Principle and Application of Laser Drilling in HDI Manufacturing
1. 激光钻孔的核心原理:能量聚焦和基板相互作用机制
(1) 热消融机制:适用于树脂基底(主流应用)
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能量聚焦台:
由激光发生器(如CO₂激光、紫外线激光)产生的连续或脉冲激光束通过光学系统(聚焦透镜、反射镜)聚焦,形成一个直径只有几微米到几十微米的“高能光斑”,能量密度高达 10⁶-10⁹ W/cm²,精确作用于基板上需要钻孔的区域。
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基底加热和分解台:
聚焦的激光能量迅速传递到基板(树脂+玻璃纤维/PI膜)上,使局部温度急剧上升至树脂的分解温度(通常为400-600℃,FR-4树脂约为450℃,PI树脂为550℃) 微秒(μs)或甚至纳秒(ns)内。此时,树脂分子链分解成CO₂、H₂O和小分子有机物等气态产物,而玻璃纤维(在FR-4中)或PI膜在高温下部分熔化并气化。
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材料去除阶段:
基板分解产生的气态产物和熔融物质在高温和压力的作用下以“飞溅”的形式从基板表面分离,形成初步的“孔坑”。同时,激光束可以通过“多脉冲扫描”(即对同一区域重复作用多个脉冲激光)逐步加深孔坑,直到满足设计要求(例如,盲 Via 需要准确控制深度以避免穿透下层电路)。
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钻孔壁冷却和成型阶段:
After the laser pulse ends, the temperature of the hole wall area drops rapidly (the cooling rate can reach 10⁵℃/s). The remaining molten substances (such as glass fiber debris and resin carbonized layer) will form a “carbonized layer” (usually 0.5-2μm thick) on the hole wall, which needs to be removed in the subsequent “desmear” process to ensure the reliability of hole wall metallization.
(2) Photochemical Ablation Mechanism: Suitable for High-Frequency/Special Substrates
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Photon Absorption and Chemical Bond Breaking:
A deep ultraviolet (DUV) laser with an extremely short wavelength (wavelength 193nm) or an excimer laser is used, whose photon energy (about 6.4eV) is higher than the bond energy of C-C bonds (3.6eV) and C-F bonds (4.8eV) in PTFE molecules. When the laser irradiates the substrate, photons are directly absorbed by the substrate molecules, and the molecular chemical bonds can be broken without converting into thermal energy, decomposing PTFE into small-molecule fluorides (such as CF₄) and gaseous carbon.
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Heat-Free Damage Material Removal:
There is no obvious temperature rise during the entire process (the local temperature of the substrate is usually below 100℃), so there is no melting, carbonization, or thermal deformation. The hole wall has extremely high smoothness (roughness Ra ≤0.1μm) and no heat-affected zone (HAZ), which perfectly meets the requirements of high-frequency signals for “low loss and low interference”.
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Precise Depth Control and Forming:
By controlling the number of laser pulses (the thickness of material removed by a single pulse is only a few nanometers to tens of nanometers), “atomic-level” precise depth control of the PTFE substrate can be achieved, which is especially suitable for the processing requirement of “blind vias penetrating the insulating layer without damaging the underlying ground copper foil” in high-frequency HDI boards.
2. Key Technical Parameters of Laser Drilling for HDI: Determining Drilling Quality and Reliability
| Technical Parameter | Definition and Function | Typical Requirements for HDI Boards | Impact on HDI Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aperture Accuracy | Deviation between the actual aperture and the designed aperture, including diameter deviation and roundness | Diameter deviation ≤±5μm, roundness ≥0.9 (i.e., the ratio of major axis to minor axis of the hole ≤1.1) | Too small an aperture will lead to poor conduction after hole metallization; too large an aperture is likely to cause short circuits between circuits, affecting high-density wiring |
| Hole Position Accuracy | Position deviation between the actual hole center and the designed hole center | Position deviation ≤±3μm (2nd-order HDI), ≤±1.5μm (3rd-order HDI) | Hole position deviation will cause “misalignment” between blind vias and inner circuits, resulting in “broken holes” or “edge contact”, reducing interconnection reliability |
| Depth Control Accuracy | Deviation between the actual depth and the designed depth of blind vias | Depth deviation ≤±5% (e.g., designed depth 50μm, actual depth 47.5-52.5μm) | Too shallow a depth will prevent the hole from penetrating the insulating layer after metallization, failing to achieve inter-layer interconnection; too deep a depth will penetrate the underlying copper foil, causing short circuits |
| Hole Wall Roughness | Degree of unevenness on the hole wall surface (expressed by Ra) | Ra ≤1.5μm for ordinary HDI, Ra ≤0.5μm for high-frequency HDI | Excessively high hole wall roughness will lead to uneven copper layer coverage during chemical copper plating, increasing the transmission loss of high-frequency signals; it may also leave drill debris, causing poor insulation |
| Heat-Affected Zone (HAZ) | Width of the area where the substrate’s performance changes due to thermal effects after drilling | HAZ ≤10μm for ordinary HDI, HAZ ≤5μm for high-frequency/flexible HDI | Excessively large HAZ will cause brittleness of the substrate (such as PI), reducing the bending life of flexible HDI; HAZ in high-frequency substrates will cause fluctuations in Dk/Df, affecting signal integrity |
3. Typical Application Scenarios of Laser Drilling in HDI: From Ordinary HDI to High-End Special HDI
(1) Ordinary HDI Boards: Mainstream Application in Consumer Electronics
- Substrate Type: Mainly FR-4 substrates (PI substrates are used in some flexible areas);
- Aperture Specification: Blind via diameter 50-100μm, depth 20-50μm (corresponding to the thickness of the HDI board insulating layer);
- Laser Type: Mainly CO₂ lasers (moderate cost, high processing efficiency), and ultraviolet lasers are used in some high-precision areas;
- Core Requirement: Meeting the high-density layout of “hundreds of holes per square centimeter” to adapt to the “miniaturized chips and dense components” in mobile phone motherboards (for example, the laser blind via density in iPhone motherboards can reach more than 500 holes/cm²).
(2) Flexible HDI Boards: Adaptation to Dynamic Bending Scenarios
- Substrate Type: PI flexible substrates (thickness 25-50μm), some matched with ultra-thin copper foil (12-18μm);
- Aperture Specification: Blind via diameter 30-60μm, depth 15-30μm, with strict control of the heat-affected zone (HAZ ≤5μm);
- Laser Type: Ultraviolet lasers (wavelength 355nm) are preferred, which have lower thermal effects than CO₂ lasers and can reduce thermal damage to PI substrates;
- Core Requirement: The bending life of the flexible HDI board after drilling is ≥100,000 times (180° bending), with no cracks or carbonization on the hole wall, ensuring that the hole metallized copper layer does not fall off during dynamic bending.
(3) High-Frequency HDI Boards: Low-Loss Requirement for High-End Communication
- Substrate Type: PTFE high-frequency substrates (Df ≤0.001) or hydrocarbon composite substrates (such as Rogers RO4003C);
- Aperture Specification: Blind via diameter 25-50μm, depth 10-30μm, hole wall roughness Ra ≤0.5μm, no carbonized layer;
- Laser Type: Deep ultraviolet (DUV) lasers (193nm) are used in high-end scenarios to achieve heat-free damage drilling through photochemical ablation; ultraviolet lasers (355nm) are used in mid-to-high-end scenarios;
- Core Requirement: No impurities or heat-affected zones on the hole wall, ensuring that the insertion loss of high-frequency signals (24GHz/77GHz) during transmission in the hole is ≤0.1dB (10GHz) and the return loss is ≥-25dB, avoiding signal reflection or attenuation.
4. Comparison Between Laser Drilling and Traditional Mechanical Drilling: Advantages Highlighted in HDI Scenarios
| Comparison Dimension | Laser Drilling | Traditional Mechanical Drilling | Conclusion (HDI Scenario) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum Aperture | Down to 10μm (DUV laser), conventional 25-100μm | Minimum about 150μm, hard to break through 100μm | Laser drilling fully meets the micro-aperture requirement of HDI |
| Hole Position Accuracy | ±1.5-3μm (optical positioning) | ±10-15μm (mechanical positioning, easily affected by tool wear) | Laser drilling meets the high-precision requirement of multi-layer alignment in HDI |
| Substrate Compatibility | Compatible with FR-4, PI, PTFE, etc., no tool wear | Only compatible with rigid substrates such as FR-4, tools are easily worn (PTFE wears drills) | Laser drilling covers all substrate types of HDI |
| Processing Efficiency | Single-hole processing time ≤1μs (pulsed laser), suitable for mass production | Single-hole processing time ≥10μs, efficiency drops sharply for small apertures | Laser drilling is more efficient in high-frequency HDI and high-density HDI scenarios |
| Thermal Damage/Tool Wear | Slight HAZ in thermal ablation (controllable), no tool wear | No thermal damage, but tools are easily worn (tools need to be replaced after processing 10,000 holes) | Laser drilling reduces consumable costs and is suitable for long-term mass production |
5. Conclusion
