Speaker
Ralf Bruening
(Mount Allison University)
Description
Copper films for applications in printed circuit boards usually have to be fine-grained to achieve even filling of microvias. When galvanically plating Cu films on roll-annealed Cu substrates, unacceptably large epitaxial crystals were found for certain conditions. Here galvanic Cu films were plated on oriented single-crystal Cu substrates from an additive-free electrolyte and from a commercial electrolyte designed for DC plating. The crystallite distribution in the films was mapped with XRD. For the additive-free bath, the transition to a polycrystalline film occurs more readily on ⟨111⟩ and ⟨100⟩ oriented surfaces, whereas films on ⟨110⟩ substrates are persistently epitaxial. A sequence of recursive twinning steps is the main mechanism for the transition to polycrystalline texture. The bath additives promote fine-grained films and they deliver, for the same plating conditions, remarkably improved results.
Author
Ms
Delilah Brown
(Mount Allison University)
Co-authors
Dr
Frank Brüning
(Atotech Deutschland GmbH)
Ralf Bruening
(Mount Allison University)
Ms
Tanu Sharma
(Mount Allison University)
Dr
Tobias Bernhard
(Atotech Deutschland GmbH)