METHOD FOR FORMATION of ELECTRO-CONDUCTIVE TRACES ON POLYMERIC ARTICLE SURFACE

20190360104 ยท 2019-11-28

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    The present invention relates to a production of electro-conductive traces on the surface of polymeric articles using laser excitation for the areas to be metallised, followed by activation of the laser-treated areas with a metal salt solution, the article is later rinsed in distilled water, and the activated areas are metallised in the chemical plating bath. The aims of the invention are to produce cost-effective conductive traces of the circuits for the application in 3D moulded interconnect devices, to increase the quality of the circuit traces improving the selective metallization process. An irradiation dose and scanning parameters for the surface excitation are chosen experimentally, provided that a negative static charge appears on the surface of the laser-irradiated areas. The chosen parameters ensure that any surface degradation of the polymer is avoided. The activation solution used in the method is aqueous solution consisting of one chosen salt comprising: silver (Ag), copper (Cu), nickel (Ni), cobalt (Co), zinc (Zn), chrome (Cr), tin (Sn) salt.

    Claims

    1. A method for formation of electro-conductive traces on polymeric article surface comprising the following steps: laser treatment of the surface by irradiating, in ambient air, an area of the polymeric article on which the metal is to be deposited, thereby forming a laser-irradiated area, wherein the polymeric article is made from a polymer selected from the thermoplastic or thermosets or their mixture thereof and wherein short pulse duration, irradiation dose and laser beam scanning parameters of a laser of the laser treatment are chosen so that a reducing agent is formed on the area of the polymeric article after irradiation; chemical activation of said laser-irradiated areas by submerging the polymeric article in the activation solution, where metal ions are attached on said irradiated areas thereby obtaining activated areas; rinsing of said polymeric article; and metal plating of said activated polymer surface areas by submerging said polymeric article into a chemical metallization bath; wherein the reducing agent reduces metal ions from said activation solution to a neutral metal atoms or zero degrees of ionisation to enable the electroless catalytic plating process, herewith a negative static charge occurs on the surface of said laser-irradiated areas, which avoids any surface degradation of said polymer of the polymeric article; and wherein the activation solution used for chemical activation is an aqueous solution of metal salt selected from the list of the salts consisting of: silver (Ag) salt, copper (Cu) salt, nickel (Ni) salt, cobalt (Co) salt, zinc (Zn) salt, chrome (Cr) salt, and tin (Sn) salt.

    2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the polymer of the polymeric article is selected from the group consisting of: Polypropylene (PP), Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS), Polycarbonate (PC), Polystyrene (PS), Polyethylene (PE), Polybutylene Terephthalate (PBT), Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP), Cycloolefin Copolymer (COC), Polymethyl-Methacrylate (PMMA), Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), Polyphenylene Ether (PPE), Polyetheretherketones (PEEK), Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET), Polyamide (PA) and their blends thereof.

    3. The method according to claim 2, wherein the polymeric article is produced from Polycarbonate and Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene polymers blend (PC-ABS).

    4. The method according to claim 1, wherein a pulse or continuous wave laser is used for said laser treatment of the surface, wherein a wavelength of the laser source comprises infrared, visible and ultraviolet range, wherein said irradiation dose is in a range of 0.1-50 J/cm.sup.2 and laser scanning speed is in a range of 0.1-5 m/s, wherein said irradiation dose and scanning speed are chosen such that the laser-irradiated areas become active for adsorption and reduction of metal ions from said aqueous solution of metal salt.

    5. The method according to claim 4, wherein a laser with a pulse duration from 0.1 ps to 900 ps, pulse repetition rate from 10 to 200 kHz and irradiation dose in the range of 1-10 J/cm.sup.2 is used for irradiation of the areas for metallization, provided that any surface oxidation of said polymer article is avoided during laser treatment in the ambient air.

    6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the chemical activation solution consists of silver nitrate AgN0.sub.3 or silver diamine complex Ag(NH.sub.3).sub.2 aqueous solution at a concentration of 0.0000001-1 M.

    7. The method according to claim 1, wherein after the activation and rinsing, said polymeric article is submerged into a chemical metallization bath containing: metal ions, a ligand for complexion of metal ions, a reducing agent for metal ions reduction, and a buffer for keeping a constant pH-value of the activation solution, provided that said areas treated by the laser and chemically activated will be deposited by a metal from the chemical metallization bath.

    8. The method according to claim 6, wherein chemical activation is performed at 20 C. temperature for 15 minutes.

    9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the chemical metallization bath is an electroless copper plating bath which consists of: copper sulphate CuS0.sub.4 in concentrations of 0.05-0.25 M (copper (II) source), formaldehyde in a concentration of 0.0015-6 M (reducing agent), ligand chosen from the group of polyols, hydroxy-polycarboxylic acids, polyamine-polycarboxylic acids, polyamine-polyhydroxy compounds comprising: glycerol, citric acid, isomers of tartaric acid, EDTA, DTPA, CDTA, Quadrol, in a concentrations of 0.15-0.75 M, wherein in the electroless copper plating bath, sodium carbonate Na.sub.2C0.sub.3 is present in concentrations of 0.05-0.6 M and sodium hydroxide NaOH in concentrations of 0.1-2 M are used as a buffering environment at pH-values of 12-13.5; and wherein a temperature of the electroless copper plating bath is maintained in a range of 5-90 C. during the metal plating process.

    10. The method according to claim 9, wherein the copper plating bath contains: 0.12 M Copper (II) sulphate (CuS0.sub.4), 0.25 M Quadrol ([CH.sub.3CH(OH)CH.sub.2].sub.2NCH.sub.2CH.sub.2N[CH.sub.2CH(OH)CH.sub.3].sub.2), 1.25 M Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), 0.3 M Sodium carbonate (Na.sub.2C0.sub.3) and 0.34 M formalin (CH.sub.2(OH)2) aqueous solution, at pH=12.7 and a temperature of 30 C.

    11. The method according to claim 1, wherein the chemical metallization bath is an electroless silver plating bath containing: 0.001-0.1 M AgN0.sub.3-silver(1) ions source; 0.001-0.8 M CoS0.sub.4reducing agent; 0.1-1 M (NH.sub.4).sub.2S0.sub.4 and 0.1-5 M NH.sub.4OH as ligands, wherein electroless silver plating takes place when the plating bath is at a pH-value within a range of 12-13.5, and a temperature of 30 C.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

    [0035] FIG. 1. illustrates embodiments of process steps of proposed method: [0036] a) surface excitation by a laser; [0037] b) chemical activation of the laser-treated areas by the aqueous solution of a metal salt; [0038] c) rinsing the article in distilled water; [0039] d) electroless catalytic deposition of metal.

    [0040] FIG. 2. shows example of the selective copper-plated surface of the PC/ABS polymer.

    DESCRIPTION OF CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION

    [0041] References to the numbers shown in drawings: the polymeric article 1; the laser beam 2; surface static charge 3; the reducing agent 4; the aqueous solution of a metal salt 5; metal ions in the activation solution 6; distilled water 7; metal ions 8 on polymer 1 surface; desorbed ions from polymer surface 9; electroless autocatalytic plating bath 10; reducing agent 11 in plating bath 10; electrons 12.

    [0042] Technology process of the present invention contains following steps:

    [0043] The first step is laser irradiation 2 of polymeric surface areas which are intended to be deposited by a metal, therefore forming the excited areas for chemical activation. The polymeric article 1 is produced from standard polymeric material selected from the group of: Polypropylene (PP), Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS), Polycarbonate (PC), Polystyrene (PS), Polyethylene (PE), Polybutylene Terephthalate (PBT), Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP), Cycloolefin Copolymer (COC), Polymethyl-Methacrylate (PMMA), Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), Polyphenylene Ether (PPE), Polyetheretherketones (PEEK), Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET), Polyamide (PA) or their blends thereof.

    [0044] Areas provided for metallization are irradiated with a pulse or continuous wave laser. The laser wavelength comprises infrared, visible and ultraviolet range. Irradiation dose is from 0.1 to 50 J/cm.sup.2. All sets of laser process parameters are chosen experimentally in such a way that irradiated surface area gets a negative static charge, herewith avoiding surface degradation. When a pulsed laser is used for irradiation the pulse duration can be selected from the range from 0.1 ps to 900 ps, pulse repetition rate from 10 to 200 kHz, the wavelength from 355 to 1064 nm and irradiation dose from 3 to 5 J/cm.sup.2. The laser beam is scanned over the selected polymer surface areas using a galvanometric scanner or translating the beam or the article relative each other. The scanning speed ranges from 0.1 to 5 m/s depending on the laser process parameters and material properties. The width of the metallic traces written by a single scan can be controlled by the diameter of the Gaussian laser beam, which can be easily varied from 10 to 250 m.

    [0045] Laser-treated surface areas get a static charge, therefore, becomes active for adsorption and reduction of ions from the activation solution. Laser untreated areas remain inactive or almost inactive for adsorption of ions from the activation solution. Apparently adsorbed ions on laser-untreated areas (which are a minority) can be washed out during the rinsing step. However, ions adsorbed on laser treated areas remain after the rinsing. The temperature of the polymer surface is locally increased after absorption of laser irradiation. When the temperature exceeds a certain value (depending on a polymer), it results in bond-breaking of a polymeric molecule by the thermochemical decomposition. Hereby, many radicals having negative charge 3 appear. For the mentioned reason, the metal ions 6 are attracted by the Coulomb forces toward the opposite potential on the laser-treated polymer surface. Therefore, ions 6 are attached to the laser-irradiated areas. At some laser treatment regimes, the polymer surface can also change its structure, and this is influenced by thermomechanical effects after absorption of the irradiation. Transformation of the polymer surface to a porous, sponge-like structure, can take place. Said structure also assists the localisation of metal ions on the laser-treated areas since the rinsing of metal ions from a porous structure is more difficult.

    [0046] Several known methods of laser-induced selective plating of polymers are based on surface modification into the porous structure. In the present invention, the formation of the porous structure (for a particular set of the laser processing parameters) is a secondary process, but not the core one for the selective metal plating. In a proposed method, local activation of the polymer surface is driven by the laser-induced surface static charge. Polymer oxidation can be avoided by choosing short laser pulse duration in the range of 0.1-50 ps due to a very short interaction time. Therefore, there is no surface degradation (burning process). Processing of the PC/ABS surface with ultrashort laser pulses results not only in the gain of static charge but also in the decomposition of the molecular bond due to the nonlinear multiphoton interaction of ultra-short laser pulses with the polymer. The mentioned decomposition leads to a formation of a reducing agent on the laser treated surface. A formed said agent is capable of reducing the metal from a positively charged ion to a neutral atom. Reduction of the adsorbed metal ion is a key chemical process since the electroless catalytic plating takes place only on a neutral atom of metal.

    [0047] Second step: chemical activation of the laser-treated areas. The chemical activation is performed by submerging a polymeric article treated by a laser to a solution of metal salt consisting of silver nitrate AgNO.sub.3 or silver ammonia complex Ag(NH.sub.3).sub.2, which the concentration is in the range of 0.0000001-1 M temperature being 15-60 C. Metal ions are adsorbed on said laser-treated areas. In the case of silver nitrate or silver ammonia complex, the metal ions are silver ions. Reduction of an adsorbed ion to a neutral atom takes place (ions forms a metallic phase on a polymer surface). In the case of some polymers such as PC/ABS, the reduction can occur by assisting of chemical compounds (as reducing groups) which are formed after photochemical decomposition of the polymer at the irradiated surface. Silver ion can also be reduced in at the fourth step since electroless plating bath contains a reducing agent itself.

    [0048] Third step. Rinsing of the polymeric article in distilled water. The rinsing is performed in such way that all silver particles/ions remain on laser-treated areas only. The ions adsorbed on the unexposed areas have to be washed away.

    [0049] Fourth step. Following after rinsing procedure, the polymer article is submerged into a chosen metallization bath. The electroless catalytic plating process is used. Laser-treated and chemically-activated areas are metallised during this step. The said bath contains a chosen metal ions (for example, copper), ligand, reducing agent and a buffer. Various metals: copper, nickel, palladium, etc., can be used for deposition. The copper plating bath contains: copper sulphate CuSO.sub.4 in the concentrations of 0.005-0.25 M (copper source), formaldehyde in the concentration of 0.0015-6 M (reducing agent), ligand chosen from the group of polyols, hydroxy-polycarboxylic acids, polyamine-polycarboxylic acids, polyamine-polyhydroxy compounds comprising: glycerol, citric acid, isomers of tartaric acid, EDTA, DTPA, CDTA, Quadrol, et cetera, in the concentrations of 0.15-0.75 M. The electroless copper plating bath contains in addition sodium carbonate Na.sub.2CO.sub.3 in the concentrations of 0.05-0.6 M and sodium hydroxide NaOH in the concentrations of 0.1-2 Mas a buffering environment at pH-values of 12-13. The temperature of electroless copper plating bath during process ranges 5-90 C.

    [0050] As an example, the chemical metallization solution may consist of 0.12 M copper sulphate (CuSO.sub.4), 0.25 M Quadrol ([CH.sub.3CH(OH)CH.sub.2].sub.2NCH.sub.2CH.sub.2N[CH.sub.2CH(OH)CH.sub.3].sub.2), 1.25 M sodium hydroxide (NaOH), 0.3 M sodium carbonate (Na.sub.2CO.sub.3) and 0.34 M formalin. The pH-value is kept 12.7. The temperature of plating process is 30 C.

    [0051] Firstly, the catalytic anodic oxidation reaction of the formaldehyde reducing agent takes place in the electroless plating process. Therefore, free electrons appear on the surface of the catalyst as a final product of its oxidation reaction. Following, the cathodic redox reaction of copper ions is being proceeded by free electrons on the catalyst surface (wherein initially, a catalyst are silver atoms, later deposited copper). The yield of the redox process strongly depends on the ligand properties, (both from bonding strength with a metal ion and adhesion on the surface) since copper ion is not free in the solution and consists of a complex with ligands. The Quadrol-copper complex has a strong adhesion to the catalyst surface, thus, increasing concentration of copper atoms. Finally, a better plating quality is achieved as a result of the higher copper yield on the surface.

    [0052] In FIG. 2, PC/ABS polymer surface selective metalled by copper is presented: a fragment of an electronic circuit, and the microscopic image of the copper-plated lines. The high spatial selectiveness of a few tens of micrometres can be clearly visible in the figure.

    Example 1

    [0053] Materials: a polymeric article was fabricated using the PC/ABS bayblend T65 masterbatch. The masterbatch was heated and mixed in a chamber at the 270-280 C. temperature for 4-5 min. Following, the mixture was injected into the mould using an injection moulding machine. The press heating to 275-285 C. was utilised, and the mixture was loaded with about 20 bars.

    [0054] Laser treatment: the laser source was a picosecond Nd:YVO.sub.4 laser (Atlantic, EKSPLA), radiating at the wavelength of 1064 nm. The pulse repetition rate ranged 50-100 kHz. The average laser power was 1 W. A galvanometric scanner (SCANLAB) was used for the beam translation. The 80 mm F-Theta telecentric objective was applied for laser beam focusing. The diameter of the Gaussian beam on the surface was 83 m. The pattern of the laser-scanned areas contained the band-shaped areas. The width of the bands ranged from a single scanned line up to several lines with the 50% overlap between scans (half of neighbour line overlapped each over). The scanning speed was 0.5 m/s at the 50 kHz pulse repetition rate; and 1 m/s at the 100 kHz pulse repetition rate.

    [0055] Chemical activation: Article was submerged into silver nitrate (AgNO.sub.3) aqueous solution at a concentration of 510.sup.2 M after the laser treatment.

    [0056] Rinsing: the polymeric article was rinsed in distilled water.

    [0057] Metal plating: The activated article was submerged into the copper electroless plating bath immediately after the rinsing. The bath consisted of: 0.12 M CuSO.sub.4 (copper sulphate), 0.35 M Sodium potassium tartrate, 1.25 M NaOH (sodium hydroxide), 0.3 M Na.sub.2CO.sub.3 (sodium carbonate), 0.34 M CH.sub.2O (formaldehyde), pH=12.7. The plating time was 60 min, at the 30 C. temperature.

    [0058] Results: analysis of plated metal bands was carried out after the metal plating procedure. Results indicated that the narrowest width of the plated line was equal to 25 m. The measurement of sheet resistance was also performed using the Keithley 2002 SourceMeter. The sheet resistance was <R.sub.5>=3.10.sup.3/. The Scotch tape test was applied for adhesion strength check. The result of the test showed that all the metal lines remained on the polymer surface after the peel off procedure.

    Example 2

    [0059] Materials: a polymeric article was fabricated using granules of the PP Hostacom CR 1171 G1. The masterbatch was heated and mixed in a chamber at the 170-180 C. temperature for 4-5 min. Following the mixture has been injected into the mould using an injection moulding machine. The Mixture was heated to 175-195 C. and loaded by about 20 bars.

    [0060] Laser treatment: the Nd:YAG (Baltic HP, EKSPLA) laser with the second harmonics was used for the surface treatment at the wavelength of 532 nm. The pulse repetition rate was 50 kHz. The average laser power was 1 W. A galvanometric scanner (SCANLAB) was used for the laser beam translation. The 80 mm F-Theta telecentric objective was applied for focusing. The diameter of Gaussian beam on the polymer surface was 95 m. A pattern of the laser scanned areas contained the band-shaped areas. The width of the bands ranged from a single scanned line up to several lines with the 50% of overlapping (half of neighbour line overlapped each over). The scanning speed was 0.5 m/s at 50 kHz pulse repetition rate.

    [0061] Chemical activation: after the laser processing, the polymer article was submerged into silver diamine Ag(NH.sub.3).sub.2 aqueous solution at the concentration of 110.sup.4 M.

    [0062] Rinsing: The article was rinsed in distilled water.

    [0063] Metal plating: Following, the activated and rinsed article was submerged into the copper electroless plating bath, which consisted of 0.12 M CuSO.sub.4 (copper sulphate), 0.35 M Sodium potassium tartrate, 1.25 M NaOH (sodium hydroxide), 0.3 M Na.sub.2CO.sub.3 (sodium carbonate), 0.34 M CH.sub.2O (formaldehyde). The pH-value of the bath was 12.7. The plating procedure lasted 60 min. at the 30 C. temperature.

    [0064] Results: analysis of the plated metal bands was carried out after the metal plating procedure. The results indicated that the narrowest width of the metal-plated line was 20.1 m. The measurement of sheet resistance was also performed using the Keithley 2002 SourceMeter. The sheet resistance was <R.sub.5>=8.10.sup.3/. The Scotch tape test was applied for the adhesion strength check, which showed that all the metal lines remained on the polymer surface after the peel off procedure.