Claims
- 1. An electrically conductive article comprising electrically insulating sheet material having first and second opposed main sheet surface regions with through-holes extending between the opposed main sheet surface regions and electrically conductive material providing electrically separate conductive paths close-fitting within the through-holes in the sheet material and extending substantially only between the opposed main surface regions thereof, wherein the conductive material adjacent to the first main sheet surface region projects beyond the first main sheet surface region and the projecting conductive material is overplated with metal such that the conductive material at one end of the said paths is bondable at a temperature lower than the minimum bonding temperature of the conductive material at the other end of the said paths.
- 2. An article according to claim 1, wherein the electrically conductive material comprises tubes of the plated metal, each tube close-fitting within a respective one of the through-holes.
- 3. An article according to claim 1, wherein the conductive material carries solder at the end of each through-hole adjacent to the second main sheet surface region.
- 4. An article according to claim 1, wherein said metal with which the conductive material is overplated is gold.
- 5. An article according to claim 4, wherein the gold has a thickness of at least 2 micrometers.
- 6. An article according to claim 4, wherein the conductive paths comprise at least one metal which is not thermocompression-bondable carrying at least two micrometers thickness of the overplated gold metal.
- 7. An article according to claim 3, wherein the conductive material carries a first solder at the said remote end of the said paths and a second solder at the overplated end of the said paths, one of the solders having a minimum bonding temperature high enough to survive exposure to lower temperatures capable of bonding the other solder.
- 8. An article according to claim 1, wherein the overplated metal is bondable by thermocompression bonding.
- 9. An article according to claim 1, wherein the overplated metal at one end of the said paths is bondable by thermocompression, and the conductive material at the other end of the said paths is bondable by solder.
- 10. An article according to claim 9, wherein the thermocompression-bondable material comprises gold metal and the solder-bondable material comprises at least one other metal.
- 11. An article according to claim 8 or 9, having the thermocompression-bondable ends of at least some of the conductive paths thermocompression-bonded to connection sites on an integrated circuit semiconductor device.
- 12. An article according to claim 9, having the solder-bondable ends of at least some of the conductive paths solder bonded to microelectronic interconnect circuitry.
- 13. An article according to claim 8 or 9, having the thermocompression-bondable ends of at least some of the conductive paths thermocompression-bonded to microelectronic interconnect circuitry.
- 14. An article according to claim 9, having the solder-bondable ends of at least some of the conductive paths solder bonded to connection sites on an integrated circuit semiconductor device.
- 15. An article comprising a strip of electrically insulating sheet material carrying two or more arrays of the through-holes containing electrically conductive material as specified in claim 1.
- 16. An article according to claim 15, wherein the strip has edge adaptations suitable for feeding the strip to processing equipment by mechanical feed means.
- 17. An article according to claim 1, wherein the conductive material projects beyond the adjacent sheet surface region at both ends of each said path.
- 18. An article according to claim 1, in which the number of the conductive paths per unit area of the sheet surface is at least 25 conductive paths per square millimeter of the sheet surface over at least a portion of the article.
- 19. An article according to claim 1, wherein the said insulating sheet material is a polyimide capable of retaining at least 50% of its original elongation after immersion in water of pH10 at 100.degree. C. for 4 days according to ASTM D882.
- 20. An article according to claim 1 wherein the said insulating sheet material is a polyimide capable of retaining at least 75% of its original elongation after immersion in water of pH10 at 100.degree. C. for 4 days according to ASTM D882.
- 21. An article according to claim 1 wherein the said insulating sheet material is a polyimide capable of retaining at least 85% of its original elongation after immersion in water of pH10 at 100.degree. C. for 4 days according to ASTM D882.
- 22. An article according to claim 1, wherein the said insulating sheet material is a polyimide derived from polymerization of 4,4'-biphenyl dianhydride and (4,4'-diaminobiphenyl, or 4,4'-diaminobiphenyl ether, or phenylenediamine).
- 23. An article according to claim 22, wherein the said insulating sheet material is a polyimide derived from polymerization of 4,4'-biphenyl dianhydride and p-phenylenediamine.
- 24. An article according to claim 1, wherein at least some of the conductive paths are not more than 200 micrometers in diameter.
- 25. An article according to claim 1, wherein the said holes are U.V. laser ablation holes.
- 26. An article according to claim 1, wherein the said holes have a taper relative to the hole axis and the overplated metal covers the conductive material projecting from the wider end of the hole.
- 27. An article according to claim 1, wherein the said holes have a taper relative to the hole axis and the overplated metal covers the conductive material projecting from the narrower end of the hole.
Priority Claims (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
8802565 |
Feb 1988 |
GBX |
|
8815447 |
Jun 1988 |
GBX |
|
8819895 |
Aug 1988 |
GBX |
|
8823053 |
Sep 1988 |
GBX |
|
8828245 |
Dec 1988 |
GBX |
|
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/173,602, filed Dec. 27, 1993, abandoned, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 07/548,963, filed as PCT/GB89/00111, Feb. 3, 1989 published as WO89/07339, Aug. 10, 1989, now abandoned.
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Continuations (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
173602 |
Dec 1993 |
|
Parent |
548963 |
Feb 1991 |
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