Uyemura Introduces TWX-40 Mixed Reaction Autocatalytic Gold
February 21, 2018 | UyemuraEstimated reading time: 2 minutes

Uyemura has introduced TWX-40, an important technology development that allows gold deposits up to 8μin in ENIG and ENEPIG processing, in a single step.
The standard deposit for ENEPIG has been 1−2 µin of gold, a thickness now considered insufficient for certain OEM applications. Designers are now encountering applications demanding a minimum 3−5 µins gold in order to widen their operating window, add process flexibility, and assure the reliability of their wire bonding or pressure pin applications.
With standard immersion gold processes, heavier deposits on nickel or palladium in particular are problematic. To produce thicker deposits, shops are often forced to increase dwell time in the immersion gold, but with even minor porosity in the palladium layer, gold attacks the underlying nickel, leading to corrosion byproducts and poor reliability. The inevitable outcome of this nickel corrosion is two-fold: either wire bonds lift, or press pin connections become unreliable at the palladium-nickel interface.
One answer to this challenge has been to deposit autocatalytic gold over immersion gold—an additional step, requiring costly bath make-up for what is inevitably a limited bath life.
For ENIG/ ENEPIG processors serving a diverse group of customers and applications, TWX-40 is a better, proven solution with higher reliability. It saves dollars and processing time, and produces highly consistent results.
TWX-40 is a reduction-assisted immersion gold bath that deposits gold using both immersion and autocatalytic (electroless) reactions. The autocatalytic feature allows the gold to build without attacking the underlying electroless nickel layer. Deposit uniformity is independent of pad sizes and PCB surface geometry, or residual capacitance potential.
The demand for thicker gold is increasingly becoming a requirement for OEM specs, particularly those in the medical, aerospace and “high reliability/harsh environment” sectors. TWX-40 is the first chemistry to enable fabricators to achieve these substantially thicker deposits in one step, at low cost, while preventing nickel corrosion.
TWX-40 gold electrolyte plates directly on electroless palladium or nickel without intermediate activation. Plating speed is 0.12 μm/15 min. at 78°C; the bath exhibits excellent stability and fine geometry edge resolution.
TWX-40 has substantially widened the operating window for wire bonding by facilitating the deposition of thicker gold deposits, while maintaining the integrity of the underlying palladium and nickel. It is broadly recommended for shops working with specifications outside IPC’s gold thickness requirements. Best results are achieved when the bath is used with UIC’s Talon electroless palladium baths as the underlayer for PWBs and IC packages.
For more information click here.
Suggested Items
S&K Aerospace Awarded Major Contract Under DLA Maritime Acquisition Advancement Program
07/02/2025 | BUSINESS WIRES&K Aerospace, LLC has been awarded a significant contract under the Defense Logistics Agency’s (DLA) Maritime Acquisition Advancement Program, managed by the U.S. Naval Supply Command - Weapon Systems Support (NAVSUP WSS) in Mechanicsburg, PA.
Green Circuits to Exhibit Full-Service Electronics Manufacturing Solutions at 2025 SMD Symposium
07/02/2025 | Green CircuitsGreen Circuits, a full-service Electronics Manufacturing Services (EMS) partner to leading OEMs, is pleased to announce its participation in the 2025 SMD Symposium, taking place August 5-7 at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
06/27/2025 | Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007While news outside our industry keeps our attention occupied, the big news inside the industry is the rechristening of IPC as the Global Electronics Association. My must-reads begins with Marcy LaRont’s exclusive and informative interview with Dr. John Mitchell, president and CEO of the Global Electronics Association. For designers, have we finally reached the point in time where autorouters will fulfill their potential?
Knocking Down the Bone Pile: Tin Whisker Mitigation in Aerospace Applications, Part 3
06/25/2025 | Nash Bell -- Column: Knocking Down the Bone PileTin whiskers are slender, hair-like metallic growths that can develop on the surface of tin-plated electronic components. Typically measuring a few micrometers in diameter and growing several millimeters in length, they form through an electrochemical process influenced by environmental factors such as temperature variations, mechanical or compressive stress, and the aging of solder alloys.
RTX, the Singapore Economic Development Board Sign MOU Outlining 10-year Growth Roadmap
06/20/2025 | RTXRTX and the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) which outlines a 10-year roadmap to further long-term strategic collaboration in Singapore.