PCB007 Magazine

PCB-July2014

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86 The PCB Magazine • July 2014 by Michael Carano oMg electronic cheMicalS Oxide Alternative Processes: Performance Characteristics c o l u M n trouble iN your taNk Introduction It is all about optimizing the performance of the oxide alternative chemistry. This includes close monitoring of the main reactive ingredi- ents of the process chemistry. And one of the first issues that the industry had to address, whether one is using reduced oxide chemis- try or oxide alternatives, is pink ring. While the industry has enjoyed moderate success at minimizing the dreaded pink ring defect with reduced oxides, the desire has long been to sim- plify the bonding treatment process. Secondly, improving bond strength on high-performance and advanced resin materials is critical to the successful implementation of any interlayer treatment process. While the latter attribute is well documented, the ability of the oxide alter- native bonding system to resist pink ring must be established. In all instances, where multi- layer PWB test coupons (some fabricated with reduced oxide, others with alternative bonding treatment) were subjected a severe acid test, no pink ring was detected. The coupons were im- mersed in an aqueous solution of 17% hydro- chloric acid for 15 minutes. After removal, the coupons were horizontally ground down to re- move the outerlayer pad. Coupons were then inspected under 30x microscope. No pink ring was detected on the coupons fabricated with the organo-metallic (oxide alternative) bonding process. However, the reduced oxide bonding process showed pink ring (Figures 1 and 2). It is important to recognize that the ex- istence of pink ring does not suggest that the PCBs are rejectable. In fact, pink ring is defined in the IPC-600H (acceptability of printed circuit boards) as a process indicator. No evidence ex- ists that pink ring affects functionality. In fact, the presence of pink ring concerns a number of manufacturing processes. The focus of concern should be the quality of the lamination bond, the laminate materials, drilling, desmear met- allization processes. As an example (Figure 3), etchback prior to metallization can open up a Figure 1: reduced oxide coupons showing pink ring. Figure 2: organo-metallic process for MlB coupons; no pink ring found.

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