The invention relates to the field of electrical circuit boards, such as printed circuit boards. Such printed circuit boards may, for example, be flexible and used to produce electronic modules for smart cards.
The invention is illustrated below using the example of electronic modules for smart cards, but it is easily transferable to other applications of rigid or flexible printed circuit boards.
Smart cards are well known to the public, who makes multiple uses thereof: credit cards, travel cards, identity cards, etc.
As shown in
In the prior art, the smart card modules 2 are generally formed from a dielectric substrate that is covered, on at least one of its sides 6, 7, by a sheet of electrically conductive material that is composed, for example, of a metal such as copper, steel or aluminium, or an alloy of one of these metals. Conductive tracks that form, at least in the case of some thereof, the electrical contact lands 15 are produced in this sheet of electrically conductive material. The dielectric substrates widely used in the prior art are made of composite materials (glass epoxy) or of plastic materials (PET, PEN, polyimide, etc.). This type of dielectric substrate is generally thin (its thickness is, for example, of the order of 100 μm) in order to retain a flexibility that is compatible with roll-to-roll methods for manufacturing electronic modules.
The method for manufacturing this type of electrical circuit board then comprises, for example:
A layer of dielectric material is generally used as the substrate, but the layer of adhesive material may, under certain conditions, be enough to form a dielectric substrate itself. When a layer of dielectric material is used, a step of coating one of the main sides of the layer of dielectric material with the adhesive material is carried out, in order to form the layer of adhesive material on the layer of dielectric material. The sheet of electrically conductive material is then placed in contact with the layer of adhesive material previously deposited onto the layer of dielectric material, and the assembly thus formed is subsequently laminated.
For certain applications, and in particular in the production of smart cards, it may be advantageous to obtain a visible colour in spaces cut or etched into the sheet of electrically conductive material. This colour may have a purely aesthetic function, but may also mask elements potentially positioned under the module and which would be visible between the contacts or other patterns formed in the sheet of electrically conductive material if the substrate were transparent.
To this end, the use of a dyed dielectric substrate has been proposed, but substrate suppliers, for which dyed substrates do not necessarily correspond to their standard products, are reluctant to multiply the number of their products in order to broaden the colour palette offered to their clients.
One aim of the invention is to overcome this drawback and to provide a simple means for obtaining numerous possible visible colours between at least certain areas cut or etched into the sheet of electrically conductive material.
Thus, it is proposed, according to the invention, to add a colouring agent (dye or pigment) to the adhesive material forming the layer of adhesive material, in order to form a layer of tinted or coloured adhesive material.
In this document, the following are referred to:
As the layer of tinted adhesive is immediately subjacent to the sheet of electrically conductive material, its colour becomes visible between areas cut or etched into the latter, for example between conductive tracks, contacts, patterns forming logos, etc.
This method does not really modify the method of the prior art. Indeed, the layer of adhesive material is generally required. In particular, this method is much simpler than a method in which colour is added into spaces etched into the electrically conductive layer, after lamination and etching of the latter.
According to another aspect, the invention relates to an electrical circuit board comprising a sheet of electrically conductive material, with two main sides, and a layer of adhesive material in contact with one of the main sides of the layer of electrically conductive material, a colouring agent being added to the adhesive material forming the layer of adhesive material, in order to form a layer of tinted adhesive material.
According to another aspect, the invention relates to a smart card comprising a card body and a cavity made in the card body and in which an electronic module, itself comprising an electrical circuit board, is placed, with contacts that are flush with the surface of the card body and a colour that is visible on at least a portion of the surface of the module not occupied by the contacts, this colour being produced by a colouring agent present in a layer of adhesive subjacent to the contacts and added to an adhesive material in order to form a layer of tinted adhesive material.
The method, the electrical circuit board or the smart card according to the invention potentially comprises one or other of the features mentioned in the claims, considered individually or in combination.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the detailed description and the appended drawings in which:
An exemplary method for manufacturing an electrical circuit board according to the invention is described below. It belongs to the field of smart cards but, as already mentioned, what is described here may be easily transferred to applications in other fields (RFID antennas, LEDs, etc.).
As shown in
The flexible electrical circuit board 3 therefore comprises a connector 5 with multiple contact lands 15 to which the chip 100 is connected. The flexible circuit board 3 is shown (above) from its front side 6 (contact side). It is also shown (below) from its back side 7, or bonding side. The flexible electrical circuit board 3 thus shown corresponds to a single-sided flexible electrical circuit board for a “contact” card. However, it could equally be a double-sided flexible electrical circuit board, for a “dual” card for example.
This method comprises the provision (
In the following step (
Examples of dyes are given in the table below:
The concentrations used for the dyes vary between 0.5 and 5 phr (parts per hundred resin), i.e. between 0.5 and 5 percent by weight of colouring agent with respect to the solid resin(s) (hence without the solvents) that are present in the adhesive material 20.
The colouring agent may also be a pigment. It may then be a powdered pigment (or a mixture of multiple pigments) or a pre-dispersed pigment (again with one or more pigments).
Powdered pigments are to be dispersed in a medium. Their concentration in the medium is, for example, between 0.5 and 5 phr.
Pre-dispersed pigments take the form of products containing resins and/or solvents, one or more pigments, and potential dispersing agents, additives, etc. The composition of these pre-dispersed pigments varies depending on the product itself and/or its manufacturer. Pre-dispersed pigments are easy to use as they have only to be mixed into the adhesive material. The concentration of the pigments in pre-dispersed pigments may vary widely: e.g. 10% to 70% by weight of pigment in the pre-dispersed pigment.
Chromaflo is, for example, a supplier of pre-dispersed pigments. The reference Temacolor™ EP RM15 by Chromaflo is a red pre-dispersed pigment. Used at a concentration of 20 phr, it gives good results, without negatively affecting the properties of the adhesive material. More generally, the concentration of pre-dispersed pigment in the adhesive material may be made to vary from 1 to 50 phr (or even more).
Other examples of pigments and pre-dispersed pigments are given in the table below:
A layer of dielectric material 40, for forming a substrate 50, is provided (
The layer of dielectric material 40 is next coated (
After drying, the assembly composed of the layer of dielectric material 40 and the tinted adhesive material 30 is perforated all the way through (
A sheet of electrically conductive material 60 is placed in contact with the layer of adhesive material 30 (
Resist patterns 72 are formed on the sheet of electrically conductive material 60 via photolithography, by depositing, exposing (
A step of etching patterns electrochemically allows patterns 62 to be formed in the sheet of electrically conductive material 60 (
The resist protecting the patterns 62 during etching is removed (
In steps that are not illustrated, a chip is fixed to the back of each module. Each chip is connected, for example via conductive wires, from the bottom of and through connection wells (like the holes 42), to contacts 15. The chip and the conductive wires are encapsulated and the modules are singulated and each one is individually transferred to a card cavity. The result is shown in
Numerous variants of the method described above may be envisaged. For example:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
15 57974 | Aug 2015 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5688573 | Goeb | Nov 1997 | A |
6459588 | Morizumi | Oct 2002 | B1 |
20030132302 | Hattori | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20050094274 | Souparis | May 2005 | A1 |
20050257880 | Herring | Nov 2005 | A1 |
20070231587 | Naito | Oct 2007 | A1 |
20090004442 | Danner | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20090322538 | Kobren | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100147958 | Martinent | Jun 2010 | A1 |
20110036914 | Shingu | Feb 2011 | A1 |
20110290892 | Ozawa | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20140209691 | Finn | Jul 2014 | A1 |
20150041546 | Herslow | Feb 2015 | A1 |
20150109651 | Branda | Apr 2015 | A1 |
20150242740 | Dehouwer | Aug 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
195 23 242 | Jan 1997 | DE |
2 777 506 | Oct 1999 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170061273 A1 | Mar 2017 | US |