The invention relates to the electrolytic treatment, in particular electroplating and etching, of electrically conductive layers on preferably planar material. It is particularly suitable for electroplating substrates such as printed circuit boards and conductive foils as portions in continuously operating plant or strips of metal or metallized synthetic films in plant for passing material from one roll to the next. Here, the intention is to apply as high a current density as possible to deposit or etch a metal layer of uniform thickness over the entire extent of the surface of the material even if the base layer is very thin and hence has high resistance. Tried-and-tested solutions for this already exist.
It is the object of the invention to describe making electrical contact in planar material for electroplating or for electrolytic etching in continuously operating plant and in plant for treating material which is passed from one roll to the next. In particular, the preferably rotating electrical contact-making means of the material is also to be suitable for material having differing sizes transversely to the direction of transport and having thin base layers, for uniform electrolytic treatment. In this case, by comparison with the prior art a high level of complexity in the plant is to be avoided.
The object is achieved by the method according to claim 1 and the device according to claim 7. The subclaims describe advantageous embodiments of the invention.
Continuously operating plant and plant that produces material passed from one roll to the next is suitable preferably for the manufacture of mass-produced products, because it has little flexibility in respect of the sequence of processes. These products were called end products above. These are usually small and miniature printed circuit boards or conductive foils for, for example, BGAs (ball grid arrays), RFIDs (radio frequency identification units), MP3 players, memory sticks or indeed for relatively large printed circuit boards for, for example, mobile telephones, PCs and the like. On the one hand the invention makes use of the increasing miniaturisation of these electronic end products to optimize the layout of the material, and on the other it supports the precision conductor technology required for miniaturisation, as a result of the planar electroplating of the thin base layers necessary therefor. After they have been finished in the continuously operating plant, and where appropriate further plant, the end products are separated from the material for their respective use.
The material to be treated is in this case for example a large-scale printed circuit board or conductive foil. In practice, these large-scale printed circuit boards or conductive foils are also called panels. They have a useful and a non-useful zone. The end products are located in the area to be used. By contrast, the edge zones, including the contact track or tracks located thereon, are typically not usable for the end products. In the layout of the printed circuit boards, a large or very large number of, usually, the same end products are arranged in the area to be used. There are always a plurality of ways of arranging the many end products on the printed circuit board or panel. The present invention makes use of this fact. It takes as a starting point the fact that the end products are arranged on the panel such that a contact track is formed on the material and kept free approximately or precisely in the centre, transversely as seen in the direction of transport. Similarly approximately or precisely in the centre of the transport track of the continuously operating plant or strip plant, that is to say also transversely as seen in the direction of transport, there is in each case an electrical contact, preferably rotating, on each of the many contact rolls or contact wheels arranged along the transport path, which may equally be the transport rolls, transport wheels or transport means.
The invention is described in particular by way of the example of electroplating, in particular that of printed circuit boards for metalizing the entire surface and providing uninterrupted contact and for constructing the conductor pattern, which is structured using resist, for example. However, the invention is also suitable without restrictions for electrolytic etching and other electrolytic processes.
According to the invention, the material is supplied with the electrical or electrolytic current required for electroplating, preferably by means of a contact track in the centre. In this case, the effect on the distribution of layer thickness transversely as seen in the direction of transport is at least as advantageous as—or better than—in the prior art with optimally uniform supply from the two edges. The two oblique planes which are formed according to the invention face in the opposite direction, however. The maximum layer thickness is once again achieved in the contact zone, that is to say in the centre of the material. The differences in layer thickness in the oblique planes transversely as seen in the direction of transport are, according to the invention, only approximately a quarter of the difference achieved when the electroplating current is supplied from only one edge, regardless of the contact resistances effective at the particular moment.
The making of electrical contact in the region of the centre of the material, that is to say in the useful zone, has the following substantial advantages by comparison with the prior art:
The invention will be further described below with reference to the schematic
a shows, in cross section, a continuously operating plant or a strip plant, according to the prior art.
b shows, on a much larger scale, the profile of the layer thickness to be achieved with the arrangement according to
a shows, in cross section, a continuously operating plant or a strip plant, according to the present invention.
b shows the profile of the layer thickness to be achieved according to the invention, transversely as seen in the direction of transport, again on a much larger scale.
In
b shows the profile of the layer thickness on the material 1 transversely to the direction of transport, as results from an arrangement according to
The difference in the amount deposited between the edge zone 5 and the centre of the material increases when the base layer to be electroplated is of higher resistance, when the width of the material transversely to the direction of transport is larger and when a higher current density is used for the electroplating.
The so-called deposition bone formation 11 is added to the profile of the oblique planes at the already higher edges of the material 1, and this effect is particularly intensive there because of the electrical edge effect in the zone of greatest local current density. This increases the difference in the overall depositions on the material in a highly disadvantageous way. In particular for the above-mentioned mass-produced products which are made by precision conductor technology, the distributions of layer thickness have to be very uniform, and according to the prior art this can only be achieved using low current densities.
a shows, in cross section, a continuously operating plant or a strip plant according to the invention, for electroplating board-shaped or strip-shaped material 1. In this plant, there are along the transport path numerous transport and contact means 2 which transport the material 1 and make electrical contact. Rolls are illustrated serving as the transport means 2. It is also possible for rotating rolls having small wheels, or non-rotating sliding contacts, to be used. The electrical contacts 3, which take the form of rings, small wheels, discs, brushes or segmented contact wheels, are in this basic arrangement of the invention located transversely as seen in the direction of transport, preferably in the centre of the contact means 2 and the transport path. This arrangement requires only one corresponding contact track 15 on the material, preferably also running in the centre of the material 1 inside the useful area 17, as shown in
An asymmetrical contact track, in the layout of the material or printed circuit board or the strip to be electroplated, and corresponding contacts 3 along the transport path of the continuously operating plant may also be provided.
Because electrical contact is still made in the event of the contacts 3 leaving the track unexpectedly, as a result of the arrangement according to the invention in the useful zone, the serious consequences for the plant technology which are described above do not occur. Because of this, there is no need for a safety margin and the width of the contact track 15 may be narrow in the layout of the material 1, for example 10 mm with a width of the contact wheel 3 of for example 5 mm. The contacts always roll within the useful zone 12 of the material. They cannot fall off the material and so lose electrical contact. This means that electrical contact cannot be broken, which among other things means that faults cannot result in the case of demetallisation of the contacts because of a thick metallized layer that was not planned for.
The distribution of layer thickness which can be achieved according to the invention transversely to the direction of transport is shown in
The method according to the invention is highly suited for example to the requirements currently made of such electroplating plant in printed circuit board technology. These requirements include copper base layers down to a minimum of 1.5 μm thick for printed circuit boards that are 610 mm wide and to which an electroplated layer up to 25 μm thick is to be applied. In this case, only differences in layer thickness of at most 1 μm are acceptable in the zone of the useful area. These requirements can be met according to the invention.
In the case of base layers applied by sputtering or chemically deposited copper layers having a thickness of, for example, 0.2 μm, it is helpful to extend the concept of the invention because of the substantially higher resistance. For this, it is proposed that at least two contact tracks be provided in the layout of the material and two contact tracks or contacts 3 be provided on the contact means 2. These two contact tracks are located inside the useful zone of the material, approximately at ¼ and ¾ of the way across the width thereof, transversely as seen in the direction of transport and approximately symmetrically in relation to the transport path. Here, a total of four smaller oblique planes are formed on the upper side and where appropriate on the lower side of the material. In this case, ¼ of the total current of this contact zone flows from each contact in each of the two directions, transversely as seen in the direction of transport. At the same time, the length of the current flow in the base layer of the printed circuit board is reduced to ¼ of the total width, resulting in the electrical resistance of the associated current path being quartered in size. A quarter of the current flowing through a quarter of the resistance gives, by Ohm's law, a drop in electrical voltage to only one sixteenth. The differences in layer thickness on the material are reduced to approximately this fraction by comparison with the supply of current from one side, according to the prior art. Once again, the troughs of the oblique planes are in each case away from the contacts.
Base layers deposited by sputtering are particularly thin in the edge zone of the material, or metallisation is completely absent. The same is true of so-called etched-back full-surface printed circuit boards. In these, base layers which are for example 12 μm or 17 μm thick are etched back to around 3 μm. Then the actual treatment of the printed circuit boards takes place. In particular because of the puddling effect, the edge zones are etched more intensively than the centre zone. In both these cases, the fact of supplying the electrolytic current in the centre of the material, according to the invention, or in a plurality of tracks of the centre zone proves very advantageous, because that is where the nominal layer thickness for the base layer always prevails and so a reliable supply of current is possible. A plurality of contact wheels arranged transversely as seen in the direction of transport are preferably arranged symmetrically in relation to the transport path. The edge of the material is not required for making contact when supply is in the centre, by means of one or more contact tracks 15. However, in these cases the layout of the material and the position of the contacts on the contact means must be adjusted to one another. If there are a plurality of tracks arranged transversely as seen in the direction of transport, there is no longer complete freedom in the selection of parameters, as is provided by a single supply in the centre. With some mass-produced products which are manufactured over a long period, this extension according to the invention is very advantageous, particularly since there is no economic alternative of comparable simplicity for the electroplating of very thin and hence high-resistance base layers on a large material using high current density, that is to say economic electroplating with a very good distribution of layer thickness.
If there are, for example, two contact tracks 15, it is possible for there to be two contacts 3 on one contact means 2. For this, two sliding or rotary contacts 9 are required if there are associated with each contact track one or more individual rectifiers, which advantageously ensure that there is a current flow of exactly the same size on all sides, transversely as seen in the direction of transport. However, it is also possible to equip each contact means 2 with only one contact 3 and one rotary contact 9. In this case, these contacts 3 are arranged alternately to right and left on the contact means 2, as seen in the direction of transport of the material 1. With this lower-cost solution, the contacts 3 then have to transmit twice the current, however, regardless of whether both sides are supplied by one rectifier or by individual rectifiers.
In particular in the case of high current densities, the size of the current to each contact also increases. In this case, it is important that the electrolytic handling current of a common rectifier is distributed uniformly over all the respectively involved contacts to avoid damage to the surface of the material and/or the contacts. This is particularly important when the contact track(s) in the useful zone run over the end products. As the number of contacts associated with a rectifier 8 decreases, so does the possibility of overloading individual contacts. The best case is when there is a rectifier 8 associated with each individual contact. The current-regulated rectifier limits the treatment current to the pre-set current. This reliably prevents the contact from being overloaded.
The useful zone for the end products 14, for example BGAs, is smaller, for example 580 mm×580 mm. The edges 13 are not usable for end products 14. In the centre of the material 1, or approximately in the centre, runs the contact track 15, which is kept free and separate. This track is typically not usable for end products 14, or only to a limited extent. In particular in the case of small end products 14, however, it is also possible to cover the entire useful area in the layout with end products and not to leave any contact track on the material as a separate area. Electrical contact is made, in the zone of the centre of the material 1, with the end products 14 there. If these relatively few end products become faulty because of the contact made, they can be discarded in a sorting operation later, once they have been depanelled. This procedure makes the construction of the layout of the material 1 simpler. Moreover, the course of the actual contact track on the material during electroplating is then in no way critical. With small end products, the yield per panel is about the same in both cases, that is to say with or without the contact track as a separate area. In this case, there is no need either for a technically complex alignment station upstream of the continuously operating plant, which is otherwise required for precise lateral alignment of the material.
The invention is also suitable for electroplating structures which are formed by a structured resist on the material. In this case, the contact track, like the other areas to be electroplated, has to be kept free of resist.
The format of the material according to the invention is not restricted to a rectangular shape. It is possible for example for it to have polygonal or round contours. In particular cases, this may result in a saving of base material.
1 Material, printed circuit board, panel
2 Contact means, transport means
3 Contact, contact ring, contact wheel, contact roll
4 Base layer
5 Edge zone
6 Anode, electrode
7 Electrolyte
8 Electrolytic current source, rectifier
9 Rotary contact, sliding contact
10 Electroplated layer, etched layer
11 Deposition bone formation
12 Useful part-area, useful part-zone
13 Edge, edge area
14 End product
15 Contact track
16 Arrow for direction of transport
17 Useful area
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 023 763.1 | May 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2010/000596 | 5/18/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/21/2011 |