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Transactions of The Japan Institute of Electronics Packaging Vol. 2, No. 1, 2009
Fabrication of RF Circuit Structures on a PCB Material Using Inkjet
Printing-Electroless Plating and the Substrate Preparation for the
SameA. Sridhar*, M. A. Perik**, J. Reiding**, D. J. van Dijk* and R. Akkerman*
*Production Technology Group, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE, Enschede, the Netherlands
**Saxion Hogeschool, 7500 KB, Enschede, the Netherlands
(Received August 12, 2009; accepted November 2, 2009)
Abstract
This paper describes the optimisation of the surface characteristics of a high-frequency substrate material widely used
in the PCB (printed circuit board) industry by means of CF4/O2 plasma etching, in order to make it suitable for the fab-
rication of RF (radio frequency) circuit structures by a combination of inkjet printing and electroless plating. A statistical
DoE (design of experiments) based on a CCRD (central composite rotatable design) was used to systematically vary the
plasma etching parameters and explore the characteristics of the etching process. This experimental design yielded 31
substrates, all of which were assessed in terms of surface energy, surface roughness and adhesion. Out of these sub-
strates, 5 were identified as having the most favourable surface characteristics. Finally, RF circuit structures in the form
of S-band filters were fabricated on these substrates using an inkjet printing-electroless plating combination, and the RF
performance of these structures was characterised and compared.
Keywords: Printed Circuit Board (PCB), Plasma Etching, Inkjet Printing, Stripline Filter, Design of Experiments
(DoE), Surface Roughness, Surface Energy, Adhesion
1. IntroductionInkjet printing is an additive fabrication method, seen as
an important enabler to realise (RF-) electronic circuit
structures on dielectric substrates. In recent years, consid-
erable progress has been made in fabricating electronic
circuits/circuit components using this method.[1–4]
Development of inks with low sintering temperatures,
such as nanoparticle-based silver ink, has resulted in wide-
spread research activity in this field.
Reliability and robustness are crucial factors that deter-
mine the extent to which a process or a product is suc-
cessful. Lately, important results concerning the reliability
of inkjet-printed circuit structures have been published.
Caglar et al.[5] and Sridhar et al.[6] discussed the mechan-
ical reliability of inkjet-printed silver structures in terms of
tensile adhesive performance, determined using the pull-
off test method. Caglar et al.[5] also performed a DMA
(dynamic mechanical analysis) to assess the effect of
dynamic mechanical stresses on inkjet printed NPS (nano-
particle silver) structures. Joo and Baldwin[7] developed a
new adhesion test method called the MBST (modified
button shear test) to estimate the interfacial fracture
energy of NPS films. Other publications, such as the one
by Kaydanova et al.,[8] have dealt with the adhesion per-
formance of inkjet-printed structures using qualitative test
methods like the scotch-tape test. However, the effects of
surface roughness and surface energy of the substrate
material on the mechanical reliability of inkjet-printed
structures has not been given sufficient attention so far,
though there are some exceptions including the work of
Park et al.[9]
Prior experience has shown that mechanical interlock-
ing of inkjet printed structures to the substrate, due to the
latter’s surface roughness, plays a dominant role in deter-
mining the adhesion. This is especially true in the case of
polymer substrates, as their chemically inert nature gener-
ally does not favour strong chemical bonding. Scotch-tape
tests done on inkjet-printed structures on commercially
available PCB laminates have indicated that the adhesive
strength was poor and unsuitable for further processing
117
steps. Figure 1 depicts the Scotch-tape used for one such
test, in which an inkjet printed silver track was almost com-
pletely removed from the substrate. A survey of the litera-
ture indicates that plasma etching offers a way to modify
the substrate surface characteristics, thereby promoting
adhesion.
This research was carried out with two principal objec-
tives: (1) to determine the influence of the surface cha-
racteristics of the substrate material on the adhesion of
structures inkjet-printed on them, so as to find the optimal
surface characteristics to realise better adhesion without
compromising the accuracy of the inkjet-printed struc-
tures; and (2) to fabricate S-band filter structures on the
optimised substrates using a combination of inkjet printing
and electroless plating. This fabrication method involves
inkjet printing of silver seed tracks and subsequently
copper plating them using an electroless plating process.
The growth of copper on the silver seed track resulting
from the plating process imparts the necessary thickness
to the RF structures. The mechanism behind the copper
growth has been explained by Kao and Chou.[10] The
fabrication of RF structures using the abovementioned
method was demonstrated by Sridhar, et al.,[11] with the
example of an S-band filter and an RF transmission line. In
order to determine the influence of the surface character-
istics of the substrate material on adhesion, a CF4/O2
plasma etching process was used to impart varying
degrees of roughness and surface energy to the substrate
material. The plasma process parameters were systemati-
cally varied using an experimental design based on a second-
order CCRD. The substrates with optimal surface charac-
teristics were selected based on surface energy calcula-
tions, surface roughness measurements, and adhesion
tests using the scotch-tape test method.
2. Materials and Methods2.1. Materials
RO4000 series high-frequency laminate (Rogers Corpo-
ration, USA) was used as the substrate material. It is a
glass-reinforced hydrocarbon/ceramic thermoset laminate
with a Tg (glass transition temperature) greater than 280°C.
A TePla 3067-E (Technics Plasma GmbH, Germany), an
industrial-scale barrel-type plasma-etching machine, was
used for the CF4/O2 plasma etching. TEC-IJ-040, an
organic silver-complex compound (InkTec Company
Limited, Korea), containing less than 77% Ag-complex by
weight, was used to print the silver seed tracks. A Jetlab-4,
a commercially available piezoelectric drop-on-demand
inkjet printer (MicroFab Technologies Inc., USA), was
used for the inkjet printing trials. A nozzle with a diameter
of 80 μm was used for printing. Electroless copper plating
was done using an Envision-2130 electroless copper system
(Enthone Inc., USA). The contact angle measurements
were done using an OCA (Dataphysics Instruments
GmbH, Germany), an optical contact-angle measuring
instrument. A DEKTAK surface profiler (Veeco Instru-
ments Inc., USA) was used for surface roughness mea-
surements. The SEM (scanning electron microscope)
images in this paper were captured using a JSM-6400
(JEOL Limited, Japan).
2.2. Experimental designThe experimental design techniques commonly used for
process analysis are full factorial, fractional factorial and
CCRD. CCRD gives sufficient information to describe the
majority of steady-state process responses.[12] It requires
much fewer runs when compared to the full factorial
design and gives a clearer picture about interactions
between the process variables than a fractional factorial
method.
The CCRD was chosen in such a way that it contains ‘2n’
factorial treatment designs, ‘2n’ axial or star points, and
sufficient replications at the centre of the design. Here, ‘n’
represents the number of process variables under study.
Initial plasma-etching trials showed that four factors,
namely power (P), time of exposure of the substrate to the
plasma (t), flow rate of O2 (f_O2), and flow rate of CF4
(f_CF4), are the most relevant parameters that need to be
studied. The operating pressure, which is generally con-
sidered important in plasma etching, could not be pre-set
in the available equipment. As a result, the CCRD con-
sisted of 16 factorial treatment designs, with 8 star points
and 7 centre points; thus, 31 experiments in total. In com-
parison, a full factorial design for the same process would
Fig. 1 Scotch tape after testing on a silver track printed onan untreated RO4000 laminate.
Sridhar et al.: Fabrication of RF Circuit Structures on a PCB Material (2/9)
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Transactions of The Japan Institute of Electronics Packaging Vol. 2, No. 1, 2009
have resulted in 34 = 81 experiments. Star points and rep-
licates were added to the design to estimate the curvature
and error of the model.[13] The response model for 4 vari-
ables can be expressed as[14]:
(1)
Here, Y represents the yield; β0 is a constant intercept; βi,
βii and βij represent linear, quadratic and interaction coef-
ficients, respectively; and xi represents the coded indepen-
dent variables. The DoE model was used to understand
the influence of the process parameters on the outcome of
the plasma-etching process. The experimental design and
the coded parameter levels are listed in Table 1; the corre-
sponding parameter names and actual values are listed in
Table 2. The magnitude of the process parameters are
much higher than those found in the literature. The reason
for this is that the plasma-etching equipment used for this
study is an industrial-scale machine with a large chamber
that necessitated these parameter values for effective etch-
ing. In Table 1, runs 1–16 represent the 2-level full factorial
model, runs 17–24 represent the star points, and runs 25–
31 represent the centre points of the model.
3. ExperimentsAs per the experimental design, 31 substrates, each
measuring 100 mm × 100 mm, were cut and then plasma
etched. In this etching process, the specimen, i.e. sub-
strate, is immersed in plasma containing gases that react
with it. At relatively high process pressures of more than
0.2 mbar, the mechanism for etching is predominantly
chemical; these chemical reactions are promoted by
radicals in O2 and CF4.[15] For the chosen flow rates, the
operating pressure was above 0.2 mbar for all the experi-
mental runs. The process temperature is a complex func-
tion of power input and heat-transfer phenomena and was
not controlled during the experimental runs. The substrate
temperature during all the runs was well below the glass
transition temperature of the substrate material; hence, it
was not expected to play a major role in the outcome of the
etching process.
After etching, the contact angle of water on these
substrates was measured for the purpose of calculating the
surface energy of the substrates. Neumann’s equation of
state, shown as Eqn. (2), relates surface energy with
contact angle. These calculations were done using a soft-
ware program coupled to the contact-angle measuring
system.
, (2)
where ‘θ ’ is the contact angle, ‘σS’ is the surface energy of
Y x x x xi i ii i ij i jj iiii
= + + += +===∑∑∑∑β β β β0
2
1
4
1
3
1
4
1
4
Table 1 CCRD for four coded process variables.
Runs x1 x2 x3 x4
1 –1 –1 –1 –1
2 1 –1 –1 –1
3 –1 1 –1 –1
4 1 1 –1 –1
5 –1 –1 1 –1
6 1 –1 1 –1
7 –1 1 1 –1
8 1 1 1 –1
9 –1 –1 –1 1
10 1 –1 –1 1
11 –1 1 –1 1
12 1 1 –1 1
13 –1 –1 1 1
14 1 –1 1 1
15 –1 1 1 1
16 1 1 1 1
17 –2 0 0 0
18 2 0 0 0
19 0 –2 0 0
20 0 2 0 0
21 0 0 –2 0
22 0 0 2 0
23 0 0 0 –2
24 0 0 0 2
25 0 0 0 0
26 0 0 0 0
27 0 0 0 0
28 0 0 0 0
29 0 0 0 0
30 0 0 0 0
31 0 0 0 0
Table 2 Actual values of the process variables.
CodeP (x1)watt
t (x2)min
f_O2(x3)
ml/min
f_CF4(x4)
ml/min
–2 2500 10 0 0
–1 2900 20 500 50
0 3300 30 1000 100
1 3700 40 1500 150
2 4100 50 2000 200
Cos eS
L
L Sθσσ
β σ σ= −− −( )2 12
119
the substrate, ‘σL’ is the surface tension of the liquid, and
‘β ’ is a constant with a value of 1.247E-04.
The next step was the surface roughness measurement,
using a DEKTAK surface profiler. Subsequent to surface
characterisation, rectangular test patterns (30 mm × 10
mm) were inkjet-printed on the substrates. The thickness
of the pattern was highly dependant on the surface rough-
ness and surface energy of the individual substrates, and
was difficult to characterise due to the pronounced rough-
ness of certain substrates. Measurements on selected sub-
strates after sintering of the test patterns indicated that the
thicknesses were in the order of 1 μm. Scotch tape tests
were done on these patterns to qualitatively rank the adhe-
sive strength of the substrates under study. The next step
was to study the spreading of the ink on the substrates in
order to identify the optimal substrate surface energy
value(s). For this purpose, a micropipette was used to
deposit ink droplets with a constant volume of 20 μ l. The
reason behind the deposition of such a large droplet, the
diameter of which was nearly 20 times that of a droplet
from the inkjet printer, was to make the ink cover a larger
area on the substrate, to keep the influence of local rough-
ness peaks and valleys minimal. Prior experience showed
that the roughness peaks and valleys on a roughened sub-
strate’s surface can be several times the thickness of an
inkjet printed droplet after spreading on the substrate.
Moreover, a local cluster of roughness peaks or valleys
will radically modify the spreading behaviour of such a
droplet.
4. Selection of Optimal SubstratesThe measured contact-angle values and the correspond-
ing surface-energy values are depicted in Fig. 2. In Figure
3, the measured surface roughness values in terms of Ra
are plotted. In both these graphs, specimen number 0 indi-
cates the untreated RO4000 series substrate. The numbers
of the substrates correspond to the runs as listed in Table 1.
For a given material, a substrate with high surface
energy provides better adhesive strength than one with
lower surface energy, by decreasing the contact angle of
the deposited liquid, thereby increasing the interfacial
area. Mechanical interlocking resulting from surface
roughness, which is a dominant factor in metal-polymer
adhesion, is also enhanced by a larger interfacial area. On
the other hand, if the surface is too rough, it is not possible
to inkjet print with accuracy. The edge as well as the cross-
sectional accuracy of printed structures is very important
for (RF–) electronic applications, especially in the fre-
quency range (S-band) dealt with in this research. For this
reason, we attempted to select substrates that were suffi-
ciently rough, but not too rough, with sufficiently high sur-
face energy, so that the printed droplets did not bead up
and have high contact angles.
It is interesting to note that three substrates with the
highest surface roughness (numbers 7, 8 and 22) also had
surface energy values among the highest measured. Fig-
ure 4 shows a scatter plot of surface roughness (Ra) versus
Fig. 2 Contact angle and surface energy values of theplasma treated substrates.
Fig. 3 Surface roughness values of the plasma treated sub-strates.
Fig. 4 Surface roughness versus surface energy (S.E.) andcontact angle (C.A.).
Sridhar et al.: Fabrication of RF Circuit Structures on a PCB Material (4/9)
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Transactions of The Japan Institute of Electronics Packaging Vol. 2, No. 1, 2009
contact angle and surface energy. As seen clearly in this
graph, low surface roughness values yield high contact
angles and high surface roughness values result in low
contact angles. Similarly, the surface energy generally
increases with surface roughness. However, the relation-
ship between these physical quantities is too complex to
be derived based on these observations alone. Even
though an increase in surface roughness of the substrate
results in a higher contact area between the substrate and
the ink, resulting in lower contact angles, there are devia-
tions as seen in Fig. 4, since the substrate material con-
tains more than one phase. This complexity due to the
composition of the substrate material is also mentioned in
the ‘Results and Discussion’ section.
The results from the ranking-based adhesion tests and
droplet-spreading studies showed that substrates 4, 5, 15,
16, and substrates 25 to 31, exhibited the desired results
and met the requirements mentioned above. Since sub-
strates 25 to 31 were subjected to plasma treatment with
the same parameter set (as they represent the centre points
of the DoE model), only one, number 25, was chosen from
them. Thus, 5 substrates were chosen for fabricating the S-
band filter. As seen from Figs. 2 and 3, the surface energy
values of the chosen substrates are on the higher side
(> 45 mNm–1), and their Ra values are in the order of 1 μm,
which, incidentally, corresponds to the layer thickness of
the inkjet printed test structures. 5 substrates were chosen
instead of only 1 for the following reasons:
(1) It was desired to determine a range of surface rough-
nesses and surface energy values that are suitable and
not one particular value.
(2) Fabricating the S-band filter on a number of substrates
and comparing their performance will give an idea
about the repeatability of the fabrication method under
study.
Figure 5(a) depicts the RO4000 laminate before plasma
etching and Fig. 5(b) depicts the same material after
plasma etching; in this case, the parameter set used was
from the centre point of the DoE model. It can be clearly
seen from these SEM images that the etched substrate is
roughened and the filler material (silica) present in the
substrate is exposed. The surface energy of this substrate
was also higher, due to the change in functional groups on
the surface. The increased roughness and surface energy
resulted in better adhesion of the deposited ink. The sub-
strate shown in this image was one of those selected for
the fabrication of the S-band filter.
5. S-band FilterThe design of the S-band band-pass filter is shown in
Fig. 6. The reason for choosing to make a filter is that it is
relatively straightforward to compare performance charac-
teristics like return loss (S11), insertion loss (S21) and
passband.
The next step was the fabrication of the designed filter.
The selected substrates were cleaned to remove any impu-
rities present on their surface and dried in a convection
oven at 100°C for 30 minutes. After drying, seed tracks for
the filters were inkjet printed, with the substrate and the
ink at room temperature. A sintering step followed, in
which the printed substrates were heated at 150°C for 30
minutes, as specified by the ink supplier. Copper was elec-
troless plated on these seed tracks to impart the desired
thickness to the filter structure. The thickness of plated
copper was approximately 2.5 μm, which is sufficient for
the S-band due to the skin effect. More details concerning
the filter design, skin effect and plating process used in
(a)
(b)
Fig. 5 Micrograph of RO4000 laminate (a) before plasmaetching and (b) after plasma etching.
Fig. 6 S-band filter design; dimensions in mm.
121
this research have been dealt with in a separate journal
paper.[11] Figure 7 shows one of the fabricated filters. All
the filters were subjected to RF measurements using a net-
work analyser.
6. Results and Discussion6.1. Plasma etching and DoE model
The reproducibility of plasma etching, exemplified by
responses at the centre points of the design (25 to 31), can
be ascertained from Figs. 2 and 3. It can be seen that sur-
face roughness values are more reproducible than surface
energy values. However, the tolerance of the contact-angle
measuring device may also account for surface energy
variations. The experimental responses of the DoE were
analysed using MINITAB15 statistical software. The model
equations for the two variables under study, namely sur-
face roughness and surface energy, were derived based on
Eqn. (1).
Surface roughness model:
(3)
Surface energy model:
(4)
In these models, x1, x2, x3 and x4 represent the process
variables listed in Table 2. Substituting the coded values of
the process variables gives the yield in terms of μm for
Eqn. (3) and mNm–1 for Eqn. (4). It is clear from Eqn. (3)
that the O2 flow rate has the strongest effect on surface
roughness, as it has the highest β coefficient. The positive
sign of this coefficient indicates that the surface roughness
will increase with increasing O2 flow rate. The CF4 flow
rate also has a strong effect, albeit a negative one. As the
CF4 flow rate increases, the surface roughness values tend
to be lower, even at high O2 flow rates. This phenomenon
can be explained by fact that a high concentration of fluo-
rine radicals results in passivation via the formation of a
fluorinated surface layer, which inhibits attack, i.e. etching,
by oxygen.[16] The analysis also revealed that the effect of
power on surface roughness is not significant for the range
of parameter values studied.
As far as the surface energy is concerned, the O2 flow
rate again has the strongest effect, as seen from Eqn. (4).
In this case also, the CF4 flow rate has a strong negative
effect due to its contribution towards the formation of the
surface passivation layer. The interaction effect of the flow
rates of these gases are, understandably, very important as
well. The influence of power and time are insignificant.
The ANOVA (analysis of variance) showed that there is
a significant lack-of-fit in the models and they contain a few
observations with large residuals. These deviations can be
explained by the following influences:
(1) The presence of different phases in the substrate
(thermoset, silica and glass fibre) makes the etching
process highly complicated. SEM images revealed
that after plasma etching, a number of substrates had
their polymer top layer completely etched away,
revealing silica and, in some cases, the glass fibres
present underneath. Consider the surface roughness
model represented by Eqn. (3): the measured surface
roughness, i.e. the observed responses, might repre-
sent the roughness of the polymer top layer for a par-
ticular measurement, whereas for another measure-
ment, it might represent the roughness of the exposed
silica or glass fibre, or a combination of these materi-
als. The effect of the etching parameters is difficult to
predict in this case, exemplified by the very low pre-
dicted R-squared values, which indicate how well the
model will predict future data. For both models, this
value is less than 30%. The R-squared values for the
current dataset are about 85% for both models. The
presence of outliers in the model supports this expla-
nation.
(2) The influence of the operating pressure inside the
plasma equipment could be pronounced. Since it
could not be pre-set and hence was left out of the DoE
model, its influence could not be quantified.
6.2. RF characterisationNetwork analysis of the fabricated filters showed that
return and insertion losses of the 5 tested filters show
some variation, as depicted in Figures 8 and 9. This can be
Fig. 7 A fabricated S-band filter.
Y x x x x x
x
= + + + − +
+ +
0 643 0 099 0 168 0 32 0 19 0 034
0 044 01 2 3 4 1
2
22
. . . . . .
. .1131 0 011 0 042 0 0750 101 0 138 0
32
42
1 2 1 3
1 4 2 3
x x x x x xx x x x
+ + +− + −
. . .. . .. .16 0 2352 4 3 4x x x x−
Y x x x x x
x x
= − − + − −
− + −
50 32 1 43 1 35 7 6 5 05 0 27
1 7 0 731 2 3 4 1
2
22
32
. . . . . .
. . 00 77 0 65 0 911 21 0 81 1 13 3 59
42
1 2 1 3
1 4 2 3 2 4
. . .. . . .
x x x x xx x x x x x
− +− + − + xx x3 4
Sridhar et al.: Fabrication of RF Circuit Structures on a PCB Material (6/9)
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attributed to variations in the cross-sections of the seed
tracks and differences in the dielectric properties of the
substrate. The cross-sectional variation is due to differ-
ences in the surface characteristics of these substrates.
For a given set of parameters of the inkjet-printing process,
if the surface characteristics like surface roughness and
surface energy are different for different substrates, then
the spreading behaviour of the ink droplet also varies,
resulting in differing dimensions of the printed structures.
Variation in the dielectric properties between substrates
Fig. 8 Return loss (S11) of the tested filters.
Fig. 9 Insertion loss (S21) of the tested filters.
123
could have been caused by the different parameter sets
used for the plasma etching of these substrates, resulting
in differences in the extent of etching. It can be seen from
Fig. 8 that the filter fabricated on substrate 15 has the low-
est return loss in the passband. However, the insertion
losses of all the filters in the passband, as seen in Figure
9, agree well with each other and are close to 0 dB, indi-
cating very low losses during transmission through the fil-
ters. The passbands of the filters are in fair agreement with
each other.
The network analyses revealed that it is indeed possible
to fabricate RF structures using the process combination
of inkjet printing and electroless plating; in addition, the
repeatability of this fabrication method was also verified.
7. ConclusionsThe goals stated at the beginning of this paper were
accomplished. Substrates with optimal surface characteris-
tics were identified based on DoE, and S-band filters were
fabricated on them using a combination of inkjet printing
and electroless plating. The RF measurements proved the
validity of the chosen fabrication method and brought the
importance of consistency in substrate surface characteris-
tics to the fore. DoE analysis showed that the model devel-
oped based on the experimental results does not account
for all the outcomes. The reasons for this are two-fold and
have been explained. Future work will involve refining the
DoE model by including plasma-process pressure as a
parameter.
AcknowledgementsThis research falls under the auspices of the PACMAN
project, promoted by SENTER, the Netherlands. The
authors would like to gratefully acknowledge the contribu-
tions of Mr. J. Mannak and Dr. R. Legtenberg, both of
Thales Nederland B.V. The contribution of their project
partner, ASTRON (Netherlands Institute of Radio Astron-
omy), is acknowledged as well.
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