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HDI Technology - Flex Circuits
September 10, 2015 | Mike Morando, PFC Flexible Circuits LTDEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
High density interconnect (HDI) is the process of leveraging manufacturing capabilities and materials to create very small interconnect solutions. Small interconnects are required for some of the new applications and dense components on the market. It is the next generation of etched circuitry.
Benefits of HDI
- Higher density and smaller size
- Use of advanced component packaging
- More design options and flexibility
- Improved electrical performance and signal integrity
- Improved thermal performance and reliability
HDI Applications
Wearable technology is one of the new applications we are seeing where dense packaging is required. Imagine wearing a sensor device that can monitor all of your vitals and connect to the internet via Bluetooth so your doctor can monitor you remotely. The solution has to be bendable, stretchable, and dense. We will talk more about this in upcoming columns, but this is the type of application that drives density.
Equipment
Gone are the days of plants with rooms full of noisy drilling equipment. HDI requires smaller holes and blind and buried vias that are best done with laser technology. Lasers provide a faster, more cost effective solution over drilling (after you get over the sticker shock cost of the equipment).
Materials
Very thin copper materials are essential to creating high density solutions. Nine-micron copper is what is used in many cases to create HDI solutions. Thinner materials are on the horizon. New higher speed materials—coverlays and adhesives—are being qualified on a daily basis to meet the challenges of higher speeds and impedance requirements.
HDI Lines, Spaces and Hole Sizes
Smaller lines and spaces are required for HDI. Today, 50-micron (2-mil) lines and spaces in production and 37.5 microns (1.75 mils) line and spaces are being provided in prototypes. The laser drill enables smaller hole diameter (50-micron hole diameters) and enables blind and buried vias for even denser packaging.
Resources
HDI requirements and equipment push flex vendors to invest in better educated human resources. The complexity of the circuits and the software for the equipment to make the circuits is driving circuit vendors towards a better educated work force.
HDI Assembly
Many industry flex circuit gurus discuss HDI with regard to the density of the package—the circuit itself. However, in addition to the package, an HDI flex requires HDI assembly—the need to place 1005 components and 12-mil pitch BGAs.
The flex circuit industry in North America is moving rather quickly. The packaging densities are moving to smaller and the electrical requirements much faster. In order to keep pace with the industry requirements of HDI, North American flex vendors need to invest in equipment, resources and R&D.
Mike Morando is VP of sales and marketing for PFC Flexible Circuits LTD.
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Rachael Temple - AlltematedSuggested Items
Statement from the Global Electronics Association on the July 2025 Tariff on Copper Foil and Electronics-Grade Copper Inputs
07/31/2025 | Global Electronics AssociationWe are disappointed by today’s decision to impose a 50% tariff on imported copper foil and other essential materials critical to electronics manufacturing in the United States.
Considering the Future of Impending Copper Tariffs
07/30/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamThe Global Electronics Association is alerting industry members that a potential 50% tariff on copper could hit U.S. electronics manufacturers where it hurts.
Connect the Dots: Sequential Lamination in HDI PCB Manufacturing
07/31/2025 | Matt Stevenson -- Column: Connect the DotsAs HDI technology becomes mainstream in high-speed and miniaturized electronics, understanding the PCB manufacturing process can help PCB design engineers create successful, cost-effective designs using advanced technologies. Designs that incorporate blind and buried vias, boards with space constraints, sensitive signal integrity requirements, or internal heat dissipation concerns are often candidates for HDI technology and usually require sequential lamination to satisfy the requirements.
OKI Launches Rigid-Flex PCBs with Embedded Copper Coins Featuring Improved Heat Dissipation for Space Equipment Applications
07/29/2025 | BUSINESS WIREOKI Circuit Technology, the OKI Group’s printed circuit board (PCB) business company, has developed rigid-flex PCBs with embedded copper coins that offer improved heat dissipation for use in rockets and satellite-mounted equipment operating in vacuum environments.
Designers Notebook: Basic PCB Planning Criteria—Establishing Design Constraints
07/22/2025 | Vern Solberg -- Column: Designer's NotebookPrinted circuit board development flows more smoothly when all critical issues are predefined and understood from the start. As a basic planning strategy, the designer must first consider the product performance criteria, then determine the specific industry standards or specifications that the product must meet. Planning also includes a review of all significant issues that may affect the product’s manufacture, performance, reliability, overall quality, and safety.