The German patent application DE 10 2004 030 388 A1 relates to an article with a coating of electrically conductive polymer and a method for the production thereof. According to this solution, circuit boards are provided with a copper layer in which electrical conductors are produced by means of structuring. A layer of electrically conductive polymer is applied to the copper layer in order to maintain the solderability thereof and to protect the same from oxidation. The copper or copper alloy layer is located between an electrically conductive basis layer and a layer containing the conductive polymer.
The German patent application DE 10 2009 001 461 A1 relates to a method for producing an electronic assembly. The assembly is formed by two microelectronic components which are connected to one another. The connection is established by means of a plurality of dielectric components which comprise respectively at least one conductor track. The conductor track is produced by introducing a continuous cavity into the dielectric component and by subsequently filling said cavity with an electrically conductive material. The filling material can relate to an electrically conductive polymer.
A THT manufacturing process (through-hole technology) is used for the purpose of electrical contacting. According to this manufacturing process, the connecting wires of wired components as well as male multipoint connecters are inserted through openings in the circuit board. The components to be contacted can relate to capacitors, transistors, resistors, integrated circuits (ICs) and the like. The listed components require different preparations in which the connecting wires, which are also denoted as connecting pins, are bent and cut so that said connecting wires fit into a bore pattern or opening pattern predefined by the circuit board. After preparing the components and equipping the circuit board with the same, said components are soldered. The soldered connection occurs as a rule on the bottom side of the circuit board. To this end, the wave soldering method or the flow soldering method can be used. In the case of wave soldering, the circuit board is passed with the bottom side thereof over a solder wave which, when making contact with the bottom side of the component, produces the soldered connection. A special way of carrying out said method is known as selective soldering. In this case, the entire assembly is not soldered but only a small portion thereof—partially only a single component—by means of a miniature wave. The selective soldering method is frequently the only possible soldering method if wired components have to be soldered.
In particular in applications in the automotive field, the soldered joints produced by means of the THT manufacturing method have to be able to withstand a large number of temperature changes without the function of the soldered joint being significantly affected on the one hand with regard to the electrical conductivity thereof and on the other hand with regard to the mechanical stability thereof. Thermomechanically induced stresses occur however in the soldered joints due to the temperature changes, which stresses can lead to damage to the soldered joints. Said stresses are determined by geometrical factors with respect to all components and furthermore are dependent on transient thermal conditions (temperature/time profiles).
As a result of the development trend towards intramodular design of control devices, individual modules and not only individual components are connected by THT soldering technology to the actual circuit board. In particular for applications in the automotive sector, THT soldered joints have to withstand many temperature changes without the function of the soldered joint being significantly compromised with regard to the conductivity thereof and to the mechanical stability thereof. Due to the temperature changes, thermomechanically induced stresses result in the soldered joints, which can lead to premature damage to the soldered joints. The stresses are determined by geometrical factors of all components and are dependent on transient thermal stresses. A majority of components that are soldered by means of applications of the THT method relates to connector strips that are soldered on one side and are preferably used in electronic control devices. Contact pins being used, which are also denoted simply as pins, are manufactured from bronze and for the most part punched out of bands. In so doing, it is however absolutely necessary for the material on the plug side to correspond to the material classes of the automobile manufacturer required to date. In contrast, the materials on the solder side can be freely defined, i.e. metals or aluminum-based metal alloys can, for example, be used here which can either be directly soldered or can be made solderable by means of a corresponding coating, for example a NiSn coating.
According to the invention, it is proposed to use an aluminum-copper composite in order to improve the thermal shock resistance of the contact pins to be soldered. Said aluminum-copper composite relates, for example, to an extruded aluminum profile which comprises a Cu portion and an Al portion in a common plane. The Cu portion and the Al portion can on the one hand lie in a common plane that runs horizontally. Said portions can however also be disposed in planes which are different from one another and extend horizontally. Both embodiment options of the extruded aluminum profile have in common that the Cu portion and the Al portion are connected to one another within a transition region, for example by an arrow-shaped end of one of the two portions protruding into a complementarily configured receptacle of the respective other of the two portions. The portions are joined to one another in a materially bonded manner within the transition region. In accordance with the solution proposed according to the invention, the contact element is manufactured from an Al/Cu material composite, wherein the Cu portion of which forms the plug side of the contact element and the Al portion of the Al/Cu material composite forms the solder side of said contact element.
The contact elements, whether said elements comprise a common plane in relation to solder side and plug side or whether the solder side and the plug side are designed so as to lie in different planes, are preferably punched out of the Al/Cu material composite. This offers the advantage of a very efficient large-scale manufacturability and a very high utilization of the Al/Cu material composite with regard to accruing residual material.
The contact element proposed according to the invention and punched out of the Al/Cu material composite has a plug-side geometry in the form of plug pins on the plug side. The plug pins form a material composite and can be connected to one another by individual webs. On the solder side, i.e. of the aluminum portion of the extruded aluminum profile, a solder-side geometry can be formed which, for example, can be configured in the form of a contact composite comprising individual contact wires. In so doing, the individual contact wires of the contact composite can have the same length or also lengths which in each case are different from one another.
In an advantageous manner, it is possible by means of the contact element proposed according to the invention that on the one hand the plug side of the contact element continues to be formed from a copper alloy; whereas an aluminum alloy is used on the solder side, said alloy having less rigidity with regard to the modulus of elasticity and a greater coefficient of thermal expansion. In the case of a thermally induced stress on the plug pin in the form of bending, twisting or tensile load, a portion of this mechanical stress, which can result in damage to the contact element, is absorbed by the more flexible aluminum material which is located on the circuit board side or on the carrier substrate. The contact element, taken as a whole, has a longer damage-free time and thus a longer service life.
If the contact element is made from an Al/Cu material composite, the Cu portion of which and the Al portion of which run in a common horizontal plane, a particularly efficient production in terms of manufacturing technology is possible for the large-scale production of the contact element proposed according to the invention. On the other hand, the prefabrication of the extruded material of the Al/Cu material composite also offers the possibility of accommodating different installation geometries of the contact element. Thus, the Cu portion and the Al portion can, for example, not only be designed to lie in a common plane; but in fact the option exists for the two said portions to also run in horizontal planes that are different from one another.
The two portions, i.e. the Cu portion and the Al portion, of the Al/Cu material composite of the extruded profile are connected to one another within a transition region, i.e. merge into one another. The transition region is provided with regard to the mechanical stability thereof in such a way that said region can withstand the mechanical stresses which impact the extruded profile during a punching process or the like.
The invention is described below in more detail with the aid of the drawings.
In the drawings:
An Al/Cu material composite can be seen in the depiction pursuant to
From the depiction pursuant to
It is shown in the depiction pursuant to
A top view of a contact element proposed according to the invention from the Al/Cu material composite pursuant to
It follows from the top view pursuant to
Pursuant to the top view in
Besides the constitution of the contact wires 56 in the different lengths 20, 22, and 24 as depicted in
The contact wires 56 form a contact composite 18 and constitute a solder-side geometry 34 of the contact element 10.
Taking recourse to
It can be seen in the depiction pursuant to
A possible embodiment variant of the Al/Cu material composite 36 pursuant to the depiction in
As an alternative to the depiction pursuant to
For the sake of completeness, it should be mentioned that, according to the embodiment variant of the extruded profile 40 pursuant to the depiction in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2012 213 804.8 | Aug 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2013/065589 | 7/24/2013 | WO | 00 |