PCB Manufacturing Process
- 14.08.2019
- admin
PCB Making Process
Generally, PCB are made of copper plated on a
substrate. The excess copper is etched away to expose the circuits. As
technology progresses, multiple layers of the circuit boards are bonded
together and connected through vias hole.
Steps of PCB
Manufacturing
1. PCB Design
2. Printing the Design
3. Creating the Substrate
4. Printing the Inner
Layers
5. Ultraviolet Light
6. Removing Unwanted
Copper
7. Inspection
8. Laminating the Layers
9. Pressing the Layers Step
10. Drilling
11. Plating
12. Outer Layer Imaging
13. Plating
14. Etching
15. Solder Mask
Application
16. Silkscreening
17. Surface Finish
18. Testing
Step 1 – The Design
Before you begin
manufacturing the PCB, you need to have a design of the board. These blueprints
will be what you base the process off of. The design process is generally
completed through computer software. Using a trace width calculator will help with a
majority of the details needed for inner and external layers.
Step 2 – Printing the Design
A special printer called a plotted printer is
used to print the design of the PCB. It produces a film that shows the details
and layers of the board. When printed, there will be two ink colors used on the
inside layer of the board:
·
Clear Ink to show the
non-conductive areas; and
·
Black Ink to show the
conductive copper traces and circuits.
The same colors are used for the outer layers,
but the meaning of them is reversed.
Step 3 – Creating the Substrate
Now is when the PCB will start to form. The
substrate, which is the insulating material (epoxy resin and glass fiber) that
holds the components on the structure, begins forming by passing the materials
through an oven to be semicured. Copper is pre-bonded to both sides of the
layer and then etched away to show the design from the printed films.
Step 4 – Printing the Inner Layers
The design is printed to a laminate, the body
of the structure. A photo-sensitive film made from photo-reactive chemicals
that will harden when exposed to ultraviolet light (the resist) covers the
structure.. This will help align the blueprints and the actual print of the
board. Holes are drilled into the PCB to help with the alignment process.
Step 5 – Ultraviolet Light
Once aligned, the resist and laminate go under
ultraviolet lights to harden the photoresist. The light reveals the pathways of
copper. The black ink from before prevents hardening in areas that will be
removed later on. The board is then washed in an alkaline solution to remove
the excess photoresist.
Step 6 – Removing Unwanted Copper
Now, it is time to remove any unwanted copper
that remained on the board. A chemical solution, similar to the alkaline
solution, eats away at the unwanted copper. The hardened photoresist remains
intact.
Step 7 – Inspection
The newly-cleaned layers will need to be
inspected for alignment. The holes drilled earlier help align the inner and
outer layers. An optical punch machine drills a pin through the holes to keep
the layers lined up. After the optical punch, another machine will inspect the
board to ensure there are no defects. From here on out, you will not be able to
correct any missed errors.
Step 8 – Laminating the Layers
Now, you will see the board take shape as the
layers are fused together. Metal clamps hold the layers together as the
laminating process begins. A prepreg (epoxy resin) layer goes on the alignment
basin. Then, a layer of substrate goes over the prepreg followed by a copper
foil layer and more prepreg resin. Lastly, there is on more copper layer
applied, which is the press plate.
Step 9 – Pressing the Layers
A mechanical press is then used to press the
layers together. Pins are punch through the layers to keep them properly
aligned and secured, these pins can be removed depending on the technology. If
correct, the PCB will go to the laminating press, which applies heat and
pressure to the layers. The epoxy melts inside of the prepreg that, along with
the pressure, fuses the layers together.
Step 10 – Drilling
Holes are drilled into the layers by a
computer-guided drill to expose the substrate and inner panels. Any remaining
copper after this step is removed.
Step 11 – Plating
The board is now ready to be plated. A
chemical solution fuses all of the layers together. The board is then
thoroughly cleaned by another series of chemicals. These chemicals also coat
the panel with a thin copper layer, which will seep into the drilled holes.
Step 12 – Outer Layer Imaging
Next, a layer of photoresist, similar to Step
3, is applied to the outside layer before being sent for imaging. Ultraviolet
light hardens the photoresist. Any undesired photoresist is removed.
Step 13 – Plating
Just like in Step 11, the panel is plated with
a thin copper layer. After this, a thin tin guard is layered to the board. The
tin is there to protect the copper of the outside layer from being etched off.
Step 14 – Etching
The same chemical solution from before removes
any unwanted copper under the resist layer. The tin guard layer protects the
needed copper. This step established the PCB’s connections.
Step 15 – Solder Mask Application
All of the panels should be cleaned before the
solder mask is applied. An epoxy is applied with the solder mask film. The
solder mask applies the green color you typically see on a PCB. Any unwanted
solder mask is removed with ultraviolet light, while the wanted solder mask is
baked on to the board.
Step 16 – Silkscreening
Silkscreening is a vital step since this
process is what prints critical information onto the board. Once applied, the
PCB passes through one last coating and curing process.
Step 17 – Surface Finish
The PCB is plated with either a solderable
finish, depending on the requirements, which will increase the quality/bond of
the solder.
Step 18 – Testing
Before the PCB is
considered complete, a technician will perform an electrical test on the board.
This will confirm the PCB functions and follows the original blueprint designs.
Tags: PCB Making, PCB Manufacturing