Treating multilayer printed wiring boards

4230553
Add to folder: View Folders  
Keywords to Highlight:

full-text

print

pdf

permalink

Inventors

Bartlett, Charles J.
Rhodes, Ronald J.
Rust, Ray D.

Application #

032339

Filed

Apr-23-1979

Published

Oct-28-1980

Current US Class

029/852
029/857
174/262
204/192.35
204/192.36
216/17
216/67
216/77
216/78

International Classes

C23C 015/00

Field of Search

29/625 29/628 174/68.5 204/192 156/643 156/644

Assignee

Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated (Murray Hill, NJ)

Examiners

Mack; John H.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Wilde; Peter V. D.

US Patent References

4012307   Method for conditio...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

J. L. Vossen, Glow Discharge Phenomena in Plasma Etching and Plasma Deposition, J. Electrochem. Soc., Feb. 1979, pp 319-324.

Citation

Cite This Patent

More From Subclass 67

5762813   Method for fabricat...
4246060   Plasma developme...
5240556   Surface-heating ap...
5702562   Dry etching appar...
6095084   High density plasm...
4662977   Neutral particle sur...
5648000   Plasma Processing...
5961850   Plasma processing...
5647945   Vacuum processin...
5213658   Plasma processing...
5275692   Method for fabricat...
5296095   Method of dry etchi...
 

More From Class 216

5240556   Surface-heating ap...
5419803   Method of planariz...
6068000   Substrate treatment...
4368099   Development of ger...
5259923   Dry etching method
6187688   Pattern formation...
5980769   Plasma etching me...
6444254   Microstamping acti...
6818138   Slotted substrate an...
5906950   Selective etch process
4139409   Laser engraved me...
4851079   Producing lithium...
 
Abstract
Multilayer printed wiring boards are conventionally laminated using epoxy adhesives. When the boards are drilled, a residual smear often remains within the drilled holes. This smear prevents proper through plating of the holes and the layers are left without some of the intended interconnections. In the past, the residual smear was removed by wet etching. A technique is described using plasma etching with the conductive surface layers of the drilled boards as the electrodes to generate the plasma. The plasma forms directly within the holes and effectively removes the smear. A dielectric material in contact or close proximity to the perimeter of each board provides uniformity of treatment over the panels.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A process for treating a laminated structure having metal layers separated by an insulating layer, and holes therethrogh, comprising the steps of placing the structure in an evacuated chamber containing oxygen, making electrical contact to the metal layers, and applying an electric field to the contacts so as to create a gas plasma that extends into the holes.

2. The process of claim 1 in which the structure is a multilayer printed wiring board.

3. The process of claim 2 in which the metal layers are copper or aluminum.

4. The process of claim 3 in which dielectric field suppressors enclose the edges of the printed wiring board.

5. The process of claim 3 in which the chamber contains a gas additive to the oxygen to promote etching of the holes.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Multilayer printed wiring boards have added valuable new dimensions to printed circuit design. The design freedom resulting from the added crossover capability creates more compact and efficient packaging of complex circuits than is possible with the conventional two-sided board. Interconnection between levels, however, has also become a more complex problem than the simple plated-through interconnections on a single two-sided printed circuit board. A persistent difficulty is the smearing of the adhesive and dielectric that occurs when the multilayer board (MLB) is drilled. Smeared adhesive and dielectric materials that coat the sidewalls of the drilled holes prevent proper electrical contact between inner conducting layers when the holes are through-plated.

This problem is addressed by U.S. Pat. No. 4,012,307. The solution proposed there is to clean the holes, before plating, using a gas plasma cleaning technique. The plasma technique is represented to be superior in several respects to the chemical etching technique used earlier to attack the same problem.
 
  High density fine-line integrated structure fabrication is expedited by use of plasma etching systems which assure straight vertical walls (absence of...  A radio frequency and a static electric field are superposedly applied to a low pressure gas to generate a gaseous plasma and to drive ions of selected...