Post on 29-Mar-2015
Printed Wiring Board Fabrication
Imaging• For feature sizes less than 200μm, use
photolithography process1. Clean surface2. Apply photoresist3. Expose photoresist4. Develop photoresist image5. Pattern transfer image (plating or etching)6. Strip photoresist
• Dry film photoresist for pattern formation• Liquid photoresists for precision work (less
than 50μm)
Drilling• Purpose is to form an electrical connection between
layers and permit through-hole component mounting• Typically use tungsten carbide drill bits at speeds of
50,000 to 100,000rpm• Most common defects are:
– Delamination - vibrational– Smear - thermal– Burr - sharpness– Debris - sharpness
• Drill smear is the most important factor for hole quality• Drill smear occurs due to heating of the PWB by the drill,
which can cause epoxy-resin melting
Plating• Metal deposition by electroless and electrolytic
processes• Typically use copper with the following
requirements– High electrical conductivity– Good mechanical strength– High ductility and elongation– Excellent solderability– Good tarnish and corrosion resistance– Good etchant resistance
• Also can add Sn, Sn-Pb, or Ni undercoating as a solder barrier
Etching• Typically chemical etching used (alkaline
ammonia, hydrogen peroxide-sulfuric acid, cupric cholride)
• Process steps:– Resist stripping– Precleaning– Etching– Neutralization– Water rinsing– Drying
Single-sided PWB Fabrication
• Single layer process shown
• Can either use:– Photolithographic
process• Higher precision• Higher cost
– Screen printing• Lower precision• Lower cost
Double-sided PWB Fabrication1. Holes drilled, deburred,
and cleaned2. Panels prepared for
electroplating3. Deposit, mask, expose,
and develop photoresist (UV light)
4. Copper electroplating5. Additional electroplating
(Sn-Pb) to protect and improve quality of surface
6. Strip photoresist7. Solder reflow
Multilayer PWB Fabrication
• Pressing process to form layers
• Alignment is critical• Process steps:
1. Panels produced using double-sided etching from prepreg laminates
2. Panels are laminated, pressed, and cured
3. Additional drilling, electroplating and etching as required
Four Layer PWB Example
Solder Masks
• Three primary types of solder resist masks:
1. Screen-printed
2. Dry film
3. Liquid photoimageable (LPI)
• Dry film and LPI produce finer features than screen-printed
• Protection of exposed surfaces using finishes
Finish Typical Thickness
Features
Electroplated Ni + matte Sn
7.5μm Sn over 5μm Ni
Solderable surface and good shelf life
Electroplated Ni + hard Au
0.75-1.25μm Au over 5μm Ni
Excellent corrosion resistance, shelf life, hardness and wear resistance.
Electroplated Ni + soft Au
0.75-1.25μm Au over 5μm Ni
Excellent corrosion resistance and shelf life, fair wear resistance
Electroless plated Ni + immersion gold
0.02-0.1μm Au over 4.5μm Ni
Excellent corrosion resistance, solderability, and shelf life
Hot-air solder leveling (HASL)
1.5-5μm Sn-Pb
Excellent solderability, good shelf life
Organic solderability preservative (OSP)
0.2-0.5μm Excellent solderability, surface coplanarity and hole size uniformity, and good shelf life
Limitations on PWB Process• New products
require higher pad densities
• Drilled hole technology becomes too expensive
• Microvia is the solution
Microvias• Fabrication processes:
1. Laser drilling2. Plasma or RIE3. Photolithography
• Advantages for high volume production:
1. Increased circuit density2. Advanced packages
enabled3. Better electrical
performance4. Improved reliability than
drilled holes5. Improved thermal
conductance6. Lower PWB cost
Microvia Generation
1. Photovia• Utilizes photolithography• Requires photosensitive
permanent dielectrics2. Plasmavia (PEV)
• Very flexible process• Can generate many different
geometries• Typically 60-90μm diameter
3. Laservia• Economical for mass
production • Nd:YAG, CO2, UV excimer
4. Paste-via• Cheap, but less reliable
Laservia is the best overall microvia process
• Direct CO2 laser drilling is leading throughput and quality of holes
• 20,000 holes/min/head
Microvia Board Technologies
• Three major technologies1. Surface Laminar Circuitry (SLC) or Build-Up
Technology
2. All Layer Internal Via Hole (ALIVH) Technology
3. Buried Bump Interconnection Technology (B2IT)
Build-Up Technology• Can use photosensitive
dielectrics for photovias or use lasers to drill vias
• Copper lines can be spaced as close as 20μm wide
• Lastly, gold plating is used for wire bondable surface finish
All Layer Internal Via Hole (ALIVH) Process
• Invented by Matsushita in Japan
• Used primarily for cell phone boards
• Uses epoxy-aramid prepregs with laser drilled vias, which are filled with copper paste
Buried Bump Interconnection Technology (B2IT)
• Invented by Toshiba in Japan
• Uses silver paste bumps to punch holes in dielectric or prepreg
PWB Market
Expected growth of PWBs and microvias
PWB Trends
Feature size and pitch decrease as number of pins increases
Summary and Future Trends• PWB Fabrication process (Imaging, Drilling, Plating, and
Etching)• Different board fabrication processes (Single-sided,
Double-sided, and Multilayer)• Microvia generation (Photovia, Plasmavia, and Laservia)• Microvia board fabrication (Build-up, ALIVH and B2IT)• Trade-offs (cost, reliability, quality of contacts, dielectric
properties, feature sizes, etc.)