A
printed circuit board, or
PCB,
is used to mechanically support and electrically connect
electronic components using
conductive pathways, tracks, or
trace,
etch from copper sheets
laminated onto a non-conductive
substrate. It is also referred to as
printed
wiring board (
PWB) or
etched
wiring board. A PCB populated with electronic components
is a
printed circuit assembly
(
PCA), also known as a
printed circuit
board assembly (
PCBA).
PCBs are inexpensive, and can be highly reliable. They require much
more layout effort and higher initial cost than either
wire-wrapped or
point-to-point constructed
circuits, but are much cheaper and faster for high-volume
production. Much of the electronics industry's PCB design,
assembly, and quality control needs are set by standards that are
published by the
IPC organization.
History
The
inventor of the printed circuit was the Austrian
engineer
Paul Eisler (1907–1995) who, while
working in England, made one circa 1936 as part
of a radio set. Around
1943 the USA began to use the technology on a large
scale to make rugged radios for use in
World War II. After the war, in
1948, the USA released the invention for commercial
use. Printed circuits did not become commonplace in consumer
electronics until the mid-1950s, after the
Auto-Sembly
process was developed by the
United
States Army.
Before printed circuits (and for a while after their invention),
point-to-point
construction was used. For prototypes, or small production
runs,
wire wrap or
turret board can be more efficient.
Originally, every electronic component had wire leads, and the PCB
had holes drilled for each wire of each component. The components'
leads were then passed through the holes and soldered to the PCB
trace. This method of assembly is called
through-hole construction.
In 1949, Moe Abramson and Stanislaus F. Danko of the
United States Army Signal
Corps developed the Auto-Sembly process in which component
leads were inserted into a copper foil interconnection pattern and
dip soldered. With the development of board lamination and etching
techniques, this concept evolved into the standard printed circuit
board fabrication process in use today. Soldering could be done
automatically by passing the board over a ripple, or wave, of
molten solder in a
wave-soldering
machine. However, the wires and holes are wasteful since drilling
holes is expensive and the protruding wires are merely cut
off.
In recent years, the use of
surface mount parts has gained
popularity as the demand for smaller electronics packaging and
greater functionality has grown.
Manufacturing
Materials
Conducting layers are typically made of thin copper foil.
Insulating layers
dielectric are
typically laminated together with
epoxy
resin prepreg. The board is typically
coated with a solder mask that is green in color. Other colors that
are normally available are blue and red. There are quite a few
different dielectrics that can be chosen to provide different
insulating values depending on the requirements of the circuit.
Some of these dielectrics are
polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon),
FR-4, FR-1, CEM-1 or CEM-3. Well known prepreg materials used in
the PCB industry are
FR-2 (Phenolic cotton
paper), FR-3 (Cotton paper and epoxy),
FR-4
(Woven glass and epoxy), FR-5 (Woven glass and epoxy), FR-6 (Matte
glass and polyester), G-10 (Woven glass and epoxy), CEM-1 (Cotton
paper and epoxy), CEM-2 (Cotton paper and epoxy), CEM-3 (Woven
glass and epoxy), CEM-4 (Woven glass and epoxy), CEM-5 (Woven glass
and polyester). Thermal expansion is an important consideration
especially with BGA and naked die technologies, and glass fiber
offers the best dimensional stability.
Typical density of a raw PCB (an average amount of traces, holes,
and vias, with no components) is 2.15g / cm
3.
Patterning (etching)
The vast majority of printed circuit boards are made by bonding a
layer of copper over the entire substrate, sometimes on both sides,
(creating a "blank PCB") then removing unwanted copper after
applying a temporary mask (eg. by etching), leaving only the
desired copper traces. A few PCBs are made by
adding
traces to the bare substrate (or a substrate with a very thin layer
of copper) usually by a complex process of multiple
electroplating steps.
There are three common "subtractive" methods (methods that remove
copper) used for the production of printed circuit boards:
- Silk screen
printing uses etch-resistant inks to protect the
copper foil. Subsequent etching removes the unwanted copper.
Alternatively, the ink may be conductive, printed on a blank
(non-conductive) board. The latter technique is also used in the
manufacture of hybrid circuits.
- Photoengraving
uses a photomask and chemical etching to remove the copper foil
from the substrate. The photomask is usually prepared with a
photoplotter from data produced by a
technician using CAM, or computer-aided manufacturing
software. Laser-printed transparencies are typically employed for
phototools; however, direct laser imaging techniques are
being employed to replace phototools for high-resolution
requirements.
- PCB milling uses a
two or three-axis mechanical milling system to mill away the copper
foil from the substrate. A PCB milling machine (referred to as a
'PCB Prototyper') operates in a similar way to a plotter, receiving commands from the host software
that control the position of the milling head in the x, y, and (if
relevant) z axis. Data to drive the Prototyper is extracted from
files generated in PCB design software and stored in HPGL or Gerber file
format.
"Additive" processes also exist. The most common is the
"semi-additive" process. In this version, the unpatterned board has
a thin layer of copper already on it. A reverse mask is then
applied. (Unlike a subtractive process mask, this mask exposes
those parts of the substrate that will eventually become the
traces.) Additional copper is then plated onto the board in the
unmasked areas; copper may be plated to any desired weight.
Tin-lead or other surface platings are then applied. The mask is
stripped away and a brief etching step removes the now-exposed
original copper laminate from the board, isolating the individual
traces. Some boards with plated thru holes but still single sided
were made with a process like this.
General Electric made consumer radio sets
in the late 1960s using boards like these.
The additive process is commonly used for multi-layer boards as it
facilitates the
plating-through of the holes
(to produce conductive
vias) in
the circuit board.
Lamination
Some PCBs have trace layers inside the PCB and are called
multi-layer PCBs. These are formed by bonding together
separately etched thin boards.
Drilling
Holes through a PCB are typically drilled with tiny drill bits made
of solid
tungsten carbide. The
drilling is performed by
automated
drilling machines with placement
controlled by a
drill tape or
drill file. These
computer-generated files are also called
numerically controlled
drill (NCD) files or "
Excellon
files". The drill file describes the location and size of each
drilled hole. These holes are often filled with annular rings
(hollow rivets) to create
vias.
Vias allow the electrical and thermal connection of conductors on
opposite sides of the PCB.
Most common laminate is epoxy filled fiberglass. Drill bit wear is
in part due to the fact that glass, being harder than steel on the
Mohs scale, can scratch steel. High drill
speed necessary for cost effective drilling of hundreds of holes
per board causes very high temperatures at the drill bit tip, and
high teperatures (400-700 degrees) soften steel and decompose
(oxidize) laminate filler. Copper is softer than epoxy and interior
conductors may suffer damage during drilling.
When very small vias are required, drilling with mechanical bits is
costly because of high rates of wear and breakage. In this case,
the vias may be evaporated by
lasers.
Laser-drilled vias typically have an inferior surface finish inside
the hole. These holes are called
micro vias.
It is also possible with
controlled-depth drilling, laser
drilling, or by pre-drilling the individual sheets of the PCB
before lamination, to produce holes that connect only some of the
copper layers, rather than passing through the entire board. These
holes are called
blind vias when they connect an internal
copper layer to an outer layer, or
buried vias when they
connect two or more internal copper layers and no outer
layers.
The walls of the holes, for boards with 2 or more layers, are made
conductive then plated with copper to form
plated-through
holes that electrically connect the conducting layers of the
PCB. For multilayer boards, those with 4 layers or more, drilling
typically produces a
smear comprised of the high
temperature decomposition products of bonding agent in the laminate
system. Before the holes can be plated through, this
smear
must be removed by a chemical
de-smear process, or by
plasma-etch. Removing (etching back) the smear also
reveals the interior conductors as well.
Exposed conductor plating and coating
PCBs are plated with Solder, Tin, or Gold over Nickel as a resist
for
etching(removal) away the (unneeded
after plating) underlying copper. Matte solder is usually fused to
provide a better bonding surface or stripped to bare copper.
Treatments, such as benzimidazolethiol, prevent surface oxidation
of bare copper. The places to which components will be mounted are
typically plated, because untreated bare copper oxidizes quickly,
and therefore is not readily solderable. Traditionally, any exposed
copper was coated with
solder by hot air
solder levelling (
HASL). This solder was a
tin-
lead alloy, however new
solder compounds are now used to achieve compliance with the
RoHS directive in the
EU and
US, which restricts the use of lead. One of these lead-free
compounds is SN100CL, made up of 99.3% tin, 0.7% copper, 0.05%
nickel, and a nominal of 60ppm germanium.
It is important to use solder compatible with both the PCB and the
parts used. An example is Ball Grid Array (BGA) using tin-lead
solder balls for connections losing their balls on bare copper
traces or using lead-free solder paste.
Other platings used are OSP (organic surface protectant), immersion
silver (
IAg), immersion tin, electroless nickel
with immersion gold coating (
ENIG), and direct
gold (over nickel).
Edge connectors,
placed along one edge of some boards, are often nickel plated then
gold plated. Another coating
consideration is rapid diffusion of coating metal into Tin solder.
Tin forms intermetallics such as Cu
5Sn
6 and
Ag
3Cu that dissolve into the Tin liquidus or
solidus(@50C), stripping surface coating and/or leaving
voids.
Electrochemical migration (ECM) is the growth of
conductive metal filaments on or in a printed circuit board (PCB)
under the influence of a DC voltage bias. Silver, zinc, and
aluminum are known to grow whiskers under the influence of an
electric field. Silver also grows conducting surface paths in the
presence of halide and other ions, making it a poor choice for
electronics use. Tin will grow "whiskers" due to tension in the
plated surface. Tin-Lead or Solder plating also grows whiskers,
only reduced by the percentage Tin replaced. Reflow to melt solder
or tin plate to relieve surface stress lowers whisker incidence.
Another coating issue is
tin pest.
Solder resist
Areas that should not be soldered to may be covered with a polymer
solder resist (
solder mask) coating. The solder
resist prevents solder from bridging between conductors and thereby
creating short circuits. Solder resist also provides some
protection from the environment. Solder resist is typically 20-30
microns thick.
Screen printing
Line art and text may be printed onto the outer surfaces of a PCB
by
screen printing. When space
permits, the screen print text can indicate
component
designators, switch setting requirements, test points, and
other features helpful in assembling, testing, and servicing the
circuit board.
Screen print is also known as the
silk screen, or, in one
sided PCBs, the
red print.
Lately some digital printing solutions have been developed to
substitute the traditional screen printing process. This technology
allows printing variable data onto the PCB, including serialization
and barcode information for traceability purposes. Also some
manufacturers tend to coat their boards in a thin layer of
micro-film used to keep electricity from escaping the conductivity
of the wire-strips.
Test
Unpopulated boards may be subjected to a
bare-board test
where each circuit connection (as defined in a
netlist) is
verified as correct on the finished board. For high-volume
production, a
Bed of nails
tester, a fixture or a
Rigid
needle adapter is used to make contact with copper lands or
holes on one or both sides of the board to facilitate testing. A
computer will
instruct the electrical test unit to apply a
small voltage to each contact point on the bed-of-nails as
required, and verify that such voltage appears at other appropriate
contact points. A "short" on a board would be a connection where
there should not be one; an "open" is between two points that
should be connected but are not. For small- or medium-volume
boards,
flying-probe and
flying-grid testers use
moving test heads to make contact with the
copper/silver/gold/solder lands or holes to verify the electrical
connectivity of the board under test.
Printed circuit assembly
After the printed circuit board (PCB) is completed, electronic
components must be attached to form a functional
printed
circuit assembly, or PCA (sometimes called a "printed circuit
board assembly" PCBA). In
through-hole construction,
component leads are inserted in holes. In
surface-mount construction, the components are
placed on
pads or
lands on the outer surfaces of
the PCB. In both kinds of construction, component leads are
electrically and mechanically fixed to the board with a molten
metal solder.
There are a variety of
soldering
techniques used to attach components to a PCB. High volume
production is usually done with
machine placement and bulk wave
soldering or reflow ovens, but skilled technicians are able to
solder very tiny parts (for instance 0201 packages which are 0.02"
by 0.01") by hand under a
microscope,
using tweezers and a fine tip
soldering
iron for small volume prototypes. Some parts are impossible to
solder by hand, such as
ball grid
array (BGA) packages.
Often, through-hole and surface-mount construction must be combined
in a single PCA because some required components are available only
in surface-mount packages, while others are available only in
through-hole packages. Another reason to use both methods is that
through-hole mounting can provide needed strength for components
likely to endure physical stress, while components that are
expected to go untouched will take up less space using
surface-mount techniques.
After the board has been populated it may be tested in a variety of
ways:
- While the power is on, in-circuit
test, where physical measurements (i.e. voltage, frequency) can
be done.
- While the power is on, functional
test, just checking if the PCB does what it had been designed
for.
To facilitate these tests, PCBs may be designed with extra pads to
make temporary connections. Sometimes these pads must be isolated
with resistors. The in-circuit test may also exercise
boundary scan test features of some
components. In-circuit test systems may also be used to program
nonvolatile memory components on the board.
In boundary scan testing, test circuits integrated into various ICs
on the board form temporary connections between the PCB traces to
test that the ICs are mounted correctly. Boundary scan testing
requires that all the ICs to be tested use a standard test
configuration procedure, the most common one being the Joint Test
Action Group (
JTAG) standard.
When boards fail the test, technicians may
desolder and replace failed components, a task
known as "
rework".
Protection and packaging
PCBs intended for extreme environments often have a
conformal coating, which is applied by
dipping or spraying after the components have been soldered. The
coat prevents corrosion and leakage currents or shorting due to
condensation. The earliest conformal coats were
wax. Modern conformal coats are usually dips of dilute
solutions of silicone rubber, polyurethane, acrylic, or epoxy. Some
are engineering plastics
sputtered onto the PCB in a vacuum
chamber.
Many assembled PCBs are
static sensitive, and therefore must
be placed in
antistatic bags during
transport. When handling these boards, the user must be
earthed; failure to do this might
transmit an accumulated static charge through the board, damaging
or destroying it. Even bare boards are sometimes static sensitive.
Traces have become so fine that it's quite possible to blow an etch
off the board (or change its characteristics) with a static charge.
This is especially true on non-traditional PCBs such as
MCMs and
microwave PCBs.
Design
- Schematic capture or schematic
entry is done through an EDA tool.
- Card dimensions and template are decided based on required
circuitry and case of the PCB. Determine the fixed components and
heat sinks if required.
- Deciding stack layers of the PCB. 4 to 12 layers or more
depending on design complexity. Ground
plane and Power plane are decided.
Signal planes where signals are routed are in top layer as well as
internal layers.
- Line impedance determination
using dielectric layer thickness, routing copper thickness and
trace-width. Trace separation also taken into account in case of
differential signals. Microstrip,
stripline or dual stripline can be used to
route signals.
- Placement of the components. Thermal considerations and
geometry are taken into account. Via and lands are marked.
- Routing the signal trace. For
optimal EMI performance high frequency signals
are routed in internal layers between power or ground planes as
power plane behaves as ground for
AC.
- Gerber File generation for
manufacturing.
Safety certification (US)
Safety Standard UL 796 covers component safety requirements for
printed wiring boards for use as components in devices or
appliances. Testing analyzes characteristics such as flammability,
maximum operating temperature, electrical tracking, heat
deflection, and direct support of live electrical parts.
The boards may use organic or inorganic base materials in a single
or multilayer, rigid or flexible form. Circuitry construction may
include etched, die stamped, precut, flush press, additive, and
plated conductor techniques. Printed-component parts may be
used.
The suitability of the pattern parameters, temperature and maximum
solder limits shall be determined in accordance with the applicable
end-product construction and requirements.
"Cordwood" construction

A cordwood module.
Cordwood construction can give large space-saving advantages and
was often used with
wire-ended
components in applications where space was at a premium (such
as missile guidance and telemetry systems). In 'cordwood'
construction, two leaded components are mounted axially between two
parallel planes. Instead of soldering the components, they were
connected to other components by thin nickel tapes welded at right
angles onto the component leads. To avoid shorting together of
different interconnection layers, thin insulating cards were placed
between them. Perforations or holes in the cards would allow
component leads to project through to the next interconnection
layer. One disadvantage of this system was that special
nickel leaded components had to be used to allow the
interconnecting welds to be made.Some versions of cordwood
construction used single sided PCBs as the interconnection method
(as pictured). This meant that normal leaded components could be
used.
Before the advent of
integrated
circuits, this method allowed the highest possible component
packing density; because of this, it was used by a number of
computer vendors including
Control Data Corporation. The
cordwood method of construction now appears to have fallen into
disuse, probably because high packing densities can be more easily
achieved using
surface mount
techniques and integrated circuits.
Multiwire boards
Multiwire is a patented technique of interconnection which uses
machine-routed insulated wires embedded in a non-conducting matrix
(often plastic resin). It was used during the 1980s and 1990s.
(Augat Inc., )
Since it was quite easy to stack interconnections (wires) inside
the embedding matrix, the approach allowed designers to forget
completely about the routing of wires (usually a time-consuming
operation of PCB design): Anywhere the designer needs a connection,
the machine will draw a wire in straight line from one location/pin
to another. This led to very short design times (no complex
algorithms to use even for high density designs) as well as reduced
crosstalk (which is worse when wires run
parallel to each other—which almost never happens in Multiwire),
though the cost is too high to compete with cheaper PCB
technologies when large quantities are needed.
Surface-mount technology

Surface-mount technology emerged in the 1960s, gained momentum in
the early 1980s and became widely used by the mid 1990s.Components
were mechanically redesigned to have small metal tabs or end caps
that could be soldered directly on to the PCB surface. Components
became much smaller and component placement on both sides of the
board became more common than with through-hole mounting, allowing
much higher circuit densities.Surface mounting lends itself well to
a high degree of automation, reducing labour costs and greatly
increasing production and quality rates. Carrier Tapes provide a
stable and protective environment for Surface mount devices (SMDs)
which may can be one-quarter to one-tenth of the size and weight,
and passive components can be one-half to one-quarter of the cost
of corresponding through-hole parts. However, integrated circuits
are often priced the same regardless of the package type, because
the chip itself is the most expensive part. As of 2006, some
wire-ended components, such as small-signal switch diodes, e.g.
1N4148, are actually significantly cheaper
than corresponding SMD versions.
See also

Schematic Capture.

PCB layout.

3D View.
- PCB Materials
- PCB layout software
References
-
http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11515&page=77
- http://epa.gov/dfe/pubs/pwb/tech_rep/p2_report/p2_sec3.htm
- IPC Publication IPC-TR-476A,
“Electrochemical Migration: Electrically Induced Failures in
Printed Wiring Assemblies,” Northbrook, IL, May 1997.
- S.Zhan, M. H. Azarian and M. Pecht, "Reliability Issues of
No-Clean Flux Technology with Lead-free Solder Alloy for High
Density Printed Circuit Boards", 38th International Symposium on
Microelectronics, pp. 367-375, Philadelphia, PA, September 25-29,
2005.
- Ayob M. and Kendall G. (2008) A Survey of Surface Mount Device
Placement Machine Optimisation: Machine Classification. European
Journal of Operational Research, 186(3), pp 893-914
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2007.03.042)
- Ayob M. and Kendall G. (2005) A Triple Objective Function
with a Chebychev Dynamic Pick-and-place Point Specification
Approach to Optimise the Surface Mount Placement Machine.
European Journal of Operational Research, 164(3), pp 609-626
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2003.09.034)
- See appendix D of IPC-2251
- Coombs, Clyde F., Jr. (Ed.) (1995). Printed Circuits
Handbook, Fourth Edition, McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-012754-9.
- Coombs, Clyde F., Jr. (Ed.) (2001). Printed Circuits
Handbook, Fifth Edition" ', McGraw-Hill Professional ISBN 0-07-135016-0.
- Coombs, Clyde F., Jr. (Ed.) (2007). Printed Circuits
Handbook, Sixth Edition" ', McGraw-Hill Professional ISBN
0-07-146734-3.
External links
Design guidelines
Standards and specifications
Do-it-yourself (DIY) guides
Others