combination of any two or more of these processes.
In a case where electroless plating is used, a catalyst may be mixed with an insulating frame material, such as ceramic or insulating resin, or may be deposited on the surface of the frame.
In a case where electrolytic plating is used, an electrically conductive material, such as carbon, may be deposited on the surface of an insulating frame material, such as ceramic or resin.
A surface layer of metal may further be formed on the surface of the above-mentioned frame formed largely as a metal member of Al, Fe, Cu, Mg, or the like.
The metal layer on the surface of the heat-conductive frame 7 may be a layer of Cu (having a thermal conductivity of 403 W/m·K), Ni (having a thermal conductivity of 94 W/m·K), Au (having a thermal conductivity of 319 W/m·K), Ag (having a thermal conductivity of 428 W/m·K), Pd (having a thermal conductivity of 72 W/m·K), Sn (having a thermal conductivity of 68 W/m·K), or Al (having a thermal conductivity of 236 W/m·K), or may composed of a plurality of layers of any two or more of these metals laid together.
Each conductor, namely an obverse-side electrode 2 having a polarity, obverse-side electrode 3 having no polarity, reverse-side electrode 4 having a polarity, or reverse-side electrode 5 having no polarity, is formed largely as a metal member of Al, Fe, Cu, or the like, or an alloy thereof
It is preferable that the surface of each obverse-side electrode 2 having a polarity, obverse-side electrode 3 having no polarity, reverse-side electrode 4 having a polarity, and reverse-side electrode 5 having no polarity be plated with Cu, Ni, Au, Ag, Pd, or Sn, or with a plurality of layers of any two or more of these metals laid together.
It is preferable that the metal layer 9 be plated with Cu, Ni, Au, Ag, Pd, or Sn, or with a plurality of layers of any two or more of these metals laid together.
In a structure in which, as shown in the drawings of the third example, the heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 are brought into contact with each other and thereby heat-conductively connected together, since there is no need to form a metal layer 9, the heat-conductive frame 7 may be formed of ceramic or insulating resin having a thermal conductivity of 10 W/m·K or more, or may be a frame of Al having a layer of anodized aluminum (having a thermal conductivity of 80 W/m·K) formed on the surface thereof.
The fine metal wires 12 are formed of metal such as Ag, Au, or Al.
Used as the die-bonding resin is epoxy resin, or a paste of epoxy resin or the like mixed with an electrically conductive material, for example metal such as Au, Ag, or Cu, or an alloy such as solder, or a metal oxide such as ITO or SnO2. Used as the die-bonding sheet is a sheet of epoxy resin or the like.
Used as the resin 14 used to seal the LED elements 11 and the fine metal wires 12 is a translucent or fluorescent resin.
According to
It is preferable that the metal frame 21 be formed of Cu, Ni, Au, Ag, Pd, or Sn, or of a plurality of layers of any two or more of these metals laid together.
In the drawings referred to in connection with the first to fourth and sixth examples described above, the heat-conductive frame 7 and the metal frame 21 have no polarity; thus, even if they make contact with another electrically conductive member, there is no risk of electrical short-circuiting. Thus, as shown in a perspective view in
In the drawings referred to in connection with the fifth example described above, the obverse-side electrodes 2 having a polarity which are formed on the circuit board 6 and the heat-conductive frame 7 are electrically and heat-conductively connected together; thus, the heat-conductive frame 7 has a polarity, and functions as an electrode for making the LED elements 11 emit light. In a case of mounting as a surface-mounting LED, the heat-conductive frame 7 can be used as a connection terminal on a board 24.
With the board opening 25 formed as shown in
Instead of the metal layer 9 formed in the board opening 25, an electrically conductive, heat-conductive metal member or metal paste may be used.
In the structure shown in
Moreover, the mechanical connection results in extremely high adhesion strength between the circuit board 6 and the heat-conductive frame 7 compared with that obtained in the structure of the first example.
Moreover, the use of the metal rivet 27 permits heat conduction from the reverse-side electrode 5 via the rivet 27 to the heat-conductive frame 7. Thus, even in a case where LED elements 11 are mounted on the reverse-side electrode 5, the heat generated by the LED elements 11 conducts from the reverse-side electrode 5 via the rivet 27 to the heat-conductive frame 7.
The mechanical connection here may instead be achieved by use of a bolt, by screwing in, or otherwise.
With the above structure, the heat generated by LED elements 11 is efficiently dissipated to outside air.
The electrically conductive projections 28 are formed, for example, as metal members of Ni, Au, Ag, Cu, Al, or the like; or are formed of an alloy such as solder; or are formed of a high-heat-conductivity material using an electrically conductive paste formed by mixing an electrically conductive material (metal such as Au, Ag, Cu, or Al, or an alloy such as solder, or a metal oxide such as ITO or SnO2) with resin, carbon material, or the like.
As shown in a sectional view in
In a case where the contact portions 36 provide the desired connection strength, the adhesive layer 8 may be omitted.
As a result of this projection 28 being formed around the bottom opening 29 of the heat-conductive frame 7, the light emitted from LED elements 11 is shielded by the projection 28.
Moreover, the above projection 28 also offers an effect of, when the heat-conductive frame 7 and the circuit board 6 are adhered together with the adhesive layer 8, preventing the seeping out of the adhesive layer 8 during heat-crimping. It thus reduces contamination, resulting from the seeping out of the adhesive layer 8, of the areas where the LED elements 11 are mounted and of the obverse-side electrodes connected thereto, and also widens the control ranges of various conditions in the process, for example the condition for the thickness of the adhesive layer 8 and the conditions for heat-crimping for adhering the heat-conductive frame 7 and the circuit board 6 together. This leads to stable product quality and offers an effect of enhancing yields.
The shape of the electrically conductive projection 28 formed around the bottom opening 29 of the heat-conductive frame 7 is not limited to circular as shown in
As shown in
With electric power fed to the heat-conductive frame 7 and to the obverse-side electrode 3 having no polarity (it may be fed to the obverse-side electrodes 2), as shown in
With this structure, there is no need for an adhesive layer 8 as in the first example, and there is no need for heat-conductive connection by a metal layer 9; nevertheless, it is possible to obtain an effect similar to that obtained in the first example.
Moreover, since the connection between the heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 is achieved by the metallic bond provided by the metal diffusion layer 30, the adhesion strength between the circuit board 6 and the heat-conductive frame 7 is extremely high.
The connection by welding is achieved, for example, by welding using electric energy, such as arc welding or electron beam welding; or by welding using chemical energy, such as blazing including soldering; or by welding using mechanical energy, such as pressure welding; or by ultrasonic welding; or by laser welding.
Instead of the adhesive layer 8 shown in
The electrically conductive projection 28 formed around the bottom opening 29 of the heat-conductive frame 7 as described above may be replaced with an adhesive layer 8, with solder provided at a similar position; in this case, the heat-conductive frame 7 is then preliminarily fixed with the adhesive layer 8, then the solder is melted, and then the heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 are welded together so that the heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 are heat-conductively connected together (unillustrated).
The heat-conductive frame 7 and the obverse-side electrode 3 may be welded together totally or partly.
In a case where the projections 28 of the tenth example are formed of metal such as Au, Ag, Cu, or Al or of an alloy such as solder, by use of one of the welding methods mentioned above, a metal diffusion layer 30 may be formed between the top surface of the projections 28 and the heat-conductive frame 7 so that these are joined together metallically. This increases the joint strength between the top surface of the projections 28 and the heat-conductive frame 7.
The various examples of electronic component mounting boards by way of which the invention has been specifically described above are in no way meant as any limitation. Preferably, the shape, inner wall angle, and height of the heat-conductive frame 7 or metal frame 21 are determined to suit the actual purpose; it is possible, for example, to give those frames a multiple-stage structure, or to form a heat-conductive frame 7 on the top surface of a metal frame 21 and heat-conductively connect them together.
In any other fashion, the features of the first to twelfth examples may be combined together appropriately to suit the actual purpose.
Now, examples of the method of fabricating an electronic component mounting board according to the invention will be described.
Through the steps shown in
It is preferable that the barrier metal layer 31 shown in
The barrier metal layer 31 is formed by electrolytic plating or electroless plating.
The plated-metal layer 32 is formed of Cu, and is formed by electrolytic plating or electroless plating.
In a case where the plated-metal layer 32 is formed of Cu and the barrier metal layer 31 is formed of one of the substances mentioned above, the etchant is an alkali etchant, a solution of ammonium persulfate, a mixed solution of hydrogen peroxide and sulfuric acid, or the like.
In a step after step 6 shown in
It is preferable that the electrodes and the metal frame 21 formed in the processes described above be plated with Cu, Ni, Au, Ag, Pd, or Sn, or a plurality of layers of any two or more of these metals laid together.
Through the steps shown in
In
In a case where, as described above, the insulating base member I has a part where the heat-conductive frame 7 will be fitted, the adhesive layer 8 may be formed on the insulating base member 1, or on a bottom part of the heat-conductive frame 7, or both on the insulating base member I and on a bottom part of the heat-conductive frame 7.
In the examples described above, as shown in their respective diagrams, a single electronic component mounting board according to the invention has been described separately; depending on product specifications, it is also possible to adopt a structure in which a plurality of such boards are coupled together.
The point is that the invention is applicable to any of the following structures: one in which a plurality of circuit boards 6 are coupled together and a plurality of heat-conductive frames 7, fitted thereto, are also coupled together; one in which a plurality of heat-conductive frames 7 are coupled together but circuit boards 6, fitted thereto, are separate from one another; and one in which heat-conductive frames 7 are separate from one another and circuit boards 6, fitted thereto, are also separate from one another.
The invention is also applicable to a structure in which, after LED elements 11 are mounted on a circuit board 6, sealing with resin 14 is applied, and then a heat-conductive frame 7 is fitted so that a conductor formed on the circuit board 6 and the heat-conductive frame 7 are heat-conductively connected together.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005-339055 | Nov 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2006/323265 | 11/22/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/15/2009 |