Embodiments described herein pertain generally to voltage switchable dielectric material, and more specifically to voltage switchable dielectric composite materials containing core shelled compounds.
Voltage switchable dielectric (VSD) materials are materials that are insulative at low voltages and conductive at higher voltages. These materials are typically composites comprising of conductive, semiconductive, and insulative particles in an insulative polymer matrix. These materials are used for transient protection of electronic devices, most notably electrostatic discharge protection (ESD) and electrical overstress (EOS). Generally, VSD material behaves as a dielectric, unless a characteristic voltage or voltage range is applied, in which case it behaves as a conductor. Various kinds of VSD material exist. Examples of voltage switchable dielectric materials are provided in references such as U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,357, U.S. Pat. No. 5,068,634, U.S. Pat. No. 5,099,380, U.S. Pat. No. 5,142,263, U.S. Pat. No. 5,189,387, U.S. Pat. No. 5,248,517, U.S. Pat. No. 5,807,509, WO 96/02924, and WO 97/26665, all of which are incorporated by reference herein.
VSD materials may be formed in using various processes. One conventional technique provides that a layer of polymer is filled with high levels of metal particles to very near the percolation threshold, typically more than 25% by volume. Semiconductor and/or insulator materials is then added to the mixture.
Another conventional technique provides for forming VSD material by mixing doped metal oxide powders, then sintering the powders to make particles with grain boundaries, and then adding the particles to a polymer matrix to above the percolation threshold.
Other techniques for forming VSD material are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/829,946, entitled VOLTAGE SWITCHABLE DIELECTRIC MATERIAL HAVING CONDUCTIVE OR SEMI-CONDUCTIVE ORGANIC MATERIAL; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/829,948, entitled VOLTAGE SWITCHABLE DIELECTRIC MATERIAL HAVING HIGH ASPECT RATIO PARTICLES.
Embodiments described herein provide a composition of voltage switchable dielectric (VSD) material that comprises conductive core shelled particles. According to embodiments, VSD material is formulated having particle constituents that individually include a conductive core and one or more shell layers. In some embodiments, the VSD material includes multiple shell layers for corresponding conductive core centers.
Still further, an embodiment provides for a composition of voltage switchable dielectric (VSD) material that includes a concentration of core shelled particles that individually comprise a conductor core and a shell, with the shell of each core shelled particle being (i) multilayered, and/or (ii) heterogeneous.
Still further, some embodiments include a composition that includes a binder having multiple types particle constituents uniformly mixed therein. The multiple types of particle constituents include a concentration of conductor and/or semiconductor particle constituents, and a concentration of particles that include conductive core shelled particles. In particular, the core shelled particles may be conductive, core multi-layered shell (CCMLS) particles. As an addition or alternative, the core shelled particles may be comprised of a heterogeneous shell. The resulting VSD composition is (i) dielectric in absence of a voltage that exceeds a characteristic voltage level, and (ii) conductive with application of a voltage that exceeds a characteristic voltage level of the composition.
Overview of VSD Material
As used herein, “voltage switchable material” or “VSD material” is any composition, or combination of compositions, that has a characteristic of being dielectric or non-conductive, unless a field or voltage is applied to the material that exceeds a characteristic level of the material, in which case the material becomes conductive. Thus, VSD material is a dielectric unless voltage (or field) exceeding the characteristic level (e.g. such as provided by ESD events) is applied to the material, in which case the VSD material is switched into a conductive state. VSD material can further be characterized as a nonlinear resistance material. With an embodiment such as described, the characteristic voltage may range in values that exceed the operational voltage levels of the circuit or device several times over. Such voltage levels may be of the order of transient conditions, such as produced by electrostatic discharge, although embodiments may include use of planned electrical events. Furthermore, one or more embodiments provide that in the absence of the voltage exceeding the characteristic voltage, the material behaves similar to the binder.
Still further, an embodiment provides that VSD material may be characterized as material comprising a binder mixed in part with conductor or semi-conductor particles. In the absence of voltage exceeding a characteristic voltage level, the material as a whole adapts the dielectric characteristic of the binder. With application of voltage exceeding the characteristic level, the material as a whole adapts conductive characteristics.
Many compositions of VSD material provide desired ‘voltage switchable’ electrical characteristics by dispersing a quantity of conductive materials in a polymer matrix to just below the percolation threshold, where the percolation threshold is defined statistically as the threshold by which a continuous conduction path is likely formed across a thickness of the material. Other materials, such as insulators or semiconductors, may be dispersed in the matrix to better control the percolation threshold. Still further, other compositions of VSD material, including some that include particle constituents such as core shell particles (as described herein) or other particles may load the particle constituency above the percolation threshold. As described by embodiments, the VSD material may be situated on an electrical device in order to protect a circuit or electrical component of device (or specific sub-region of the device) from electrical events, such as ESD or EOS. Accordingly, one or more embodiments provide that VSD material has a characteristic voltage level that exceeds that of an operating circuit or component of the device.
According to embodiments described herein, the constituents of VSD material may be uniformly mixed into a binder or polymer matrix. In one embodiment, the mixture is dispersed at nanoscale, meaning the particles that comprise the organic conductive/semi-conductive material are nano-scale in at least one dimension (e.g. cross-section) and a substantial number of the particles that comprise the overall dispersed quantity in the volume are individually separated (so as to not be agglomerated or compacted together).
Still further, an electronic device may be provided with VSD material in accordance with any of the embodiments described herein. Such electrical devices may include substrate devices, such as printed circuit boards, semiconductor packages, discrete devices, Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs), and radio-frequency (RF) components.
VSD Composite with Core Shelled Particles
In some applications, inherent issues may arise with the use of VSD composites that load particles to just below the percolation threshold. In particular, embodiments described herein recognize that some VSD compositions incorporate carbon nanotubes, conductive polymers, and other graphitic compounds. But in instances when these particles are loaded into a matrix of the composition to levels that are ‘just below’ percolation levels, the conductive nature of the particles can have higher than desired current leakage and/or very low loading levels. Other semiconductive particles or nanorods such as titanium dioxide, tin oxide, or antimony doped tin oxide are not as conductive and therefore can be loaded to high levels. However, these materials are not as conductive and therefore cannot conduct as much current in the “on state”; thereby not providing as much ESD protection. Hence, it is desirable to be able to “tune” the conductivity and bandgap of the polymer, particle, nanoparticle, and/or nanorods to optimize the balance between “on state” resistance and “off state” resistance, i.e. maximize off state resistance, and minimize on state resistance.
Embodiments described herein enable core shell particles to be comprised of core or shell material that has a desired electrical or physical characteristic. In this way, the core or shell material of the core shell particle is selected to form a core shell particle constituent of VSD material that tunes a desired electrical or physical characteristic of the overall composition of VSD material.
Still further, some embodiments described herein recognize that for many VSD composites, after a layer or quantity of the VSD material has been pulsed with a high voltage ESD event (or simulated version thereof), some current must flow through the polymer matrix between the conductive particles. As a result, degrading side reactions may arise, most likely due to the high electron flow and localized heating in the polymer.
Embodiments described herein include composites of VSD material that incorporate core shelled particles, such as CCMLS particles or core shelled particles that have heterogeneous shell layers. The inclusion of such core shelled particles enhances desired electrical characteristics from the VSD composition (e.g. reduction in leakage current).
Examples for matrix binder 105 include polyethylenes, silicones, acrylates, polymides, polyurethanes, epoxies, polyamides, polycarbonates, polysulfones, polyketones, and copolymers, and/or blends thereof.
Examples of conductive materials 110 include metals such as copper, aluminum, nickel, silver, gold, titanium, stainless steel, nickel phosphorus, niobium, tungsten, chrome, other metal alloys, or conductive ceramics like titanium diboride or titanium nitride. Examples of semiconductive material 120 include both organic and inorganic semiconductors. Some inorganic semiconductors include, silicon carbide, Boron-nitride, aluminum nitride, nickel oxide, zinc oxide, zinc sulfide, bismuth oxide, titanium dioxide, cerium oxide, bismuth oxide, tin oxide, indium tin oxide, antimony tin oxide, and iron oxide, praseodynium oxide. The specific formulation and composition may be selected for mechanical and electrical properties that best suit the particular application of the VSD material. The nano-dimensioned particles 130 may be of one or more types. Depending on the implementation, at least one constituent that comprises a portion of the nano-dimensioned particles 130 are (i) organic particles (e.g. carbon nanotubes, graphenes); or (ii) inorganic particles (metallic, metal oxide, nanorods, or nanowires). The nano-dimensioned particles may have high-aspect ratios (HAR), so as to have aspect ratios that exceed at least 10:1 (and may exceed 1000:1 or more). The particle constituents may be uniformly dispersed in the polymer matrix or binder at various concentrations. Specific examples of such particles include copper, nickel, gold, silver, cobalt, zinc oxide, tin oxide, silicon carbide, gallium arsenide, aluminum oxide, aluminum nitride, titanium dioxide, antimony, Boron-nitride, tin oxide, indium tin oxide, indium zinc oxide, bismuth oxide, cerium oxide, and antimony zinc oxide.
The dispersion of the various classes of particles in the matrix 105 may be such that the VSD material 100 is non-layered and uniform in its composition, while exhibiting electrical characteristics of voltage switchable dielectric material. Generally, the characteristic voltage of VSD material is measured at volts/length (e.g. per 5 mil), although other field measurements may be used as an alternative to voltage. Accordingly, a voltage 108 applied across the boundaries 102 of the VSD material layer may switch the VSD material 100 into a conductive state if the voltage exceeds the characteristic voltage for the gap distance L.
As depicted by a sub-region 104 (which is intended to be representative of the VSD material 100), VSD material 100 comprises particle constituents that individually carry charge when voltage or field acts on the VSD composition. If the field/voltage is above the trigger threshold, sufficient charge is carried by at least some types of particles to switch at least a portion of the composition 100 into a conductive state. More specifically, as shown for representative sub-region 104, individual particles (of types such as conductor particles, core shell particles or other semiconductive or compound particles) acquire conduction regions 122 in the polymer binder 105 when a voltage or field is present. The voltage or field level at which the conduction regions 122 are sufficient in magnitude and quantity to result in current passing through a thickness of the VSD material 100 (e.g. between boundaries 102) coincides with the characteristic trigger voltage of the composition.
Accordingly,
Specific compositions and techniques by which organic and/or HAR particles are incorporated into the composition of VSD material is described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/829,946, entitled VOLTAGE SWITCHABLE DIELECTRIC MATERIAL HAVING CONDUCTIVE OR SEMI-CONDUCTIVE ORGANIC MATERIAL; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/829,948, entitled VOLTAGE SWITCHABLE DIELECTRIC MATERIAL HAVING HIGH ASPECT RATIO PARTICLES; both of the aforementioned patent applications are incorporated by reference in their respective entirety by this application.
Some embodiments may provide for VSD material that includes varistor particles as a portion of its particle constituents. Embodiments may incorporate a concentration of particles that individually exhibit non-linear resistive properties, so as to be considered active varistor particles. Such particles typically comprise zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, Bismuth oxide, Indium oxide, tin oxide, nickel oxide, copper oxide, silver oxide, praseodymium oxide, Tungsten oxide, and/or antimony oxide. Such a concentration of varistor particles may be formed from sintering the varistor particles (e.g. zinc oxide) and then mixing the sintered particles into the VSD composition. In some applications, the varistor particle compounds are formed from a combination of major components and minor components, where the major components are zinc oxide or titanium dioxide, and the minor components or other metal oxides (such as listed above) that melt of diffuse to the grain boundary of the major component through a process such as sintering.
The particle loading level of VSD material using core shelled particles, as described by embodiments herein, may vary below or above the percolation threshold, depending on the electrical or physical characteristics desired from the VSD material. Particles with high bandgap (e.g. using insulative shell layer(s)) may be used to enable the VSD composition to exceed the percolation threshold. Accordingly, in some embodiments, the total particle concentration of the VSD material, with the inclusion of a concentration of core shelled particles (such as described herein), is sufficient in quantity so that the particle concentration exceeds the percolation threshold of the composition. In particular, some embodiments provide that the concentration of core shelled particles may be varied in order to have the total particle constituency of the composition exceed the percolation threshold.
Under some conventional approaches, the composition of VSD material has included metal or conductive particles that are dispersed in the binder of the VSD material. The metal particles may range in size and quantity, depending in some cases on desired electrical characteristics for the VSD material. In particular, metal particles may be selected to have characteristics that affect a particular electrical characteristic. For example, to obtain lower clamp value (e.g. an amount of applied voltage required to enable VSD material to be conductive), the composition of VSD material may include a relatively higher volume fraction of metal particles. As a result, it becomes difficult to maintain a low initial leakage current (or high resistance) at low biases due to the formation of conductive paths (shorting) by the metal particles.
As shown by an embodiment of
Accordingly, the metal particles 210 of the VSD material 200 are provided one or more layers of shell material 222. The shell material 222 may be semi-conductive or insulative, such provided through formation of a metal oxide shell. The metal oxide shell may be formed by, for example, thermal oxidation. As described below, the shell material 222 may be heterogeneous, so that the shell layer or layers are formed from multiple types of material. A heterogeneous core shell particle may be formed from (i) different kinds of shell layers in an individual shell layer, and/or (ii) multiple layers that are each homogeneous but formed from a different kind of material. One or more shell formation processes may be used to form the shell material 222 on individual particles. In one implementation, the oxide shell may be formed to include a relatively uniform thickness. Alternatively, the shell material may be formed to be non-uniform.
According to an embodiment provides that the shell material 222 is formed from metal oxide particles to surround the core metal particle 210. The core metal particles may be dimensioned in the micron or sub-micron range.
As mentioned, it is believed that incidental conductive paths 215 (
Core Shell Particles
According to some embodiments, core shell particles are comprised of metal particles that are mixed with an oxide precursor solution to control the composition and thickness of an oxide shell on the particle. By mixing metal particles with an oxide precursor solution, it is possible to control the composition and thickness of a given layer of oxide shell. Further sintering at elevated temperature enables more durable and uniform oxide shell creation about individual metal particles.
Still further, embodiment recognize that it is also possible to form a shell with material other than oxide, such as an organic shell to impart additional properties to the metal particles.
The conductive particles 210 (i.e. the ‘cores’) that can be shelled and used as constituents of VSD material 200 may be selected from a wide range of materials, including (i) metals such as nickel, aluminum, titanium, iron, copper, or tungsten, stainless steel or other metal alloys; (ii) conductive metal oxides like antimony doped tin oxide, indium doped tin oxide, aluminum doped zinc oxide, and antimony doped zinc oxide. The shell material used to modify the conductive particle 210 can be insulative, or semiconductive. In some variations, it is possible for at least one shell layer to be formed from material that is conductive. According to embodiments, the shell material used to make the surface modification (the shell material) may correspond to a metal oxide, such as tin oxide, zinc oxide, titanium oxide, aluminum oxide, silicon oxide, nickel oxide, or copper oxide. Still further, an embodiment provides that colloidal solutions of oxide nanoparticles are formed in the presence of the conductive particles (e.g. nickel). Still further, the metal/metal oxides are low melting, e.g. less than 1000° C., such as metals and their corresponding oxides from bismuth, chromium, antimony, and praseodynium. Adsorption of the colloidal nanoparticles onto the conductive particle surface may occur by van der Waals force, electrostatic attraction, covalent bonding, steric entrapment or other means under appropriate conditions. This bound surface layer is then solidified by heating up to certain temperature in air, thus ensuring uniform coating of the conductive particles by the surface coating material. In another embodiment, conductive particles are mixed with various sol solutions with well established sol gel chemistry. The particles may be agitated and dispersed in the sol medium. After evaporation of solvent and drying a gel coating forms on the conductive particle surface which can be further solidified by heating at elevated temperatures.
Additional coatings of the same or different coating materials can be applied onto the conductive particles surface repeatedly in similar fashion.
With regard to
The formation of each type of material may be performed in one combined process (e.g. one precursor solution with multiple types of material) or in multiple processes (e.g. separate precursor solution for each shell material type). In one embodiment, when heterogeneous shells are formed, the material that comprises the shells may have different electrical properties or characteristics. For example, one implementation may combine a metal oxide and a nano-particle as the shell material, while another implementation may use two kinds of metal oxides as the shell material.
As shown by
In one embodiment, nickel oxide forms at least one of the shell layers, and is formed a metal particle core. A core shell particle (for use with VSD composition) comprising nickel core and nickel oxide shell material may be formulated as follows: (1) Mix 120 mL 1M NiSO4 solution with 90 mL 0.2M K2S2O8 solution and 60 mL DI water; (2) Add 1100 g of Ni (for example, Novamet 4SP-10) to the above solution; (3) Mix with an overhead mixer for duration; and (4) Add 24 mL NH4OH solution (30% wt) quickly and under vigorous stirring. The mixture is further mixed for 8 hrs at room temperature. The solution is filtered and rinsed with DI water and ethanol. The filtered powder is then dried at 100 C in vacuum for 2 hour. The dried powder is finally heated in a furnace at 300 C for 1 to 3 hours. All the chemicals are obtained from Sigma-Aldrich.
In embodiment, the coating formulation includes (i) 20 to 30% vol surface modified nickel particles, (ii) 5 to 25% vol metal oxide semiconductors with primary particle size less than 1 um (e.g. TiO2). Epoxy and epoxy functionalized polymers are used as the polymer matrix materials, solvents can be added to adjust viscosity for mixing (i.e. N-methypyrrolidinone or 1-methoxy-2-propanol). Appropriate types and amounts of cross-linkers may be dispersed in the binder. Small amount of dispersants may be used to disperse particles with size less than 1 um.
Results: A layer of VSD material with 26% vol 4SP-10 nickel treated as above, formulated such as described above, has a resulting clamp voltage of 263V at 5 mil electrode gap size. Resistances of all samples before and after testing are greater than 10^10 ohm at low biases.
A layer of VSD material with 26% vol treated 4SP-20 nickel and 2% untreated INP-400 nickel (both from Novamet) has a resulting clamp voltage of 194V at 5 mil electrode gap size. Resistances of sample are greater than 10^10 ohm before testing and greater than 10^6 ohm after testing at low biases.
In another embodiment, zinc oxide is used for shell material. A zinc oxide shell may be formed over a metal particle. Formation of a core shell particle that uses a zinc oxide shell may be as follows: (1) 1M zinc acetate solution is used to form zinc oxide on the nickel particle surface; (2) 120 mL 1M zinc acetate solution is mixed with 90 mL 0.2M K2S2O8 solution and 60 mL DI water; (3) 1100 g of Ni (for example, Novamet 4SP-20) is added to the above solution and mixed with an overhead mixer; (4) After 15 minutes, 24 mL NH4OH solution (30% wt) is added quickly under vigorous stirring. The mixture is further mixed for 8 hrs at room temperature. The resulting mixture is filtered and rinsed with DI water and ethanol for several times. The filtered powder is then dried at 100° C. in vacuum for 2 hour. The dried powder is finally heated in a furnace at 300° C. for 2 hours. All the chemicals are obtained from Sigma-Aldrich.
A VSD coating with 26% vol 4SP-20 nickel treated as above has a resulting clamp voltage of 238V at 5 mil electrode gap size. Resistances of all samples before and after testing are greater than 10^10 ohm at low biases.
Still further, an embodiment provides for titanium oxide as the shell material. One or more layers of titanium oxide shell are formulated over a metal particle. Formation of a core shell particle that includes a titanium oxide shell may be as follows: (1) 50 mL of titanium tetraisopropoxide may be mixed with 250 mL of 2-methoxyethanol and 25 mL of ethanolamine; (2) While keeping under argon flow, the mixture is heated at 80° C. and 120° C. for 1 hour each and repeated once. The resulting product used the titanium oxide precursor solution to coat nickel particles.
Under one formulation, 200 g of above titanium oxide precursor solution is mixed with 500 g of isopropanol. Next, 600 g of nickel powder (for example, Novamet 4SP-20) is added under vigorous stirring by an overhead stirrer and sonicated at the same time. After sonicating (or mixing) for 60 minutes, the sonicator horn is removed. Stirring may be maintained with heating at 70° C. to remove most of volatile solvents in the mixture. The mixture may be placed in an oven at 80° C. until all solvents evaporate. The dried powder is then heated at 300° C. for two hours and used in coating formulation.
A VSD coating with 26% vol 4SP-20 nickel treated as above gives a clamp voltage of 309V at 5 mil electrode gap size. Resistances of all samples before and after testing are greater than 10^10 ohm at low biases.
Still further, in another embodiment, a core shell may comprise a metal-core, a metal oxide shell, and a polymer shell. In one implementation, the metal core is nickel, and the oxide shell is nickel oxide. The polymer shell may be formed using, for example, hydrosiloxane treatment, other embodiments would include reacting the surface of the shell with silane coupling agents such as aminopropyltriethoxysilane, acryloxypropyltriethoxysilane, or epoxypropyltriethoxysilane.
Still further, some embodiments provide for a core shell particle that comprises a cross-lined polymer shell formed using a hydrosiloxane treatment. A cross-linked polymer shell may be formed by linking hydrosiloxane group polymers that comprise the shell of the core shelled particle. This polymer (e.g. polymethylhydrosiloxane) is cross-linked with platinum or peroxide in solution. More specific examples of surface-modifying particles for use as core shell particle constituents of VSD material are described below.
Surface Modification of Metal Particles
Oxidized Ni particles may be treated with a D4-H molecule (1,3,5,7-tetramethyl cyclotetrasiloxane, from Gelest) using the vapor phase reaction. 600 g of oxidized Ni power is transferred into a 500 ml teflon container. Then 3% by wt of D4-H is added. The container is mixed and placed in a furnace set at a temperature of 150° C. for several hours. Since the boiling point of D4-H is 135° C., D4-H vaporizes at 150° C. resulting in the ring opening polymerization of D4-H on the NiO/NiO2 surface of Ni. The Ni particles are rinsed with ethanol and DI The filtered powder is dried.
The surface modification of nickel oxide with siloxanes (monomeric or polymeric) can be carried out either by solution or vapor phase reaction. In the following two examples, the solution and vapor phase reactions of nickel oxide with 1,3,5,7-tetramethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4H) are described. In addition to D4H, other siloxanes can be employed for such reactions on nickel surfaces; Octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4), octamethyltrisiloxane (Si3), decamethyltetrasiloxane (Si4), dodecamethylpentasiloxane (Si5), octylsilane, polymethylhydridosiloxane and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS).
Solution phase reaction of 1,3,5,7-tetramethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4H) on nickel oxide: About 2-5% volume of D4H with respect to a solvent is treated with nickel oxide. The solvents may correspond to, for example hexane, heptanes or toluene. The reaction temperatures are typically 90-110° C. and the reaction times may vary. In one process, 2.5 g of D4H and 100 g of nickel are taken in 150 g of toluene and refluxed for a duration. After the reaction, the reaction mixture are treated and dried at 100° C. overnight to obtain the product in 90-95% yield.
Vapor phase reaction of 1,3,5,7-tetramethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4H) on nickel oxide: About 2-10 weight % of D4H may be taken with nickel oxide in an autoclavable teflon container. This is heated to above the boiling point of D4H in an oven. As an example, 15 g of D4H is taken with 600 g of nickel oxide using a sealed teflon container. This is placed in a pre-heated oven at 150° C. The container is then cooled to room temperature, and the nickel oxide is washed with toluene to remove the un-attached siloxane monomer and filtered. Further drying provides surface modified nickel oxide in 90-95% yield.
Other types of reactions on siloxane-modified nickel oxide are possible. For example, the Si—H group can be used for coupling hydridosilane with other functional group containing olefins to tailor the surface chemistry. An allyl amine or acrylonitrile can be used to react with hydridosiloxane-modified nickel oxide using a Platinum catalyst (eg. Chloroplatinic acid). This will result in nickel oxide surfaces containing amine or nitrile end groups. Similarly, the reaction with perfluorobutylethylne results in highly fluorine-rich end groups on the nickel oxide surface.
In another example, the siloxane-treated nickel oxide surface is treated with a radical initiator such as benzoyl peroxide that can generate silyl radical, which in turn may initiate a polymerization of olefinic substrates, such as acrylate monomers. As an example, D4H-modified nickel oxide was reacted with hexanediol-diacrylate in presence of benzoyl peroxide to give nickel oxide covered with acrylate shell.
Table 1 lists a summary of the atomic composition of the surface modified nickel that can be included in VSD composition, according to some embodiments as measured by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
VSD Formulation Using Core Shelled Particles
With reference to embodiments described, the core shell particles may be formulated using the following example. Core shell particles such as described may be included as one of the particle constituents of VSD material, in a manner described with prior embodiments. In one embodiment, the VSD material includes nanoparticles, such as carbon-nanotubes as particle constituents. The nanoparticles (0.6 g) are mixed into the polymer binder (e.g. EPON 828 or difunctional bisphenol A/epichlorohydrin by HEXION) (70.8 g) and GP611 epoxy functional dimethylpolysiloxane copolymer, by GENESEE POLYMERS CORP.) (70.8 g). A solvent such as N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone is added (140 g). Appropriate curing and catalyst agents are applied and mixed uniformly. A pre-mixture is formed comprising nanoparticles (e.g. carbon nanotubes), resin and solvent. 78.5 g of TiO2 and 2.6 g of isopropyl tri(N-ethylenediamino)ethyl titanate are added during the mixing process. 617.8 g of wet-chemistry processed oxidized Ni particles (provided as core shelled particle constituents) are then added with 85.1 g of additional TiO2 and 142.3 g of Bi2O3. Mixing was continued to achieve uniform constituency. High shear mixing over long durations is used to achieve desired uniformity, optionally sonication may also be desirable to improve mixing. According to an embodiment, the formulation results in VSD material that comprises Ni core shell particles having a trigger voltage of approximately 313V and a clamp voltage of approximately 217V for a 3 mil gap with 20 pad diameter measured by a transmission line pulse.
As an alternative to embodiments described, the core of the core shell particle may comprise a varistor particle, such as zinc-oxide or titanium dioxide. Still further, other embodiments may mix varistors and core shell particles such as described herein.
VSD Material Applications
Numerous applications exist for compositions of VSD material in accordance with any of the embodiments described herein. In particular, embodiments provide for VSD material to be provided on substrate devices, such as printed circuit boards, semiconductor packages, discrete devices, thin film electronics, as well as more specific applications such as LEDs and radio-frequency devices (e.g. RFID tags). Still further, other applications may provide for use of VSD material such as described herein with a liquid crystal display, organic light emissive display, electrochromic display, electrophoretic display, or back plane driver for such devices. The purpose for including the VSD material may be to enhance handling of transient and overvoltage conditions, such as may arise with ESD events. Another application for VSD material includes metal deposition, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,797,145 to L. Kosowsky (which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety).
Electroplating
In addition to inclusion of the VSD material on devices for handling, for example, ESD events, one or more embodiments contemplate use of VSD material (using compositions such as described with any of the embodiments herein) to form substrate devices, including trace elements on substrates, and interconnect elements such as vias. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/881,896, filed on Sep. Jul. 29, 2007, and which claims benefit of priority to U.S. Pat. No. 6,797,145 (both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their respective entirety) recites numerous techniques for electroplating substrates, vias and other devices using VSD material. Embodiments described herein enable use of VSD material, as described with any of the embodiments in this application.
Other Applications
With respect to any of the applications described herein, device 500 may be a display device. For example, component 520 may correspond to an LED that illuminates from the substrate 510. The positioning and configuration of the VSD material 505 on substrate 510 may be selective to accommodate the electrical leads, terminals (i.e. input or outputs) and other conductive elements that are provided with, used by or incorporated into the light-emitting device. As an alternative, the VSD material may be incorporated between the positive and negative leads of the LED device, apart from a substrate. Still further, one or more embodiments provide for use of organic LEDs, in which case VSD material may be provided, for example, underneath an organic light-emitting diode (OLED).
With regard to LEDs and other light emitting devices, any of the embodiments described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/562,289 (which is incorporated by reference herein) may be implemented with VSD material such as described with other embodiments of this application.
Alternatively, the device 500 may correspond to a wireless communication device, such as a radio-frequency identification device. With regard to wireless communication devices such as radio-frequency identification devices (RFID) and wireless communication components, VSD material may protect the component 520 from, for example, overcharge or ESD events. In such cases, component 520 may correspond to a chip or wireless communication component of the device. Alternatively, the use of VSD material 505 may protect other components from charge that may be caused by the component 520. For example, component 520 may correspond to a battery, and the VSD material 505 may be provided as a trace element on a surface of the substrate 510 to protect against voltage conditions that arise from a battery event. Any composition of VSD material in accordance with embodiments described herein may be implemented for use as VSD material for device and device configurations described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/562,222 (incorporated by reference herein), which describes numerous implementations of wireless communication devices which incorporate VSD material.
As an alternative or variation, the component 520 may correspond to, for example, a discrete semiconductor device. The VSD material 505 may be integrated with the component, or positioned to electrically couple to the component in the presence of a voltage that switches the material on.
Still further, device 500 may correspond to a packaged device, or alternatively, a semiconductor package for receiving a substrate component. VSD material 505 may be combined with the casing 550 prior to substrate 510 or component 520 being included in the device.
Although illustrative embodiments have been described in detail herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, variations to specific embodiments and details are encompassed herein. It is intended that the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims and their equivalents. Furthermore, it is contemplated that a particular feature described, either individually or as part of an embodiment, can be combined with other individually described features, or parts of other embodiments. Thus, absence of describing combinations should not preclude the inventor(s) from claiming rights to such combinations.
This application claims benefit of priority to Provisional U.S. Patent Application No. 61/101,637 filed Sep. 30, 2008; the aforementioned priority application being hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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