WO1985002751A1 - Partially aligned multi-layered circuitry - Google Patents

Partially aligned multi-layered circuitry Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1985002751A1
WO1985002751A1 PCT/US1984/002043 US8402043W WO8502751A1 WO 1985002751 A1 WO1985002751 A1 WO 1985002751A1 US 8402043 W US8402043 W US 8402043W WO 8502751 A1 WO8502751 A1 WO 8502751A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
layer
pathways
layers
patterns
electrical
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1984/002043
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Morgan Johnson
Original Assignee
Laserpath Corporation
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Laserpath Corporation filed Critical Laserpath Corporation
Priority to BR8407221A priority Critical patent/BR8407221A/en
Publication of WO1985002751A1 publication Critical patent/WO1985002751A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K3/00Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
    • H05K3/30Assembling printed circuits with electric components, e.g. with resistor
    • H05K3/32Assembling printed circuits with electric components, e.g. with resistor electrically connecting electric components or wires to printed circuits
    • H05K3/325Assembling printed circuits with electric components, e.g. with resistor electrically connecting electric components or wires to printed circuits by abutting or pinching, i.e. without alloying process; mechanical auxiliary parts therefor
    • H05K3/326Assembling printed circuits with electric components, e.g. with resistor electrically connecting electric components or wires to printed circuits by abutting or pinching, i.e. without alloying process; mechanical auxiliary parts therefor the printed circuit having integral resilient or deformable parts, e.g. tabs or parts of flexible circuits
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L23/00Details of semiconductor or other solid state devices
    • H01L23/52Arrangements for conducting electric current within the device in operation from one component to another, i.e. interconnections, e.g. wires, lead frames
    • H01L23/538Arrangements for conducting electric current within the device in operation from one component to another, i.e. interconnections, e.g. wires, lead frames the interconnection structure between a plurality of semiconductor chips being formed on, or in, insulating substrates
    • H01L23/5382Adaptable interconnections, e.g. for engineering changes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K1/00Printed circuits
    • H05K1/02Details
    • H05K1/0286Programmable, customizable or modifiable circuits
    • H05K1/0287Programmable, customizable or modifiable circuits having an universal lay-out, e.g. pad or land grid patterns or mesh patterns
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L2924/00Indexing scheme for arrangements or methods for connecting or disconnecting semiconductor or solid-state bodies as covered by H01L24/00
    • H01L2924/0001Technical content checked by a classifier
    • H01L2924/0002Not covered by any one of groups H01L24/00, H01L24/00 and H01L2224/00
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K1/00Printed circuits
    • H05K1/02Details
    • H05K1/11Printed elements for providing electric connections to or between printed circuits
    • H05K1/118Printed elements for providing electric connections to or between printed circuits specially for flexible printed circuits, e.g. using folded portions
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K2201/00Indexing scheme relating to printed circuits covered by H05K1/00
    • H05K2201/09Shape and layout
    • H05K2201/09009Substrate related
    • H05K2201/091Locally and permanently deformed areas including dielectric material
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K2201/00Indexing scheme relating to printed circuits covered by H05K1/00
    • H05K2201/10Details of components or other objects attached to or integrated in a printed circuit board
    • H05K2201/10227Other objects, e.g. metallic pieces
    • H05K2201/10295Metallic connector elements partly mounted in a hole of the PCB
    • H05K2201/10303Pin-in-hole mounted pins
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K2201/00Indexing scheme relating to printed circuits covered by H05K1/00
    • H05K2201/10Details of components or other objects attached to or integrated in a printed circuit board
    • H05K2201/10431Details of mounted components
    • H05K2201/1059Connections made by press-fit insertion
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K2203/00Indexing scheme relating to apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits covered by H05K3/00
    • H05K2203/17Post-manufacturing processes
    • H05K2203/175Configurations of connections suitable for easy deletion, e.g. modifiable circuits or temporary conductors for electroplating; Processes for deleting connections
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K3/00Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
    • H05K3/0058Laminating printed circuit boards onto other substrates, e.g. metallic substrates
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K3/00Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
    • H05K3/30Assembling printed circuits with electric components, e.g. with resistor
    • H05K3/306Lead-in-hole components, e.g. affixing or retention before soldering, spacing means
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K3/00Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
    • H05K3/40Forming printed elements for providing electric connections to or between printed circuits
    • H05K3/4038Through-connections; Vertical interconnect access [VIA] connections
    • H05K3/4046Through-connections; Vertical interconnect access [VIA] connections using auxiliary conductive elements, e.g. metallic spheres, eyelets, pieces of wire
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05KPRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
    • H05K3/00Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
    • H05K3/46Manufacturing multilayer circuits
    • H05K3/4611Manufacturing multilayer circuits by laminating two or more circuit boards

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to electrical circuits for interconnecting components such as microchips and also electrical circuits for the microchips themselves.
  • Circuit boards in mass production for consumer and commercial needs can be printed using silkscreen tech ⁇ niques. Even with routing programs and computer aided engineering, much time is needed to design, set up production lines for, and build such boards. The design and set up time requirement means that such boards can only be produced at competitive prices for orders of thousands and hundreds of thousands. Tha costs and time required for multi-layer board arrangements are even larger.
  • a wire-wrap technique is generally used.
  • a base circuit board is produced which has a matrix of pins upstanding from one surface thereof and a matrix of connectors communicating with the pins and usually upstanding from the other surface of the board.
  • the matrix of connectors are generally for mounting chip packages or carriers.
  • the board may have certain basic electrical pathways predesign d therein which connect selected chip packages to each other or to terminals on the board for purposes of powering, grounding or signal communication requirements.
  • a circuit builder would use a wire-wrapping tool which would tightly wind a connecting wire around the appropriately selected pins to provide electric communication therebetween.
  • a wire-wrapping tool which would tightly wind a connecting wire around the appropriately selected pins to provide electric communication therebetween.
  • the design and manufacturer of small orders of custom-chips can be accomplished through the application of, for example, circuitry to gate array chips during the final metalization steps.
  • circuitry to gate array chips during the final metalization steps.
  • the surface becomes rough and the electrical pathways themselves can become quite convoluted.
  • the roughness or three-dimensional effect of the surfaces becomes greater causing increased difficulty in properly focusing the various deposits which are placed on the chip so that they stay within the bounds intended by the circuit design.
  • the present invention is directed to overcoming these difficulties.
  • an electrical circuit comprises a plurality of layers, each including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulating means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another . layer, with at least some of the electrical pathways having substantially repeating patterns and with at least the first .and second layers ' having substantially the same repeating patterns.
  • Each pathway of each layer comprises means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer.
  • the electrical circuit can comprise a single layer including electrical pathways with repeating patterns.
  • the method of the invention includes providing an insulation base and then providing electrical pathways thereon which are comprised of regular and repeating patterns.
  • the method further includes the step of selectively severing portions of the pathways to provide the desired circuit.
  • the pathways are severed by the use of a laser.
  • the design of the patterns themselves is such that at points where it would be desirable to have the pathway severed, the pathways which are located on several layers are unaligned. Thus no matter what layer the pathway is on, the laser can easily access the pathway without interrupting any other pathway.
  • the electrical pathways include means for receiving pins of wire-wrap circuit boards. These means can accept the pins and provide a proper electrical contact with the pins.
  • first and second layers can be interconnected by a third layer of discrete nodes with communicating means.
  • the positioning of the nodes is selected by a programmed photoplotter so that the appropriate pathways are communicated between the first and second layer. If all the nodes were selected, a regular grid would be es ⁇ tablished which would communicate with each communication means of the first and second layers.
  • the photoplotter selects the appropriate nodes to complete the electrical circuit and only those are deposited on the third layer.
  • the present invention can be used with conventional wire-wrap printed circuit boards .without the necessity of actually wire-wrapping the connections.
  • the circuits are made using the severing technique indicated above and then one or more the layers are urged onto the pins of the wire-wrap board.-
  • the circuits are completed in a minimum of time as compared with the conventional wire-wrapping technique.
  • further connections can be made with the conventional wire-wrap techniques.
  • the present invention can be used to replace conventional circuit boards which are used in other than a wire-wrap environment.
  • the present invention can be used for customizing microchips and for other chip carrier and chip package manufacture.
  • the various layers of the invention are laid down and then a laser used to sever the pathways as desired to create the desired electrical circuitry.
  • the layers are comprised of substantially repeating patterns, each layer is substantially level and thus there is less of a resolution problem or focusing problem which leads to improperly deposited materials. Also, there tends to be a reduction in the number of convoluted pathways which cross excessively between layers.
  • Figure 1 depicts a layer of an embodiment of the in ⁇ vention with repeating electrical pathways.
  • Figure 2 depicts the electrical pathways of Figure 1 with a laser path described thereon.
  • Figure 3 depicts the electrical pathway of Figure 1 with select pathways severed.
  • Figure 4 depicts the electrical pathways of Figure 1 moved one position to the right and superimposed on a second layer which is identical to the pathway config ⁇ uration in Figure 1.
  • Figure 5 depicts eight layers superimposed on each other, the two layer set of Figure 4 providing the base with three similar sets being rotated 90°, 180° and 270° with reference to the base and aligned under the base.
  • Figure 6a through 6h depict several methods of severing the pathways.
  • Figure 7 depicts pins of a wire-wrap circuit board positioned above the electrical circuitry of the invention.
  • Figure 8 depicts several layers of the electrical circuitry of the invention being in engagement with a pin of the wire-wrap circuit board.
  • Figure 9 depicts an another embodiment of the pathway of the electrical circuit with several of the pathways pre-severed.
  • Figure 10 depicts a different configuration of the pathway of the embodiment of Figure 9.
  • Figure 11 depicts the alignment of the layer of Figure 9 over the layer of Figure 10.
  • Figure 12 depicts a matrix of electrical shunts which are used with the invention of Figure 11.
  • Figure 13 depicts a layer of electrical pathways in accordance with another embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 14 depicts a layer of a plurality of nodes in accordance with the embodiment of Figure 13.
  • Figure 15 depicts a perspective view of the electrical circuit comprised of the layers such as depicted in Figures 13 and 14.
  • Figure 16 is yet another embodiment of the present invention.
  • Figure 17 depicts the layer .of the invention of Figure 16 translated and superimposed over a similar layer.
  • Figure 18 depicts the two-layer configuration of
  • Figure 17 used as a base with a separate two-layer configuration rotated by 90° and aligned with the base configuration.
  • Figure 19 depicts another embodiment of the invention wherein a single layer has pathways which are somewhat similar to the two-layer combination of pathways in Figure 17.
  • Figure 20 is a combination of two layers, a base layer similar to Figure 19 which is superimposed over a similar layer which has been rotated by 90°.
  • OMfl Figure 21 is yet another embodiment of the present invention.
  • Figure 22 is an embodiment of the present invention with the pathways of Figure 21 superimposed over a layer of pathways which are comprised of a mirror image of the pathways of Figure 21.
  • layer 30 of the electrical circuit 32 of the invention is depicted.
  • Layer 30 is comprised of an insulation substrate 34 which can be comprised of a plastic as, for example, kapton which is a polyimide of the thermo-setting variety which can be between one-half and five mils thick. This particular plastic was selected as it can be used during a soldering operation and will not melt, although it does .tend to char.
  • Electrical pathways 36, 38 defined on substrate 34.
  • the electrical pathways 36, 38 are comprised of copper and are from one-and-one-eighth to one-and-one-half mils thick.
  • these electrical pathways are configured by making a uniform deposit of copper onto the substrate 34 and then, using photomask and etching techniques, removing the undesired copper to leave the electrical paths 36 and 38.
  • these electrical paths are comprised of repeating patterns which include different patterns 40 and 42.
  • Pattern 40 is similar to pattern 42, however, it includes several more electrical traces such as traces 44 and 46 than does the pattern 42. In fact, a substantial amount of the pattern 40 can be superimposed over and aligned with the pattern 42, with only some of the patterns being nonalignable, such as for example, the traces 44 and 46 and the traces that are located on either side thereof.
  • electrical path 36 is first composed of pattern 40, then pattern 42, and then repeats pattern 40 and can continue in that arrangement.
  • Pathway 38 is first composed of pattern 42, then pattern 40, and then repeats pattern 42 and can continue in that arrangement.
  • Pattern 40 is comprised of a center flower-shaped communication means 48 through which a pin of, for example, a wire-wrap circuit board can be inserted so as to expand the flower without breaking any of the traces and allow for electrical communication between the pathway and the pin.
  • the flower is composed of eight substantially identical wedge-shaped sections 50, pairs of which are joined together at the center to form quarter sections of the flower, with the quarter sections of the flower being joined together at the periphery of the flower to form the entire flower. Due to this wedge-shaped arrangement, the center of the flower can be pushed out or expanded without disturbing the electrical connection between the wedge-shaped sections.
  • the pattern 42 further includes other communication means which include nodes or junctions 52, 54, 56 and 58.
  • Pattern 40 further includes a baseline trace 60 which communicates with nodes 52 and 58 by previously indicated traces 44 and 46.
  • Nodes 54 and 56 communicate with baseline trace 60 by traces 62 and 64, which are accurate in nature and extend about the flower-shaped communication means 48, but which are substantially parallel to the traces 44 and 46 as traces 62, 64 approach the baseline trace 60.
  • traces 66 and 68 communicate the flower-shaped communication means 48 with the baseline trace 60.
  • nodes 52 through 58 include blind vias which provide communication between the various layers of the electrical circuit of the invention, which layers may be situated above or below the layer as depicted in Figure 1. Plated through holes can be substituted for the blind vias. It is to be understood that the flower-shaped communication means do not communicate with the other side of the insulation substrate material as the nodes with the vias do.
  • pattern 40 includes interconnecting means, such as traces 70, 72, 74 and 76 which interconnect pattern 40 with the other adjacent patterns 42 form a matrix of patterns 40 and 42.
  • Pattern 42 is comprised of a similar flower-shaped communication means 78 with nodes 80 through 86 and baseline trace 88. Nodes 80, 82, 84 and 86 all communicate with a common trace 90 which is described about the flower-shaped communication means 78 and which communicates with baseline trace 88.
  • the flower-shaped communication means 78 also communicates with baseline trace 88 through traces 92, 94 and 96.
  • traces 92, 94 and 96 of pattern 42 are substantially parallel, as are traces 44, 46, 66, 68, 61 and portions of traces 62 and 64 of pattern 40.
  • the traces of pattern 40 lie along a laser- cut path such as cut path 91 in Figure 2. These traces are substantially perpendicular to this cut path 91. The same is true with the parallel traces of pattern 42. They lie along a laser cut path 93.
  • the elec ⁇ trical circuitry of the invention can be fabricated from the pathways 36 and 38 by selectively severing one or more of the portions of the traces which fall within the laser cut paths 91 and 93 by using a programmed and pulsing laser.
  • a programmed and pulsing laser As for example, in Figure 3 and in pathway 48, and pattern 40, if it is desired to communicate node 56 with interconnecting trace 70, the laser would sever traces 44, 62, 66, 64 and 58 and interconnecting trace 76. This altered pathway is shown by dotted line 97 which is included for clarity only and does not comprise a portion of the circuit.
  • the appropriate traces are severed, as shown in Figure 3, and line 98, which again is not part of this circuit but which is included for
  • Figure 4 depicts a translational movement of the elec ⁇ trical pathways 36 and 38 of the layer 30 of Figure 1 to the right and positioned over a second layer 100 which includes pathway 102 and 104 which are identical to pathways 38 and 36 respectively.
  • a pathway similar to pathway 36 is placed over a pathway similarly to pathway 38.
  • a great majority of the patterns of the two pathways are substantially aligned with, for the most part, the traces which are parallel and communicate directly with baseline trace 60 and baseline trace 88 being nonaligned.
  • these traces lie on the laser cut paths such as cut paths 92 and 94 in Figure 2, and thus the laser can be pulsed to selectively sever any one of these traces without severing a trace lying thereunder.
  • pattern 40 is imposed upon pattern ' 42.
  • Nodes 52, 54, 56 and 58 of pattern 40 communicate with nodes 80, 82, 84 and 86 of pattern 42. Again these nodes include blind vias which communicate the nodes of the adjacent layer.
  • the set of first layer 30 and second layer 100 in Figure 4 is identified as 110 and is so indicated in Figure 5.
  • Figure 5 includes eight layers of pathways which are identical to the first layer which is shown in Figure 1. Each of these layers is rotated or translated with respect to the first layer 30.
  • the set of layers 110 in Figure 4 is so identified in Figure 5 and similarly position.
  • the other six layers are comprised of two layer sets which are similar to Figure 4 but which have been rotated 90°, 180° and 270° from the first two layer set 110. These sets are identified as 112, 114 and 116 respectively.
  • the electric circuitry of the invention can be fabricated in one of several ways. As shown in Figure 6a and b, the circuitry is composed of four layers, 118 through 132. The cross-section shown is to be taken along a laser cut path. The traces in the laser cut path are identified by the number 111, 113, 115 and 117.
  • traces are parallel and unaligned.
  • the layers which are located above each of the traces have a window provided therein so that there is an open column above each of the traces.
  • a laser such as laser 134 can be positioned above.- the appropriate trace and used to sever that, trace, as is indicated in Figure 6b.
  • the laser is controlled by a writing program which can be selectively programmed according to the circuitry requirements so that the laser pulses and severs the appropriate traces.
  • a circuit board which is used for wire wrapping purposes such as board 140 in Figure 7, is positioned over the first layer 142 of this -circuit with the pins 144, 146 positioned above the centers of the flower-shaped communication means such as means 48.
  • a backer board 148 is positioned underneath the layer 142 or can be initially associated with the layer. The pins are forced down into communication with and pierce the flower-shaped communication means so that good contact is made (Fig.8).
  • This simple process eliminates the entire need for using the prior art wire-warp technique.
  • the traditional wire-wrap technique can be ⁇ sed in combination with circuit board 142 by simply wrapping the wires around the pins 144 and 146 which extend beyond layer 142.
  • the backer board can be removed and additional layers can be forced onto the wire-wrap pins with the backer board left on with the last layer. Also the backer board can be left on with each layer. Further it is to be understood that the fit between the backer board and the pin is essentially a forced fit with the pin being rectangular or circular and larger than a circular hole being provided through the backer board. As the cover deposit 150 is on the upper surface of each layer 142 the pathways are placed in intimate contact with the pin during this force fit.
  • FIG. 9 Another embodiment of the invention is shown in Figures 9 through 12.
  • This embodiment includes a first pattern 200 which is similar to pattern 40 in Figure 1 except for the fact that the parallel traces 202 through 218 are severed or have a discontinuity with nodes such as nodes 220 and 222 defining each end of the discontinuity. These nodes include plated through holes which communicate with the other side of the insulating material. Blind vias could also be used.
  • This pattern additionally includes free nodes such as nodes 224, 225, and 226 which relay communication with other patterns of other layers.
  • Figure 10 depicts a pattern 230 which is substantially similar to pattern 42 of Figure 2.
  • Pattern 230 includes traces 232, 234, and 236 which are discontinuous and which have nodes such as nodes 238 and 240 which include plated through holes.
  • nodes 238 and 240 which include plated through holes.
  • traces 232, 234, and 236 which are discontinuous and which have nodes such as nodes 238 and 240 which include plated through holes.
  • the final layer which- includes a plurality of discreet shunts such as shunt 242 ( Figure 12) and which included blind vias or plated through holes, is then placed on top of the upper layer of the previous layers of patterns in order to complete the circuitry.
  • a laser such as laser 244 can selectively sever the isolated shunts such as shunt 242 without having to penetrate the remaining layers as shown in Figure 6h.
  • the construction and method of use of this embodiment of the invention is identical to the embodiment shown in Figures 1 through 5. It is to be understood that in both of these embodi ⁇ ments, the layers can perform if desired a separate function. For example, one layer can be essentially provide voltage, while another layer can be a ground plane. Other layers can be exclusively signal layers. Further it is to be understood that as the layers are relatively thin and as the electric circuit which is comprised of one or more layers is itself relatively thin, redundant circuitry can be built into a system with relatively little cost and small space requirements, simply by adding redundant layers.
  • FIG. 13 Another embodiment of the invention is shown in Figures 13, 14 and 15.
  • This embodiment includes a first layer which has a substrate of a isolation material upon which is deposited discreet isolated pathways, such as pathways 246, 248, 250, 252, 254 and 256.
  • Pathways 248, 252, 254 and 256 are essentially straight parallel - pathways, and pathways 246 and 2 * 50 are straight parallel pathways, with pathways 246 and 250 substantially perpendicular to the above pathways.
  • Interspersed between the pathways are nodes which include node 258 and 260 with are shown as blind vias but which could be plated through holes.
  • Figure 14 is essentially comprised of a matrix of potential locations which can have copper deposited thereon through use of a masks made from a photoplotter, which are used to communicate the layer immediately thereabove with the layer immediately therebelow.
  • the dotted lines indicate areas where no copper was deposited but where copper could be deposited in order to make the various communications.
  • the solid squares indicate where copper was deposited.
  • Figure 15 shows a circuit comprised of three layers, the upper layer 270 being identical to the layer of Figure 13, and the lower layer 272 being identical to the layer 270, but translated and repositioned with respect to upper layer 272 to form, with the cooperation of the pattern of Figure 14, which forms the intermediate layer, certain pathways.
  • the first pathway 274 includes a first trace 276, which through node 278 acts as a junction and fans out to three traces, 280, 282 and 284.
  • Nodes 286 and 288 and also 290 and 292 which are defined in the pattern of Figure 14 provide the necessary communications between the upper layer 270 and the lower layer 272 to accomplish the fan-out from a single trace to three traces. In this embodiment, as is evident, no laser cutting is required.
  • a second pathway 292 crosses the pathway 274.
  • This second pathway 292 is formed in the same way as pathway 274 in that the isolated shunts of each of the upper and lower layers are connected through the nodes of the intermediate layer. Where the pathway 274 and 292 cross, no node is formed immediately between the discrete shunts 294 and 296. Thus second pathway 292 does not communicate with pathway 274.
  • the nodes which are located between the shunts, only communicate with the nodes of other layers. These nodes can be all communicated through a common ground plane and can form shields between the various circuits.
  • An electronic circuit of the invention using this embodiment can be fabricated in the following way. First, layers similar to the layer in Figure 13 are made much in the same way the layers in Figure 1 are made. Then a photoplotter is used to provide the necessary mask to make the layer in Figure 14, according to the circuitry desired, which is then fabricated similarly to Figure 1. The layers are then mated, and the mated layers forming the electrical circuits are in turn mated to a circuit board to which can be mounted the chips and other components of the circuit. Additionally if the required, the chips, or packages or carriers can be mounted directly to the upper layer of the electrical circuitry.
  • layers similar to those in Figures 13, 14 and 15 can be used for producing • the final metallization layers of for example a gate array. As each layer is substantially uniform, these metallization ,layers are less rough than those currently used in gate array technology, and thus the focusing and deposition problems which occur after two metallization layers have been deposited on the gate array are of little significance. Further there is less likelihood that any of the circuits will have to snake around excessively in order to provide the necessary connections. These layers would be made using standard fabrication techniques known in the industry.
  • the first layer is comprised of a plurality of identical and continuous but isolated pathways 302 through 308.
  • Each of these pathways is comprised of repeating S-shaped patterns.
  • each pathway includes a projecting trace such as traces 310 and 312, which include at the end thereof nodes such as 314 and 316 with plated through holes which communicate with the other surface of the layer.
  • Located opposite each of the projecting traces such as traces 310 and 312 are isolated nodes such as nodes 318 and 320. Each of these nodes includes a plated through hole which communicates with the other surface of the layer.
  • Figure 17 includes a composite of a first layer 322, which is composed of traces which are oriented in a manner similar to those in Figure 16, which is superimposed on a second layer 324 which is similar to the layer of Figure 16 but which has been translated over and up in order to form substantially hourglass patterns between the two layers. It is noted that the projecting traces 326 and 328 with the associated nodes 327 and 329 of the pathway 325 of the first layer 222 communicate with the isolated nodes 330, 332 of the pathway 334 of the second layer 324.
  • Figure 18 a two-layer configuration of Figure 17 is used as a base configuration 340 with projecting traces 310 and 312. This configuration is superimposed over another . configuration which is similar to Figure 17 but which has been rotated by 90° and includes projecting traces 342 and 344 which communicate with the other traces 310 arid 312 with the appropriate nodes such as nodes 320. 322.
  • This arrangement of four layers of pathways such as pathway 302 in Figure 16 produces an alternating pattern of large octagons 346 and adjacent squares 348.
  • traces such as traces 310, 312, 342 and 344 are located under or over another trace, and all these .traces describe laser cut paths such as cut path 348.
  • a laser can be used to selectively sever the traces to form .the appropriate electrical circuitry.
  • the sections of the pathways which form the squares such as square 348 are all on separate layers and also that they are not aligned within the other pathway which is located above or below. Thus these portions of the pathways are prime for being severed, if required, by a laser.
  • circuitry is principally used in non-wire-wrap situations, although with the addition of the flower-shaped communication means located in the octagonal portions, wire-wrap board usage is made possible. Again, as with the
  • this embodiment can be used to construct the metallization layers of a gate array.
  • Figure 19 is similar to Figure 17 except for the path ⁇ ways 400, 402, 404 and 406 that are all located on the same layer. Further nodes which include plated through holes are located at every position where the pathways change direction. As, for example, one S-shaped portion 408 of pathway 400 includes nodes 410, 412, 414 and 416.
  • FIG. 20 The configuration of Figure 20 is quite similar to "that of Figure 18, with each square configuration, such as configuration 418, having a node, such as nodes 420 through 426, at each corner, which allow these two layers to communicate with each other.
  • laser cut paths such as 428 and 430, can selectively sever the portions of the pathways which are located between the nodes to create the various desired electrical circuitry. Again it should be noted that none of the portion of the pathways which are located between these nodes are aligned with any other pathways. Thus the laser can conveniently sever that portion of a pathway without interrupting any other pathway.
  • first layer 500 which has pathways 502, 506 and 508.
  • Each pathway includes selected nodes such as nodes 510, 512 and 514 which occur on the slanted portions of the S-shaped pattern.
  • This type of an arrangement is especially useful for mirror imaging, as is shown in Figure 22.
  • the first layer 500 is superimposed upon a second layer which is comprised of a mirror image of a first layer.
  • the nodes, with plated through holes, communicate the first layer 500 with the second layer 514. It is to be understood that in a mirror image situation, a mirror image of the layer must be produced on a second layer, and that the second layer cannot be merely flipped over. In this arrangement, the mirror image effect can be acquired be simply rotating one pathway be 180° with respect to a second pathway to produce the mirror image effect.
  • the laser can be appropriately defocused and used to burn or char the isolation material so that the appropriate identifiers can be placed on the circuitry to locate where components are to be mounted and connections are to be made.

Abstract

Electrical circuitry (32) is comprised of a plurality of layers (30, 100) each layer (30, 100) including one or more electrical pathways (36, 38) each layer (30, 100) also including insulation (34) for insulating at least part of one layer (30) from another layer (100). The pathways (36, 38) comprise repeating patterns (40, 42). Each pathway (36, 38) of each layer (30, 100) can communicate with the pathways (36, 38) of the next adjacent layers (30, 100). Some portions of the patterns (40, 42) which comprise the pathways (36, 38) of each layer (30, 100) can be at least partially aligned with some portion of the patterns (40, 42) of pathways (36, 38) of the other layers (30, 100). Other portions of the pathways (36, 38) of the layers (30, 100) remain unaligned. A pulse laser (134) can be used to sever unaligned portions of the pathways (36, 38) as appropriate to create the desired electrical circuitry (32). Components can be secured to the electrical circuitry as required. Further, such circuitry can be used in the construction of the final metallization layers of chips such as gate arrays.

Description

Partially Aligned Multi-layered Circuitry
Background of the Invention
The present invention relates to electrical circuits for interconnecting components such as microchips and also electrical circuits for the microchips themselves.
Background Art
Circuit boards in mass production for consumer and commercial needs can be printed using silkscreen tech¬ niques. Even with routing programs and computer aided engineering, much time is needed to design, set up production lines for, and build such boards. The design and set up time requirement means that such boards can only be produced at competitive prices for orders of thousands and hundreds of thousands. Tha costs and time required for multi-layer board arrangements are even larger.
Accordingly, for custom orders of circuit boards a wire-wrap technique is generally used. In the wire-wrap technique, a base circuit board is produced which has a matrix of pins upstanding from one surface thereof and a matrix of connectors communicating with the pins and usually upstanding from the other surface of the board. The matrix of connectors are generally for mounting chip packages or carriers. The board may have certain basic electrical pathways predesign d therein which connect selected chip packages to each other or to terminals on the board for purposes of powering, grounding or signal communication requirements.
To develop a custom board using this arrangement, a circuit builder would use a wire-wrapping tool which would tightly wind a connecting wire around the appropriately selected pins to provide electric communication therebetween. Such a process is quite naturally slow and must be done with painstaking skill, otherwise incorrect pins may be communicated during the wire-wrap procedure.
It has been found that if pins are incorrectly communciated, many wire must be removed prior to reaching the incorrectly positioned wire. Also it has been found that during the wire-wrap procedure, the wire-wrap tool places stress on the wires such that in some instances the wire breaks inside the insulation making it impossible to find the break with visual inspection. Further as even the same operator will never wire two functionally identical custom boards in exactly the same manner, visual inspection is time consuming.
To assist in this wire-wrap process, there are some semi- automatic wire-wrap machines which provide pointers which move between the pins which are to be connected with • the wires. The person who is using the wire-wrap tool will then appropriately communicate the pins with a wire. With this semi-automatic wire-wrap machine, up to four hundred wires per hours can be connected between appropriate pins. A standard five-inch by seven-inch board contains approximately a thousand pins of which seven hundred are generally connected during the wire-wrap operation. Thus, approximately two hours is required to wire the board. Fully automatic wire-wrap machines do exist which make up to twelve hundred connections per hour. Such machines are considerably more costly than the semi-automatic machines.
On a smaller but not less significant scale, the design and manufacturer of small orders of custom-chips can be accomplished through the application of, for example, circuitry to gate array chips during the final metalization steps. With no more than one or two metalization layers are placed on the chip, the surface becomes rough and the electrical pathways themselves can become quite convoluted. As more layers are put on the chip, the roughness or three-dimensional effect of the surfaces becomes greater causing increased difficulty in properly focusing the various deposits which are placed on the chip so that they stay within the bounds intended by the circuit design.
Thus generally there is a need to provide electrical circuitry which can be easily fabricated for use with custom and small order designs both for circuit boards and chips.
The present invention is directed to overcoming these difficulties.
Summary of the Invention
In one aspect of the invention, an electrical circuit comprises a plurality of layers, each including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulating means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another . layer, with at least some of the electrical pathways having substantially repeating patterns and with at least the first .and second layers 'having substantially the same repeating patterns. Each pathway of each layer comprises means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer. Some portions of the patterns, including the communication means, of one layer are at least partially aligned with some portions of the pattern including the communication means-'of another layer with the one layer moved and repositioned relative to the another layer and with other portions of the pattern remaining unaligned.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the electrical circuit can comprise a single layer including electrical pathways with repeating patterns.
The method of the invention includes providing an insulation base and then providing electrical pathways thereon which are comprised of regular and repeating patterns. The method further includes the step of selectively severing portions of the pathways to provide the desired circuit.
_.OMW In another aspect of the invention, the pathways are severed by the use of a laser. The design of the patterns themselves is such that at points where it would be desirable to have the pathway severed, the pathways which are located on several layers are unaligned. Thus no matter what layer the pathway is on, the laser can easily access the pathway without interrupting any other pathway.
In another aspect of the invention, the electrical pathways include means for receiving pins of wire-wrap circuit boards. These means can accept the pins and provide a proper electrical contact with the pins.
In yet another aspect of the invention, first and second layers can be interconnected by a third layer of discrete nodes with communicating means. In this aspect, the positioning of the nodes is selected by a programmed photoplotter so that the appropriate pathways are communicated between the first and second layer. If all the nodes were selected, a regular grid would be es¬ tablished which would communicate with each communication means of the first and second layers. The photoplotter selects the appropriate nodes to complete the electrical circuit and only those are deposited on the third layer.
The present invention can be used with conventional wire-wrap printed circuit boards .without the necessity of actually wire-wrapping the connections. The circuits are made using the severing technique indicated above and then one or more the layers are urged onto the pins of the wire-wrap board.- Thus the circuits are completed in a minimum of time as compared with the conventional wire-wrapping technique. Also it should be understood that if required, after the circuit of the invention is urged onto the wire-wrap board, that further connections can be made with the conventional wire-wrap techniques. The problems associated with wire-wraps such as the time involved in removing wires when a terminal is incorrectly connected, and the time involved in locating breaks hidden by the insulation due to the stress placed on the wire by the wire-wrap tool, are solved by this invention.
It should also be understood that the present invention can be used to replace conventional circuit boards which are used in other than a wire-wrap environment.
It is also to be understood that the present invention can be used for customizing microchips and for other chip carrier and chip package manufacture. With microchips, the various layers of the invention are laid down and then a laser used to sever the pathways as desired to create the desired electrical circuitry. As the layers are comprised of substantially repeating patterns, each layer is substantially level and thus there is less of a resolution problem or focusing problem which leads to improperly deposited materials. Also, there tends to be a reduction in the number of convoluted pathways which cross excessively between layers.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 depicts a layer of an embodiment of the in¬ vention with repeating electrical pathways.
Figure 2 depicts the electrical pathways of Figure 1 with a laser path described thereon.
Figure 3 depicts the electrical pathway of Figure 1 with select pathways severed.
Figure 4 depicts the electrical pathways of Figure 1 moved one position to the right and superimposed on a second layer which is identical to the pathway config¬ uration in Figure 1.
Figure 5 depicts eight layers superimposed on each other, the two layer set of Figure 4 providing the base with three similar sets being rotated 90°, 180° and 270° with reference to the base and aligned under the base.
Figure 6a through 6h depict several methods of severing the pathways. Figure 7 depicts pins of a wire-wrap circuit board positioned above the electrical circuitry of the invention.
Figure 8 depicts several layers of the electrical circuitry of the invention being in engagement with a pin of the wire-wrap circuit board.
Figure 9 depicts an another embodiment of the pathway of the electrical circuit with several of the pathways pre-severed.
Figure 10 depicts a different configuration of the pathway of the embodiment of Figure 9.
Figure 11 depicts the alignment of the layer of Figure 9 over the layer of Figure 10.
Figure 12 depicts a matrix of electrical shunts which are used with the invention of Figure 11.
Figure 13 depicts a layer of electrical pathways in accordance with another embodiment of the invention.
Figure 14 depicts a layer of a plurality of nodes in accordance with the embodiment of Figure 13.
Figure 15 depicts a perspective view of the electrical circuit comprised of the layers such as depicted in Figures 13 and 14.
Figure 16 is yet another embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 17 depicts the layer .of the invention of Figure 16 translated and superimposed over a similar layer.
Figure 18 depicts the two-layer configuration of
Figure 17 used as a base with a separate two-layer configuration rotated by 90° and aligned with the base configuration.
Figure 19 depicts another embodiment of the invention wherein a single layer has pathways which are somewhat similar to the two-layer combination of pathways in Figure 17.
Figure 20 is a combination of two layers, a base layer similar to Figure 19 which is superimposed over a similar layer which has been rotated by 90°.
OMfl Figure 21 is yet another embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 22 is an embodiment of the present invention with the pathways of Figure 21 superimposed over a layer of pathways which are comprised of a mirror image of the pathways of Figure 21.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiment
With reference to the figures and in particular to Figure 1, layer 30 of the electrical circuit 32 of the invention is depicted. Layer 30 is comprised of an insulation substrate 34 which can be comprised of a plastic as, for example, kapton which is a polyimide of the thermo-setting variety which can be between one-half and five mils thick. This particular plastic was selected as it can be used during a soldering operation and will not melt, although it does .tend to char. Electrical pathways 36, 38 defined on substrate 34. In a preferred embodiment, the electrical pathways 36, 38 are comprised of copper and are from one-and-one-eighth to one-and-one-half mils thick. In a preferred embodiment, these electrical pathways are configured by making a uniform deposit of copper onto the substrate 34 and then, using photomask and etching techniques, removing the undesired copper to leave the electrical paths 36 and 38. As can be seen in Figure 1, these electrical paths are comprised of repeating patterns which include different patterns 40 and 42. Pattern 40 is similar to pattern 42, however, it includes several more electrical traces such as traces 44 and 46 than does the pattern 42. In fact, a substantial amount of the pattern 40 can be superimposed over and aligned with the pattern 42, with only some of the patterns being nonalignable, such as for example, the traces 44 and 46 and the traces that are located on either side thereof. As is evident from Figure 1, electrical path 36 is first composed of pattern 40, then pattern 42, and then repeats pattern 40 and can continue in that arrangement. Pathway 38 is first composed of pattern 42, then pattern 40, and then repeats pattern 42 and can continue in that arrangement.
Pattern 40 is comprised of a center flower-shaped communication means 48 through which a pin of, for example, a wire-wrap circuit board can be inserted so as to expand the flower without breaking any of the traces and allow for electrical communication between the pathway and the pin. As can be seen in Figure 1, the flower is composed of eight substantially identical wedge-shaped sections 50, pairs of which are joined together at the center to form quarter sections of the flower, with the quarter sections of the flower being joined together at the periphery of the flower to form the entire flower. Due to this wedge-shaped arrangement, the center of the flower can be pushed out or expanded without disturbing the electrical connection between the wedge-shaped sections. The pattern 42 further includes other communication means which include nodes or junctions 52, 54, 56 and 58. These nodes are placed at 90° intervals about the flower-shaped communication means 48. Pattern 40 further includes a baseline trace 60 which communicates with nodes 52 and 58 by previously indicated traces 44 and 46. Nodes 54 and 56 communicate with baseline trace 60 by traces 62 and 64, which are accurate in nature and extend about the flower-shaped communication means 48, but which are substantially parallel to the traces 44 and 46 as traces 62, 64 approach the baseline trace 60. Further, traces 66 and 68 communicate the flower-shaped communication means 48 with the baseline trace 60. As will be discussed further herebelow, nodes 52 through 58 include blind vias which provide communication between the various layers of the electrical circuit of the invention, which layers may be situated above or below the layer as depicted in Figure 1. Plated through holes can be substituted for the blind vias. It is to be understood that the flower-shaped communication means do not communicate with the other side of the insulation substrate material as the nodes with the vias do.
Further, pattern 40 includes interconnecting means, such as traces 70, 72, 74 and 76 which interconnect pattern 40 with the other adjacent patterns 42 form a matrix of patterns 40 and 42.
Pattern 42 is comprised of a similar flower-shaped communication means 78 with nodes 80 through 86 and baseline trace 88. Nodes 80, 82, 84 and 86 all communicate with a common trace 90 which is described about the flower-shaped communication means 78 and which communicates with baseline trace 88. The flower-shaped communication means 78 also communicates with baseline trace 88 through traces 92, 94 and 96. As is evident from the figures, traces 92, 94 and 96 of pattern 42 are substantially parallel, as are traces 44, 46, 66, 68, 61 and portions of traces 62 and 64 of pattern 40. The traces of pattern 40, lie along a laser- cut path such as cut path 91 in Figure 2. These traces are substantially perpendicular to this cut path 91. The same is true with the parallel traces of pattern 42. They lie along a laser cut path 93.
As will be more fully described hereinbelow, the elec¬ trical circuitry of the invention can be fabricated from the pathways 36 and 38 by selectively severing one or more of the portions of the traces which fall within the laser cut paths 91 and 93 by using a programmed and pulsing laser. As for example, in Figure 3 and in pathway 48, and pattern 40, if it is desired to communicate node 56 with interconnecting trace 70, the laser would sever traces 44, 62, 66, 64 and 58 and interconnecting trace 76. This altered pathway is shown by dotted line 97 which is included for clarity only and does not comprise a portion of the circuit. Similarly, if it is desired to communicate a node such as node 56 with node 52, the appropriate traces are severed, as shown in Figure 3, and line 98, which again is not part of this circuit but which is included for
_OMPI clarity only, shows the pathway which connects node 56 with node 52.
While it is to be understood that single layers be used for the complete electrical circuitry, it is also the intent of the invention to use multiple layers such as layer 30 to comprise the electrical circuitry of the invention. Thus multiple parallel layers, although identical in pattern and pattern arrangement, can be moved with respect to each other to form circuits in the third dimension. The movement of the layers with respect to each other can be by translational or rotational or mirror image moves with mirror imaging the electrical patterns would be produced on the reverse side of the layer. The moves can also be combinations of all three of these types of moves.
Figure 4 depicts a translational movement of the elec¬ trical pathways 36 and 38 of the layer 30 of Figure 1 to the right and positioned over a second layer 100 which includes pathway 102 and 104 which are identical to pathways 38 and 36 respectively. Thus in effect, a pathway similar to pathway 36 is placed over a pathway similarly to pathway 38. As can be seen in Figure 4, a great majority of the patterns of the two pathways are substantially aligned with, for the most part, the traces which are parallel and communicate directly with baseline trace 60 and baseline trace 88 being nonaligned. In fact, there is no overlapping or aligning of the parallel traces which are directly connected to these baseline trace 60 and 88. The reason for this is that these traces lie on the laser cut paths such as cut paths 92 and 94 in Figure 2, and thus the laser can be pulsed to selectively sever any one of these traces without severing a trace lying thereunder.
For the pattern in the upper left-hand corner of the electric circuitry in Figure 4, pattern 40 is imposed upon pattern' 42. Nodes 52, 54, 56 and 58 of pattern 40 communicate with nodes 80, 82, 84 and 86 of pattern 42. Again these nodes include blind vias which communicate the nodes of the adjacent layer. For purposes of identification, the set of first layer 30 and second layer 100 in Figure 4 is identified as 110 and is so indicated in Figure 5. Figure 5 includes eight layers of pathways which are identical to the first layer which is shown in Figure 1. Each of these layers is rotated or translated with respect to the first layer 30. To more conveniently describe Figure 5, the set of layers 110 in Figure 4 is so identified in Figure 5 and similarly position. The other six layers are comprised of two layer sets which are similar to Figure 4 but which have been rotated 90°, 180° and 270° from the first two layer set 110. These sets are identified as 112, 114 and 116 respectively.
The electric circuitry of the invention can be fabricated in one of several ways. As shown in Figure 6a and b, the circuitry is composed of four layers, 118 through 132. The cross-section shown is to be taken along a laser cut path. The traces in the laser cut path are identified by the number 111, 113, 115 and 117.
These traces are parallel and unaligned. In this arrangement, the layers which are located above each of the traces have a window provided therein so that there is an open column above each of the traces. A laser such as laser 134 can be positioned above.- the appropriate trace and used to sever that, trace, as is indicated in Figure 6b.
The laser is controlled by a writing program which can be selectively programmed according to the circuitry requirements so that the laser pulses and severs the appropriate traces.
The same arrangement is shown in Figure 6c with no windows provided above the traces to be severed. In this situation, the substrate would be transparent to the laser emission which would selectively sever the appropriate trace as shown in 6d. It is also possible to have a laser of one wavelength used to burn a hole in the substrate and then have a laser of a different wavelength used to sever the trace. With respect to Figures 6e and f, a laser is provided for simply burning through the substrate and the trace with one blast. Again it is to be remembered that circuitry including a single layer can be made in the above manner.
Once one or more layers of the the circuitry is completed and appropriate traces are severed, a circuit board which is used for wire wrapping purposes, such as board 140 in Figure 7, is positioned over the first layer 142 of this -circuit with the pins 144, 146 positioned above the centers of the flower-shaped communication means such as means 48. A backer board 148 is positioned underneath the layer 142 or can be initially associated with the layer. The pins are forced down into communication with and pierce the flower-shaped communication means so that good contact is made (Fig.8). This simple process eliminates the entire need for using the prior art wire-warp technique. However, it is to be understood that should additional circuits be required in the board, that the traditional wire-wrap technique can be μsed in combination with circuit board 142 by simply wrapping the wires around the pins 144 and 146 which extend beyond layer 142.
It is to be understood that the backer board can be removed and additional layers can be forced onto the wire-wrap pins with the backer board left on with the last layer. Also the backer board can be left on with each layer. Further it is to be understood that the fit between the backer board and the pin is essentially a forced fit with the pin being rectangular or circular and larger than a circular hole being provided through the backer board. As the cover deposit 150 is on the upper surface of each layer 142 the pathways are placed in intimate contact with the pin during this force fit.
It is to be understood that this embodiment can be used to provide electrical circuitry without the use of wire-wrap boards as is contemplated by some of the following embodiments. Another embodiment of the invention is shown in Figures 9 through 12. This embodiment includes a first pattern 200 which is similar to pattern 40 in Figure 1 except for the fact that the parallel traces 202 through 218 are severed or have a discontinuity with nodes such as nodes 220 and 222 defining each end of the discontinuity. These nodes include plated through holes which communicate with the other side of the insulating material. Blind vias could also be used. This pattern additionally includes free nodes such as nodes 224, 225, and 226 which relay communication with other patterns of other layers. Figure 10 depicts a pattern 230 which is substantially similar to pattern 42 of Figure 2. Pattern 230 includes traces 232, 234, and 236 which are discontinuous and which have nodes such as nodes 238 and 240 which include plated through holes. With the pattern of Figure 9 imposed upon the pattern of Figure 10 as depicted in Figure 11, a substantial amount of the patterns are aligned, with the unaligned portions remaining the traces as in the previous embodiments. It is to be understood that the free nodes 224 and 225 of the pattern .200 in Figure 9 align with the nodes 238 and 240 at the end of the discontinuous trace 232. The nodes at the discontinuous traces and the free nodes form columns which communicate to the upper surface of the last layer. The final layer, which- includes a plurality of discreet shunts such as shunt 242 (Figure 12) and which included blind vias or plated through holes, is then placed on top of the upper layer of the previous layers of patterns in order to complete the circuitry. A laser such as laser 244 can selectively sever the isolated shunts such as shunt 242 without having to penetrate the remaining layers as shown in Figure 6h.
With the exception of the above indicated discrete shunts, the construction and method of use of this embodiment of the invention is identical to the embodiment shown in Figures 1 through 5. It is to be understood that in both of these embodi¬ ments, the layers can perform if desired a separate function. For example, one layer can be essentially provide voltage, while another layer can be a ground plane. Other layers can be exclusively signal layers. Further it is to be understood that as the layers are relatively thin and as the electric circuit which is comprised of one or more layers is itself relatively thin, redundant circuitry can be built into a system with relatively little cost and small space requirements, simply by adding redundant layers.
Another embodiment of the invention is shown in Figures 13, 14 and 15. This embodiment includes a first layer which has a substrate of a isolation material upon which is deposited discreet isolated pathways, such as pathways 246, 248, 250, 252, 254 and 256. Pathways 248, 252, 254 and 256 are essentially straight parallel - pathways, and pathways 246 and 2*50 are straight parallel pathways, with pathways 246 and 250 substantially perpendicular to the above pathways. Interspersed between the pathways are nodes which include node 258 and 260 with are shown as blind vias but which could be plated through holes. It is to be understood that many other patterns of pathways can be constructed for all or some of the layers of multilayer circuitry, as for example, having each discrete pathway be replaced by two similar and parallel isolated pathways and be within the scope and meaning of the invention. All of the other layers which comprise the circuit y of this embodiment can be comprised of the identical same pattern as is provided on the layer in Figure 13, but which have been displaced through translation, rotation, or mirror imaging relative to the layer shown in Figure 13.
In this embodiment, an intermediate layer between any two layers such as constructed in accordance with Figure 13 is provided to communicate between these two layers. Such an intermediate layer is shown in Figure 14. Figure 14 is essentially comprised of a matrix of potential locations which can have copper deposited thereon through use of a masks made from a photoplotter, which are used to communicate the layer immediately thereabove with the layer immediately therebelow. The dotted lines indicate areas where no copper was deposited but where copper could be deposited in order to make the various communications. The solid squares indicate where copper was deposited.
Figure 15 shows a circuit comprised of three layers, the upper layer 270 being identical to the layer of Figure 13, and the lower layer 272 being identical to the layer 270, but translated and repositioned with respect to upper layer 272 to form, with the cooperation of the pattern of Figure 14, which forms the intermediate layer, certain pathways. As can be seen in Figure 15, two separate and discreet pathways are formed-. The first pathway 274 includes a first trace 276, which through node 278 acts as a junction and fans out to three traces, 280, 282 and 284. Nodes 286 and 288 and also 290 and 292 which are defined in the pattern of Figure 14 provide the necessary communications between the upper layer 270 and the lower layer 272 to accomplish the fan-out from a single trace to three traces. In this embodiment, as is evident, no laser cutting is required.
A second pathway 292 crosses the pathway 274. This second pathway 292 is formed in the same way as pathway 274 in that the isolated shunts of each of the upper and lower layers are connected through the nodes of the intermediate layer. Where the pathway 274 and 292 cross, no node is formed immediately between the discrete shunts 294 and 296. Thus second pathway 292 does not communicate with pathway 274.
As is evident from Figure 15, the nodes, which are located between the shunts, only communicate with the nodes of other layers. These nodes can be all communicated through a common ground plane and can form shields between the various circuits. An electronic circuit of the invention using this embodiment can be fabricated in the following way. First, layers similar to the layer in Figure 13 are made much in the same way the layers in Figure 1 are made. Then a photoplotter is used to provide the necessary mask to make the layer in Figure 14, according to the circuitry desired, which is then fabricated similarly to Figure 1. The layers are then mated, and the mated layers forming the electrical circuits are in turn mated to a circuit board to which can be mounted the chips and other components of the circuit. Additionally if the required, the chips, or packages or carriers can be mounted directly to the upper layer of the electrical circuitry.
Further it is to be understood that layers similar to those in Figures 13, 14 and 15 can be used for producing • the final metallization layers of for example a gate array. As each layer is substantially uniform, these metallization ,layers are less rough than those currently used in gate array technology, and thus the focusing and deposition problems which occur after two metallization layers have been deposited on the gate array are of little significance. Further there is less likelihood that any of the circuits will have to snake around excessively in order to provide the necessary connections. These layers would be made using standard fabrication techniques known in the industry.
In another embodiment of the invention as shown in Figures 16, 17 and 18, the first layer is comprised of a plurality of identical and continuous but isolated pathways 302 through 308. Each of these pathways is comprised of repeating S-shaped patterns. each pathway includes a projecting trace such as traces 310 and 312, which include at the end thereof nodes such as 314 and 316 with plated through holes which communicate with the other surface of the layer. Located opposite each of the projecting traces such as traces 310 and 312 are isolated nodes such as nodes 318 and 320. Each of these nodes includes a plated through hole which communicates with the other surface of the layer.
Figure 17 includes a composite of a first layer 322, which is composed of traces which are oriented in a manner similar to those in Figure 16, which is superimposed on a second layer 324 which is similar to the layer of Figure 16 but which has been translated over and up in order to form substantially hourglass patterns between the two layers. It is noted that the projecting traces 326 and 328 with the associated nodes 327 and 329 of the pathway 325 of the first layer 222 communicate with the isolated nodes 330, 332 of the pathway 334 of the second layer 324.
In Figure 18 a two-layer configuration of Figure 17 is used as a base configuration 340 with projecting traces 310 and 312. This configuration is superimposed over another . configuration which is similar to Figure 17 but which has been rotated by 90° and includes projecting traces 342 and 344 which communicate with the other traces 310 arid 312 with the appropriate nodes such as nodes 320. 322. This arrangement of four layers of pathways such as pathway 302 in Figure 16 produces an alternating pattern of large octagons 346 and adjacent squares 348.
As depicted in Figure 18, no two traces such as traces 310, 312, 342 and 344 are located under or over another trace, and all these .traces describe laser cut paths such as cut path 348. Thus a laser can be used to selectively sever the traces to form .the appropriate electrical circuitry. Also- it should be understood that the sections of the pathways which form the squares such as square 348 are all on separate layers and also that they are not aligned within the other pathway which is located above or below. Thus these portions of the pathways are prime for being severed, if required, by a laser.
Such circuitry is principally used in non-wire-wrap situations, although with the addition of the flower-shaped communication means located in the octagonal portions, wire-wrap board usage is made possible. Again, as with the
OMPI previous embodiment, this embodiment can be used to construct the metallization layers of a gate array.
Figure 19 is similar to Figure 17 except for the path¬ ways 400, 402, 404 and 406 that are all located on the same layer. Further nodes which include plated through holes are located at every position where the pathways change direction. As, for example, one S-shaped portion 408 of pathway 400 includes nodes 410, 412, 414 and 416.
The configuration of Figure 20 is quite similar to" that of Figure 18, with each square configuration, such as configuration 418, having a node, such as nodes 420 through 426, at each corner, which allow these two layers to communicate with each other. As in the embodiment in Figure 18, laser cut paths, such as 428 and 430, can selectively sever the portions of the pathways which are located between the nodes to create the various desired electrical circuitry. Again it should be noted that none of the portion of the pathways which are located between these nodes are aligned with any other pathways. Thus the laser can conveniently sever that portion of a pathway without interrupting any other pathway.
Finally the embodiment as shown in Figures 21 and 22 includes a first layer 500 which has pathways 502, 506 and 508. Each pathway includes selected nodes such as nodes 510, 512 and 514 which occur on the slanted portions of the S-shaped pattern. This type of an arrangement is especially useful for mirror imaging, as is shown in Figure 22. In Figure 22, the first layer 500 is superimposed upon a second layer which is comprised of a mirror image of a first layer. The nodes, with plated through holes, communicate the first layer 500 with the second layer 514. It is to be understood that in a mirror image situation, a mirror image of the layer must be produced on a second layer, and that the second layer cannot be merely flipped over. In this arrangement, the mirror image effect can be acquired be simply rotating one pathway be 180° with respect to a second pathway to produce the mirror image effect.
Again the electrical circuitry depicted in Figure 22 can be fabricated and used in much the same manner as the circuitry depicted in Figures 16 through 20.
It is further to be understood that during the step where a laser is used to sever the pathways, the laser can be appropriately defocused and used to burn or char the isolation material so that the appropriate identifiers can be placed on the circuitry to locate where components are to be mounted and connections are to be made.
Other aspects, objects and advantages of the invention can be discerned from a study of the figures and the appended claims.

Claims

I claim:
1. An electrical circuit comprising: a plurality of layers, each including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another layer; at least some of the electrical pathway having at least one substantially repeating pattern, with at least the first and second layers having substantially the same repeating pattern; each pathway of each layer comprising means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; some portion of said pattern, including said communication means of a first layer being at least partially aligned with some portion of said pattern, including said communication means of a second layer with the first layer moved «and repositioned relative to the second layer with other portions of said pattern remaining unaligned.
2. The electrical circuit of claim 1 comprising: a third layer interleaved between said first and second layers with pathways including discrete nodes and communicating means for selectively communicating with the pathways of the first and second layers.
3. The electrical circuit of claim 1 wherein said insulation means includes a substrate of insulation material with substantially planar surfaces and wherein said pathways are located on one of said planar surfaces.
4. The electrical circuit of claim 1 wherein said pathways are selectively severable.
5. An electrical circuit comprising: a plurality of layers, each including a plurality of electrical pathways, each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another; at least some of said electrical pathway being comprised of one or more repeating patterns; at least some of said layers being comprised of substantially the same electrical pathways with the same repeating patterns positioned in the same manner with respect to each other as the other layers; at least some of the pathways of said some of the layers comprising means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; and some portions of said patterns of one of said layers, including said communicating means of said one layer, being at least partially aligned with some portions of said patterns for another of s id layer, including said communicating means of said another layer, with said one layer moved and repositioned relative to said another layer, with other portions of said patterns remaining unaligned.
6. The electrical circuit of claim 5 including means for electrically interconnected at least some of the electrical pathways of at least said some of the layers.
7. The electrical circuit of claim 5 wherein said communicating means electrically connect the electrical pathways of each layer into a matrix.
8. The electrical circuit of claim 5 wherein with at least one layer displaced with respect to and positioned on top of another layer and with the aligned portions of the patterns of each layer aligned, said unaligned portion of said patterns describe a substantially straight path.
9. The electrical circuit of claim 5 wherein each pathway is comprised of a first and a second pattern, said first pattern repeating itself in some regular manner with respect to the second pattern.
10. The electrical circuit of claim 5 including first and second layers, each of which have first and second patterns, which patterns have similar portions, wherein the similar portion of the first pattern is aligned with similar portion of said second pattern when one layer is moved relative to another layer and the first pattern on one layer is placed over the second pattern of another layer.
11. The electrical circuit of claim 10 wherein another portion of said first pattern is unaligned with another portion of said second pattern, and said unaligned portions of the first and second patterns of the two layers define at least one substantially straight path.
12. The electrical circuit of claim 11 wherein said unaligned portions of said first and second patterns are selectively severable.
13. The electrical circuit of -claim 5 wherein the communicating means includes vias.
14. The electrical circuit of claim 5 for use with the pin matrix arrangement of a wire-wrap circuit board wherein: said communicating means includes means adapted for securely and electrically engaging the pins of the wire-wrap board.
15. The electrical circuit of claim 14 wherein the pin engaging means are expandable as one of the pins of the wire-wrap boards is urged therethrough.
16. The electrical circuit of claim 5 wherein: some of said pathways have discontinuous portions; and each pathway includes additional communicating means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layers, said additional communicating means being located in pairs in the pathways, one each of said pairs located on each end of the discontinuous portions.
17. The electrical circuit of claim 16 wherein with one layer repositioned with respect to an adjacent layer, all of the additional communicating means are aligned and further including an additional layer including a plurality of discrete shunt means for communicating said pairs of additional communicating means.
18. The electrical circuit of claim 17 wherein said shunt means are severable.
19. An electrical circuit for use with the pin matrix arrangement of a wire-wrap circuit board comprising: a layer including a plurality of electrical pathways, said layer otherwise/ being comprised of insulating material; each electrical pathway being comprised of one or more repeating patterns; each pathway comprising communicating means adapted for making external connections; interconnect means for interconnecting into a matrix the electrical pathways wherein at least some portions of said pathways and said interconnect means are severable; and wherein some of said communicating means include means adapted for securely and electrically engaging the pins of the wire-wrap board.
20. The electrical circuit of claim 19 wherein said some of said engaging means are expandable as one of the pins of the wire-wrap board is urged therethrough.
21. An electrical circuit comprising: a plurality of layers, each including a plurality of electrical pathways, and each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another layer; said plurality of electrical pathways on at least some of said layers being comprised of discrete shunts which are arranged in a repeating pattern; communicating means located on each layer for communicating the pathways of that layer with the next adjacent layers; at least some of said communicating means being alignable such that with one layer, moved and repositioned relative to another layer, said communicating means are aligned and with the rest of the pathways being substantially unaligned; at least one intermediate layer having electrical pathways comprised of substantially discrete communicating means selectively arranged for selectively communicating the communicating means of the discrete shunts of one layer with the communicating means of the discrete shunts of another adjacent layer which the intermediate layer located between said one and said another layer and the another layer repositioned with respect to the one layer.
22. The electrical circuit of claim 21 wherein said one layer and said another adjacent layers have the same repeating pattern.
23. The electrical circuit of claim 21 wherein said one layer and said another adjacent layers have different repeating patterns.
24. The electrical circuit of claim 21 wherein each layer has a matrix of discrete additional communicating means which are alignable with the matrix of discrete additional communicating means of the other layers for communicating all the layers, the alignment of said discrete additional communicating means of said layers forming electrical column means for providing circuit shielding.
25. An electrical circuit comprising: a plurality of layers, each including a plurality of discrete electrical pathways, each layers including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another; each electrical pathway being comprised of the same repeating patterns; each layers being comprised of the same electrical pathways with the same repeating patterns positioned in the same manner with respect to each other as the other layers; each pathway of each layer comprising means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; and some portion of said patterns and said communicating means of one layer.being at least partially aligned with some portions of said patterns and said communicating means of another layer with said one layer moved and repositioned relative to said another layer, and with other portions of said pattern remaining unaligned and with at least the communicating means being aligned.
26. The electrical circuit of claim 25 wherein the one layer is translated with respect to the another layer with some portions of the patterns and the communicating means of the one layer being aligned with some portions of the patterns and the communication means of the another layer.
-fussy,
OMPI
27. The electrical circuit of claim 25 wherein the one layer is rotated with respect to the another layer with some portions of the patterns and the communicating means of the one layer being aligned with some portions of the patterns and the communication means of the another layer.
28. The electrical circuit of claim 25 wherein the one layer is a mirror image with respect to the another layer with some portions of the patterns and the communicating means of the one layer being aligned with some portions of the patterns and the communication means of the another layer.
29. A method for providing an electrical circuit comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of layers, each layer including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another, layer; providing at least some of the electrical pathway with at least one substantially repeating patterns; providing each pathway of each layer with communicating means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; and repositioning the first" layer with respect to the second layer with some portion of the patterns including the communicating means of a first layer being at least partially aligned with some portion of the pattern, including said communication means of a second layer, with other portions of the patterns remaining unaligned.
30. The method of claim 29 including the step of: selectively severing portions of the unaligned portions of the patterns.
OMPI
31. The method of claim 30 including the step of: using a laser to selectively sever the unaligned portions of the patterns.
32. The method of claim 29 including the step of: providing a third layer interleaved between said first and second, and selectively providing discrete nodes with communication means on said third layer for communicating between selected portions of the pathways of the first and second layer.
33. The method of claim 29 including the step of: translating the first layer with respect to the second layer.
34. The method of claim 29 including step of: rotating the first layer with respect to' the second layer.
35. The method of claim 29 including the step of: moving the first layer so that it is a mirror image of the second layer.
36. A method of providing an electrical circuit for use with the pin matrix arrangement of a wire-wrap circuit board comprising the steps of: providing at least one layer including a plurality of electrical pathways, said layer otherwise being comprised of insulating material;
providing each electrical pathway with one or more repeating patterns; providing each pathway with communicating means for making connections with the pins of the wire-wrap board. providing interconnect means for interconnecting into a matrix the electrical pathways whrerein at least
OMP some portions of said pathways and said interconnect means are severable; selectively severing portions of the electrical poathways; and urging the communication means into contact with the pins of the wire-wrap board.
37. A method for providing an electrical circuit comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of layers, each layer including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another layer; providing at least some of the electrical pathway, with substantially repeating patterns, with at least the first and second layers having substantially the same repeating patterns; providing each pathway of each layer with communicating means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; and repositioning the first layer with respect to the second layer with some portion of the patterns including the communication means of a first layer being at least partially aligned with some portion of the patterns, including said communication means of a second layer, with other portions of the patterns remaining unaligned; providing discontinuous portions in said pathways of the first and second layers associated with at least some of the σommunicting means; locating additional communicating means, for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer in pairs in the pathways, one each of said pairs on each end of the discontinuous portion in said pathways; providing an additional layer including a plurality of discrete shunt means for communicating pairs of additional communicating means; and selectively severing the shunt means.
38. The method of claim 37 including the step of: using a laser to selectively sever the discrete shunt means.
39. A method for providing an electrical circuit for one of a chip, a chip package and a chip carrier and the like including the steps of: providing a plurality of layers, each layer including one or more electrical pathways, each layer including insulation means for insulating at least part of any one layer from another layer; providing at least some of the electrical pathway with at least one substantially repeating patterns; providing each pathway of each layer with communicating means for communicating with the pathways of the next adjacent layer; and repositioning one layer with respect to another layer with the communication means of the one layer being at least partially aligned with some portion of the patterns, including said communication means of the other layer, with other portions of the patterns remaining unaligned.
40. The method of claim 39 wherein the step of providing a plurality of layer includes the steps: providing a substrate of the insulating material; and separately providing the electrical pathways on the insulating material.
OMPI
PCT/US1984/002043 1983-12-15 1984-12-12 Partially aligned multi-layered circuitry WO1985002751A1 (en)

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BR8407221A BR8407221A (en) 1983-12-15 1984-12-12 ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT AND PROCESS TO PROVIDE AN ELECTRIC CIRCUIT

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US56191783A 1983-12-15 1983-12-15
US561,917 1990-08-02

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JP (1) JPS61500697A (en)
AU (1) AU3747585A (en)
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CA (1) CA1223085A (en)
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0166762A4 (en) 1986-05-16
EP0166762A1 (en) 1986-01-08
IL73839A0 (en) 1985-03-31
CA1223085A (en) 1987-06-16
IL73839A (en) 1988-05-31
AU3747585A (en) 1985-06-26
BR8407221A (en) 1985-11-26
JPS61500697A (en) 1986-04-10

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