Surface mounted resistor

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6529115
  • Patent Number
    6,529,115
  • Date Filed
    Friday, March 16, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 4, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A precision surface mounted foil resistor has a substrate having top and bottom planar surfaces. A resistance foil is secured to the bottom surface of the substrate and extends over the bottom. A bending protector plate of non-conductive material is superimposed over the resistance foil. A solder material is located at two areas of the foil to provide electrical contact with the PCB. The bending protector element is thicker than the solder contact areas and is provided between the solder material.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to precision surface mounted resistors of the general type shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,405,381; 3,517,436; 3,718,883; 4,136,656; 4,172,249 and 4,286,249.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Among the various technologies used to produce resistive electronic components, the foil resistor technology is known to produce very tight resistance tolerances and which have the lowest temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR). Such devices have been made since 1963, as described in detail by the above referenced patents, by bonding of resistive foil to a rigid substrate to form resistive chips. The foil is photo-etched and adjusted to reach the desired ohmic value and tolerance. Copper or gold wire leads or ribbons are attached, mechanically and electrically, to the chip and the assembly is encapsulated in a plastic case or molding in a coating.




With the advent of the surface mounting technology (SMT), molded electronic devices were designed with flat leads protruding from the plastic and formed into “gull wings”, “J wings” or other forms to facilitate soldering to pads on a printed circuit board (PCB). This technology partially replaced the “Through Hole Technology”. These assemblies are substantially larger than the chip itself and are expensive to produce compared to production cost of the chip itself.




A reduction in size has been achieved by designing SMT chips with a “wrap around metallization” not necessitating any wiring or molding. These chips have the resistive foil attached to one side of the substrate and are electrically connected to metallization on the other side of the substrate and to it's lateral surfaces, (see FIG.


1


).




It is known in the electronic art, mainly in semiconductors, to produce devices called flip chips or bump devices attached through solder balls to the PCB. However, such devices were never used for Ni—Cr alloy precision foil precision resistors. Due to high precision and stability of foil resistors the strain sensitivity becomes a very important factor.




The resistance changes and the resistor are no longer within tolerance when the chip is soldered to the PCB because of strains imposed on the chip during soldering. These changes are in the order of magnitude of 20×10


−6


to 200×10


−6


cm/cm strain, resulting in resistance changes of about 40 to 400 ppm (parts per million) ohm per ohm. Since most of foil resistors are used with a tolerance of 100 to 1000 ppm (ohm per ohm), this kind of change is not acceptable. Furthermore, in case of a ratio of two resistance values serving for voltage division, the error is further aggravated.




This strain situation occurs mostly due to bending of the chip when the user is mounting the resistor chip onto the PCB. The forces during this mounting and the forces due to further protection and soldering to the PCB produce strains, spoils the initial tolerance achieved during the production of resistors.




Furthermore, after soldering the chip to the PCB an air gap exists between the chip and the PCB impeding heat transfer from the chip to the PCB. Accordingly, the heat transfer is done mainly through the pads. Power handling capability is greatly improved if this heat transfer is improved.




Therefore, the principal object of this invention is to provide a chip resistor with improved characteristics of accuracy, stability, and power handling, and which is less costly to produce.




A further object of this invention is to provide a chip resistor wherein the chip will essentially not be sensitive to bending during and after soldering it to the PCB and the chip being in intimate contact with the PCB (no air gap) will provide a good heat transfer, hence a better power handling of the chip.




These and other objects will be apparent to those skilled in the art.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to a resistive Ni—Cr foil chip which is directly attached by soldering to the PCB. It occupies essentially only the surface and thickness of the chip itself and enables improvement in accuracy, stability, heat transfer, cost and size when compared to “wrap around” or molded designs.




The chip includes solder balls or solder tabs and a bending protector plate which is applied to the surface of the chip in a way that after soldering to the PCB the chip is in intimate contact with the PCB, the resistive foil being on the surface close to the PCB. This minimizes the strain due to bending during assembly and soldering onto a PCB. The bending protector can be cemented to the PCB in order to reduce the thermal resistance of the interface. Manufacturing costs are reduced and reduction in space and thickness is achieved. In each case the foil is cemented to the substrate by a cement (shown in

FIGS. 1



b


,


2




a


and


2




b


), and protected by a polymer shown only in

FIGS. 1



b


,


2




a


and


2




b.













BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS





FIG. 1



a


is a plan view of a prior art SMD resistor chip with wrap around metallization;





FIG. 1



b


is a side elevation of the device of

FIG. 1



a;







FIG. 1



c


is a prior art device without a bending protector and hence very sensitive to bending strains and not good for heat transfer;





FIG. 2



a


is an elevational view of the device of this invention before mounting on a PCB;





FIG. 2



b


is a side elevational view of the device of

FIG. 2



a


after soldering to the PCB;





FIG. 3



a


is a bottom plan view of a first alternative embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 3



b


is a side elevational view of the device of

FIG. 3



a;







FIG. 4



a


is a bottom plan view of a second alternative form of the invention with four contacts;





FIG. 4



b


is a side elevational view of the device of

FIG. 4



a;







FIG. 5



a


is a bottom plan view of a further alternative form of the invention using four contact balls;





FIG. 5



b


is a side elevational view of the device of

FIG. 5



a;







FIGS. 6-10

are side elevational views of alternative forms of the invention immediately before mounting on a PCB. The dimensions of all the drawings are not to scale. Note that in each case the bending protector is thicker than the contact balls or pads.











DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS OF THIS INVENTION




A prior art chip


10


is shown in

FIGS. 1



a


,


1




b


and


1




c


. Chip


10


has a “wrap around metallization” feature including a resistive foil


11


A attached to one side of substrate by cement


11


B and electrically connected to a metallization on the side of the foil, the opposite side of the substrate and the lateral sides of the substrate. Furthermore, the foil is protected by a polymer


11


C. This construction is expensive to produce and does not provide a good heat transfer.




The preferred construction of this invention is illustrated in

FIGS. 2



a


and


2




b


. The chip


10


A includes a substrate


12


. A layer of resistive foil


14


is secured to the bottom surface of substrate


12


by a layer of cement


16


. In

FIG. 2



a


, solder balls


18


are located adjacent the ends of the resistive foil on opposite ends of a bending protector


20


. The bending protector must have a thickness bigger than the solder pads (balls) to assure good contact with the PCB after soldering.

FIG. 2



b


shows the next step in the process where the solder balls


18


are melted to form


18


A to move into intimate contact with PCB surface


22


and provide an intimate contact between the bending protector


20


and the PCB. Solder paste is on the PCB surface


22


opposite to balls


18


to facilitate the mounting of the chip


10


A on the surface


22


. This contact can be enhanced by applying a thin layer of cement between the bending protector and the PCB and curing it.




A first alternative embodiment of the invention is shown in

FIGS. 3



a


and


3




b


. Chip


10


B has a substrate


12


and bending protector


20


, but with rectangular solder pads


24


instead of the solder balls


18


in

FIG. 2



a


.

FIGS. 3



a


and


3




b


are understood to also have the foil layer


11


A and cement and polymer layers of


11


B and


11


C of

FIG. 1B

, although they are not specifically shown. When the solder pads


24


are melted together with the solder paste of the PCB, they will encompass the member


20


in the same way as reflected by the solder


18


A in

FIG. 2



b


. The foregoing assumptions in regard to the foil layer


11


A and cement and polymer layers


11


C and


11


B will also apply to

FIGS. 4



a


,


4




b


,


5




a


,


5




b


,


6




a


,


6




c


and


7


-


10


.




The chip


10


C in

FIGS. 4



a


and


4




b


is a second alternative embodiment of the invention. Chip


10


C is the same as chip


10


B of

FIGS. 3



a


and


3




b


except that four rectangular solder contacts


26


are used for current sensing.




A third alternate invention is a chip


10


E in

FIGS. 5



a


and


5




b


. It is similar to the arrangement in

FIG. 2



a


except in

FIG. 2



a


, only a single solder ball is used on each side of bending protector


20


; while in

FIGS. 5



a


and


5




b


, four balls


18


are used.




A fourth alternate form of the invention is shown by the chip


10


F in

FIG. 6

which shows rectangular contacts


28


which extend outside the bottom surface of the chip to provide for easy visual inspection.




A fifth alternative form of the invention is shown by chip


10


G in

FIG. 7

which uses flexible L-shaped contacts


30


to avoid lateral stress to temperature changes.




A sixth alternate form of the invention is shown in

FIG. 8

by chip


10


H which is similar to chip


10


B in

FIG. 3



b


except that chip


10


H has metal heat sink


32


secured to the upper surface of substrate


12


.




A seventh alternate form of the invention is shown in

FIG. 9

by chip


10


I which is similar to chips


10


D and


10


E of

FIGS. 5



b


and


6




b


, respectively except that a narrow bending stopper


34


is centrally positioned on the bottom of substrate


12


in place of the bending protector


20


on chips


10


D and


10


E.




An eighth alternate form of the invention is shown in

FIG. 10

by chip


10


J. Chip


10


J is similar to chip


10


H of

FIG. 9

except that metal bending protector


36


is used on chip


10


J in place of the bending protector


20


on chip


10


H.




The construction of the chip


10


A in

FIGS. 2



a


and


2




b


is as follows:




1. The chip consists of a photo-etched Ni—Cr alloy foil cemented to one side of a rigid substrate and the foil is protected by a layer of polymer except in pad areas of electrical contact.




2. Two or more solder balls, bumps or rectangles are attached to pads (not shown) on the foil. The pads can be plated for better adhesion between foil and solder.




3. The foil is covered by a layer of plastic serving as a bending protector to prevent bending of chip during mounting on the PCB. Said bending protector being thicker than the solder contacts on the chip.




4. The chip is mounted to the PCB with the foil facing the PCB.




Material used for the chip is as follows:




1. Foil—Nickel-Chrome alloy with traces of other metals, thickness 1 to 25 micrometers. Pads are gold plated or otherwise prepared for receiving solder (etching or abrading of pad's surface, Nickel, Cooper or Gold plating; sputtering or evaporating metal on pads to improve adhesion of solder).




2. Substrate—ceramic, alumina, glass, sapphire, metal with insulation.




3. PCB—epoxy fiber glass, ceramic.




4. Bending protector: Thickness: flush with the PCB surface when chip is mounted, (see

FIG. 2



b


) and said bending protector being thicker than the solder pads or balls prior to mounting. Protector


20


is made of plastic (epoxy, silicone or other), ceramic, metal. (If metal is used, contact with the solder should be avoided, but excellent for heat transfer, see FIG.


10


).




For better heat dissipation, the chip surface not facing the PCB has a metal heat sink


32


attached to it.




All of the manufacturing is done in a wafer (or plate) form where many chips are produced simultaneously (bonding of foil to substrate, photo-etching and trimming to final value of resistive pattern, plating of pads, application of bending protector, cutting of wafer into separate chips). This process is inexpensive per device and the cut wafer is ready for pick and place assembly of chips onto a PCB, without manual handling of individual chips or for packaging in reels or otherwise.




Among the advantages of this construction are:




1. Smaller, thinner devices of the same size as the basic chip itself.




2. No molding, no lead-frame, no gold wire bonding (or ribbon welding) is required which provides a less expensive device by decreasing both materials and labor cost.




3. The device is not handled individually because all processing is done on a wafer (plate); bonding of foil to a large substrate, photo-etching of resistive pattern, trimming to value, plating of pads, application of bending protector, cutting of wafer into separate chips—while the substrate is attached to a thin plastic holder like a silicone wafer before pick and place operations. The finished plate in cut form is ready either for pick and place assembly onto a PCB or to a packaging system.




From the foregoing it is seen that this invention will provide a very thin inexpensive chip that can be made essentially without being individually touched by human hands, which is resistant to bending and the problems associated therewith and which provides an excellent heat transfer when soldered to a PCB.



Claims
  • 1. A precision surface mounted foil resistor for mounting to a PCB surface, comprising,a rigid substrate having top and bottom planar surfaces, and opposite ends, a resistance foil secured to the bottom planar surface of the substrate and extending over the bottom planar surface, a solder material at two areas of the resistance foil and in contact with the resistive foil for surface mounting to the PCB surface, a bending protector plate element of non-conductive material superimposed over the resistance foil without covering the solder material for intimately contacting the PCB surface; the bending protector having a thickness exceeding the thickness of the solder material on the resistance foil.
  • 2. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the solder material is one solder ball at two areas of the resistance foil, with the remainder of the foil being protected with a polymer.
  • 3. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the solder material is two spaced solder balls at each end of the bending protector plate.
  • 4. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the solder material is one rectangular-shaped solder member at two areas of the foil element.
  • 5. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the solder material is two spaced rectangular-shaped solder members at each end of the plate element.
  • 6. The resistor of claim 5 wherein an exterior edge of each solder member extends outwardly from the ends of the substrate.
  • 7. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the solder material is comprised of two L-shaped configurations that extend downwardly and thence outwardly from the bottom of the substrate at each end of the plate element.
  • 8. The resistor of claim 1 wherein a heat sink element is secured to the top of the substrate.
  • 9. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the bending protector plate is comprised of plastic.
  • 10. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the bending resistance plate is comprised of one of epoxy, ceramic, glass or metal.
  • 11. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the resistance foil is comprised of nickel-chrome alloy with a thickness of 1-25 micrometers.
  • 12. The resistor of claim 1 wherein the substrate material is one of ceramic, alumina, insulated metal, glass or sapphire.
  • 13. A precision surface mounted foil resistor for surface mounting to PCB surface, comprising,a rigid substrate having top and bottom planar surfaces, and opposite ends, a resistive foil secured to the bottom surface of the substrate and extending over the bottom surface, a bending protector element of non-conductive material extending downwardly from a center portion of the bottom of the substrate for intimately contacting the PCB surface, and a solder material for surface mounting to the PCB surface on opposite ends of the protector element and in contact with the resistive foil; said solder material having a thickness less than the thickness of the bending protector.
  • 14. A precision surface mounted foil resistor for surface mounting to a PCB surface, comprising,a rigid substrate having top and bottom planar surfaces, and opposite ends, a resistance foil secured to the bottom surface of the substrate and extending over the bottom, a metal bending protector extending downwardly from a center portion of the bottom of the substrate and for intimately contacting the PCB surface, and a solder material for surface mounting to the PCB surface at opposite ends of the metal bending protector and in contact with the resistive foil whereby the bending metal protector is thicker than the solder material and is free from contact therewith.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Number Name Date Kind
3405381 Zandman et al. Oct 1968 A
3517436 Zandman et al. Jun 1970 A
3718883 Berman et al. Feb 1973 A
3955068 Shaheen May 1976 A
3996551 Croson Dec 1976 A
4136656 Sokolov et al. Jan 1979 A
4172249 Szwarc Oct 1979 A
4286249 Lewis et al. Aug 1981 A
4677413 Zandman et al. Jun 1987 A
5641990 Chiu Jun 1997 A
5684677 Uchida et al. Nov 1997 A
5815065 Hanamura Sep 1998 A
5901041 Davies et al. May 1999 A
5903052 Chen et al. May 1999 A
5928003 Kajinuma Jul 1999 A
6114287 Komeda Nov 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
08064401 Aug 1996 JP
2001035882 Sep 2001 JP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Zero TCR Foil Resistor: Ten-Fold Improvem,ent in Termperature Coefficient. Carts-Europe 2000: 14th European Passive Components Symposium, Oct. 16, 2000. F. Zandman, P.-R. Simon, J. Szwarc, Resistor Theory and Technology, Scietch Publishing, Inc. (2000).