Protection device and circuit protection apparatus containing the same
11201026 · 2021-12-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Tsung Min Su (Hsinchu, TW)
- Chia-Mao Chen (Ji'an Township, Hualien County, TW)
- David Shau-Chew Wang (Taipei, TW)
Cpc classification
H01H85/11
ELECTRICITY
H01H85/0065
ELECTRICITY
H01H83/20
ELECTRICITY
H01H37/761
ELECTRICITY
H01H85/08
ELECTRICITY
H01H2085/0555
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01H85/46
ELECTRICITY
H01H85/00
ELECTRICITY
H01H85/08
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A protection device comprises a substrate, a fusible element and a heating element. The substrate comprises a first electrode and a second electrode on its surface. The fusible element is disposed on the substrate and connects to the first electrode and the second electrode at two ends. The fusible element comprises a first metal layer and a second metal layer disposed on the first metal layer. The second metal layer has a lower melting point than that of the first metal layer. The heating element is disposed on the substrate. In the event of over-voltage or over-temperature, the heating element heats up to melt and blow the fusible element. The second metal layer is 40-95% of the fusible element in thickness.
Claims
1. A protection device, comprising: a substrate having a surface provided with a first electrode and a second electrode; a fusible element disposed on the substrate and connecting to the first electrode and the second electrode at two ends, the fusible element comprising a first metal layer and a second metal layer, the second metal layer being disposed on the first metal layer, the second metal layer having a melting point lower than that of the first metal layer; and a heating element disposed on the substrate, the heating element heating up to blow the fusible element in the event of over-voltage or over-temperature, wherein the second metal layer is at least 40% and less than 60% of the fusible element in thickness, wherein the protection device passes an over-voltage test where a current is applied to the heating element of the protection device to generate a power of 7 W-35 W such that the fusible element in a circuit is blown to open the circuit, and wherein the fusible element is blown within 10 seconds with the power of 7 W-35 W applied to the protection device.
2. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the second metal layer is thicker than the first metal layer.
3. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the first metal layer comprises silver, copper, gold, nickel, zinc or alloys thereof.
4. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the second metal layer comprises tin or alloys thereof.
5. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the first metal layer is an inner layer of the fusible element and the second metal layer is an outer layer of the fusible element.
6. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the second metal layer comprises two layers disposed on an upper surface and a lower surface of the first metal layer.
7. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the first metal layer forms a bottom surface of the fusible element and the second metal layer forms a top surface of the fusible element.
8. The protection device of claim 1, wherein the first metal layer has a thickness equal to or greater than 16 μm, and the second metal layer has a thickness greater than 50% of a thickness of the fusible element.
9. A circuit protection apparatus, comprising: a protection device, comprising: a substrate having a surface provide with a first electrode and a second electrode; a fusible element disposed on the substrate and connecting to the first electrode and the second electrode at two ends, the fusible element comprising a first metal layer and a second metal layer, the second metal layer being disposed on the first metal layer, the second metal layer having a melting point lower than that of the first metal layer, the second metal layer being at least 40% and less than 60% of the fusible element in thickness; and a heating element disposed on the substrate, wherein the protection device passes an over-voltage test where a current is applied to the heating element of the protection device to generate a power of 7 W-35 W such that the fusible element in a circuit is blown to open the circuit, and wherein the fusible element is blown within 10 seconds with the power of 7 W-35 W applied to the protection device; a detector senses a voltage drop or a temperature of the circuit to be protected; and a switch coupled to the detector to receive signals of the detector; wherein the switch turns on to allow current to flow through the heating element by which the heating element heats up to blow the fusible element when the detector senses the voltage drop or the temperature exceeding a threshold value.
10. The circuit protection apparatus of claim 9, wherein the second metal layer is thicker than the first metal layer.
11. The circuit protection apparatus of claim 9, wherein the first metal layer is an inner layer of the fusible element and the second metal layer is an outer layer of the fusible element.
12. The circuit protection apparatus of claim 9, wherein the first metal layer has a thickness equal to or greater than 16 μm, and the second metal layer has a thickness greater than 50% of a thickness of the fusible element.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present application will be described according to the appended drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) The making and using of the presently preferred illustrative embodiments are discussed in detail below. It should be appreciated, however, that the present application provides many applicable inventive concepts that can be embodied in a wide variety of specific contexts. The specific illustrative embodiments discussed are merely illustrative of specific ways to make and use the invention, and do not limit the scope of the invention.
(7)
(8) In an embodiment, the substrate 11 may be a rectangular insulating substrate including aluminum oxide, aluminum nitride, zirconium oxide, glass, or ceramic, or may use the material for printed circuit layout such as glass epoxy substrate or phenolic substrate. The substrate 11 has a thickness of about 0.1-2 mm. The electrode layer 18, the heating element electrodes 13 and the intermediate electrode 15 may comprise silver, gold, copper, tin, nickel or other conductive metals, and its thickness is approximately 0.005-1 mm, or 0.01 mm, 0.05 mm, 0.1 mm, 0.3 mm or 0.5 mm in particular. In addition to making the electrodes by printing, they may be alternatively made of metal sheets for high-voltage applications.
(9) The fusible element 16 is a composite structure comprising inner and outer layers and may be in the shape of a rectangular bar or a round bar. The first metal layer 16a is the inner layer of a higher melting point, and the second metal layer 16b is the outer layer of a lower melting point. In other words, the second metal layer 16b has a lower melting point than that of the first metal layer 16a. The second metal layer 16b can be formed on the first metal layer 16a by electroplating, vapor deposition, sputtering, attachment or extrusion. The first metal layer 16a may comprise silver, copper, gold, nickel, zinc, or alloys thereof. The second metal layer 16b may comprise tin or its alloy such as Sn, Sn—Ag, Sn—Sb, Sn—Zn, Sn—Ag—Cu, Pb—Sn—Ag, Sn—Zn—Cu, Sn—Bi—Ag and Sn—Bi—Ag—Cu. In the present application, it is preferable to use but not limited to the lead-free materials to comply with RoHS Directive. In addition to a lower melting point of the second metal layer 16b compared to the first metal layer 16a, the melting point of the first metal layer 16a may be higher than a reflow temperature. As a result, even if a reflow temperature is higher than the melting point of the second metal layer 16b, a surface of the second metal layer 16b may slightly flow but the first metal layer 16a is not melted during reflow. Therefore, the fusible element 16 is not blown and sustains its original shape. The heating element 12 may comprise ruthenium oxide (RuO.sub.2) with additives of silver (Ag), palladium (Pd), and/or platinum (Pt). The insulating layer 14 between the heating element 12 and the fusible element 16 may contain glass, epoxy, aluminum oxide, silicone or glaze.
(10) In an embodiment, the fusible element 16 has a thickness T of about 15-150 μm. The first metal layer 16a has a thickness T1 of about 5-30 μm. Either upper or lower second metal layer 16b has a thickness of 5-50 μm, and therefore the second metal layer 16b has a total thickness T2 of 10-100 μm. T2 may be larger or less than T1, and the thickness of the second metal layer is preferably 40-95% of the thickness of the fusible element. That is, T=T1+T2, and T2/T=40-95%, e.g., 50%, 60%, 70%, 80% or 90%. In an embodiment, the second metal layer 16b is thicker than the first metal layer 16a, or the second metal layer 16b has a larger volume than the first metal layer 16a. In the event of an abnormality of over-voltage or over-current, the second metal layer 16b having larger thickness or volume can erode the first metal layer 16a effectively to speed up the blowout of the fusible element 16. In summary, there are adequate ratios in terms of volumes and thicknesses of the first metal layer 16a compared to the second metal layer 16b. In case of a thin or small volumetric second metal layer 16b, the fusible element 16 may not be blown timely and effectively.
(11)
(12) Table 1 exemplifies fusible elements with a structure shown in
(13) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Sn layer Ag layer 5 μm 10 μm 20 μm 30 μm 5 μm 66.67% 80% 88.89% 92.31% 7 μm 58.82% 74.07% 85.11% 89.55% 9 μm 52.63% 68.97% 81.63% 86.96% 12 μm 45.45% 62.5% 76.92% 83.33% 14 μm 41.67% 58.82% 74.07% 81.08% 16 μm 38.46% 55.56% 71.43% 78.95% 18 μm 35.71% 52.63% 68.97% 76.92% 20 μm 33.33% 50% 66.67% 75%
(14) The fusible elements in Table 1 are sequentially manufactured to be the protection devices of a structure illustrated in
(15) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Sn layer Ag layer 5 μm 10 μm 20 μm 30 μm 5 μm PASS PASS PASS PASS 7 μm PASS PASS PASS PASS 9 μm PASS PASS PASS PASS 12 μm PASS PASS PASS PASS 14 μm PASS PASS PASS PASS 16 μm NG PASS PASS PASS 18 μm NG NG PASS PASS 20 μm NG NG NG PASS
(16) Table 3 shows embodiments of the present application with fusible elements as shown in
(17) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Over-voltage test Ag layer Sn layer Fusible heating power & thickness thickness element (mΩ) blowout time (sec) 9 μm 5 μm 0.8-1.2 7 W 3.71-3.76 10 W 1.52-1.77 35 W 0.24-0.27 12~13 μm 5 μm 0.8-0.9 7 W 3.86-5.06 10 W 1.69-1.81 35 W 0.27-0.29 14~15 μm 5 μm 0.8-0.9 7 W 5.58-7.43 10 W 2.23-2.26 35 W 0.38-0.41 9 μm 10 μm 0.9-1.1 7 W 3.08-4.51 10 W 1.16-1.67 35 W 0.22-0.26 14~15 μm 10 μm 0.8 7 W 4.17-9.17 10 W 1.54-1.84 35 W 0.31-0.32 9 μm 20 μm 0.8-0.9 7 W 2.81-3.71 10 W 1.31-1.38 35 W 0.21-0.22 14~15 μm 20 μm 0.7 7 W 4.36-4.77 10 W 1.98-3.07 35 W 0.26-0.29 9 μm 30 μm 0.9 7 W 2.68-2.76 10 W 1.31-1.32 35 W 0.21-0.24 14~15 μm 30 μm 0.7 7 W 4.51-6.65 10 W 1.94-2.91 35 W 0.26-0.31
(18) The equivalent circuit diagram of the protection device 10 of this embodiment is depicted in a dashed-line block in
(19) The equivalent circuit diagrams of the protection devices of the aforesaid embodiments comprise two fuses and a heater. Nevertheless, variant designs in terms of structure or circuit may be used to form a protection device containing two fuses and two heaters, or one fuse and one heater, which are also covered by the scope of the present application. In an embodiment, the fusible element may electrically connect to two bonding pads to form a current path and the heating element electrically connect to another two bonding pads to form another current path, so as to independently control the current flowing through the heating element to blow the fusible element.
(20) The protection device of the present application comprises a composite fusible element having a first metal layer of a high melting point and a second metal layer of a low melting point, and the fusible element comprises a certain amount of the second metal layer in thickness. When the fusible element is molten, the second metal layer erodes the first metal layer to blow the fusible element quickly. The fusible element of the present application employs a high melting point metal layer and a low melting point metal layer as a main component which may include but not limited to lead-free materials.
(21) The above-described embodiments of the present invention are intended to be illustrative only. Numerous alternative embodiments may be devised by persons skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the following claims.