Abstract

In recent years, the fabrication of metallic patterns on polymer substrates has been given increasing attention because of its wide and important applications in many fields. This paper reported a selective metallization technology on ordinary polymer substrates basing on laser direct activation of copper hydroxyl phosphate [Cu2(OH)PO4] and electroless deposition of copper. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were utilized to characterize the interaction mechanism between nanosecond-pulsed fiber laser (1064 nm wavelength) and Cu2(OH)PO4. It was found that after laser modification and activation by appropriate parameters, the special surface microstructure (e.g., porous sponge-like) appeared and explained the good adhesion strength (the highest grade of 5B) between the copper layer and substrate. At the same time, Cu+ was generated from the Cu2(OH)PO4, adsorbed on the microstructure, and acted as catalytic active centers to realize the selective copper deposition in the laser-activated zone. In addition, the copper layer possessed good selectivity (< 3% error of line space and width) and electrical conductivity (10−6 Ω·cm volume electrical resistivity). By comparison with laser direct structuring (LDS) technology and with palladium chloride as laser sensitive material, this was a more universal and less-cost technical pathway to fabricate planar and/or three dimensional (3D) metallic patterns on more kinds of ordinary polymer substrates.

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