AndrewUK
Mechanical
- Jun 22, 2005
- 31
Hi I’m working on removing bubbles form holes !after some thoughts and ideas,
We manufacture printed circuit boards, we drill hole 0.2mm deep , 0.2mm diameter and are blind (not fully through)
These holes are then treated in electroless copper to make them a conductive passage.
The circuits are held in the vertical plane, thus the holes are horizontal when submerged in the electroless copper liquid.
The problem is that the electroless copper (in liquid form) does not get in al the holes due to bubble entrapment.
Bubbles could be air from the atmosphere before being submerged and/or from the hydrogen produced during the
Electroless process.
I’m currently setting up some experiments to gather data, I’m looking at vibrating the jig that holds the circuits changing the following, Direction, Amplitude, Frequency
Does any one have any ideas on this?
I’m also looking at other techniques such at pluses in the liquid. If any one has any info on this please let me know.
do you think cavatation be a factor?
Could you treat the bubbles as a solid object and transport out as you would transport a component on a production line?
I'm thinking larger bubbles be easier to remove than smaller bubbles? (larger surface area, lower pressure).
I will post results of experiments soon