Lumitronix Utilizes Paper and PET as Printed Circuit Board
July 16, 2019 | LumitronixEstimated reading time: 7 minutes

In cooperation with its technology partners, the Swabian LED company Lumitronix succeeded in equipping plasma-metallised flexible printed circuit boards with electronic components. This is based on the one-of-a-kind process of plasma metallization. The novel technology from the field of medical engineering turns a plurality of materials into electrically conducting and solderable printed circuit boards that were not suitable for an assembly with electronic components up to this point in time.
Plasma Metallization: More Than 10 Years Of Research And Development
"Within the framework of this special type of metallization, a patented plasma spray head is used to spray a conductive metal—mostly copper—in the form of a powder under high atmospheric pressure onto the basic material coated with silver paste. Simultaneously, the copper is fused by a very hot plasma beam of 10,000-50,000°C whereby a connection with the silver substrate is being formed. This metallization process provides for a conductive basic material and ensures that it can be soldered and ultimately equipped with electronic components in the further course of production," says Christian Hoffmann, CEO of Lumitronix.
This unique technology is based on more than 10 years of research and development. This game-changing process has its origins in the field of medicine, where implants or prostheses have been sprayed with bone powder for quite some time already such that these grow together with the body's tissue in an enhanced manner and are not considered as foreign objects and possibly rejected. This know-how was transferred to the field of electronics and, with plasma metallization, a process was created that will be used as the standard from now on.
New and Affordable Basic Materials as Printed Circuit Boards
When compared to the standard material polyimide, forming the basis for the majority of all flexible printed circuit boards available on the market, the innovative process of plasma Metallization results in a plurality of new and affordable basic materials for printed circuit boards.
So far, solderable paper FPCs (flexible printed circuits) are a novelty and, as a consequence of the new technology, offer a plurality of applications. They are affordable, have no diffusion barrier and are thus suitable for large-scale applications such as wallpapers or advertising spaces.
PET may also serve as a basic material for FPCs. This plastic material is cheaper than polyimide, is characterised by a very good strength, a high resilience, and a low weight. When coated with a thin aluminium layer, which is rendered solderable via plasma Metallization, the PET FPCs may be equipped with components. Furthermore, PET is transparent and can therefore be applied to glass surfaces, for instance. Illuminated glass facades of multi-storey buildings, windows, or glass doors are conceivable.
Moreover, aluminium FPCs coated with copper may be used in order to achieve both cost savings and a weight reduction when compared to pure copper FPCs. Thanks to 100 µm thick aluminium, the FPCs are also provided with a high current load capacity and may be used for interior and exterior applications. Since the surface of aluminium is not solderable without further ado, it has not been used in the field of flexible printed circuit boards up to now.
Advantages of Plasma Metallization
When compared to the standard process utilised for printed FPCs, wherein the basic material printed with non-solderable strip conductors—e.g. made of aluminium—is coated by means of a conductive adhesive with a high silver content, the plasma Metallization method is much cheaper. The high silver content used within the framework of the conventional process results in significantly higher financial expenditures and additionally is complex. Furthermore, it is not that reliable, since the conductivity ultimately depends on temperature and moisture.
Another advantage of plasma Metallization is that the high current—more than 10 A, preferably 50 A—and the low voltage, preferably 50 V—used within the framework of the process of irradiation prevent the complete breaking of the molecule chains of the coating material. However, the exclusion of oxygen results in the prevention of a direct oxidation of the coating material within the plasma beam. Therefore, high energies for starting the chemical reaction may be introduced into the coating material, which is why the novel method is particularly suitable for continuous, industrial coating processes with high coating rates.
Series Production with Lumitronix
Series production of the flexible printed circuit boards will be performed on a new Lumitronix in-house production line. The new flexible strip park will be capable of equipping the basic printed circuit boards using the reel-to-reel process. Thanks to state-of-the-art machines and high processing speeds, production may be implemented on a large industrial scale. The particularity of the flex line is that all possible flexible materials may be processed there. Starting with the standard flex material polyimide, via wallpapers or paper up to very affordable plastic (PET).
The Lumitronix production line allows for serially equipping basic material that is present in the form of reels. These reels are chucked at the beginning of the lines and tightened along the entire length by clamp supports—also referred to as hitch feeders—so that the further processes of coating with solder paste and equipping with LEDs and other components may be performed smoothly. Upon the step of equipping, the flexible printed circuit boards are soldered in an infrared oven and then checked electronically and optically by a machine. Afterwards, the flexible printed circuit boards may be cut to individual lengths and different patterns, respectively, by oscillating blades. Additionally, a special printer allows for printing the flexible printed circuit boards in colours and therefore customizing these.
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