Described herein are techniques for reverse side film laser circuit etching. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous examples and specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be evident, however, to one skilled in the art that the present invention as defined by the claims may include some or all of the features in these examples alone or in combination with other features described below, and may further include obvious modifications and equivalents of the features and concepts described herein.
A laser 114 is used to ablate off the metal from the backside of tape 104 as it translates from supply reel 106 to take-up reel 108. A mirror 116 moves a laser beam 118 to various lateral points across the tape 104. Once laser beam 118 is positioned properly, a pulse of energy is generated enough to ablate metal 120 away. In such manner, the remaining portions of the metal 112 are patterned to create electrical circuits, e.g., RFID antennas. A metal collection and recycle system 122 captures the ablated metal 120 and recycles it. The metal collection and recycle system 122 may include a vacuum pump.
Observe in the embodiment shown in
Gravity and/or vacuum caused airflow is used to assist the falling away and collection of ablated metal 120.
The materials used for the transparent film substrate and the wavelength of laser beam 118 are chosen such that the energy absorbed by the substrate will be minimal and be able to pass the laser energy through to concentrate on ablating the metal 120. This could be assisted by placing an energy absorbing material between the transparent film substrate 110 and a thin-film metal cladding 112. (Further details regarding the energy absorbing material are provided below with reference to
According to other embodiments, the tape 104 is radiused so the substrate 110 is under compression and the metal cladding 112 is under tension where they encounter the laser beam 118. Such mechanical stresses and the force of gravity may assist with ablation and not require all the separation energy come from the laser and its heating effects. According to further embodiments, heating, or pre-heating tape 104 may also be used to assist to get the materials up to the points where the metal will ablate more readily and with less violence. According to other embodiments, the tape 104 may be cooled prior to ablation, for example, using liquid nitrogen. Cooling may make a metal such as copper more brittle so that it ablates more easily. The choice of heating, cooling or neither may depend upon the specific material.
The tape 104 may also be referred to as a coated tape. In general, the term “coated” includes both “laminated”, which refers to an adhesive material between the substrate 110 and the metal cladding 112, as well as “sputtered”, which refers to a chromium material between the substrate 110 and the metal cladding 112. These materials help the substrate 110 and the metal cladding 112 to adhere together.
Although a reel-to-reel tape system is shown in the embodiment of
The mirror 116 may be implemented in various ways. According to one embodiment, the mirror 116 is a swinging mirror that may be tilted on one or more axes, for example, the x-axis or the y-axis. The mirror 116 may be part of a galvo head device. According to another embodiment, the mirror 116 may be a rotating mirror, for example, a many-sided prism type structure that is rotated to direct the laser beam.
For higher throughput, one laser can have two or more galvo heads for ablating simultaneously.
There is a balance between what kinds of laser beams 118 will be good for wide area ablating of metal, and what kind will provide clean, sharp features. An alternative embodiment of the present invention uses two lasers, one for wide area ablating of metal, and the other set to write clean, sharp features.
A fine laser 244 is used to ablate off fine lines of metal from the backside of tape 204 as it translates from supply reel 206 to take-up reel 208. A second mirror 226 moves a fine laser beam 228 to various lateral points across the tape 204. Once fine laser beam 218 is positioned properly, e.g., within 50-micrometers, a pulse of energy is generated to ablate precise lines and spots of metal 230 away.
A coarse laser 214 is used to ablate off wide fields of metal from the backside of tape 204, after the fine laser 244. A first mirror 210 moves a coarse laser beam 218 to various lateral points across the tape 204. Once coarse laser beam 218 is positioned properly, a pulse of energy is generated to ablate field metal 220 away. Such ablated metal takes heat away and is caught and recycled by metal collection and recycle system 222. The metal collection and recycle system 222 may include a vacuum pump.
Gravity and/or vacuum caused airflow is used to assist the falling away and collection of ablated metals 220 and 230.
The mirror 210 or the mirror 226 may be swinging mirrors or rotating mirrors as described above regarding
According to other embodiments, the tape 204 is radiused so the substrate 210 is under compression and the metal cladding 212 is under tension where they encounter laser beams 218 and/or 228. Such mechanical stresses and the force of gravity can assist with ablation and not require all the separation energy come from the laser and its heating effects. According to further embodiments, heating, or pre-heating tape 204 may also be used to assist to get the materials up to the points where the metal will ablate more readily and with less violence. According to other embodiments, the tape 204 may be cooled prior to ablation, for example, using liquid nitrogen. Cooling may make a metal such as copper more brittle so that it ablates more easily. The choice of heating, cooling or neither may depend upon the specific material.
Having to balance between what kinds of laser beams would be good for wide area ablating of metal, and what kind would provide clean sharp features is avoided in the system 200 of
Various materials for substrate 110 and 210 can be used, the best depending on several variables. A typical substrate tape is 460 mm wide. Table I summarizes the properties of several popular materials. (As reported by LPKF Laser & Electronics AG.)
KAPTON, APICAL, and UPILEX are brand names of various forms of polyimide, KALADEX is a polyethylene naphthalate (PEN), MYLAR is a polyester, and MAKROFOL and LEXAN are polycarbonates.
The choice of metal for cladding 112 and 212 depends on several tradeoffs. In general, the thinner the metal, the easier is the laser ablation. Thinner materials will have higher sheet resistances, as measured in Ohms per square. A balance between these is to be made in each embodiment. Copper is a good choice for circuit wiring, but the copper material absorbs and dissipates heat very efficiently, and that counters the spot heating effects the laser is trying to obtain for ablation. Aluminum is better in this regard, but gold and platinum may have to be used if the application is in a corrosive environment. The metals' reflectivity, absorptivity, and thermal conductivity are key parameters in the choice of metal to use. LPKF Laser & Electronics AG reported on three of these metals, as in Table II.
Early proof-of-concept tests were made with different thicknesses of metal on a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) substrate, and at different reel-to-reel tape speeds, e.g., 0.2 μm Cu at 2.5 m/s, 0.5 μm Cu at 2.5 m/s, 0.2 μm Al at 3.0 m/s, and 0.5 μm Al at 3.0 m/s. The laser was a 15 W diode pumped YAG laser.
Many kinds of lasing mediums are used for lasers, and the mediums determine the wavelength of the coherent light produced. The right one to use here depends on the films, metals, and processing speeds decided. Excimer lasers operate in the ultraviolet (UV), below 425 nm. The Argon:Fluorine (Ar:F) laser operates at 193 nm, and Krypton:Fluoride (Kr:F) at 248 nm. The nitrogen UV laser emits light at 337 nm. The Argon laser is a continuous wave (CW) gas laser that emits a blue-green light at 488 and 514 nm. The potassium-titanyl-phosphate (KTP) crystal laser operates in green, around 520 nm. Pulsed dye lasers are yellow and about 577-585 nm. The ruby laser is red and about 694 nm. The synthetic chrysoberyl “alexandrite” laser operates in the deep red at about 755 nm. The diode laser operates in the near infrared at about 800-900 nm. The right laser to use in embodiments of the present invention will probably be the hazardous Class-IV types, e.g., greater than 500 mW continuous, or 10 J/cm2 pulsed.
YAG lasers are infrared types that use yttrium-aluniinum-garnet crystal rods as the lasing medium. Rare earth dopings, such as neodymium (Nd), erbium (Er) or holmium (Ho), are responsible for the different properties of each laser. The Nd:YAG laser operates at about 1064 nm, the Ho:YAG laser operates at about 2070 nm, and the “erbium” Er:YAG laser operates at just about 2940 nm. YAG lasers may be operated in continuous, pulsed, or Q-Switched modes. The carbon-dioxide (CO2) laser has the longest wavelength at 10600 mm.
The RFID device 300 is one example of an electrical circuit that may be formed according to embodiments of the present invention. Embodiments of the present invention may also be used to form other electrical circuits and electronic devices. As another example, embodiments of the present invention may be used to form thermal circuits such as flexible heaters.
It is a feature of the embodiment shown in
Such heating area 416 is used to overpressure ablatement area 418 and stress it to assist in ablating metal 420. If intermediate layer 410 is not used, then transitioning beam 414 reaches metal ablatement area 418 directly and melts and vaporizes metal to produce ablating metal 420 according to patterns written by a patterning control 422. The metal cladding 412 may be pre-patterned to reduce the amount of metal that must be ablated on-line in final patterning, e.g., into RFID antenna circuits and other electronics boards.
In general, metal cladding 412 will comprise material conductive to electricity, and dielectric substrate 408 will comprise electrically insulative materials so that patterning control 422 can produce rigid or flexible printed circuits. Typical metals are copper, aluminum, gold, silver, platinum, etc. Typical insulators are polyimide, polycarbonate, silicon dioxide, alumina, glass, diamond, etc., in tapes, boards, films, and dice.
Laser 402, and in particular beam 406, is positioned in coordination with patterning control 422 by means such as pen-plotter mechanisms, x-y stages, micro-mirrors, a galvo head device, etc. according to design tradeoffs in various embodiments. The patterning control 422 in combination with the sheet feeder system 430 work together so that the laser beam 406 ablates the metal from the coated material 407 at the desired location. Additional lasers can be included to improve job throughput, or they can be specialized to do wide area or fine feature ablations. Such lasers can use different wavelengths and laser types to assist in such specialization and job sharing. According to another embodiment, to improve throughput, a beam splitter may split a beam from a single laser into multiple beams that are directed by multiple galvo head devices.
The use of a pen-plotter type positioning mechanism for laser 402 permits the propagation distance that beam 406 has to travel through atmosphere 404 to be reduced as compared to certain embodiments that interpose a mirror between the laser and the substrate 408. Such then would permit atmosphere 404 to be ordinary air, whereas a longer travel distance could necessitate the use of vacuum in certain embodiments.
The coated material 407 may be implemented in various form factors, and the components of the system 400 may be varied in accordance with the form factor of the coated material 407. Conversely, the form factor of the coated material 407 may be varied in accordance with the components of the system 400. For example, a reel-to-reel tape system (similar to that shown in
In step 602, a coated sheet is provided. As discussed above, the coated sheet comprises a dielectric substrate layer and a metal foil layer. The coated sheet may be in various form factors, such as in tape form or in sheet form. The specific form factor of the coated sheet may depend upon the specific embodiment of the laser etching device. The form factor of the coated sheet may also depend upon the properties of the metal layer. For example, a tape form factor may be suitable for a thinner metal layer, and a sheet form factor may be suitable for a thicker metal layer.
In step 604, thermal isolation ablation is performed. Which laser performs the thermal isolation ablation will depend upon the specific embodiment of the invention. For example, for the embodiment shown in
In step 606, structural ablation is performed. Which laser performs the structural ablation, and in what sequence, will depend upon the specific embodiment of the invention. For example, for the embodiment shown in
As discussed above with reference to
In step 608, recycling of the ablated metal is performed. The recycling process is as described above.
The master control block 702 generally coordinates the other components of the control system 700. The master control block may store a program or other set of instructions for performing a specific set of ablations, and may then instruct the other components of the control system to in accordance with the program or other instructions.
The beam control A block 704 controls the operation of a laser in an embodiment of the present invention (for example, laser 114 in
The beam control B block 706 is optional in that it controls the operation of a second laser, when present, in an embodiment of the present invention (for example, fine laser 224 in
The position control X block 708 controls, via control signals, the relative position between the laser and the coated sheet in an embodiment of the present invention. For example, in the laser etching system 100 of
The position control Y block 710 controls, via control signals, other aspects of the relative position between the laser and the coated sheet not otherwise controlled by the position control X block 708 in an embodiment of the present invention. For example, in the laser etching system 100 of
As discussed above, the systems and methods according to various embodiments of the present invention are suitable for flexible circuit manufacturing techniques. Flexible circuits may be used in many different applications, including RFID antennas, RFID tag circuitry, membrane switches, flexible heaters and printed circuits, data compact disks, and data video disks.
The above description illustrates various embodiments of the present invention along with examples of how aspects of the present invention may be implemented. The above examples and embodiments should not be deemed to be the only embodiments, and are presented to illustrate the flexibility and advantages of the present invention as defined by the following claims. Based on the above disclosure and the following claims, other arrangements, embodiments, implementations and equivalents will be evident to those skilled in the art and may be employed without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the claims. The terms and expressions that have been employed here are used to describe the various embodiments and examples. These terms and expressions are not to be construed as excluding equivalents of the features shown and described, or portions thereof, it being recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims.
The present application is a continuation-in-part (CIP) application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/544,499, titled “Reverse Side Film Laser Circuit Etching”, filed Oct. 5, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11544499 | Oct 2006 | US |
Child | 11895724 | US |