US20130176691A1 - Masks for use in applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, masked electronic assemblies and associated methods - Google Patents
Masks for use in applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, masked electronic assemblies and associated methods Download PDFInfo
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- US20130176691A1 US20130176691A1 US13/737,709 US201313737709A US2013176691A1 US 20130176691 A1 US20130176691 A1 US 20130176691A1 US 201313737709 A US201313737709 A US 201313737709A US 2013176691 A1 US2013176691 A1 US 2013176691A1
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- mask
- electronic assembly
- electronic
- assembly
- applying
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/02—Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/02104—Forming layers
- H01L21/02107—Forming insulating materials on a substrate
- H01L21/02296—Forming insulating materials on a substrate characterised by the treatment performed before or after the formation of the layer
- H01L21/02299—Forming insulating materials on a substrate characterised by the treatment performed before or after the formation of the layer pre-treatment
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B05—SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
- B05C—APPARATUS FOR APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
- B05C21/00—Accessories or implements for use in connection with applying liquids or other fluent materials to surfaces, not provided for in groups B05C1/00 - B05C19/00
- B05C21/005—Masking devices
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/02—Manufacture or treatment of semiconductor devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/027—Making masks on semiconductor bodies for further photolithographic processing not provided for in group H01L21/18 or H01L21/34
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L23/00—Details of semiconductor or other solid state devices
- H01L23/564—Details not otherwise provided for, e.g. protection against moisture
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K1/00—Printed circuits
- H05K1/02—Details
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K3/00—Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
- H05K3/22—Secondary treatment of printed circuits
- H05K3/28—Applying non-metallic protective coatings
- H05K3/284—Applying non-metallic protective coatings for encapsulating mounted components
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L2924/00—Indexing scheme for arrangements or methods for connecting or disconnecting semiconductor or solid-state bodies as covered by H01L24/00
- H01L2924/0001—Technical content checked by a classifier
- H01L2924/0002—Not covered by any one of groups H01L24/00, H01L24/00 and H01L2224/00
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K2203/00—Indexing scheme relating to apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits covered by H05K3/00
- H05K2203/01—Tools for processing; Objects used during processing
- H05K2203/0147—Carriers and holders
- H05K2203/0173—Template for holding a PCB having mounted components thereon
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K2203/00—Indexing scheme relating to apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits covered by H05K3/00
- H05K2203/05—Patterning and lithography; Masks; Details of resist
- H05K2203/0548—Masks
- H05K2203/0557—Non-printed masks
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K3/00—Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
- H05K3/0073—Masks not provided for in groups H05K3/02 - H05K3/46, e.g. for photomechanical production of patterned surfaces
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H05—ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H05K—PRINTED CIRCUITS; CASINGS OR CONSTRUCTIONAL DETAILS OF ELECTRIC APPARATUS; MANUFACTURE OF ASSEMBLAGES OF ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
- H05K3/00—Apparatus or processes for manufacturing printed circuits
- H05K3/22—Secondary treatment of printed circuits
- H05K3/28—Applying non-metallic protective coatings
-
- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10T—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
- Y10T29/00—Metal working
- Y10T29/49—Method of mechanical manufacture
- Y10T29/49002—Electrical device making
Definitions
- This disclosure relates generally to methods for applying protective (e.g., moisture-resistant, etc.) coatings to electronic assemblies. Such a method may include masking the electronic assembly prior to application of a protective coating to the electronic assembly. The present disclosure also relates to masks that may be used to shield portions of an electronic assembly during coating processes, as well as to masked electronic devices.
- protective e.g., moisture-resistant, etc.
- One or more masks may be used to control the application of material of a protective coating, or “protective material,” and, thus, the application of a protective coating to one or more portions of various components of an electronic device during assembly of the electronic device.
- a mask may be planar or substantially planar, or it may be nonplanar.
- the planarity (or nonplanarity) of a mask may result from the planarity (or nonplanarity) of the electronic assembly over which the mask is formed (e.g., when conformal coating processes are used, when the mask contacts or substantially contacts all of the portions of the surface of the electronic assembly that it covers, etc.).
- the term “protective coating” includes moisture-resistant coatings, as well as other coatings that protect various parts of an electronic assembly from external influences.
- moisture resistant refers to the ability of a coating to prevent exposure of a coated element or feature to moisture.
- a moisture-resistant coating may resist wetting or penetration by one or more types of moisture, or it may be impermeable or substantially impermeable to one or more types of moisture.
- a moisture-resistant coating may repel one or more types of moisture.
- a moisture-resistant coating may be impermeable to, substantially impermeable to or repel water, an aqueous solution (e.g., salt solutions, acidic solutions, basic solutions, drinks, etc.) or vapors of water or other aqueous materials (e.g., humidity, fogs, mists, etc.), wetness, etc.).
- an aqueous solution e.g., salt solutions, acidic solutions, basic solutions, drinks, etc.
- vapors of water or other aqueous materials e.g., humidity, fogs, mists, etc.
- wetness etc.
- moisture resistant may also refer to the ability of a coating to restrict permeation of or repel organic liquids or vapors (e.g., organic solvents, other organic materials in liquid or vapor form, etc.), as well as a variety of other substances or conditions that might pose a threat to an electronic device or its components.
- organic liquids or vapors e.g., organic solvents, other organic materials in liquid or vapor form, etc.
- Various aspects relating to the use of masks in the application of protective coatings are disclosed.
- a method for applying a protective coating to an electronic device includes assembling two or more components of the electronic device with one another. A mask may then be applied to the resulting electronic assembly. The mask may shield selected portions of the electronic assembly, while other portions of the electronic assembly, i.e., those to which a protective coating is to be applied, may remain exposed through the mask. With the mask in place, application of a protective coating to portions of the electronic assembly exposed through the mask may commence. After application of the protective coating, the mask may be removed from the electronic assembly. In some embodiments, one or more additional components may then be added to an electronic assembly to which a protective coating has been applied. Another mask may be applied to this larger electronic assembly, and another protective coating may then be applied to areas of the larger electronic assembly that are exposed through the mask.
- the mask may be formed on the electronic assembly.
- the mask may be selectively formed on, defined on or applied to areas of the electronic assembly that are exposed, but not to be covered with a protective coating.
- such areas may include components from which a protective coating may interfere with thermal transmission or features whose functionality may be detrimentally affected by protective coating.
- Non-limiting examples of the latter include various transducers (e.g., audio elements, such as microphones, speakers, etc.; camera lenses; etc.), features with moving parts (e.g., silent mode vibrating elements, autofocus elements of camera lenses, etc.), communication components (e.g., communication ports, power ports, audio jacks, etc.), memory card receptacles (e.g., for secure digital (SD) cards, subscriber identity module (SIM) cards, universal serial bus (USB) or micro USB ports, etc.) and the like.
- a variety of techniques may be used to form a mask on an electronic assembly, define a mask on an electronic assembly, or otherwise selectively apply a mask to an electronic assembly.
- a mask material may be selectively applied to areas of the electronic assembly that are to remain free from coverage by a protective coating.
- a mask material may be applied over an entire area of an electronic assembly then selectively removed from locations to which a protective coating is to be applied.
- the mask may be selectively removed from the electronic assembly.
- a mask that has been defined in place may be mechanically removed from the electronic assembly.
- mechanical removal include peeling and abrasion (e.g., with frozen gas (e.g., carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), nitrogen (N 2 ), etc.), corn starch, sand, glass, etc.).
- a mask that has been defined in place may be chemically removed from the electronic assembly.
- the defined-in-place mask may be removed with selectivity over the material of the protective coating (i.e., the protective coating may remain intact over desired locations of the electronic assembly).
- the mask may comprise a preformed apparatus, which may include one or more elements configured to be assembled with the electronic assembly and, optionally, with one or more other elements of the preformed mask.
- a seal or a sealing agent e.g., an elastomer, etc.
- the seal may comprise a part of the preformed mask that is configured for assembly against the electronic assembly.
- a preformed mask may even be formed from a solid elastomeric material that will function as a seal.
- a seal or sealing agent may be configured for application to one or both of the preformed mask and the electronic assembly before the preformed mask is assembled with the electronic assembly.
- the seal or sealing agent may define a discrete boundary between each masked region and its adjacent region(s) that is (are) to be covered with a protective coating to prevent the introduction of protective material at locations between the electronic assembly and the preformed mask and, thus, may enable the formation of a protective coating with a discrete periphery.
- the sealing agent may comprise a material that is configured for selective application.
- the sealing agent may comprise an elastomer that may be viscous when first applied and subsequently solidify to form a seal and, thus, delineation between coated and uncoated regions.
- Non-limiting examples of sealing agents that are initially viscous then solidify include liquid latex and hot melt adhesive, which is typically referred to as “hot glue.”
- the sealing agent may remain relatively viscous. Examples of sealing agents that remain relatively viscous include gels, greases and other materials that will maintain their viscosity when subjected to elevated temperatures and/or pressures of the material deposition process.
- a preformed mask may comprise one or more features that interact with corresponding features of the electronic assembly to which they are configured to be assembled.
- a protruding feature may be positioned on an interior surface of the preformed mask to depress a button of the electronic assembly when the preformed mask is positioned on the electronic assembly.
- a a preformed mask may include one or more features that prevent the introduction of protective material into ports (e.g., communication ports, power ports, audio jacks, etc.) or receptacles (e.g., SIM card receptacles, memory card slots, etc.) of the electronic assembly. These features may be configured to cover ports or receptacles to keep the protective material out of these features, or these features may be configured to be received by the ports or receptacles.
- a preformed mask may be removed from an electronic assembly merely by disassembling the mask from the electronic assembly. Thereafter, the preformed mask may be cleaned. For example, protective material may coat portions of the preformed mask. A residue of a sealing agent may also remain on surfaces of the preformed mask following its removal from the electronic assembly. Once the mask has been cleaned, it may be reused; i.e., placed on another electronic assembly to mask portions of that electronic assembly as a protective coating is applied to other portions of the electronic assembly.
- An electronic assembly may be masked with a combination of preformed elements and elements that are defined on the electronic assembly.
- both preformed and defined-in-place mask elements may reside on an electronic assembly concurrently and, thus, be used simultaneously.
- one or more mask elements that are defined in place may be used at a different point in the process of assembling an electronic device than masks that include one or more preformed elements.
- a masked electronic assembly includes an electronic assembly and a mask.
- the mask may include one or more features that are defined in place on the electronic assembly, one or more preformed elements, or a combination of defined-in-place and preformed elements.
- FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment of a process in which a protective coating is applied to a portion of an electronic assembly, which process includes the assembly of at least two components of an electronic device, application of a mask to the electronic assembly formed by those components, application of the protective coating to the electronic assembly, and removal of the mask from the electronic assembly;
- FIGS. 2 through 4 are schematic representations of embodiments of electronic assemblies with masks and/or protective coatings on some, but not all, areas of their surfaces;
- FIG. 5 depicts an embodiment of a preformed mask configured to be placed on and disassembled from surfaces of an electronic assembly that are configured to be located within an interior of an electronic device;
- FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of a preformed mask with at least one feature that interacts with a corresponding feature of an electronic assembly or an electronic device when the preformed mask is placed on the electronic assembly or electronic device;
- FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a system for applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, showing a masking element, a protective coating element and a de-masking element.
- the disclosed subject matter includes methods for shielding selected surfaces or features of electronic assemblies during application of protective coatings (e.g., moisture resistant coatings, etc.) to the electronic assemblies and/or components of the electronic assemblies.
- a mask may shield one or more features of the electronic assembly and/or its components for a variety of reasons, including, without limitation, to enable electrical connectivity between components following application of the protective coating to the electronic assembly, to provide access to interactive features of an electronic device of which the electronic assembly is a part, for aesthetic purposes (e.g., to limit or prevent application of the protective coating to one or more exterior features of an electronic device, such as a display, etc.), to prevent interference with various components (e.g., features with moving parts, transducers, communication components, card receptacles, etc.), and to enable the transmission of light or other electromagnetic radiation to or from one or more components of the electronic assembly or a device of which the electronic assembly is a part.
- protective coatings e.g., moisture resistant coatings, etc.
- FIG. 1 a series of elements of a process 10 for applying a protective coating to an electronic assembly is described, as are embodiments of the manner in which masking, coating and related processes may fit into the process of assembling a finished electronic device.
- Various embodiments of electronic assemblies 100 , 100 ′, 100 ′′ are shown in FIGS. 2 through 4 .
- two or more components 102 , 104 of an electronic device e.g., a circuit board (e.g., printed wiring board, ceramic board, etc.); another carrier, such as a silicon interposer; etc.) and another electronic component, such as a packaged semiconductor device, an antenna, a display, another electronic subassembly including its own circuit board, etc.; two components of an electronic device; etc.
- an electronic device e.g., a circuit board (e.g., printed wiring board, ceramic board, etc.); another carrier, such as a silicon interposer; etc.) and another electronic component, such as a packaged semiconductor device, an antenna, a display, another electronic subassembly including its own circuit board, etc.; two components of an electronic device; etc.) are assembled with one another.
- a circuit board e.g., printed wiring board, ceramic board, etc.
- another carrier such as a silicon interposer; etc.
- another electronic component such as a packaged semiconductor device, an antenna, a
- the resulting electronic assembly 100 (which may comprise a finished electronic device or a device under assembly, or a subassembly) may include features that are to be located within a finished electronic device, features that are to be located on the outside of the finished electronic device or a combination of internal and external features.
- all or part of the electronic assembly 100 may be prepared before applying a mask 110 to selected areas of the electronic assembly 100 .
- preparation may include, but is not limited to, processes that will enable the mask to limit the application of one or more protective materials to masked areas of the electronic assembly.
- preparation of an electronic assembly may prevent adhesion of a mask to certain areas that are to be exposed laterally beyond or through the mask.
- an electronic assembly may be processed to facilitate adhesion of a protective material to certain areas of the electronic assembly to which a protective coating is to be applied.
- FIG. 2 shows the application of a sealing agent (e.g., by jetted printing, screen printing, spraying, etc.) or a seal 112 (e.g., by assembly processes, etc.) to selected portions of the electronic assembly 100 .
- a seal 112 or sealing agent may be applied to selected portions of a preformed embodiment of a mask 110 , or to selected portions of both the electronic assembly 100 and a preformed embodiment of a mask 110 .
- a protective coating may be limited to unmasked portions 108 of the electronic assembly 100 (i.e., portions that are exposed through the mask 110 ). Accordingly, at reference 22 of FIG. 1 , a mask 110 is applied to the electronic assembly.
- the mask 110 may be applied to an electronic assembly 100 in a way that prevents the protective material from contacting areas of the electronic assembly 100 that are covered by the mask 110 .
- a mask 110 may be formed or otherwise defined on the electronic assembly 100 , for example, by applying a mask material to the electronic assembly 100 .
- the mask material may comprise an unconsolidated material, such as a liquid or uncured material. As an unconsolidated mask material is applied to the electronic assembly 100 , it may at least partially conform to the contour of the electronic assembly 100 . In some embodiments, including those where the speed with which a mask may be removed is more desirable than the extent to which high aspect ratio features are masked, the mask 110 may only partially conform to the contour of the area of the electronic assembly 100 to which it applied.
- an unconsolidated mask material may be applied in a manner that minimizes the likelihood that any gaps will form between the mask 110 and the electronic assembly 100 , including situations where reliable masking of high aspect ratio features is desired.
- the mask 110 may conform substantially or completely to the contour of the area of the electronic assembly 100 to which it is applied.
- the viscosity, temperature and/or other properties of a masking material may affect its ability to conform and, thus, the extent to which it conforms to a surface to which it is applied.
- the mask material may then harden or cure.
- the application of a mask 110 to an electronic assembly 100 may include additional processing.
- the mask material may be applied under conditions (e.g., under a vacuum, etc.), at a temperature, etc. that minimizes or prevents the occurrence of gaps between the mask 110 and the electronic assembly.
- a mask material may comprise one or more films that are configured to be placed on and secured to the electronic assembly 100 .
- a masking film may be subjected to conditions that hold it in place in the electronic assembly 100 and/or secure it to the electronic assembly 100 .
- a masking film may be subjected to conditions that enable it to conform or substantially conform to the shape(s) of the surface(s) to which the masking film is applied. Without limitation, such conditions may include the selective application of pressure to the masking film in a manner that forces it against the surface(s) that are to be covered by a mask 110 . As an example, a positive pressure may be applied to force the masking film against a desired location of the electronic assembly 100 .
- a negative pressure such as a vacuum
- a negative pressure such as a vacuum
- positive pressure and negative pressure may be employed in conjunction with one another; for example, positive pressure may be momentarily applied (e.g., as a burst of gas or air, etc.) to press the masking film against the electronic assembly 100 , then a negative pressure may draw the masking film against the electronic assembly 100 ; holding it in place on the electronic assembly 100 .
- Heat may be applied to a masking film to increase its pliability and, thus, its ability to conform. Heat may also cause the masking film, or an adhesive on the masking film, to adhere to the surface of the electronic assembly.
- each film from which a mask 110 is to be formed comprises a material that will shrink when heated
- the masking film and, optionally, the electronic assembly 100 may be heated to enable the material to engage and/or adhere to features of the electronic assembly 100 that it covers.
- a masking film may have a thickness
- Nonlimiting examples of masking films that will shrink when heated include polyethylene films (e.g., that marketed by 3M Company of Maplewood, Minn., as Polyethylene Protective Tape 2E97C, etc.) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) films.
- An adhesive material e.g., a pressure-sensitive adhesive, a silicone coating, etc.
- a masking film may depend upon the desired thickness of the mask and, thus, may comprise any of a wide range of thicknesses.
- a masking film may have a thickness of about 2 mils (i.e., about 0.05 mm) to about 4 mils (i.e., about 0.1 mm).
- Masks 110 that are formed on electronic assemblies 100 may be configured for compatibility with the process(es) that will be used to form a protective coating on one or more parts of the electronic assembly 100 .
- relatively thin masks 110 may be used when a protective coating will be formed by directional or anisotropic deposition processes to avoid the occurrence of unprotected areas adjacent to the outer periphery of the mask 110 , which might otherwise occur due to shadowing if the mask 110 were thicker.
- masks 110 with openings that have one or more dimensions that exceed the mean free path of particles or molecules of protective material may be used to ensure that the thickness throughout the protective coating is uniform.
- a protective coating may be formed with areas that have different thicknesses than one another by forming a mask 110 with at least one opening that has one or more dimensions that exceed the mean free path of the particles or molecules that will form the protective coating and at least one opening that has one or more dimensions that are smaller than the mean free path of the particles or molecules of protective material that will form the protective coating.
- masks 110 that maintain good adhesion with, and remain in close contact with, electronic assemblies 100 when subjected to the conditions under which protective layers are formed are useful with a variety of different processes, including isotropic (i.e., multi-directional or from all directions) deposition processes, where protective material might otherwise creep under the edges of a mask 110 .
- a preformed mask 110 may be placed on, or assembled with, the electronic assembly 100 .
- Assembly of the preformed mask 110 with the electronic assembly 100 may be effected in such a way that the preformed mask 110 exerts force against the electronic assembly 100 , which may hold the preformed mask 110 in place and prevent exposure of areas covered by the preformed mask 110 to protective material.
- Such force may be achieved by application of pressure or force.
- a negative pressure such as a vacuum, may be applied to the mask 110 to pull it against the electronic assembly 100 .
- a positive pressure or force may be applied to the mask 110 to hold it against the electronic assembly 100 .
- a mask 110 that incorporates teachings of this disclosure may have a three-dimensional structure.
- a mask 110 may extend over portions of surfaces of an electronic assembly 100 that face in opposite or substantially opposite directions.
- a mask 110 may cover at least portions of opposite surfaces of an electronic assembly 100 or of a component of an electronic assembly 100 .
- a mask 110 may cover opposing, or facing, spaced-apart surfaces of two or more components.
- a protective coating 120 may be selectively applied to unmasked portions 108 of the electronic assembly 100 ′.
- a variety of processes may be used to apply a protective coating 120 to unmasked portions 108 of the electronic assembly 100 ′, including, without limitation, those disclosed by U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/736,753, filed on Jan. 8, 2013 and titled SYSTEMS FOR ASSEMBLING ELECTRONIC DEVICES WITH INTERNAL MOISTURE RESISTANT COATINGS (“the '753 application”) and those disclosed by U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/735,862, filed on Jan.
- the mask 110 may be removed from the electronic assembly 100 ′, leaving the protective coating 120 on selected portions (i.e., the previously exposed portions 108 ) of the electronic assembly 100 ′.
- An illustrative embodiment of the resulting electronic assembly 100 ′′ is shown in FIG. 4 .
- the masking and coating processes could occur during assembly of an electronic device and/or once assembly of the electronic device is complete.
- a mask may be applied manually, by automated equipment, or by a combination of both manual and automated processes.
- the mask When masking and coating occur during assembly of an electronic device, the mask may be applied to an electronic assembly 100 ( FIG. 2 ) immediately before a protective coating is formed on the electronic assembly 100 , or the mask may be applied to the electronic assembly 100 at one or more points during the assembly process that are most convenient or at which application of the mask 100 are most easily achieved.
- more than one protective coating may be applied to an electronic assembly and/or its components, in various stages of assembly. Accordingly, an assembly process may include a plurality of masking processes, a plurality of coating processes and a plurality of mask removal, or “de-masking,” processes.
- a protective coating is applied to a finished electronic device 100 ′′′ (which may take the place of the electronic device 100 in the process depicted by FIG. 1 )
- some disassembly of the electronic device 100 ′′′ may provide access to the components that require masking.
- Masking and coating may be followed by removal of the mask.
- the mask When the mask has been formed on an electronic assembly 100 ( FIG. 2 ) or on an electronic device 100 ′′′, it may be removed mechanically (e.g., by peeling, abrasion, etc.), chemically (e.g., by etching or dissolving material of the mask with selectivity over removal of the protective coating, etc.), by radiation (e.g., with laser beams, electron beams, X-rays, high intensity light, etc.), or by any other suitable means for mask removal.
- the mask comprises one or more preformed elements (see, e.g., FIGS. 5 and 6 )
- removal of the mask may comprise disassembly of the mask from the electronic assembly 100 ( FIG. 2 ).
- Individual components of an electronic assembly or the interior of an electronic device may be shielded from application of a material that forms a protective coating.
- These components may include electrical contacts, light transmission elements (e.g., cameras, projectors, etc.), sensors, and other components.
- These components may be masked with a reusable or disposable system that is specifically configured for the component geometry and location.
- This system may include a predetermined number of contact covers that can be applied to the electronic devices.
- the covers could be affixed by an adhesive, an elastic/pressure connection, a static connection, and/or geometrical constraints.
- This system could be made from multiple material types for both structural support and to ensure uniform contact to the shielded component.
- the points of contact to the electronic assembly or electronic device may uniformly and effectively seal the shielded feature or component from the protective coating deposition.
- These contact points may comprise a soft material (e.g., a polymer, such as silicone or latex, etc.), a grease, a gel, a curable liquid, or the like.
- a preformed mask 110 ′ may be configured to shield the exterior of a finished electronic device 100 ′′′ from a protective coating material.
- a preformed mask 110 ′ may have any of a variety of configurations. Without limitation, a preformed mask 110 ′ may include a snap-in fixture; a multi-part fixture that snaps or adheres together; a shrink-wrap coating that is activated by heat, UV radiation, or some other curing mechanism; a silicone or other polymer type cover; a cover that uses static or Van der Waals interactions to adhere; a gel or liquid that is applied to the exterior and cured; and masks that are printed directly on to the device exterior.
- a preformed mask may be disposable (i.e., configured to be used once) or it may be reusable. Following use, a reusable embodiment of a preformed mask may be cleaned other otherwise prepared before it is again applied to an electronic assembly or an electronic device.
- the electronic device 100 ′′′ includes one or more interface elements 108 (e.g., buttons, dials, switches, etc.), it may be desirable to shield one or more of the interface elements 108 from the protective coating. In some embodiments, it may be desirable to ensure that an interface element 108 (e.g., a button, switch, etc.) will make the necessary electrical contacts when placed in an “on” or connected position.
- the preformed mask 110 ′ may include one or more features 118 ′ (e.g., protrusions, etc.) for engaging a corresponding interface element 108 in the desired position (e.g., by depressing a button, by holding a switch in the appropriate position, etc.).
- one or more inserts may be assembled with the electronic device 100 ′′′ and/or the preformed mask 110 ′.
- the material and/or construction of the preformed mask 110 ′ e.g., its rigidity, stiffness, elasticity, shape, etc. may enable such a feature 118 ′ to accomplish its intended task.
- an external feature e.g., a tension band, etc.
- a mask preformed or formed on the electronic assembly or electronic device
- a protective coating is applied to all or part of an electronic assembly 100 ( FIG. 2 ) or electronic device 100 ′′′.
- the mask may be masked by applying a masking material that may cure or otherwise harden to define a mask.
- the masking material may comprise a liquid material or a gel material that may harden or cure over time or that may be cured by exposure to heat, a catalyst, electromagnetic (e.g., ultraviolet (UV), etc.) radiation, or another curing agent or condition.
- a selectively curable material e.g., a radiation curable material, etc.
- a selectively curable material may also, or alternatively, be employed as a moisture-resistant coating on portions of an electronic component, an assembly of electronic components, or an electronic device.
- a system for applying a protective coating to an electronic assembly may include a masking element, or station, that is configured to form a mask in accordance with teachings of this disclosure. Additionally, such a system may include one or more mask removal elements, or stations, also employing teachings of this disclosure.
- FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a system 200 for applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, showing a masking element 210 , a protective coating element 220 and a de-masking element 230 .
- a system 200 may include a corresponding number of masking elements 210 , protective coating elements 220 and de-masking elements 230 .
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Abstract
Description
- A claim for the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/584,939, filed on Jan. 10, 2012 and titled METHODS FOR MASKING ELECTRONIC DEVICES FOR APPLICATION OF PROTECTIVE RESISTANT COATINGS THERETO, MASKS FOR USE IN APPLYING PROTECTIVE COATINGS TO ELECTRONIC DEVICES AND MASKED ELECTRONIC DEVICES (“the '939 Provisional Application”), is hereby made under 35 U.S.C. §119(e). The entire disclosure of the '939 Provisional Application is, by this reference, incorporated herein.
- This disclosure relates generally to methods for applying protective (e.g., moisture-resistant, etc.) coatings to electronic assemblies. Such a method may include masking the electronic assembly prior to application of a protective coating to the electronic assembly. The present disclosure also relates to masks that may be used to shield portions of an electronic assembly during coating processes, as well as to masked electronic devices.
- One or more masks may be used to control the application of material of a protective coating, or “protective material,” and, thus, the application of a protective coating to one or more portions of various components of an electronic device during assembly of the electronic device. A mask may be planar or substantially planar, or it may be nonplanar. The planarity (or nonplanarity) of a mask may result from the planarity (or nonplanarity) of the electronic assembly over which the mask is formed (e.g., when conformal coating processes are used, when the mask contacts or substantially contacts all of the portions of the surface of the electronic assembly that it covers, etc.).
- As used herein, the term “protective coating” includes moisture-resistant coatings, as well as other coatings that protect various parts of an electronic assembly from external influences. The term “moisture resistant” refers to the ability of a coating to prevent exposure of a coated element or feature to moisture. A moisture-resistant coating may resist wetting or penetration by one or more types of moisture, or it may be impermeable or substantially impermeable to one or more types of moisture. A moisture-resistant coating may repel one or more types of moisture. In some embodiments, a moisture-resistant coating may be impermeable to, substantially impermeable to or repel water, an aqueous solution (e.g., salt solutions, acidic solutions, basic solutions, drinks, etc.) or vapors of water or other aqueous materials (e.g., humidity, fogs, mists, etc.), wetness, etc.). Use of the term “moisture-resistant” to modify the term “coating” should not be considered to limit the scope of materials from which the coating protects one or more components of an electronic device. The term “moisture resistant” may also refer to the ability of a coating to restrict permeation of or repel organic liquids or vapors (e.g., organic solvents, other organic materials in liquid or vapor form, etc.), as well as a variety of other substances or conditions that might pose a threat to an electronic device or its components. Various aspects relating to the use of masks in the application of protective coatings are disclosed.
- In one aspect, a method for applying a protective coating to an electronic device includes assembling two or more components of the electronic device with one another. A mask may then be applied to the resulting electronic assembly. The mask may shield selected portions of the electronic assembly, while other portions of the electronic assembly, i.e., those to which a protective coating is to be applied, may remain exposed through the mask. With the mask in place, application of a protective coating to portions of the electronic assembly exposed through the mask may commence. After application of the protective coating, the mask may be removed from the electronic assembly. In some embodiments, one or more additional components may then be added to an electronic assembly to which a protective coating has been applied. Another mask may be applied to this larger electronic assembly, and another protective coating may then be applied to areas of the larger electronic assembly that are exposed through the mask.
- In some embodiments, the mask may be formed on the electronic assembly. The mask may be selectively formed on, defined on or applied to areas of the electronic assembly that are exposed, but not to be covered with a protective coating. Without limitation, such areas may include components from which a protective coating may interfere with thermal transmission or features whose functionality may be detrimentally affected by protective coating. Non-limiting examples of the latter include various transducers (e.g., audio elements, such as microphones, speakers, etc.; camera lenses; etc.), features with moving parts (e.g., silent mode vibrating elements, autofocus elements of camera lenses, etc.), communication components (e.g., communication ports, power ports, audio jacks, etc.), memory card receptacles (e.g., for secure digital (SD) cards, subscriber identity module (SIM) cards, universal serial bus (USB) or micro USB ports, etc.) and the like.
- A variety of techniques may be used to form a mask on an electronic assembly, define a mask on an electronic assembly, or otherwise selectively apply a mask to an electronic assembly. As one example, a mask material may be selectively applied to areas of the electronic assembly that are to remain free from coverage by a protective coating. As another example, a mask material may be applied over an entire area of an electronic assembly then selectively removed from locations to which a protective coating is to be applied.
- After a protective coating has been applied to portions of an electronic assembly exposed through a mask that was defined on the electronic assembly, the mask may be selectively removed from the electronic assembly. A mask that has been defined in place may be mechanically removed from the electronic assembly. Some non-limiting examples of mechanical removal include peeling and abrasion (e.g., with frozen gas (e.g., carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen (N2), etc.), corn starch, sand, glass, etc.). Alternatively, a mask that has been defined in place may be chemically removed from the electronic assembly. In embodiments where chemical removal techniques are employed, the defined-in-place mask may be removed with selectivity over the material of the protective coating (i.e., the protective coating may remain intact over desired locations of the electronic assembly). Although selective chemical removal processes may not have a significant chemical affect on portions of the protective coating that were formed over the mask, those portions of the protective coating may be “lifted off” of the electronic assembly as the mask is chemically removed from the assembly.
- In other embodiments, the mask may comprise a preformed apparatus, which may include one or more elements configured to be assembled with the electronic assembly and, optionally, with one or more other elements of the preformed mask. When a preformed mask is used in the application of a protective coating to an electronic assembly, a seal or a sealing agent (e.g., an elastomer, etc.) may be applied to a surface of the electronic assembly, and may reside between the electronic assembly and the mask once the mask is in place on the electronic assembly. In some embodiments, the seal may comprise a part of the preformed mask that is configured for assembly against the electronic assembly. A preformed mask may even be formed from a solid elastomeric material that will function as a seal. In other embodiments, a seal or sealing agent may be configured for application to one or both of the preformed mask and the electronic assembly before the preformed mask is assembled with the electronic assembly. When sufficient force is applied to one or both of the preformed mask and the electronic assembly in the appropriate direction(s), the seal or sealing agent may define a discrete boundary between each masked region and its adjacent region(s) that is (are) to be covered with a protective coating to prevent the introduction of protective material at locations between the electronic assembly and the preformed mask and, thus, may enable the formation of a protective coating with a discrete periphery.
- In embodiments where a sealing agent is applied to the electronic assembly or mask, the sealing agent may comprise a material that is configured for selective application. The sealing agent may comprise an elastomer that may be viscous when first applied and subsequently solidify to form a seal and, thus, delineation between coated and uncoated regions. Non-limiting examples of sealing agents that are initially viscous then solidify include liquid latex and hot melt adhesive, which is typically referred to as “hot glue.” Alternatively, the sealing agent may remain relatively viscous. Examples of sealing agents that remain relatively viscous include gels, greases and other materials that will maintain their viscosity when subjected to elevated temperatures and/or pressures of the material deposition process.
- A preformed mask may comprise one or more features that interact with corresponding features of the electronic assembly to which they are configured to be assembled. In a specific embodiment, a protruding feature may be positioned on an interior surface of the preformed mask to depress a button of the electronic assembly when the preformed mask is positioned on the electronic assembly. In another specific embodiment, a a preformed mask may include one or more features that prevent the introduction of protective material into ports (e.g., communication ports, power ports, audio jacks, etc.) or receptacles (e.g., SIM card receptacles, memory card slots, etc.) of the electronic assembly. These features may be configured to cover ports or receptacles to keep the protective material out of these features, or these features may be configured to be received by the ports or receptacles.
- Once the protective coating has been formed, a preformed mask may be removed from an electronic assembly merely by disassembling the mask from the electronic assembly. Thereafter, the preformed mask may be cleaned. For example, protective material may coat portions of the preformed mask. A residue of a sealing agent may also remain on surfaces of the preformed mask following its removal from the electronic assembly. Once the mask has been cleaned, it may be reused; i.e., placed on another electronic assembly to mask portions of that electronic assembly as a protective coating is applied to other portions of the electronic assembly.
- An electronic assembly may be masked with a combination of preformed elements and elements that are defined on the electronic assembly. In some embodiments, both preformed and defined-in-place mask elements may reside on an electronic assembly concurrently and, thus, be used simultaneously. In other embodiments, one or more mask elements that are defined in place may be used at a different point in the process of assembling an electronic device than masks that include one or more preformed elements.
- Embodiments of masked electronic assemblies are also disclosed. A masked electronic assembly includes an electronic assembly and a mask. The mask may include one or more features that are defined in place on the electronic assembly, one or more preformed elements, or a combination of defined-in-place and preformed elements.
- Other aspects, as well as features and advantages of various aspects, of the disclosed subject matter will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art though consideration of the ensuing description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
- In the drawings:
-
FIG. 1 illustrates an embodiment of a process in which a protective coating is applied to a portion of an electronic assembly, which process includes the assembly of at least two components of an electronic device, application of a mask to the electronic assembly formed by those components, application of the protective coating to the electronic assembly, and removal of the mask from the electronic assembly; -
FIGS. 2 through 4 are schematic representations of embodiments of electronic assemblies with masks and/or protective coatings on some, but not all, areas of their surfaces; -
FIG. 5 depicts an embodiment of a preformed mask configured to be placed on and disassembled from surfaces of an electronic assembly that are configured to be located within an interior of an electronic device; -
FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of a preformed mask with at least one feature that interacts with a corresponding feature of an electronic assembly or an electronic device when the preformed mask is placed on the electronic assembly or electronic device; and -
FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of a system for applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, showing a masking element, a protective coating element and a de-masking element. - The disclosed subject matter, in various embodiments, includes methods for shielding selected surfaces or features of electronic assemblies during application of protective coatings (e.g., moisture resistant coatings, etc.) to the electronic assemblies and/or components of the electronic assemblies. A mask may shield one or more features of the electronic assembly and/or its components for a variety of reasons, including, without limitation, to enable electrical connectivity between components following application of the protective coating to the electronic assembly, to provide access to interactive features of an electronic device of which the electronic assembly is a part, for aesthetic purposes (e.g., to limit or prevent application of the protective coating to one or more exterior features of an electronic device, such as a display, etc.), to prevent interference with various components (e.g., features with moving parts, transducers, communication components, card receptacles, etc.), and to enable the transmission of light or other electromagnetic radiation to or from one or more components of the electronic assembly or a device of which the electronic assembly is a part.
- With reference to
FIG. 1 , a series of elements of a process 10 for applying a protective coating to an electronic assembly is described, as are embodiments of the manner in which masking, coating and related processes may fit into the process of assembling a finished electronic device. Various embodiments ofelectronic assemblies FIGS. 2 through 4 . - At
reference 20 ofFIG. 1 , and with added reference toFIG. 2 , two ormore components - In some embodiments, all or part of the
electronic assembly 100 may be prepared before applying amask 110 to selected areas of theelectronic assembly 100. Such preparation may include, but is not limited to, processes that will enable the mask to limit the application of one or more protective materials to masked areas of the electronic assembly. As another option, preparation of an electronic assembly may prevent adhesion of a mask to certain areas that are to be exposed laterally beyond or through the mask. In yet another option, an electronic assembly may be processed to facilitate adhesion of a protective material to certain areas of the electronic assembly to which a protective coating is to be applied. Non-limiting examples of such processes include cleaning processes, processes for applying certain materials (e.g., sealants, release agents, etc.), processes for imparting one or more areas of a surface with a desired texture, and the like. In a specific embodiment,FIG. 2 shows the application of a sealing agent (e.g., by jetted printing, screen printing, spraying, etc.) or a seal 112 (e.g., by assembly processes, etc.) to selected portions of theelectronic assembly 100. Alternatively, aseal 112 or sealing agent may be applied to selected portions of a preformed embodiment of amask 110, or to selected portions of both theelectronic assembly 100 and a preformed embodiment of amask 110. - It may be desirable to prevent the application of a protective coating to one or
more surfaces 106 of theelectronic assembly 100; application of the protective coating may be limited tounmasked portions 108 of the electronic assembly 100 (i.e., portions that are exposed through the mask 110). Accordingly, atreference 22 ofFIG. 1 , amask 110 is applied to the electronic assembly. Themask 110 may be applied to anelectronic assembly 100 in a way that prevents the protective material from contacting areas of theelectronic assembly 100 that are covered by themask 110. - Manual or automated processes may be used to apply the
mask 110 to theelectronic assembly 100. Amask 110 may be formed or otherwise defined on theelectronic assembly 100, for example, by applying a mask material to theelectronic assembly 100. In some embodiments, the mask material may comprise an unconsolidated material, such as a liquid or uncured material. As an unconsolidated mask material is applied to theelectronic assembly 100, it may at least partially conform to the contour of theelectronic assembly 100. In some embodiments, including those where the speed with which a mask may be removed is more desirable than the extent to which high aspect ratio features are masked, themask 110 may only partially conform to the contour of the area of theelectronic assembly 100 to which it applied. In other embodiments, an unconsolidated mask material may be applied in a manner that minimizes the likelihood that any gaps will form between themask 110 and theelectronic assembly 100, including situations where reliable masking of high aspect ratio features is desired. In such embodiments, themask 110 may conform substantially or completely to the contour of the area of theelectronic assembly 100 to which it is applied. The viscosity, temperature and/or other properties of a masking material may affect its ability to conform and, thus, the extent to which it conforms to a surface to which it is applied. Once the mask material has been applied to selected locations of anelectronic assembly 100, the mask material may then harden or cure. In some embodiments, the application of amask 110 to anelectronic assembly 100 may include additional processing. As a non-limiting example, the mask material may be applied under conditions (e.g., under a vacuum, etc.), at a temperature, etc. that minimizes or prevents the occurrence of gaps between themask 110 and the electronic assembly. - In some embodiments, a mask material may comprise one or more films that are configured to be placed on and secured to the
electronic assembly 100. In some embodiments, such a masking film may be subjected to conditions that hold it in place in theelectronic assembly 100 and/or secure it to theelectronic assembly 100. In addition, a masking film may be subjected to conditions that enable it to conform or substantially conform to the shape(s) of the surface(s) to which the masking film is applied. Without limitation, such conditions may include the selective application of pressure to the masking film in a manner that forces it against the surface(s) that are to be covered by amask 110. As an example, a positive pressure may be applied to force the masking film against a desired location of theelectronic assembly 100. As another example, a negative pressure, such as a vacuum, may be applied to a masking film to draw the masking film against theelectronic assembly 100. Optionally, positive pressure and negative pressure may be employed in conjunction with one another; for example, positive pressure may be momentarily applied (e.g., as a burst of gas or air, etc.) to press the masking film against theelectronic assembly 100, then a negative pressure may draw the masking film against theelectronic assembly 100; holding it in place on theelectronic assembly 100. Heat may be applied to a masking film to increase its pliability and, thus, its ability to conform. Heat may also cause the masking film, or an adhesive on the masking film, to adhere to the surface of the electronic assembly. In embodiments where each film from which amask 110 is to be formed comprises a material that will shrink when heated, the masking film and, optionally, theelectronic assembly 100 may be heated to enable the material to engage and/or adhere to features of theelectronic assembly 100 that it covers. A masking film may have a thickness Nonlimiting examples of masking films that will shrink when heated include polyethylene films (e.g., that marketed by 3M Company of Maplewood, Minn., as Polyethylene Protective Tape 2E97C, etc.) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) films. An adhesive material (e.g., a pressure-sensitive adhesive, a silicone coating, etc.) may be provided on a surface of the masking film to enable it to be temporarily secured to a substrate before it is heated. The thickness of a masking film may depend upon the desired thickness of the mask and, thus, may comprise any of a wide range of thicknesses. By way of non-limiting example, in specific embodiments, a masking film may have a thickness of about 2 mils (i.e., about 0.05 mm) to about 4 mils (i.e., about 0.1 mm). -
Masks 110 that are formed onelectronic assemblies 100 may be configured for compatibility with the process(es) that will be used to form a protective coating on one or more parts of theelectronic assembly 100. As an example, relativelythin masks 110 may be used when a protective coating will be formed by directional or anisotropic deposition processes to avoid the occurrence of unprotected areas adjacent to the outer periphery of themask 110, which might otherwise occur due to shadowing if themask 110 were thicker. As another example, when anisotropic deposition processes will be used to form a protective coating, masks 110 with openings that have one or more dimensions that exceed the mean free path of particles or molecules of protective material may be used to ensure that the thickness throughout the protective coating is uniform. Conversely, a protective coating may be formed with areas that have different thicknesses than one another by forming amask 110 with at least one opening that has one or more dimensions that exceed the mean free path of the particles or molecules that will form the protective coating and at least one opening that has one or more dimensions that are smaller than the mean free path of the particles or molecules of protective material that will form the protective coating. In yet another example, masks 110 that maintain good adhesion with, and remain in close contact with,electronic assemblies 100 when subjected to the conditions under which protective layers are formed are useful with a variety of different processes, including isotropic (i.e., multi-directional or from all directions) deposition processes, where protective material might otherwise creep under the edges of amask 110. - Alternatively, a preformed
mask 110 may be placed on, or assembled with, theelectronic assembly 100. Assembly of the preformedmask 110 with theelectronic assembly 100 may be effected in such a way that the preformedmask 110 exerts force against theelectronic assembly 100, which may hold the preformedmask 110 in place and prevent exposure of areas covered by the preformedmask 110 to protective material. Such force may be achieved by application of pressure or force. For example, a negative pressure, such as a vacuum, may be applied to themask 110 to pull it against theelectronic assembly 100. As another example, a positive pressure or force may be applied to themask 110 to hold it against theelectronic assembly 100. - A
mask 110 that incorporates teachings of this disclosure may have a three-dimensional structure. In some embodiments, amask 110 may extend over portions of surfaces of anelectronic assembly 100 that face in opposite or substantially opposite directions. As an example, amask 110 may cover at least portions of opposite surfaces of anelectronic assembly 100 or of a component of anelectronic assembly 100. In another example, amask 110 may cover opposing, or facing, spaced-apart surfaces of two or more components. - Turning now to
FIG. 3 , and atreference 24 ofFIG. 1 , with themask 110 in place, aprotective coating 120 may be selectively applied to unmaskedportions 108 of theelectronic assembly 100′. A variety of processes may be used to apply aprotective coating 120 to unmaskedportions 108 of theelectronic assembly 100′, including, without limitation, those disclosed by U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/736,753, filed on Jan. 8, 2013 and titled SYSTEMS FOR ASSEMBLING ELECTRONIC DEVICES WITH INTERNAL MOISTURE RESISTANT COATINGS (“the '753 application”) and those disclosed by U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/735,862, filed on Jan. 7, 2013 and titled ELECTRONIC DEVICES WITH INTERNAL MOISTURE RESISTANT COATINGS (“the '862 application”). The entire disclosures of both the '753 application and the '862 application are, by this reference, incorporated herein. - Thereafter, at
reference 26 ofFIG. 1 , themask 110 may be removed from theelectronic assembly 100′, leaving theprotective coating 120 on selected portions (i.e., the previously exposed portions 108) of theelectronic assembly 100′. An illustrative embodiment of the resultingelectronic assembly 100″ is shown inFIG. 4 . - The masking and coating processes could occur during assembly of an electronic device and/or once assembly of the electronic device is complete. A mask may be applied manually, by automated equipment, or by a combination of both manual and automated processes. When masking and coating occur during assembly of an electronic device, the mask may be applied to an electronic assembly 100 (
FIG. 2 ) immediately before a protective coating is formed on theelectronic assembly 100, or the mask may be applied to theelectronic assembly 100 at one or more points during the assembly process that are most convenient or at which application of themask 100 are most easily achieved. In some embodiments, more than one protective coating may be applied to an electronic assembly and/or its components, in various stages of assembly. Accordingly, an assembly process may include a plurality of masking processes, a plurality of coating processes and a plurality of mask removal, or “de-masking,” processes. - In embodiments where a protective coating is applied to a finished
electronic device 100′″ (which may take the place of theelectronic device 100 in the process depicted byFIG. 1 ), some disassembly of theelectronic device 100′″ may provide access to the components that require masking. - Masking and coating may be followed by removal of the mask. When the mask has been formed on an electronic assembly 100 (
FIG. 2 ) or on anelectronic device 100′″, it may be removed mechanically (e.g., by peeling, abrasion, etc.), chemically (e.g., by etching or dissolving material of the mask with selectivity over removal of the protective coating, etc.), by radiation (e.g., with laser beams, electron beams, X-rays, high intensity light, etc.), or by any other suitable means for mask removal. In embodiments where the mask comprises one or more preformed elements (see, e.g.,FIGS. 5 and 6 ), removal of the mask may comprise disassembly of the mask from the electronic assembly 100 (FIG. 2 ). - Individual components of an electronic assembly or the interior of an electronic device may be shielded from application of a material that forms a protective coating. These components may include electrical contacts, light transmission elements (e.g., cameras, projectors, etc.), sensors, and other components. These components may be masked with a reusable or disposable system that is specifically configured for the component geometry and location. This system may include a predetermined number of contact covers that can be applied to the electronic devices. The covers could be affixed by an adhesive, an elastic/pressure connection, a static connection, and/or geometrical constraints. This system could be made from multiple material types for both structural support and to ensure uniform contact to the shielded component. The points of contact to the electronic assembly or electronic device may uniformly and effectively seal the shielded feature or component from the protective coating deposition. These contact points may comprise a soft material (e.g., a polymer, such as silicone or latex, etc.), a grease, a gel, a curable liquid, or the like.
- A preformed
mask 110′, such as that depicted byFIG. 6 , may be configured to shield the exterior of a finishedelectronic device 100′″ from a protective coating material. A preformedmask 110′ may have any of a variety of configurations. Without limitation, a preformedmask 110′ may include a snap-in fixture; a multi-part fixture that snaps or adheres together; a shrink-wrap coating that is activated by heat, UV radiation, or some other curing mechanism; a silicone or other polymer type cover; a cover that uses static or Van der Waals interactions to adhere; a gel or liquid that is applied to the exterior and cured; and masks that are printed directly on to the device exterior. A preformed mask may be disposable (i.e., configured to be used once) or it may be reusable. Following use, a reusable embodiment of a preformed mask may be cleaned other otherwise prepared before it is again applied to an electronic assembly or an electronic device. - In embodiments where the
electronic device 100′″ includes one or more interface elements 108 (e.g., buttons, dials, switches, etc.), it may be desirable to shield one or more of theinterface elements 108 from the protective coating. In some embodiments, it may be desirable to ensure that an interface element 108 (e.g., a button, switch, etc.) will make the necessary electrical contacts when placed in an “on” or connected position. In such embodiments, the preformedmask 110′ may include one or more features 118′ (e.g., protrusions, etc.) for engaging a correspondinginterface element 108 in the desired position (e.g., by depressing a button, by holding a switch in the appropriate position, etc.). Alternatively, one or more inserts may be assembled with theelectronic device 100′″ and/or the preformedmask 110′. In any embodiment, the material and/or construction of the preformedmask 110′ (e.g., its rigidity, stiffness, elasticity, shape, etc.) may enable such a feature 118′ to accomplish its intended task. - In an alternative embodiment, an external feature (e.g., a tension band, etc.) may be assembled or otherwise used in conjunction with a mask (preformed or formed on the electronic assembly or electronic device) to apply any force needed to engage and maintain an interface element 118′ in a desired position while a protective coating is applied to all or part of an electronic assembly 100 (
FIG. 2 ) orelectronic device 100′″. - In embodiments where the mask is formed on an electronic assembly or an electronic device, all or part of the electronic assembly or electronic device may be masked by applying a masking material that may cure or otherwise harden to define a mask. As a non-limiting example, the masking material may comprise a liquid material or a gel material that may harden or cure over time or that may be cured by exposure to heat, a catalyst, electromagnetic (e.g., ultraviolet (UV), etc.) radiation, or another curing agent or condition.
- In some embodiments, a selectively curable material (e.g., a radiation curable material, etc.) may also, or alternatively, be employed as a moisture-resistant coating on portions of an electronic component, an assembly of electronic components, or an electronic device.
- In another aspect, a system for applying a protective coating to an electronic assembly (see, e.g., the '753 application and the '862 application) may include a masking element, or station, that is configured to form a mask in accordance with teachings of this disclosure. Additionally, such a system may include one or more mask removal elements, or stations, also employing teachings of this disclosure.
FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of asystem 200 for applying protective coatings to electronic assemblies, showing amasking element 210, aprotective coating element 220 and ade-masking element 230. As a plurality of protective coatings may be applied to an electronic assembly, or electronic assemblies at various stages of assembly, during the assembly components to manufacture an electronic device, asystem 200 may include a corresponding number of maskingelements 210,protective coating elements 220 andde-masking elements 230. - Although the foregoing description contains many specifics, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of any of the appended claims, but merely as providing information pertinent to some specific embodiments that may fall within the scopes of the appended claims. Features from different embodiments may be employed in combination. In addition, other embodiments of the disclosed subject matter may also be devised which lie within the scopes of the appended claims. The scopes of the claims are, therefore, indicated and limited only by the plain language used in each claim and the legal equivalents to the elements recited by the claims. All additions, deletions and modifications to the disclosed subject matter that fall within the meaning and scopes of the claims are to be embraced by the claims.
Claims (27)
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US20130276978A1 (en) * | 2012-04-19 | 2013-10-24 | Intevac, Inc. | Dual-mask arrangement for solar cell fabrication |
US8773271B1 (en) | 2013-01-08 | 2014-07-08 | Hzo, Inc. | Apparatuses, systems, and methods for detecting and reacting to exposure of an electronic device to moisture |
WO2015192146A1 (en) * | 2014-06-13 | 2015-12-17 | Hzo, Inc. | Impermeable protective coatings through which electrical connections may be established and electronic devices including the impermeable protective coatings |
WO2016033248A1 (en) * | 2014-08-26 | 2016-03-03 | Hzo, Inc. | Use of combined masking techniques and/or combined material removal techniques to protectively coat electronic devices |
US9403236B2 (en) | 2013-01-08 | 2016-08-02 | Hzo, Inc. | Removal of selected portions of protective coatings from substrates |
US9502276B2 (en) | 2012-04-26 | 2016-11-22 | Intevac, Inc. | System architecture for vacuum processing |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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AU2013208114A1 (en) | 2014-03-20 |
US9627194B2 (en) | 2017-04-18 |
US20150072452A1 (en) | 2015-03-12 |
AU2013208114B2 (en) | 2014-10-30 |
EP2803083A1 (en) | 2014-11-19 |
EP2803083A4 (en) | 2014-12-31 |
WO2013106442A1 (en) | 2013-07-18 |
TW201347859A (en) | 2013-12-01 |
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