The present invention relates to a method for producing a circuit on a substrate.
Using thick-film technology, resistors are applied in thin layers by screen-printing processes. The thicknesses of the fired layers are 10 to 15 μm, for example. The resistance layers are typically made of a glass/ruthenium oxide (RuO2) mixture, and are linked to printed circuit traces on the substrate. The mixture is laced with an organic printing carrier, e.g. a solvent or ethyl cellulose, to produce the necessary screen-printing capability.
Different resistance decades can be adjusted by way of the glass/ruthenium oxide ratio. Thus, for example, pastes having square resistances of 10 ohm, 100 ohm, 1 kOhm 10 kOhm, 100 kOhm and 1000 kOhm are used. The resistance value is preproduced via the length/width ratio with a tolerance of +/−50%, and subsequently exactly trimmed by a laser beam to a setpoint value with an exactitude of +/−0.5%. Up to six different printing planes are necessary, depending on the resistance value.
Since the precise resistance value is set by the geometric layout, surface requirement is generally large. It may be that when using several pastes, the surface requirement can be kept smaller; however, in the screen-printing process, the various pastes must be applied in several successive printing steps with drying in the interim. Production is therefore costly and time-consuming.
The method of the present invention offers several advantages. According to the present invention, the resistance pastes are applied via a print head having a plurality of printing nozzles, i.e., according to the principle of an ink jet printer in the color printing process. Different colloid inks are dosed in fine droplets via the printing nozzles, advantageously piezoelectric nozzles; the resistance value can be set very precisely via an in situ mixture. In so doing, the specific resistance value can be ascertained theoretically in advance, or determined and set with the aid of a test sample and test firing. Therefore, according to the present invention, using a predefined number, e.g., three, different colloid inks, it is possible to set a large multitude of different resistance values. Consequently, it is not necessary to use and implement several decades of different resistance values as in the related art. The circuit of the present invention can be designed with more effective use of the surface, i.e. in a more space-saving manner, since not only separate resistance decades, but also any resistance values as needed may be set.
In the colloid inks, basic substances are finely dispersed in an organic printing carrier, e.g., wax. In this context, the colloid inks may be liquid, pasty or in principle even solid; in each case, they are fed from separate containers via a heating device to the print head, so that the colloid inks are finely dosed as low-viscosity substance via the piezoelectric nozzles within a sufficient period of time, and intermix on the substrate before the mixture solidifies. Sedimentation or separation of the basic-substance particles or pigments is thereby avoided.
The resistors are advantageously imprinted in a single run of the print head, thus eliminating the need for repeated printing and drying of the layers. This results in very short cycle times. The subsequent trimming is eliminated at least for the majority of resistors, advantageously in the case of all resistors.
To form very thick resistors, in principle, a plurality of layers may also be applied. According to the present invention, further elements of the circuit, particularly printed circuit traces, possibly also capacitors, may be printed using the print head, as well. The printed circuit traces are advantageously printed in a first run and dried before the subsequent run of the print head in which the resistors and possibly also capacitors are printed. The resistors may be sealed in the upward direction in a generally known manner by a cover layer made of glass before the circuit is baked or sintered.
A device 1 of the present invention has a—in particular ceramic—substrate 2, on which a circuit 3 having printed circuit traces 4, 5 and a plurality of components, among them resistors 6, is imprinted.
Ohmic resistor 6 shown in
To produce resistor 6, a printing device 12, shown schematically in
According to the present invention, only resistors 6, or also other components, particularly printed circuit traces 4 and 5 as well as, for example, capacitors may be printed with the aid of print head 14 and using the various colloid inks. In each case a specific mixture of available colloid inks 18.1, 18.2, 18.3 is adjusted for each element 4, 5, 6; as an alternative to the specific embodiment shown, if desired, more than three colloid inks may be fed to print head 14 via corresponding lines 20. According to the present invention, different resistors 6 may be printed with different colloid ink mixtures, i.e., different RW.
According to
The entire device 1 is subsequently fired in an oven so that the organic printing carrier vaporizes or burns and the circuit shown in
Square resistance values within a large range from, e.g., 10 ohm to 1 MOhm may be attained by suitable selection of colloid inks 18.1, 18.2 and 18.3. It is not necessary to subsequently additionally trim printed resistors 6 using a laser beam; if applicable, a few very fine structures may be trimmed by a laser beam. To set the mixture ratio of ruthenium oxide and glass very precisely, different mixture ratios may already be used in particular as colloid inks. Since, for example, a mixture having 50% ruthenium oxide exhibits a square resistance of 10 ohm, and a mixture having 15% ruthenium oxide already exhibits a square resistance of 10 MOhm, three colloid inks 18.1, 18.2, 18.3 having a different ruthenium oxide content, e.g., 50%, 30% and 15%, may be used to permit precise adjustment of the intermediate values. Additionally, the inks may also contain platinum oxide (PtO), for example. If printed circuit traces 4, 5 are printed from silver via print head 14, the silver may also be used when printing resistor 6.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004044144.8 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |