CA1260624A - Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive - Google Patents

Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive

Info

Publication number
CA1260624A
CA1260624A CA000525694A CA525694A CA1260624A CA 1260624 A CA1260624 A CA 1260624A CA 000525694 A CA000525694 A CA 000525694A CA 525694 A CA525694 A CA 525694A CA 1260624 A CA1260624 A CA 1260624A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
conductive
adhesive
resin
set forth
substrate
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000525694A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
James R. Clements
Laura H.C. Yu
Terry T.J. Yu
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to CA000525694A priority Critical patent/CA1260624A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1260624A publication Critical patent/CA1260624A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Abstract

ELECTRONIC DEVICE INCLUDING UNIAXIAL CONDUCTIVE
ADHESIVE AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME

ABSTRACT
An electronic device made by the method of connecting a circuit member (18) having a plurality of laterally spaced electrically conductive terminals (20) to a substrate (12) including a mounting surface (14) having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths (16) wherein the method includes the steps of applying an adhesive (22) including a resin having a twenty to twenty-five percent by weight content of conductive metal particles over the mounting surface (14) of the substrate (12) having the conductive paths (16) wherein the resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between the spaced metal particles therein and mounting the circuit member (18) on the adhesive (22) while vertically aligning the conductive terminals (20) over preselected ones of the conductive paths (16). The percent by weight content of the conductive metal particles in the adhesive (22) is concentrated between each conductive terminal (20) and the vertically aligned conductive paths (16) to between forty to fifty percent by weight to decrease the spacing between the metal particles allowing conductivity through the resin and making the resin uniaxially conductive vertically aligned between the conductive terminal (20) and conductive path (16) while the resin unconcentrated adhesive (22) remains nonconductive between laterally spaced terminals (20) and conductive paths (16).

Description

~ ~2~6~2~

~-301 -1-ELECTROMIC DEVICE INCLUDI~G UNIAXIAL CONDUC~IVE
AD~ESIVE AND METHOD OF MARING SA~E

TECHNICAL FIELD
The subject invention relates to and electronic device and an electrically conductive adhesive therefor. The invention further relates to a method of connecting a circuit member having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals to a substrate including a surface having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths utilizing the adhesive.

BACKGROUND ART
In many electrical applications, it is desirable to connect an electrical component having a plurality of conductive terminals to a substrate including a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths such that the conductive terminals are aligned with the conductive paths in a predetermined pattern. For proper function, current is passed from the aligned conductive terminal to the substrate path, or visa a versa. It 7 S undesirable - for current to pass between laterally spaced terminals or conductive pad, such conductivity causing shorting of the circuit. This desired function is referred to as uniaxial conductivity.
Conventional methods of connecting the conductive terminals to the substrate generally include soldering techniques. Soldering requires dot deposition; that is, application of the solder only on the terminals and not therebetween.
Soldering further requires specific temperature 62~

resistant components and substra~es. Such materials must withstand the 400F and greater temperatures generally encountered in the solder application.
The U.S. Patent 4,113,981 to Fujita et al~ issued September 12, 1978, discloses an electrically conductive adhesive for connecting arrays of conductors. The adhesive includes a nonconductive base and electri~ally conductive particles incorporated into the base. The patent requires that the particles are not in contact with one another. The adhesive provides conductivity in one direction between two facing members but does not provide electric conductivity in the lateral direction. The Fujita et al patent requires a mixing ratio of between thirty to sixty percent by volume of conductive particles in the adhesive base.
When the proportion of the conductive particles is less than thirty percent by volume, the value of the electrical resistance in the lateral direction begins to be lowered and, when ths amount of conductive particles is about sixty percent by volume, a substantial conductivity is manifested in - the lateral direction. The patent states that it is preferred that the mixing ratio of the conductive particles be lower than about thirty percent by volume. Additionally, the patent states that the mixing ratio is determined within the above range so that at least one electrically conductive particle is present between opposed facing members to be electrical-l-y-connected-with each other. In practice, such metal particles are chosen to be within the range of approximately 8 to 10 microns.
This method therefor requires that the terminal members be brought to within 8 to 10 microns of the ':

6(~ 4 P-301 ~3~

substrate paths in order to provide for connection between the terminal member, the electrical particle, and the conductive paths. Such practice requires clean room techniques because in such a microscopic size range, dust particle contamination must be prevented. Therefore, the Fujita et al patent is dependent upon the concept that the space in between the conductive elements must be the same size as the largest of the conductive particles in the adhesive and that the conductive particles in the adhesive must be substantially the same size and shape. Consequently, there is a need for a uniaxially conductive adhesive not requiring the close tolerances or clean room limitations of prior art adhesives.
It has been reported that the conductivity of an adhesive resin having a conductive metal mixed therein is dependent upon the concentration of method in the adhesive. Polymer 20 Science Technology, Vol. 15, Plenum Press (1981).
The instant invention applies this concept to derive a uniaxial conductive adhesive~

STATEMENT OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention, there is provided a method ef connecting an electronic circuit member having a plurality of laterally spaced electrically conductive terminals to a substrate including a surface having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths, the method including the steps of applying an adhesive including a resin having a twenty to twenty-five percent by weight content of conductive metal particles over the surface of the substrate having P-301 -~-the conductive paths, the resin being a dielectric preventing conductivity between the spaced metal particles in the adhesive, and mounting the circuit member on the adhesive while vertically aligning the conductive terminals over preselected ones of the conductive paths. The invention is characterized by the step of concentrating the psrcent by weight content of the conductive metal particles in the adhesive between each conductive terminal and the vertically aligned conductive path to between forty to fifty percent by weight to decrease the spacing beteen the metal particles allowing conductivity through the resin and making the resin conductive vertically between the conductive terminals and paths while the adhesive resin in the unconcentrated adhesive remains nonconductive between laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths.
The instant invention further provides an electric device including the substrate, the circuit member, and the adhesive disposed over the mounting surface of the substrate. The adhesive includes the dielectric a resin having about forty to fifty percent by weight conductive metal particles between the vertically aligned terminals and the conductive paths and is uniaxially conductive vertically therebetween. The resin includes twenty to twenty-five percent by weight conductive metal between laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths and the resin is nonconductive laterally therebetween.

.

4E;24 - 4a - 68086-339 The electric device according to the invention comprises:
a substrate including a mounting surface having a plurality oE laterally spaced conductive paths thereon;
a circuit member mounted on said substrate, said circuit member including a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals aligned vertically over selected ones of said conductive paths; and an adhesive coating said mounting surface for adhering said circuit member to said substrate, said adhesive including a resin having about forty percent to fifty percent by weight spaced conductive metal particles between said vertically aligned terminals and conductive paths and being uniaxially conductive vertically therebetween, and said resin including about twenty ~,IJ percent to twenty-five percent by weight spaced conductive metal particles between laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths wherein said resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between said metal particles therein and being nonconductive laterally therebetween.
A further aspect of the invention provides an adhesive for connecting a circuit member having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals to a substrate including a mounting sur~face having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths, said adhesive comprising a mixture of a dielectric polymeric resin and twenty to twenty-five percent by weight of spaced pure conductive metal par-ticles or an alloy thereof uniformly suspended in said resin as a resin/metal suspension wherein said resin - 4b - 68086-339 prevents conductivity between said spaced metal particles, said adhesive characteri~ed by said resin being nonconductive as said resin/metal suspension and being conductive when concentra-ted to decrease the spacing between said metal particles allowing conductivity through said resin and said resin includes forty to fifty percent by weight of said metal.
In a broad sense, the method aspect of the invention provides a method of securing two electrically conductive members together, said method including the steps o~: applying an adhesive including a resin having a twenty to twenty-five percent by weight content of spaced conductive metal particles between the two members wherein the resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between -the spaced metal particles, and forcing the members together to concentrate the percent by weight content of the metal particles in the resin between the members to between forty and fifty percent by weight to decrease the spacing between the metal particles allowing conductivity through the resin and making the resin conductive between the members while maintaining the resin not between the members in the unconcentrated and nonconductive state.

'`'13~'^'',3, ~6~

FIGURES IN THE DRAWINGS
Other advantages of the present invention will be readily apprecia~ed as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
Figure 1 is a plan view of a circuit member mounted upon a substrate;
Figure 2 is a cross sectional view taken substantially along lines 2-2 of Figure l;
Figure 3 is cross sectional view of the circuit member mounted on a substrate and means for applying pressure to the circuit member against the substrate;
Figure 4 is a graph of current versus voltage showing insulation resistance of the subject adhesive between laterally spaced terminals;
Figure 5 is a graph of current versus voltage showing conductivity between aligned te~ninal members and conductive substrate paths and;
Figure 6 is an enlarged view of the ; connection between the condu tive terminal and the conductive path by the subject adhesive.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
: An electrical device constructed in accordance ~ith the instant invention is generally shown at 10 in Figures 1-3. The device includes a substrate is generally indicated at 12. The substrate is a supporting material on or in which parts of a circuit are attached or made. A
substrate may be passive or active.

6~

The substrate includes a mounting surface l4 having a plurality of laterally spaced conduc~ive paths 16 thereon. Such a substrate is generall~
referred to as printed circuit in which normally found interconnecting wires are replaced by conductive strips 16 printed, etched, or otherwise mounted onto the insulating substrate 12. In other words, the substrate is nonconductive, providing insulation between the conductive paths 16. The substrate 12 may also be referred to as printed circuit board or insulating board onto which the conductive paths 16 or circuit are printed.
A circuit member is generally indicated at 18. The circuit member 18 may be in the form of any one of various types of electrical components, ; such as capacitors, resistors etc. or may be in the form of other semiconductors. Alternatively, circuit member 18 may be a second substrate mounted - upon a first substrate 12.
The circuit member 18 includes a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals 20 aligned vertically over selected ones of the conductive paths 16. Functionally it is desirable to have uniaxial electrical conductivity to or from the conductive paths 16 to the conductive terminals 20, without electrical conductivity be~ween laterally spaced conductive paths 16 or conductive terminals 20.
An adhesive coating 22 is disposed over the mounting surface 14 for adhering the circuit member 18 to the substrate 12. The adhesive 22 includes a resin having about forty to fifty percent by weight conductive metal between the vertically aligned terminals 20 and conductive paths 16 and the 3L~

resin is conductive vertically or uniaxially therebetween. The adhesive 22 includes about twenty to twenty-five percent by weight conductive metal between laterally spaced terminals 20 or conductive paths 16 and the resin is therefore nonconductive laterally therebetween. The lower percentage of metal filler in the adhesive 22 is not sufficient to support electrical current flow through the resin.
The adhesive 22 includes conductive metal particles in powder form or the alloy of the conductive metal particles in powder form.
Conductive metals may be selected from the group including nickel, silver, graphite, palladium, platium, gold, chromium, aluminum, cadmium, cobalt, copper, iron, indium, iridium, magnesium, molybdenum, tin, tungsten, zinc, gallium, genmanium, and antimony and other conductive materials. The metal powder may have a size of 0.8 microns to 43 microns. Preferably, the metal powder includes particles having an average size of 0.8 to 7 micronsO Said another way, in the preferred range the largest particle may be at least eight (8) times larger than the smallest with an array of different sizes therebetween. The size of the particles may be determined by the size of the components adhered together, larger components can be spaced further apart thereby allowing for larger size particles to be used.
The adhesive further includes a polymeriæed resin in its pure form or as a mixture of several types of resins. The resin may be selected from the group including epoxy resins and modified resins with hardeners, acrylic resins and modified acrylic resins, polyester and modified P-301 ~~

polymers thereof, acrylic ester resins and modified ester resins thereof, silicone resins, phenoxy resins, polyurethane resins, polysulfide, cyanoacrylates, polyalexins, UV-curable polymers, and other well known adhesive resins. The resins are generally considered nonconductive in the polymerized state. However, pursuant to the subject invention, the resin is made conductive by the step of concentrating the metal powder mixed therein to between forty to fifty percent by weight.
The resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between spaced metal particles therein.
As shown in Figure 6, the percent by weight content of the metal particles in the resin is concentrated between the conductive terminals 20 and conductive paths 16 thereby decreasing the spacing between the metal particles. The decreased spacing allows conductivity through the resin providing conductivity between the aligned conductive terminals 20 and conductive paths 16. THe metal particles suspended in the resin between laterally sapced conductive terminals 20 and conductive paths 16 are not concentrated. The resin prevents conductivity between spaced metal particles~ The 25 effect achieved is uniaxial conductivity between !}
aligned conductive members 16,20 and insulation or nonconductivity therebetweeen.
The terminal members 20 may be substantially rigid pins 20 extending laterally from the circuit member 18. Preferably, the distance between the conductive terminals 20 and the mounting surface 14 is less than or equal to 20 microns.
However, the terminal members 20 are often not coplanar as they extend from a circuit member 18.

'62~

p--301 ~9~

Hence, the distance between the terminal members 20 and the mounting surface 14 of the substrate 12 may vary. The terminal members 20 may take other forms and hardness. The example, the terminal members 20 may be flexible foil projection extending from the circuit member 18. Alternatively, the terminal members 20 may be rigid members mounted directly on the body of the circuit member 18 The instant invention includes a method o~ connecting the circuit member 18 having the plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals 20 to the substrate 12 which having the mounting surface 14 presenting the plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths 16 thereon. The method includes the steps o~ applying the adhesive 22 including the resin having a twenty to twenty-five percent by weight content of the conductive metal particles over the mounting surface 14 of the substrate 12 having the conductive paths 16.
Preferably, the adhesive is applied in a layer greater than 20 microns over the entire surface, i.e., the conductive and nonconductive portions to an even upper surface. Alternatively, the adhesive may be applied in an amount so as to secure the circuit member 18 to the substrate or in an amount covering all electrical components and thereby providing an effective environmental seal.
The circuit member 18 is mounted on the adhesive 22 while vertically aligning the conductive terminals 20 over preselected ones of the conductive paths 16. The method is characterized by the step of concentrating the percent by weight content of the conductive metal particles in the adhesive 22 between each conductive terminal 20 and the i vertically aligned conductive paths 16 to between ~orty to fifty percent by weight to decrease the spacing between the metal particles and make the resin conductive vertically therebetween while the resin in the unconcentrated adhesive remains nonconductive between laterally spaced terminals 20 and conductive paths 16~ In other words, if the metal in the cured adhesive 22 between the conductive terminals 20 and the conductive paths 16 - 10 is increased or concentrated from between twenty and twenty-five percent to between forty and fifty percent by weight, there is conductivity in these concentrated regions and no conductivity in the unconc~ntrated regions therebetweenO ~ence, the instant method affectively provides a uniaxially conductive adhesive which is conductive between aligned conductive terminals 20 and conductive paths 16 but is nonconductive between laterally spaced terminals 20 and conductive paths 16.
The concentration of metal in the adhesi~e may be concentrated by applying pressure between the terminal 20 and the vertically aligned conductive path 16 to concentrate the conductive metal therebetween. Such application of pressure effective forces nonplanar terminal member in coplanarity. As illustrated in Figure 3, a pressure applying member 24 can be used to apply pressure against the circuit member 18 thereby ef~ectively applying pressure between the terminal member 20 and conductive path 16 as the two are moved together.
Such pressure concentrates the metal in the adhesive 22 between the conductive paths 16 and terminal member 20 while not concentrating the adhesive between laterally spaced terminals 20 and conductive P-301 ll-path 16 When the terminal members 20 are substantially rigid pins 20 extending from the circuit member 18, the concentrating step may be defined as applying pressure on the circuit member 18 against the substrate 12. Preferably, pressure may be applied from three to forty pounds per square inch dependent upon the size of the circuit member 18 and/or terminal sizes. The conductive terminal 20 is preferably moved to within 20 microns or less of the substrate 14. Each of these preferred values may vary as the terminal members are generally not coplanar as they extend from the circuit member 18.
Hence, the adhesive 22 must be concentrated into the preferred range of forty to fifty percent metal content at each terminal member 20 for complete conductivity. If the terminal members 20 are flexible, the pressure need be applied directly to the terminal members 20.
The adhesive 22 is cured at a predetermined time and temperature as the pressure is applied, i.e., a holding force maintains each terminal member 20 in predetermined closely spaced relationship to its associated conductive path 16.
Generally, the adhesive 22 may be cured at room temperature to 250C for a period of a few seconds to one hour, these values being dependent upon the adhesive used~
When the adhesive 22 is an ultraviolet curable adhesive, the curing step is accomplished by irradiating the adhesive 22 under an ultraviolet lamp for a predetermined amount of time.
Although the pressure may be varied dependent upon the si~e of the circuit member 18 being used, preferably, ounces to ten pounds of ~L~6~

pressure per square inch is applied dependent upon the size of the component and/or structural characteristics of the terminals.
Initially, the adhesive 22 is prepared by mixing an adhesive resin and a metal powder together uniformly to suspend the metal powder within the adhesive. The adhesive is brought to a preferred viscosity, preferably between the range of 10,000 to 40,000 CPS. Most preferably, the viscosity of the adhesive mixture is between 15,000 to 2~,000 CPS.
The viscosity values may be varied dependent upon the nature of the metal powder, the viscosity determining the ability of the adhesive 22 to suspend the metal in a uniform mixture.
The instant invention provides an adhesive 22 for connecting the circuit member 1~
having the plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals 20 to the substrate 12 including the mounting surface 14 having the plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths 16. The adhesive 22 includes a mixture of the polymeric resin and twenty to twenty-five percent by weight of a pure conductive metal powder or alloy thereof uniformly suspended in the resin as a resin/metal suspension.
The adhesive 22 is characterized by the resin being nonconductive as the resin/metal suspension and the resin being conductive when concentrated to included forty to fifty percent by weight of the metal.
The subjec~ adhesive can be used in a variety of environments. The adhesive can be characterized as a metal to metal adhesive for bonding a conductive terminal to a conductive path on a substrate. In addition, the adhesive can adhere a circuit member to a substrate board. With electronic assemblies, the adhesive can he used to adhere components to substrates whereby component terminations are electrically connected to substrate conductive paths such as printed wiring thereby replacing all soldering techniques. The adhesive can be used in surface mount technology, with printed wiring boards or printed circuit boards.
Additionally, the adhesive may be used in conventional through hole techniques, hybrid technology, flip chip or chip on board technology, with tape automated bonding or pin grid arrays wherein chips ~integrated circuits) are adhered to arrays and arrays to printed wiring boards.
The adhesive can also be used to replace omnidirectional conductive adhesives which previously have required insulative material between conductors. The adhesive can be used for substrate to substrate attachment such as with flexible printed wiring boards to rigid wiring boards, flexible wiring boards to flexible wiring boards and rigid printed wiring boards to rigid wiring boards, etc. The adhesive can be use with cable (wire) to substrate attachments, such as with flat flexible cable, flat ribbon cable, round wire cable and other forms of cable. The adhesive may be used in connector applications to improve reliability wherein wire cable is connected to other attachments such as insulation displacement connectors sealing t connector to connector attachment and sealing, and connector to printed circuit boards.
Another area where the adhesive may be used is with component fabrication. Examples of such uses are with semiconductors to lead frame (conductor) attachments such as integrated circuits, ~ 2~

~

transistors and diodes. Lid sealing of certainintegrated circuits can also be accomplished. The adhesive replaces other bonding techniques such as thermal compression, ultrasonic compression and other methods previously being used. Passive elements such as capacitors and resistors may also be connected to leads.
The ~ubject adhesive can be used in electromagnets interference (EMI~ and radio frequency interference (EFI) sealing techniques such as lid sealing.
The subject adhesive further provides utility in the repair of substrate conductor traces.
In general, the subject adhesive may be used as a general adhesive for electrical device connection to various other devices.
The instant invention provides several significant advantages over prior art adhesives. As the subject adhesive may be cured at room temperature or at least at lower temperatures than prior art soldering techniques, various substrate materials heretofore not usable can be utilized.
Nonceramic substrates which need not withstand the high temperature environment of solder may be utilized thereby lowering the expense of completed circuits.
The subject adhesive further provides a coating over the component parts effecting an environmental seal.
Soldering, is a specific method, providing specific problems. The application of solder only bonds where the solder was applied and was conductive at those points. The instant invention provides an adhesive material for the P-3~1 -15-entire substrate surface as well as over components mounted thereon, yet provides conductivity only where desiredO The instant invention further eliminates the cleaning required in prior art soldering techniques. Such cleaning requires the exposure of the circuit board to harsh chemicals not required by the instant invention~ Solder mask can also eliminated.
The instant invention does not exhibit migration or electrolysis found in prior art techniques. The instant invention further eliminates coatings on copper printed circuits previously reguired such as tin plating or seal bright.
In general, an advantage of the instant invention is that the adhesive no longer becomes a limit;ng factor in choosing substrates.
Additionally, uniaxial conductivity can be obtained with extremely close lateral spacing of conductors.
A irst embodiment of the inventor was made to include mixture of 10 grams of EPIC R1003, modified epoxy resin, sold by Epic Resins, a division of RTE Corporation, 1900 East North Street, Waukesh, Wis. 53186, and 5 grams of EPIC H5002 modified aliphatic amine (epoxy resin hardener), also sold by Epic Resins, added at room temperature to 3.75 grams of 99.8% nickel powder, 0.8u as measured by Fisher subsieve, sold by Aldrich Chemical Co., 940 West Saint Paul Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 53133. The chemicals are mixed well until a uniform mixture is obtained. The viscosity of the `
mixture was about 15,000cps, so that the epoxy resin held the nickel powder in suspension.

The epoxy resin and nickel powder mixture was uniformly coated on a PC board (made by 3M, vapor phase, reflow solding fluorinet liquids FC~
70/FC-71), at a thickness of 80um. A digital (integrated circuit), (M1511D5 with 14 pins), was placed on the glue coated PC board. The digital integrated circuit's pins were correspondingly matched to the metal strips on the PC board. The spacing between substrate conductive paths was 500um. About 4 pounds of pressure was placed on the digital integrated circuit for 15 minutes and at 150C in order to complete cure.
After cure, conductivity between pins (laterally) was greater then 1013 ohms (not conductive) yet the conductivity between pins and corresponding metal strips on the PC board was 10 3 ohms (excellent conductivity).
A second embodiment of the invention was made wherein 10 grams of Epic S7020A, from Epic Resins, epoxy resin diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A, 5 grams Epic S7020B, from Epic Resins, modified amine, and 3.75 grams nickel powder, INCO type 123, 3-7um, sold by The International Nickel Company, Inc. were mixed to a uniform suspension having a viscosity between 20,000 to 22,000 cps. A digital integrated circuit was mounted on a PC board as in the first embodiment of the invention. A pressure of 4 pounds was applied to the circuits and curing was effected at a temperature of 130C for 15 minutes. Excellent vertical conductivity was obtained with effectively no lateral conductivi~y.
A third example of the invention includes 10 grams of Norbak 179-60, which is a single component, solvent-free epoxy resin, sold by Rexnord 0.3 grams 5um graphite powder, No. 4739, Superior Graphite Co., was added to the mixture as a uniform suspension having a viscosity of 18,000cps.
The circuit was mounted on the PC board as in the first embodiment. 4 pounds of pressure was applied to the circuit for 5 minutes under UV-light by a Blak-ray~ longwave UV lamp. Mode B-lOOA made by Ultra-Violet Product, Inc., San Gabriel, CA. The adhesive provided excellent conductivity in the vertical direction and excellent lateral insulation.
In another formulation, a mixture of 10 grams of Epic R1003, modified epoxy resin sold by Epic Resins, a division of RTE Corporation, 1900 East North Street, Waukesha, Wis. 53186 and 5 grams of EPC H5002, modified aliphatic amine as hardener, also sold by Epic Resins, at room temperature, was added in varying amounts of 99.8% Nickel powder (less than 0.8u by Fisher subsieve), sold by Aldrich Chemical Co.~ 940 West Saint Paul Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 53233. The mixture was mixed well until uniform.
This epoxy resin and nickel powder mixture was uniformly coated on a PC board~ sold by 3M. The thickness is about 20um after heating 150C
~5 for 15 minutes while applying pressure.
Conductivity from terminal to substrate was then determined. The results are shown in Table I.

TABLE I
Amount of Conductivity Nickel Powder (ohm) (Percent bv weiaht) >10 >lol4 >1014 ~1013 (4.3 x 1013) 10 40 l.~x106 3.7xlO 1 1.26xlO 3 <10 3 ~10 3 The same procedure as set forth previously was utilized to make and test ~he adhesive except that the digital integrated circuit was pressed with varying pressure. The adhesive was cured at 150C
for 15 minutes. At that time, the distance between the PC board and digital integrated circuit were determined and conductivity between the conductive terminal and substrate was measured. The results are shown in Table II.

t ~i 0.3 grams 5um graphite powder, No~ 4739, Superior Graphite Co., was added to the mixture as a uniform suspension having a viscosity of 18,000cps.
The circuit was mounted on the PC board as in the first embodiment. 4 pounds of pressure was applied to the circuit for 5 minutes under UV-light by a Blak-ray, longwave UV lamp. Mode B-lOOA made by Ultra-Violet Product, Inc., San Gabriel, CA. The adhesive provided excellent conductivity in the vertical direction and excellent lateral insulation.
In another formulation, a mixture of 10 grams of Epic R1003, modified epoxy resin sold by Epic Resins, a division of RTE Corporation, 1900 East North Street, Waukesha, Wis. 53186 and 5 grams of EPC H5002, modified aliphatic amine as hardener, also sold by Epic Resins, at room temperature, was added in varying amounts of 99.8% Nickel powder (less than 0.8u by Fisher subsieve), sold by Aldrich Chemical Co., 940 West Saint Paul Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 53233. The mixture was mixed well until uniform.
This epoxy resin and nickel powder mixture was uniformly coated on a PC board, sold by 3M. The thickness is about 20um after heating 150C
for 15 minutes while applying pressure.
Conductivity from terminal to substrate was then determined. The resul~s are shown in Table I.

TABLE I
~=
Amount of Conductivity Nickel Powder (ohm) (Percent bY weiqht) >lol4 ~5 >1014 >1014 ~113 (4.3 x 1013) 10 40 1.8x106 3.7xlO 1 1.26xlO 3 _3 <10 ~10 3 The same procedure as set forth previously was utilized to make and test the adhesive except that the digital integrated circuit was pressed with varying pressure. The adhesive was cured at 150C
for 15 minutes. At that time, the distance between the PC board and digital integrated circuit were determined and conductivity between the conductive terminal and substrate was measured. The results are shown in Table II.

z~z~

TABLE II

AppliedDistance Between Conductivity Pressure PC Board/ (ohm~
5 tPSI~ IC (um) . .
0 38 >lol4 0.5 36 >lOl~
l 31 2.7x103 lO 3 2~ 4.3xlO ]
3.5 26 1.8xlO 2 ~ 23 l.lxlO 3 6 21 <10 3 16 <10 3 15 20 13 <10-3 12 <10 3 The aforementioned formulation show that there is effective insulation resistance between laterally spaced terminal members and conductive paths (Figure 4) while there is excellent conductivity between aligned terminal members and conductive paths (Figure 5). Such conductivity and insulation is exhibited over a wide range of voltages showing the instant invention to be applicable in various environments and for various uses. Table I illustrates the relationship between metal powder content and conductivity, showing good conductivity beginning at about forty percent metal content. Table II illustrates varying amounts of

Claims (22)

applied pressure as well as preferred distances between terminal and substrate to provide good conductivity.
The invention has been described in an illustrative manner, and it is to be understood that the terminology which has been used is intended to be in the nature of words of description rather than of limitation.
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.

THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A method of connecting a circuit member having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals to a substrate including a mounting surface having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths, said method including the steps of:
applying an adhesive including a resin having a twenty to twenty-five percent by weight content of spaced conductive metal particles over the mounting surface of the substrate having the conductive paths wherein the resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between the spaced metal particles therein;
mounting the circuit member on the adhesive while vertically aligning the conductive terminals over preselected ones of the conductive paths; and characterized by concentrating the percent by weight content of the conductive metal particles in the resin between each conductive terminal and the vertically aligned conductive path to between forty to fifty percent by weight, to decrease the spacing between the metal particles allowing conducting through the resin and making the resin uniaxially conductive vertically between the conductive terminal and conductor path while maintaining the adhesive between laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths in the unconcentrated and nonconductive state.
2. A method as set forth in claim 1 wherein said concentrating step is further defined by applying pressure against the terminal and the vertically aligned conductive path to concentrate the conductive metal particles therebetween.
3. A method as set forth in claim 2 wherein said step of applying pressure is further defined as applying an ounce to 40 pounds per square inch of pressure.
4. A method as set forth in claim 2 wherein said concentrating step is further defined as moving said conductive terminal to within 20 microns or less of said substrate.
5. A method as set forth in claim 2 wherein the terminal members are substantially rigid pins extending from the circuit member, said concentrating step being further defined as applying pressure on the circuit member and forcing the rigid pins against the substrate.
6. A method as set forth in claim 2 wherein the terminal members are substantially flexible, said concentrating step being further defined as applying pressure directly on said flexible terminal members against the substrate.
7. A method as set forth in claim 2 further including the step of curing the adhesive at a predetermined time and temperature as the pressure is applied.
8. A method as set forth in claim 7 wherein said curing step is further defined as incubating the adhesive at a temperature of 20°C to 250°C for 2 seconds to one hour.
9. A method as set forth in claim 7 wherein said adhesive is an ultraviolet curable adhesive, said curing step being further defined as irradiating said adhesive under an ultraviolet cure lamp for a predetermined amount of time.
10. A method as set forth in claim 2 wherein said step of applying pressure is further defined as applying three to ten pounds of pressure.
11. A method as set forth in claim 10 wherein said step of applying pressure is further defined as applying four to five pounds of pressure.
12. A method as set forth in claim 1 including the step of preparing the adhesive by mixing the resin and a metal powder together to uniformly suspend the metal powder within the resin the mixture having a predetermined viscosity.
13. A method as set forth in claim 12 wherein the viscosity of the adhesive mixture is between 10,000 to 40,000 cps.
14. A method as set forth in claim 13 wherein the viscosity of the adhesive mixture is between 15,000 and 20,000 cps.
15. An electronic device comprising:
a substrate including a mounting surface having a plurality of laterally spaced conductive paths thereon;
a circuit member mounted on said substrate, said circuit member including a plurality of laterally spaced conductive terminals aligned vertically over selected ones of said conductive paths; and an adhesive coating said mounting surface for adhering said circuit member to said substrate, said adhesive including a resin having about forty percent to fifty percent by weight spaced conductive metal particles between said vertically aligned terminals and conductive paths and being uniaxially conductive vertically therebetween, and said resin including about twenty percent to twenty-five percent by weight spaced conductive metal particles between laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths wherein said resin is a dielectric preventing conductivity between said metal particles therein and being nonconductive laterally therebetween.
16. A device as set forth in claim 15 wherein said adhesive includes a conductive metal selected from the group including nickel, silver, graphite, palladium, platium, gold, chromium, aluminum, cadmium, cobalt, copper, iron indium, iridium, magnesium, molybdenum, tin, tungsten, zinc, gallium, germanium, and antimony.
17. A device as set forth in claim 16 wherein said metal is a powder having particles with an average size of from 0.8µm to 40µm.
18. A device as set forth in claim 17 wherein said metal powder includes particles having an average size of 0.8 to 7µm.
19. A device as set forth in claim 17 wherein said adhesive includes twenty-five percent by weight metal content between said laterally spaced terminals and conductive paths.
20. A device as set forth in claim 15 wherein said terminal members are substantially rigid pins extending laterally from said circuit member.
21. A device as set forth in claim 15 wherein said resin is a polymerized resin selected from the group including epoxy resin and its modified resins, polyester and its modified polymers, acrylic ester resin and its modified esters, silicone resins, phenoxy resins, cyanoacrylates, polyurethane, polysulfide, polyalexins, and UV-curable polymers.
22. A device as set forth in claim 15 wherein the distance between said conductive terminals and said mounting surface is 20 microns or less.
CA000525694A 1986-12-18 1986-12-18 Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive Expired CA1260624A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000525694A CA1260624A (en) 1986-12-18 1986-12-18 Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000525694A CA1260624A (en) 1986-12-18 1986-12-18 Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1260624A true CA1260624A (en) 1989-09-26

Family

ID=4134581

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000525694A Expired CA1260624A (en) 1986-12-18 1986-12-18 Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA1260624A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8596024B2 (en) 2007-11-13 2013-12-03 Infinite Edge Technologies, Llc Sealed unit and spacer

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8596024B2 (en) 2007-11-13 2013-12-03 Infinite Edge Technologies, Llc Sealed unit and spacer
US8795568B2 (en) 2007-11-13 2014-08-05 Guardian Ig, Llc Method of making a box spacer with sidewalls
US9617781B2 (en) 2007-11-13 2017-04-11 Guardian Ig, Llc Sealed unit and spacer

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4667401A (en) Method of making an electronic device using an uniaxial conductive adhesive
US4868637A (en) Electronic device including uniaxial conductive adhesive and method of making same
US4720740A (en) Electronic device including uniaxial conductive adhesive and method of making same
EP0613590B1 (en) Die mounting with uniaxial conductive adhesive
EP0360971A2 (en) Mounting substrate and its production method, and printed wiring board having connector function and its connection method
US5667884A (en) Area bonding conductive adhesive preforms
KR910005533B1 (en) Electrical interconnection means
US5045249A (en) Electrical interconnection by a composite medium
KR930002935B1 (en) Composition for circuit connection method for connection using the same and connected structure of semiconductor chips
KR101183317B1 (en) Adhesive composition, circuit connecting material using the adhesive composition, method for connecting circuit member, and circuit connecting body
CA1220252A (en) Adhesive electrical interconnecting means
JP4079281B2 (en) Anisotropic conductive composition
JPS63164180A (en) Anisotropic adhesive
US20010021547A1 (en) Bonding materials
Aschenbrenner et al. Flip chip attachment using anisotropic conductive adhesives and electroless nickel bumps
KR100939607B1 (en) Connecting structure and connecting method of circuit
EP1198162A2 (en) Electronic component mounted member and repair method thereof
JP5695881B2 (en) Electronic component connection method and connection structure
KR100594340B1 (en) Connection material
EP0501270A1 (en) Electronic device using a uniaxial conductive adhesive composition
JP3542874B2 (en) Conductive fine particles
CA1260624A (en) Unidirectional conduction metal to metal adhesive
GB2203442A (en) Electronic device including uniaxial conductive adhesive and method of making same
CA1282520C (en) Adhesive composition useful for connecting two electrically conductive members
JP3219140B2 (en) Electrical and electronic equipment

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MKEX Expiry