This relates generally to adhesive tape, and more particularly, to low profile tapes that connect and seal structures such as structures in electronic devices.
Electronic devices include components such as switches and other structures that can be sensitive to environmental intrusion. If dust or moisture invades the interior of a dome switch, for example, the switch may malfunction. Tape layers and coatings may be used to seal components such as these.
Electronic devices also include structures that are attached together using adhesive. In some arrangements, layers of adhesive-coated tape are used to connect structures together.
Conventional sealing approaches are not always able to provide adequate environmental protection.
Adhesive-tape attachment arrangements sometimes produce stack ups that are thicker than desired, due in part to the thickness of the adhesive-backed tape that is used in connecting device structures together. It may therefore not always be possible to use conventional adhesive-backed tape in sealing and attachment applications.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved adhesive-tape-based structures for sealing and securing structures for electronic device.
Electronic devices may include electronic device structures such substrates, structures with cavities, and housing structures. Components such as dome switches, other electrical components, and mechanical components may be mounted in the cavities or on substrate surfaces.
Tape may be used to attach structures together and to seal electrical and mechanical components to prevent intrusion of dust and moisture.
The tape may have a flexible polymer substrate and one or more layers of adhesive. The tape may be implemented in a single-sided configuration, a configuration with a patterned substrate layer, or a double-sided configuration.
The flexible polymer substrate in the tape may be formed from a nonstick liner material such as parylene. This allows the thickness of the nonstick polymer layer to be significantly thinner than the thickness of the adhesive in the tape. For example, the nonstick layer may have a thickness that is ten times less than the adhesive (as an example).
The nonstick layer may be formed in a pattern so that some of the layer of adhesive is uncovered by the nonstick layer. The nonstick layer may be oriented so that the adhesive is interposed between the nonstick layer and a sealed component or may be oriented so that the nonstick layer is interposed between the adhesive layer and the sealed component. The component that is sealed by the tape may be an electrical component such as a dome switch or may be another mechanical or electrical component.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
Layers of adhesive may be used in assembling structures in devices. For example, layers of adhesive-coated tape may be used to seal structures and may be used to attach structures together. The structures that are sealed and fastened together using adhesive-backed tape layers and other layers of adhesive may be, for example, electrical and mechanical structures in an electronic device such as a media player, a cellular telephone, a computer, or other electronic device. Adhesive layers may be helpful for reducing device size, for reducing assembly costs, for reducing part counts by avoiding the need to use fasteners such as screws, and for forming environmental seals to prevent the intrusion of dust and moisture.
A conventional switch that has been sealed using tape is shown in
When a user presses downward in direction 20 on layers 18, underside 24 of layers 18 presses against upper surface 22 of dome switch 14. This collapses the dome switch and causes the conductive coating on the interior of the dome switch to short together a pair of associated switch terminals.
Layers 18 may include a one-sided adhesive tape formed from adhesive layer 26 and liner layer 28. In a typical one-sided tape such as the tape used in
To form a satisfactory environmental seal, the structures of
To reduce tape thickness while reducing the potential for parylene contamination of device components, a one-sided tape of the type shown in
Liner layer 36 may be formed from a polymer such as parylene or other suitable material nonstick material that can serve as a substrate for adhesive 34. For example, layer 36 may be formed from poly(p-xylylene) polymers using chemical vapor deposition. Parylene is able to form pin-hole free layers of several nanometers in thickness, helping to minimize the overall thickness of tape 32. When tape 32 is implemented using parylene (e.g., when tape 32 is single-sided or double-sided parylene tape), tape thickness can be reduced relative to tape configurations that use relatively thick liner layers. Thickness D2 of layer 36 may be 2 nm to 5 microns, 5-100 nm, 20-60 nm, about 40 nm, less than 3 microns, less than 1 micron, less than 0.5 microns, less than 100 nm, less than 50 nm, or greater than 50 nm (as examples).
Layer 34 may be formed from an adhesive such as a permanent or removable pressure sensitive adhesive (PSA). The thickness D1 of layer 34 is typically significantly larger than the thickness D2. For example, D1 may be three times thicker than D2 and D2 may be three times thinner than D1, D1 may be five times thicker than D2 and D2 may be five times thinner than D1, D1 may be ten times thicker than D2 and D2 may be ten times thinner than D1, or D1 may be 100 times thicker than D2 and D2 may be 100 times thinner than D1 (as examples). Typical thicknesses D2 of adhesive layer 34 are 5-100 microns, 5-20 microns, about 10 microns, less than 70 microns, less than 50 microns, less than 20 microns, less than 15 microns, more than 20 microns, about 1-50 microns, etc. Any combination of these illustrative values for thicknesses D1 and D2 may be used if desired.
Tape 32 may be provided with a removable backing layer and may be dispensed from a roll (as an example). Cut pieces of tape 32 may be placed over a component that is to be sealed. The component that is to be sealed may be, for example, an electrical component such as a switch, a speaker, a microphone, a light source, a sensor, or other electrical device. The component that is to be sealed may also be a mechanical component such as a mechanical component that is sensitive to dust or moisture.
If desired, tape 32 may be used to seal components that are not mounted within housing cavities. A cross-sectional side view of an illustrative electronic component such as a switch that has been covered with a layer of tape of the type shown in
If desired, tape layers such as adhesive layer 34 and nonstick layer 36 may be patterned.
Adhesive 34 may be used to attach layers 36 to the upper surface of structure 60. When backing 52 (
If desired, polymer layer 36 (e.g., a parylene layer) may be used as a substrate in forming a double-sided tape (i.e., by adding an adhesive layer to the exposed surface of a parylene layer or other polymer layer after a single-sided tape structure has been formed. An illustrative double-sided tape structure that may be used for tape 32 is shown in
Layer 36 may have a thickness of 2 nm to 5 microns, 5-100 nm, 20-60 nm, about 40 nm, less than 3 microns, less than 1 micron, less than 0.5 microns, less than 100 nm, less than 50 nm, or greater than 50 nm (as examples). Layers 34A and 34B may each have a thickness that is significantly larger than the thickness of layer 36. For example, layers 34A and 34B may each have a thickness of 5-100 microns, 5-20 microns, about 10 microns, less than 70 microns, less than 50 microns, less than 20 microns, less than 15 microns, more than 20 microns, 1-50 microns, etc.
Double-sided tapes such as tape 32 of
Tape 32A of
Tape 32B of
Tape 32C of
At step 88, tape 32 may be attached to structures such as housing structures, structures with cavities and components that are to be sealed (e.g., dome switches and other components of the types shown in
At step 90, optional patterning operations may be performed (e.g., by cutting away excess tape after tape 32 has been attached to a surface).
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. The foregoing embodiments may be implemented individually or in any combination.
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