This invention relates to the field of fuses, and particularly to a fuse used to protect electronic components, and its manufacturing method.
Most fuses are currently made by adopting chip-resistor manufacturing methods, and they have only one layer of printed fuse wire. Though the fuse wire so manufactured can be patterned in such various forms as straight, battlement-shaped or serpentine line, it is limited in total length and unable to be used on many occasions when high anti-surge capability is required. There exists other types of fuses. They have multiple layers of printed fuse wire, and are able to be used on many occasions when high anti-surge capability is required. Specifically, these fuses have a monolithic structure that consists of three or more layers of glass ceramic, each layer having been deposited with a metal film. These monolithic structure fuses are covered with a conductive layer at both ends, which are bridged by the metal films lying in parallel in between. These monolithic structure fuses are manufactured as follows: a metal film is deposited on the green body of the substrate made of glass ceramic, and wet tape-casting technology is thereafter adopted to form a very thin layer of glass ceramic thereupon; the same process is repeated so that a desired number of layers is obtained. After a monolithic green body is obtained, it is subject to horizontal and vertical cutting so that the green bodies of independent fuses are formed. The green bodies are then sintered into ceramic, and then the two end are encapsulated by electroplating.
The manufacturing method of the monolithic structure is a complicated process, requiring a large investment on equipment, and having a long manufacturing duration, which makes it difficult to use extensively.
This invention is intended to provide a multi-layer fuse that has a simple manufacturing process, requires a small investment on equipment, and has a short manufacturing duration. Thus, the multi-layer fuse can be used on most occasions when high anti-surge capability is required.
A first aspect relates to a multi-layer fuse, comprising a ceramic substrate, a plurality of back electrodes, a plurality of front electrodes, a fuse wire, a plurality of protective layers and metal ends. The fuse wire has multiple layers and the adjacent layers are connected in a head-to-tail style. The two lead-out ends of the fuse wire are connected to the two front electrodes located on the two ends of the substrate, wherein each layer of the fuse wire is deposited with the protective layer.
It is recognized by those skilled in the art, the metal ends include inner electrodes and end electrodes comprised of Nickel (Ni).
A second aspect relates to a multi-layer fuse, wherein the back electrodes, the front electrodes and metal ends are printed with the conventional single-layer printing technology, and all layers of the fuse wire and all protective layers are printed with the conventional single-layer printing technology as well. The multi-layer printing technology embodied herein is reflected in the following processes: the lowest layer of the fuse wire (hereafter referred to as “the lower lead-out fuse wire”), the first protective layer, the middle layer of the fuse wire (hereafter referred to as “the middle fuse wire”), the middle protective layer, the upper layer of the fuse wire (hereafter referred to as “upper lead-out fuse wire”), and the third protective layer are printed on the ceramic substrate in succession. The head of the lower lead-out fuse wire is connected to one front electrode at one end of the substrate while its tail stays unconnected to the other front electrode at the opposite end of the substrate. The first protective layer is printed on the lower lead-out fuse wire, and is shorter than the lower lead-out fuse wire so that the tail of the lower lead-out fuse wire projects out. The middle fuse wire is printed upon the first protective layer, not connecting to either of the two front electrodes, but its head connecting to the tail of the lower lead-out fuse link. The middle protective layer is printed upon the middle fuse wire, keeping the tail of the middle fuse wire projecting out. The upper lead-out fuse wire is printed upon the middle protective layer, its head connecting to the tail of the middle fuse wire while its tail connects to the other front electrode at the opposite end of the substrate. In doing so, the three layers of the fuse wire connect to one another in a head-to-tail style. In other words, the three layers of the fuse wire are in series connection, which effectively elongates the total length of the fuse wire, and its anti-surge capability is consequently enhanced.
The middle fuse wire and middle protective layer refer to the fuse wire and its corresponding protective layers between the first protective layer and the last layer of the fuse wire (upper lead-out fuse wire). They can be either one layer or an odd-number multiple, for example, 3 or 5 layers. However, as is recognized by those skilled in the art, each layer of the middle fuse wire should be printed with a protective layer.
The third protective layer refers to the protective layer printed upon the upper lead-out layer, a.k.a the upmost protective layer of the whole fuse; the number “third” does not necessarily mean “the third” ordinally, it depends upon the specific layers contained in the middle protective layer. It may mean either exactly the ordinal “third”, as is shown in the embodiment herein, or the fifth layer, provided that the middle protective layers contain three layers in total. In this way, the exact meaning of the third protective layer can be analogically deduced.
In this invention, all components of the fuse can be made of conventional materials.
The terms used herein, except as specifically explained, are generally recognized by those skilled in this field.
Preferred embodiments are provided in the following to facilitate a detailed description of this invention. Thus, although specific embodiments are described herein, it will be recognized that the scope of this invention is not restricted to the description.
In the following embodiments, the steps and technologies that are not elaborated, for example, screen-printing technology, are conventional to those skilled in this field.
As is shown in
I. Providing the substrate 1, which is made of alumina or steatite, as is shown in
II. Forming the back electrodes
As is shown in
III. Drying the substrate in a drying oven at a temperature of 150° C. for 15 minutes;
IV. Forming the front electrodes
As is shown in
V. Drying the substrate in a drying oven at a temperature of 150° C. for 15 minutes;
VI. Sintering the substrate in a sintering oven with a maximal temperature of 600° C.-850° C. for 60 minutes;
VII. Patterning the lower lead-out fuse wire
As is shown in
VIII. Drying the substrate in a drying oven at a temperature of 150° C. for 15 minutes;
IX. Sintering the substrate in a sintering oven with a maximal temperature of 600° C.-850° C. for 60 minutes;
X. Forming the first protective layer
As is shown in
XI. Patterning the middle fuse wire
As is shown in
XII. Drying the substrate in a drying oven at a temperature of 150° C. for 15 minutes;
XIII. Sintering the substrate in a sintering oven with a maximal temperature of 600° C.-850° C. for 60 minutes;
XIV. Forming the middle protective layer (a.k.a the second protective layer in this preferred embodiment)
As is shown in
XV. Patterning the upper lead-out fuse wire
As is shown in
XVI. Drying the substrate in a drying oven at a temperature of 150° C. for 15 minutes;
XVII. Sintering the substrate in a sintering oven with a maximal temperature of 600° C.-850° C. for 60 minutes;
XVIII. Forming the third protective layer
As is shown in
XIX. Forming the end inner electrodes
As is shown in
XX. Forming the end electrodes
As is shown in
Amongst the steps described above, steps X, XIV and XVIII are accompanied with the same drying and sintering processes as mentioned above.
The middle fuse wire and middle protective layer described herein contain only one layer respectively; however, as mentioned above, two or more layers of fuse wire and protective layers can be added in between. In accordance with the head-to-tail technology disclosed in this preferred embodiment, those skilled in the art are able to manufacture a fuse containing multi-layered middle fuse wire and multi-layered middle protective layer.
The products [S 1206-S-0.5A] manufactured through Embodiment 1 were tested in accordance with testing items and technical requirements stipulated in Chinese national standards GB9364.4-2006 and GB9364.1-1997. The results show that these products completely satisfy the stipulated specifications, particularly, compared with the conventional single-layer blade fuse, and these products present significant improvement insofar as the anti-surge capability (surge caused by 10 times of rated current) is concerned. The test results of the fuses manufactured with the two different technologies are compared as follows:
Instruments used for this test are BXC-35A fusing testing device and DS5062M digital oscilloscope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008 1 0235440 | Nov 2008 | CN | national |
2008 2 0217547 U | Nov 2008 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CN2009/001291 | 11/20/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/10/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/060275 | 6/3/2010 | WO | A |
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