Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


US3214292A - Gold plating - Google Patents

Gold plating
Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3214292A
US3214292AUS223239AUS22323962AUS3214292AUS 3214292 AUS3214292 AUS 3214292AUS 223239 AUS223239 AUS 223239AUS 22323962 AUS22323962 AUS 22323962AUS 3214292 AUS3214292 AUS 3214292A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
gold
solution
plating
acid
bath
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US223239A
Inventor
Gwynne I Edson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Western Electric Co Inc
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 Western Electric Co IncfiledCriticalWestern Electric Co Inc
Priority to US223239ApriorityCriticalpatent/US3214292A/en
Priority to GB34167/63Aprioritypatent/GB1056353A/en
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US3214292ApublicationCriticalpatent/US3214292A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
Expired - Lifetimelegal-statusCriticalCurrent

Links

Classifications

Definitions

Landscapes

Description

United States Patent 3,214,292 GOLD PLATING Gwynne I. Edson, Bethlehem, Pa., assignor to Western Electric Company, Incorporated, New York, N.Y., a corporation of New York No Drawing. Filed Sept. 12, 1962, Ser. No. 223,239 6 Claims. (Cl. 117-227) The present invention relates generally to electroless gold plating methods and solutions, and more particularly to electroless plating with acidic potassium gold cyanide solutions free of extrinsic chemical reducing agents.
In semiconductor fabrication, gold-plated surfaces are extensively employed primarily to produce an ohmic contact with a semiconductor material, such as silicon or germanium. However, the gold-plated surface also serves to provide a controlled diffusion base for gold metal, to protect certain surfaces from chemical attack during acid etching, to protect surfaces from oxidation and corrosion, and to permit other metals to be easily soldered thereto. Depending on the type of semiconductor device, the gold may be plated directly on the semiconductor material, on the fabricated piece part, or on both.
Various methods including vacuum deposition, electrodeposition, immersion, and electroless deposition are methods commonly employed in gold plating. However, one major difliculty found with the use of such methods is the limitation of the thickness deposit. Another difiiculty is the procurement of a suitable adhesion of the gold plate to the base material. Other difliculties generally encountered are low deposition rates, inconsistent porosity of the gold deposit, and the inability to use all the gold in the plating bath, thereby resulting in high cost.
Accordingly, the object of this invention is an improved method of gold plating metallic surfaces.
Another object of this invention is an improved immersion method of gold plating to permit an increased thickness deposit on the base material.
Another object of this invention is an improved immersion method of gold plating semiconductor surfaces to improve the adhesive strength of the gold plate to the base material.
The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the present invention, together with further objects and advantages thereof, will be understood from the following description in which the invention is illustrated by way of example.
The term immersion plating as utilized herein is the reduction of the gold ions in the plating solution to the metallic state through electrical energy produced by the potential difference which exists between the metal of the base material to be plated and said gold ions. It is to be expressly understood that no external source of electricity is employed and thus no electrode (anode) is required.
Heretofore, a generally known type of immersion plating formulation utilized was that having a potassium gold cyanide bath wherein either potassium hydroxide was added to produce a high pH or carbonates were added to produce a moderate alkaline pH, such as that disclosed in Patent 2,976,181, issued to R. R. Brookshire, March 21, 1961. I have discovered, however, that the usage of a potassium gold cyanide bath having an acidic pH ranging from 2.0 to 3.5 results not only in a superior adhesion of the gold plate to the base material but also in an increased thickness deposit with substantially all the gold from the bath being plated.
In general, the solution or bath for plating or coating the base material contains potassium gold cyanide of approximately 67 percent gold content (12.5 grams/ liter) in approximately 1000 ml. of distilled or deionized water.
A soluble acid or acid salt agent forming one of the basic components of the electrolyte is added to the bath, said acid agent being either a strong or a weak acid or a combination of acids or acid salts, such agents including hydrofluoric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, sulfuric acid, ammonium fluoride, and acetic acid. The pH of the solution is of a value in the range of 2.0 to 3.5 and is adjusted to a prescribed value by the addition of ammonium hydroxide. The temperature of the solution is maintained between 70 C. and 100 C. and the time required for plating most base materials ranges from about 10-30 minutes. The deposition rate varies with the acid agent used, the pH, and the temperature; for example, the deposition rate may be increased by raising the temperature or by adding a particular acid to lower the pH. However, such a deposition rate increase may affect the adhesion of the deposit.
Examples of base semiconductor materials, metals and alloys which have been coated or plated with gold by the practice of the present invention include silicon, germanium, Kovar, copper, nickel, electroless nickel, solder, silver, titanium, chromium, brass, stainless steel, tantalum and gold. It is to be understood that the term base metallic surface" used herein and in the claims includes any of the metals, semiconductor materials and alloys hereinbefore mentioned.
It is apparent that the values stated in the ranges set forth above in the general plate formulation will vary according to the particular type base material plated, since there are different requirements for the plated base materials. For example, in the semiconductor art it is required that an electrical contact be made to the plated base material, the type of contact utilized varying widely and therefore necessitating the usage of a different type plated surface. The following are illustrative examples of plating bath compositions for certain base materials, the conditions and ranges being in accordance with the present invention and the quantities, where applicable, being expressed in terms of grams per liter.
EXAMPLE I Gold plating of germanium Potassium gold cyanide 12.5 grams/liter (67% gold content). Deionized water To required volume. Sulfuric acid pH 2.5-3.0. Temperature -85 C.
EXAMPLE II Gold plating of silicon Potassium gold cyanide 12.5 grams/liter (67% gold content). Deionized water As required. Sulfuric acid pH 3.03.5. Hydrofluoric acid pH 2.53.0. Temperature Start at 70 C. and increase to 80-85 C. after initial deposit has formed.
It is believed that the sulfuric acid stabilizes the bath while the hydrofluoric acid used in Example II activates the silicon surface.
It is further believed that the gold in each formula is deposited from the potassium gold cyanide molecule and not from an acid salt of gold such as gold sulphate, gold fluoride, or gold chloride, as evidenced by the fact that said acid salt decomposes in hot water and therefore could not exist in the heated plate bath described in this invention.
It has been found that the above-described plating formulations are capable of depositing effectively percent of the gold contained in the bath. An experiment was conducted to determine the precise quantity of gold that could be plated from a typical acidic bath while yet producing sound gold deposits. Accordingly, a fifty ml. immersion gold bath containing 418.7 mg. of gold was acidified with sulfuric acid to a pH of 2.5 and operated at 8085 C. The results disclosed that 42.5 square inches of germanium had a deposit of 204.8 mg. of gold, the average thickness of the gold being 15 microinches. From the same bath 28.5 square inches of Kovar was gold plated with 193.2 mg. of gold deposit having an average thickness of 21 microinches. Thus, 398 mg. of gold was successfully plated from a gold bath having 418.7 mg. of gold therein, a balance of 20.7 mg. of gold remaining in the bath. However, it is to be especially noted that the balance of 20.7 mg. of gold was found to be drag-out losses and that a spectographic analysis of the spent solution showed that only 0.02 mg. of gold actually remained in the bath. It is also noted that a uniform, adherent deposit resulted on each base material utilized and that further experimentation resulted in the achievement of bulk handling.
The purity of the deposited gold is quite important in producing satisfactory ohmic contact to the gold plated silicon or germanium wafer of a semiconductor. In certain cases antimony must be present in the gold to produce a degenerate contact on N-type semiconductor- When the antimony gold plate is used to create a degenerate ohmic contact, it is desirable to sinter the antimony gold into the germanium base material not for adhesion but to acquire optimum contact characteristics. The bath life at a pH of 2.5 varies greatly with the acid used to suppress the pH. Bath life may be as short as -15 minutes or up to many hours, depending on the acids used. It is noted, however, that hath life does not indicate the useful life of the bath since the precipitate may be redissolved by raising the pH and the bath used to exhaustion of the gold solution.
It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are simply illustrative of the application of the principles of the invention. Numerous other arrangements may be readily devised by those skilled in the art which will embody the principles of the invention and fall within the spirit and scope thereof.
What is claimed is:
1. An electroless method of gold plating a metallic surface, which comprises contacting the surface to be plated with a solution consisting essentially of an aqueous solution of potassium gold cyanide, the gold content of the potassium gold cyanide being at least 67% by weight, and a sufficient quantity of an acid to set the pH of the solution at a value between 2.0 and 3.5, the solution being free of extrinsic chemical reducing agents such as hypophosphite and hydrazine compositions.
2. The method as recited in claim 1, wherein the temperature of the solution during plating is between and 100 C.
3. The method as recited in claim 1, wherein the solution is acidified with a mineral acid selected from the group consisting of sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid and mixtures of any of the foregoing with a fluoride selected from the group consisting of ammonium fluoride and hydrofluoric acid.
4. An electroless method of gold plating a germanium surface, which comprises contacting the surface to be plated with a plating solution consisting essentially of an aqueous solution of potassium gold cyanide, the gold content of the potassium gold cyanide being at least 67% by weight, and a sufiicient quantity of sulfuric acid to set the pH of the solution at a value between 2.5 and 3.0, the solution being free of extrinsic chemical reducing agents such as hypophosphite and hydrazine compositions, the solution being heated to a temperature between and C.
5. The method as recited in claim 4, wherein the solution additionally contains approximately 0.25 gram per liter of potassium antimonial tartrate.
6. An electroless method of gold plating a silicon surface, which comprises contacting the surface to be plated with a plating solution consisting essentially of an aqueous solution of potassium gold cyanide, the gold content of the potassium gold cyanide being at least 67% by weight, a sufficient quantity of sulfuric acid to set the pH of the solution at a value between 3.0 and 3.5, and a sufiicient quantity of hydrofluoric acid to activate the silicon surface and to set the pH at a final value of 2.5 to 3.0, the solution being free of extrinsic chemical reducing agents such as hypophosphite and hydrazine compositions, the solution being initially heated to a temperature of about 70 C. and being further heated after an initial gold deposit has formed to a temperature between 80 and 85 C.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,814,589 11/57 Waltz 117-130 X 2,836,515 5/58 McNally 117-130 2,937,962 5/60 Kitchens et al 148-333 2,983,854 5/61 Pearson 148-333 3,013,955 12/61 Roberts 117-130 X 3,032,436 5/62 Gostin et al 117-130 OTHER REFERENCES Lee: Corrosion Technology, March 1963, TA 462 C68, p. 68.
Parker: Plating, June 1959, TS 670 A3, pp. 622-623.
RICHARD D. NEVIUS, Primary Examiner. WILLI M D- N, Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. AN ELECTROLESS METHOD OF GOLD PLATING A METALLIC SURFACE, WHICH COMPRISES CONTACTING THE SURFACE TO BE PLATED WITH A SOLUTION CONSISTING ESSENTIALLY OF AN AQUEOUS SOLUTION OF POTASSIUM GOLD CYANIDE, THE GOLD CONTENT OF THE POTASSIUM GOLD CYANIDE BEING AT LEAST 67% BY WEIGHT, AND A SUFFICIENT QUANTITY OF AN ACID TO SET THE PH OF THE SOLUTION AT A VALUE BETWEEN 2.2 AND 3.5, THE SOLUTION BEING FREE OF EXTRINSIC CHEMICAL REDUCING AGENTS SUCH AS HYPOPHOSPHITE AND HYDRAZINE COMPOSITIONS.
US223239A1962-09-121962-09-12Gold platingExpired - LifetimeUS3214292A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US223239AUS3214292A (en)1962-09-121962-09-12Gold plating
GB34167/63AGB1056353A (en)1962-09-121963-08-29Gold plating

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US223239AUS3214292A (en)1962-09-121962-09-12Gold plating

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US3214292Atrue US3214292A (en)1965-10-26

Family

ID=22835656

Family Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US223239AExpired - LifetimeUS3214292A (en)1962-09-121962-09-12Gold plating

Country Status (2)

CountryLink
US (1)US3214292A (en)
GB (1)GB1056353A (en)

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3393091A (en)*1964-08-251968-07-16Bosch Gmbh RobertMethod of producing semiconductor assemblies
US3427181A (en)*1964-10-011969-02-11Ferranti LtdDeposition of gold on a tin nickel surface
US3454473A (en)*1963-12-071969-07-08Matsushita Electric Industrial Co LtdMethod for the manufacture of titanium anodic oxidation film capacitors having non-electrolytically plated cathode
US3502548A (en)*1966-10-241970-03-24Ernest H Lyons JrMethod of electroplating gold on chromium
US3645774A (en)*1969-09-151972-02-29Amp IncGold coating by salt decomposition
US3890455A (en)*1972-06-231975-06-17IbmMethod of electrolessly plating alloys
US4005472A (en)*1975-05-191977-01-25National Semiconductor CorporationMethod for gold plating of metallic layers on semiconductive devices
US4082908A (en)*1976-05-051978-04-04Burr-Brown Research CorporationGold plating process and product produced thereby
US4162337A (en)*1977-11-141979-07-24Bell Telephone Laboratories, IncorporatedProcess for fabricating III-V semiconducting devices with electroless gold plating
US4188438A (en)*1975-06-021980-02-12National Semiconductor CorporationAntioxidant coating of copper parts for thermal compression gang bonding of semiconductive devices
US4374876A (en)*1981-06-021983-02-22Occidental Chemical CorporationProcess for the immersion deposition of gold
DE3343052A1 (en)*1982-12-011984-06-07Omi International Corp., 48089 Warren, Mich. AQUEOUS BATH FOR IMMEDIATE ELECTRICITY DEPOSITION OF GOLD ON METALLIZED CERAMICS AND A METHOD FOR ELECTRICALLY GOLD PLATING GEMALLIZED CERAMICS
US5395651A (en)*1989-05-041995-03-07Ad Tech Holdings LimitedDeposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US20060280872A1 (en)*2005-06-102006-12-14Enthone Inc.Method for direct metallization of non-conducting substrates
US20080057290A1 (en)*2005-02-252008-03-06Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such
US20080314295A1 (en)*2005-03-222008-12-25Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight concrete compositions
US20090081446A1 (en)*2007-09-202009-03-26Nova Chemicals Inc.Method of placing concrete
US20090078161A1 (en)*2007-09-202009-03-26Nova Chemicals Inc.Methods of minimizing concrete cracking and shrinkage
US7790302B2 (en)2005-02-252010-09-07Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
USD356160S (en)1992-09-041995-03-07Dart Industries Inc.Baby bottle

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2814589A (en)*1955-08-021957-11-26Bell Telephone Labor IncMethod of plating silicon
US2836515A (en)*1953-04-301958-05-27Westinghouse Electric CorpGold immersion solution for treating silver and method of applying same
US2937962A (en)*1957-03-201960-05-24Texas Instruments IncTransistor devices
US2983854A (en)*1960-04-051961-05-09Bell Telephone Labor IncSemiconductive device
US3013955A (en)*1959-04-291961-12-19Fairchild Camera Instr CoMethod of transistor manufacture
US3032436A (en)*1960-11-181962-05-01Metal Proc Co IncMethod and composition for plating by chemical reduction

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2836515A (en)*1953-04-301958-05-27Westinghouse Electric CorpGold immersion solution for treating silver and method of applying same
US2814589A (en)*1955-08-021957-11-26Bell Telephone Labor IncMethod of plating silicon
US2937962A (en)*1957-03-201960-05-24Texas Instruments IncTransistor devices
US3013955A (en)*1959-04-291961-12-19Fairchild Camera Instr CoMethod of transistor manufacture
US2983854A (en)*1960-04-051961-05-09Bell Telephone Labor IncSemiconductive device
US3032436A (en)*1960-11-181962-05-01Metal Proc Co IncMethod and composition for plating by chemical reduction

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3454473A (en)*1963-12-071969-07-08Matsushita Electric Industrial Co LtdMethod for the manufacture of titanium anodic oxidation film capacitors having non-electrolytically plated cathode
US3393091A (en)*1964-08-251968-07-16Bosch Gmbh RobertMethod of producing semiconductor assemblies
US3427181A (en)*1964-10-011969-02-11Ferranti LtdDeposition of gold on a tin nickel surface
US3502548A (en)*1966-10-241970-03-24Ernest H Lyons JrMethod of electroplating gold on chromium
US3645774A (en)*1969-09-151972-02-29Amp IncGold coating by salt decomposition
US3890455A (en)*1972-06-231975-06-17IbmMethod of electrolessly plating alloys
US4005472A (en)*1975-05-191977-01-25National Semiconductor CorporationMethod for gold plating of metallic layers on semiconductive devices
US4188438A (en)*1975-06-021980-02-12National Semiconductor CorporationAntioxidant coating of copper parts for thermal compression gang bonding of semiconductive devices
US4082908A (en)*1976-05-051978-04-04Burr-Brown Research CorporationGold plating process and product produced thereby
US4162337A (en)*1977-11-141979-07-24Bell Telephone Laboratories, IncorporatedProcess for fabricating III-V semiconducting devices with electroless gold plating
US4374876A (en)*1981-06-021983-02-22Occidental Chemical CorporationProcess for the immersion deposition of gold
DE3343052A1 (en)*1982-12-011984-06-07Omi International Corp., 48089 Warren, Mich. AQUEOUS BATH FOR IMMEDIATE ELECTRICITY DEPOSITION OF GOLD ON METALLIZED CERAMICS AND A METHOD FOR ELECTRICALLY GOLD PLATING GEMALLIZED CERAMICS
US5395651A (en)*1989-05-041995-03-07Ad Tech Holdings LimitedDeposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US5965204A (en)*1989-05-041999-10-12Ad Tech Holdings LimitedDeposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US6224983B1 (en)1989-05-042001-05-01Ad Tech Holdings LimitedDeposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US5747178A (en)*1989-05-041998-05-05Adtech HoldingDeposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US7790302B2 (en)2005-02-252010-09-07Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such
US20080057290A1 (en)*2005-02-252008-03-06Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such
US7964272B2 (en)2005-02-252011-06-21Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such
US7666258B2 (en)2005-02-252010-02-23Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight compositions and articles containing such
US20080314295A1 (en)*2005-03-222008-12-25Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight concrete compositions
USRE43253E1 (en)2005-03-222012-03-20Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight concrete compositions
US7699929B2 (en)2005-03-222010-04-20Nova Chemicals Inc.Lightweight concrete compositions
US20060280872A1 (en)*2005-06-102006-12-14Enthone Inc.Method for direct metallization of non-conducting substrates
US20090078161A1 (en)*2007-09-202009-03-26Nova Chemicals Inc.Methods of minimizing concrete cracking and shrinkage
US8048219B2 (en)2007-09-202011-11-01Nova Chemicals Inc.Method of placing concrete
US20090081446A1 (en)*2007-09-202009-03-26Nova Chemicals Inc.Method of placing concrete

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
GB1056353A (en)1967-01-25

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US3214292A (en)Gold plating
US2369620A (en)Method of coating cupreous metal with tin
US3152009A (en)Electroless nickel plating
US4194913A (en)Electroless tin and tin-lead alloy plating baths
US4093466A (en)Electroless tin and tin-lead alloy plating baths
CA1177204A (en)Process and composition for the immersion deposition of gold
BarkerElectroless deposition of metals
US3726771A (en)Process for chemical nickel plating of aluminum and its alloys
US4904544A (en)Zn-based composite-plated metallic material and plating method
US3489657A (en)Process for producing solderable aluminum materials
US3562000A (en)Process of electrolessly depositing metal coatings having metallic particles dispersed therethrough
USRE30434E (en)Electroless tin and tin-lead alloy plating baths
US3723078A (en)Electroless alloy coatings having metallic particles dispersed therethrough
US3178311A (en)Electroless plating process
NL6509350A (en)
US3285754A (en)Deposition of palladium
US3050410A (en)Method of coating aluminum with lead
Pearlstein et al.Electroless cobalt deposition from acid baths
US3953624A (en)Method of electrolessly depositing nickel-phosphorus alloys
US2928168A (en)Iron coated uranium and its production
US3697296A (en)Electroless gold plating bath and process
Warwick et al.The autocatalytic deposition of tin
US3274022A (en)Palladium deposition
US3065154A (en)Method of plating chromium and the like to titanium, its alloys, and the like
US3130072A (en)Silver-palladium immersion plating composition and process

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp