Monday, October 27, 2008

Stevenage changes solder mask process

UK based PCB producer Stevenage Circuits Ltd has decided to change its photo imageable solder mask from green matt spray resist, to matt spray resist.

After extensive testing, Stevenage Circuits Ltd has decided to change its photo imageable solder mask from the Electra Polymers EMP 110/1972 green matt spray resist, to the Sun Chemicals (Coates) XV501T4 ImagecureSMART matt spray resist. The ImagecureSMART resist conforms to IPC SM840C class H, and offers a number of technical advantages for both the fabrication process and for the increasingly challenging designs, Stevenage Circuits said.

The European PCB industry in comparison

Only 5 European countries were able to increase their PCB production in 2006: Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium and Italy.

The German PCB industry is leading the European production. The industry was able to increase production to €1054 million in 2006 (2005: €981 million)

Only 5 European countries were able to increase their PCB production in 2006: Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium and Italy. The ZVEI association has released figures for the European PCB industry, covering the years 2005 and 2006. The most recent figures for 2007 will be presented at the SMT Show in June in Nuremberg.

All other European countries had to report a decrease in production. The most prominent decrease was registered in Great Britain (€278 million to €252 million) and Spain (€193 million to €167 million).

European PCB manufacturers need to specialize more

As more and more production is being moved to facilities in Asia, European PCB manufacturers need to broaden their portfolio and specialties in order to survive.

In Europe, many companies focus on survival and profitability, rather than growth and capacity increase. Aspocomp for instance specialises in mobile phones, while Schweizer focuses on automotive. However, the problem with specialisation is that it is not always a guarantee for survival or growth. Companies need to learn that in order to survive they may need to add further specialties and expertise to their portfolio.

Additional to that many social differences between the regions and companies exist and have to be accounted for. European companies for instance have a lot more social conscience than North-American or Asian companies. European companies generally have more automation than North-American companies but not necessarily more than the larger Asian companies. North American companies have less employee turnover than European companies.

Turnover in Asia is mixed. Japan seems to be very good with employees having some loyalty. China seems to have a problem with turnover, greatly increasing the Chinese learning curve, experts said during the ECWC 11 World Conference held in Shanghai, China. North American companies have always led in providing special function technology. Thick copper, high speed materials, mixed laminates, difficult build-ups and special surface finishes. This may be the niche that continues to keep the North American PCB industry alive. Increasingly these PCB suppliers are being asked for shorter cycle times.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

New CEO at NCAB Danmark

PCB trading company NCAB Denmark is changing its CEO as the former CEO Tanja Christabel left the company and changed industry.

Bjarne Nielsen, former Sales Manager at PCB producer Elcon in Denmark is the new Chef Executive Officer for NCAB Denmark.

Bjarne Nielsen has in the past been running PCB producer Permeta in Denmark which was purchased by Elcon in 1999. At Elcom he was appointed Sales Manager where he worked since then.

PCB trading company NCAB has a strong focus on growth at all of its local offices; however Germany is the market in where the company put most of its focus at the moment.

Brandner invests in new equipment

Estonia based PCB producer Brandner has invested in new drilling power.
Explosive grow of micro-hole usage has been achieved at PCB producer Brandner through additional investments in the drilling power. The company now has a capacity of 1.000.000 holes per day the company said.

Monday, October 6, 2008

PCB market for Flex boards to increase

Flex has become the preferred technology for Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs). High-volume, surface-mount PCB applications, flip-chip and BGA packaging designers are also using flex circuits for their applications.

They are thinner, weigh less than rigid PCBs and have the ability to bend to fit into tight spaces. Flexible Printed Circuit Boards (FPC) addresses the increasing demand to maximize available space within the electronic assembly. Recently, the market for FPC has grown four times the rate of rigid boards.

Rigid-flex circuits are hybrid constructions that contain both rigid and flexible substrates laminated together into a single package. They usually have at least one FPC with the rigid PCBs and are multi-layered and double-sided. Copper traces in the flex section provide interconnection between the separated rigid portions.

Rigid-flex allows designers to replace multiple PCBs interconnected with connectors, wires, and ribbon cables within a single package, offering improved performance and reliability. This also offers cost reduction in terms of purchasing, supply chain and assembling. Rigid-flex allows designers to reduce weight while increasing the reliability of the interconnection. They also allow designers to work in 3D. The flex portions can be folded, twisted and rolled to follow the design of the mechanism. The electrical properties of the connectors are enhanced due to defined shielding and isolation. Rigid-flex circuits can accommodate EMI shielding layers, through-hole assembly, controlled impedance and other customer-specified electrical requirements, said Frost. Rigid-flex is quickly finding acceptance in a number of industries. From hand-held consumer electronics such as cell-phones, mp3 players to military aerospace industry, rigid-flex is gaining popularity. The medical devices industry has adopted rigid-flex for devices such as hearing aids and pacemakers.

Cost and design issues are the main challenges facing the rigid-flex market. Rigid-flex needs a different manner of design from the standard rigid PCBs.

The cost of the material used in the fabrication of the products is very high due to which the manufacturers of simple electronic applications that do not benefit from the advantages of flexible circuits and tend to avoid the products. The cost of raw material involved is a huge deterrent apart from the fabrication costs which works out to as much as five times that of a standard rigid PCB.

Driven by demand from medical, aviation and military industry as well as industrial and consumer electronics, the market for rigid-flex PCBs is growing extremely fast. The industry has maximum demand from communication and consumer electronics industries, according to Frost.Even though the flexible printed circuit market segment currently holds only a small portion of the entire printed circuit industry, its development has dramatically altered the landscape of the printed circuit market.

Among the different FPC types, rigid-flex is anticipated to the fastest growing accounting for about 33% of the total revenues from in flexible PCBs industry in 2012.

The industry is witnessing a convergence of rigid and flex. High Density Interconnect (HDI) with increased performance and functionalities, coupled with the increasing demand and applications in the end-user industries, is expected to drive the growth of the rigid-flex PCB market. With technology utilized in the rigid-flex expected to stabilize in the next 5-7 years, it is projected that this market will experience strong growth.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

New CEO at NCAB Danmark

PCB trading company NCAB Denmark is changing its CEO as the former CEO Tanja Christabel left the company and changed industry.

Bjarne Nielsen, former Sales Manager at PCB producer Elcon in Denmark is the new Chef Executive Officer for NCAB Denmark.

Bjarne Nielsen has in the past been running PCB producer Permeta in Denmark which was purchased by Elcon in 1999. At Elcom he was appointed Sales Manager where he worked since then.

PCB trading company NCAB has a strong focus on growth at all of its local offices; however Germany is the market in where the company put most of its focus at the moment.

Weaker demand in Asian handset PCB market

According to industry sources quoted by DigiTimes.com, handset printed circuit board makers expects a fall in the first-quarter sales due to lower demand from mobile handset makers.

Orders from handset vendors such as Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Apple and HTC is not reaching previously expected levels, according to DigiTimes. It looks like orders from these manufacturers will stay flat or drop up to 10 per cent during the first quarter in 2008. This is due to a weaker demand on the mobile phone consumer market in China. Also orders from Motorola remains weak and there is no sign of any planned increase.

Unitech Printed Circuit Board expects a 5-10% drop in the first quarter, according to DigiTime’s source. Unitech's handset PCB shipments for the fourth quarter rose 3% sequentially to 25 million units, according to DigiTimes sources.

Brandner invests in new equipment

Estonia based PCB producer Brandner has invested in new drilling power.

Explosive grow of micro-hole usage has been achieved at PCB producer Brandner through additional investments in the drilling power. The company now has a capacity of 1.000.000 holes per day the company said.

Essemtec launch new pick-and-place

The batch-type pick-and-place machine allows for faster loading/unloading of PCBs compared to systems without a conveyor.

The system automates PCB handling like an inline machine but offers 50 percent more feeder capacity as a batch type. The FLX2010-BLV system is capable of processing small components (01005 chips) up to large-size PCBs (780x600 mm).

The FLX Series offers many modular add-ons. For instance, an integrated paste and glue dispenser can save stencil costs for prototyping and increase flexibility. Additionally, the MIS software package offers tools for production planning, feeder optimization and quality assurance, and enables the planning and control of the component stock. Connection to an existing ERP system also is possible.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Weak US dollar pressures Swedish PCB industry

PCB producer Multi-Teknik has increased its sales in Sweden from 34,5 million SEK to 47,2 million SEK. 1 SEK is approximately worth 0,1 Euro. PCB trading company NCAB has grown on the Swedish PCB market by 2 million SEK from last year. The biggest increase for NCAB during 2007 was in Germany and in Poland.

PCB trading company PCB Connect has increased its revenue from 46 to 76 million SEK, 65 million SEK was turned over in Sweden only. Norway based Elprint lost a lot of it sales betwen 2005 to 2006. The turnover for Elprint in Sweden during that period was almost halved. Between 2006 and 2007 Elprint sales in Sweden declined from 9,7 million SEK to 8,9 million SEK.

Teltex which is on of the few producers left in Sweden has grown by 4 million SEK from 2006. The development in Sweden has been good in 2007 but the weak US dollar has held down the development.

PCB market for automotive sector to double

Between 2006 and 2012 it is expected to double to over $5 billion by 2012. Environmental considerations will impact on electronics design and the materials used in vehicle manufacture.

With the increasing electronic content of the average vehicle and the exacting future requirements substrates, are a key component to facilitate increase automotive vehicle functionality. This report reviews the in-vehicle applications driving developments in this market sector and investigates the requirements for a range of advanced and novel substrates from flexible and flex-rigid to multilayer, microvia, thick copper, low loss high performance and ceramic.

The report will provide substrate technology roadmaps for key applications and forecast of demand for specific PCBs by type and by region. Some of the key issues to be addressed in this report are thermal dissipation, high density interconnect and the bus protocols which enable higher data rates to accommodate the increased functionality. Contributing to this functionality are telematics applications such as satellite navigation, location-based services, remote diagnostics, emergency assist, airbag deployment notification, internet access, mobile TV and Bluetooth. Other applications such as passenger comfort and infotainment place demands on interconnect in the cabin as well as under the hood and behind the dashboard.

The plan by North America and Europe to tag all vehicles for distance tolling and emergency assist will further add to the electronic content of each vehicle. This study presents an up to date current assessment and future forecast of how the key substrate technologies will evolve. The research program involved BPA in interviewing substrate suppliers, end users, EMS and ODM companies, materials and process equipment developers. In addition to this, BPA has used its proven and reliable forecasting techniques to predict the future structure and size of this exciting sector.

Eltek receives US high-end PCB order

Israel based PCB china producer Eltek has announced that a major U.S. industrial manufacturer has placed a frame order for flex - rigid PCB that will be used in the production of advanced industrial equipment.

Shipments under this $1,830,000 order are expected to be made during 2008. Arieh Reichart, President and Chief Executive Officer of Eltek, said, "This is the largest order we have received from a U.S.-based customer and takes our global growth initiatives to another level. As a follow-on order from a prestigious customer, it marks a strategic and quantitative milestone for our company and provides us with a great start to 2008. We expect that this order will further improve our revenue mix and associated operating margins, and increase our overall corporate productivity and visibility."

The future of inkjet processes for PCB manufacturing

Legend ink is already up and running, solder mask is on the way, but etch resist for inkjet is not yet available for production scale PCBs, and conductives, the ultimate goal. AT&S is looking for the ultimate low cost PCB, and here they are pursuing new technologies, they do not to buy in a fixed system, but to devise one that suits them. Ink Print Head Machine and the Process are the key elements. The application has been identified, the business plan and cost calculation has been done, now they are tackling the technical problems, partnering with Printed Electronics Ltd. They meet every 1-2 weeks, and have short communication paths. An ink formulation is almost in place; they have to integrate a machine, the process will be developed by PEL, and AT&S will be the beta site for it.

Dr. Steve Jones spoke on behalf of Printed Electronic Industries, of Cambridge. PEL now have an industrial process - it has been designed to work in a rugged environment, can print at industrial speeds, this is an iTi machine, which can take 6 different heads, Xaar heads mainly, for high speed printing with a small number of heads. Using high speed photography, they can see how the ink is leaving the head and how it is forming on the substrate, PEL know the PCB business and thus are a suitable partner for AT&S. They have an etch resist, and the initial work looks most encouraging. The future includes nano-conductive inks, multilayer dielectronic structures, and components. A panel per second is the goal.

Uwe Altmann from Orbotech said Orbothech is now firmly into the inkjet field, and DoD (drop on demand) is the future, a process which Uwe described. Drops come in a continuous stream, the viscosity is controlled by temperature, (solvent evaporation), and the system boasts lower consumable and maintenance costs than before. Inkjet resolution is 1440 dpi. UV inks are attractive, no solvents, and with them you can create 3D structures. They also cure easily and quickly. The advantages of inkjet versus screen were clearly shown, and probably already well known. Conventional solder mask process steps against ink jet application were also shown, and here the speed of UV assists greatly in the drying process for legend inks.

Legend inks exist now, to come will be etch resists, chemical milling, solder masks and solder dams using inks only. Conformal masks and conductives are also in the future. They have done some work on 100µm lines and spaces using inkjet. They need 1440 dpi for this.

Gregory Blake from Printar’s US operation talked about advanced inkjet technology. Cost pressures are enormous on PCB production, so inkjet technology offers potentially attractive cost advantages for certain kinds of circuitry, but not all. Printar have 50 systems installed worldwide, and have 70 staff employed, dedicated to inkjet and nothing else. Having their ink approved is a key element here. Legend printing was the start, and here they have been successful; the advantages of inkjet v screen printing were underlined once more, including the availability of ‘serialisation’, of on-line numbering. Gregory highlighted some of the problems with conventional solder masks, and the potential advantages of ink jet solder mask; here inkjet replaces lots of machines, people, and saves a lot of time - a 2 minute cycle time against 133 minutes. One the face of it, it sounds good, but one must ask the question, given the need for approvals and the meeting of specifications - will it work with all solder masks?

Ashok Sridhar from the University of Twente in The Netherlands is working on his PhD researching the interface between inkjet printed semi-conducting components and the substrates used in the PCB industry. His technical paper covered inkjet printing using functional inks such as PEDOT and a silver nano-particle ink, on pcb substrates and glass. They have characterised adhesion between printed layer and substrate. Using a Microfab JetLab4 inkjet printer, Mr. Sridhar clearly showed how the droplet size can be strongly affected by temperature and humidity. They have also used a silver ink on FR4. The problems and challenges are not a few. One is the absorption of the ink into the substrate, so they have measured this with an autoperosity measurement system, and they can see how problems might occur where two lines meet inside the substrate. Future work looks extensive, and the results so far look most encouraging.

Rob Haslett is the CEO of Patterning Technologies Limited showed the shopping list that is required: a system that produces high quality at low cost, is fast, handles complex materials, in small batch sizes and with full traceability. Here inkjet technology can be of real assistance. If offers minimal set up time, minimal operator skills, fewer processes, lower cost, and with variable data. Getting rid of the wet processing is desirable, but how do you go down that route? With inkjet there are many parameters - ink, print heads, print platforms, and print strategy - they all have to be balanced. Factors to be considered are adhesion-surface wetting; viscosity and jetability, coalescence; resolution, reliability, speed and accuracy.

There is 10 years experience at PTL, a technical consultancy that is experienced in the bio-medical and flat panel displays, and etching applications as well as PCB. They have partnered with KLG in Germany, who know all about X Y positioning, and together they have launched JetRite® as a system. PTL are looking at the marketing, KLG are producing the printing platform, and the manufacturing and sales and support, which is now in place. Unsurprisingly, the printing platform is very similar to a drilling machine. PTL are providing the printing head, the ink, managing the suppliers, and notifying the end users.

So far they have a machine that has one printing speed at very high quality - a 17 second print time. With a 14picolitre drop size, they are obtaining 100 micron lines and spaces. There are two self-aligning print heads, one for white and one for yellow (legend inks). It is a compatible partnership and doubtless destined for great things - interesting to see how his company has arrived at the same place, but via a rather different route.

Bosses discussed the European PCB future

Dominique Pellizzari is the boss of the CIRE Group, and wondered what can the European PCB industry do to get stronger? Some facts and figures first - the French PCB industry represents 9% of European production, it is worth 234 million euros, and comprises just 31 companies (down from 68), and they are the 5th largest producer in Europe. Most members are small - medium companies, serving an 800 billion euros electronics industry in France; challenges include a reduced supplier base, restrictions on number of hours, tougher environmental regulations, and changes in the ‘value chain’.PCB China

The structure of FIEN was described, with Gixel, FIEEC, and a competitive cluster, such as in Toulouse, where the companies and universities specialise in aerospace with technology companies gathering together in serving one industry sector. Insurance, payment terms, industry standards and regulations were all matters which came under FIEEC and FIEN takes on the promotion in all aspects, lobbying to promote R&D. Translate such a national approach into a European one was the point made by Dominique. In an ideal world, Dominique.

Giacomo Angeloni from Somacis in Italy had a swift look over his shoulder. Well, there were 767 PCB manufacturers in Europe in 1990, now there are just 342. The PCB market in 2000 was 4775 million euros, and this has dropped down to 2748 million in 2006. In Italy, the number of PCB companies has dropped down from 167 to 33, and there are 25% less people employed in the PCB industry in Italy than there were before.

What manufacture we have left is paying higher prices for most of its supplies. We are paying about twice as much for petrol in Europe as they do in China. In Italy motorists are paying $1.56 per litre, against $0.69 per litre in China. Looking at what the EC does for industry, the answer appears to be - not a lot; 45 % of expenditure is in agriculture. But surely we should be investing in technology, not crops. Technical economical and political actions are needed; we need European funds for research, for it is on the back of innovation that we shall survive. Much team work is needed here, said Giancomo. Like Bernard, Giancomo is looking at the EC for assistance, but it maybe that the commissioners have to be persuaded that the future lies in technological innovation, not olive trees.

Dr. Udo Bechtloff from KSG Leiterplatten GmbH said that his company has the same problems as anyone else, but they have been successful in their own right. It is a family owned company, with a turnover of 9 million Euros in 1996, which had risen by 2007 to 47 million. Founded in 1956, KSG lies in the former East Germany and before reunification were employing 3000 people, but they aim to be down to 430 by 2010. They have made a 50 million Euro investment in plant and buildings, serving 535 global customers, but through German ‘mother’ companies. Growth had been a process of steady increase, and their product spread is 39% for industrial electronics, 31% for EMS, 14% automotive, 10% consumer electronics and telecom 5%. With 25,000 orders per annum, they handle 100-200 different jobs per day, with an average order size of 1-2 m², with 96% delivery reliability. They have grown in a declining market, admirably, where a market in Europe has reduced by 47% in 7 years they have risen by 88%. Supply what the customer wants, said Udo. Yes, but it just maybe that KSG started with a lower operating cost, and benefited from a lot of government assistance. Their technology road map was very interesting, and as was the fact that they fund 10 R&D engineers out of turnover. Reliability of products, says Udo, is the most important thing, and reliability testing is carried out as a matter of routine. We suspect that a little modesty was being displayed here, with inspired management and strong staff motivation being key factors as well.

Italian – French PCB merger complete

Italian based electronics group Elco completes aqcusition of French Printed Circuit Board supplier Main Circuits Imprimés.

Maine Printed Circuit is a subsidiary of French Computer firm Bull. An intensive analysis work, which lasted more than one year, leaded Elco group to the agreement with Bull international group, which identified in the Elco group, the best strategical resolution to assure the growth of Main Circuits Imprimés.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Weaker demand in Asian handset PCB market

According to industry sources quoted by DigiTimes.com, handset printed circuit board makers expects a fall in the first-quarter sales due to lower demand from mobile handset makers.

Orders from handset vendors such as Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Apple and HTC is not reaching previously expected levels, according to DigiTimes. It looks like orders from these manufacturers will stay flat or drop up to 10 per cent during the first quarter in 2008. This is due to a weaker demand on the mobile phone consumer market in China. Also orders from Motorola remains weak and there is no sign of any planned increase.

Unitech Printed Circuit Board expects a 5-10% drop in the first quarter, according to DigiTime’s source. Unitech's handset PCB shipments for the fourth quarter rose 3% sequentially to 25 million units, according to DigiTimes sources.

German PCB market boomed in October 2007

According to Verband der Leiterplattenindustrie and ZVEI - Zentralverband Elektrotechnik- und Elektronikindustrie, the German Printed Circuit Board Market boomed in October 2007.

Incoming orders in October 2007 grew by 40 per cent from the same period in 2006. It grew 26 per cent on average years. Smaller and mid sized companies with prototype and pilot production grew mostly. The German PCB market growth was nearly at the same level during the first ten months in 2007 than it was during the full year of 2006.

Europe’s and N. Americas PCB share declining

IPC has released World PCB Production and Laminate Market Report for the Year 2006. The report shows that the world PCB market expanded in 2006, for the third year in a row.

At $47.6 billion, it grew 11.7 percent in nominal terms (not inflation-adjusted), and has surpassed its year-2000 peak. According to the report, PCB growth has outpaced economic growth and the growth of most other industries, thanks to the growing demand for electronic products. In addition, Asia has continued to grow to 81 percent of world PCB production, while Europe and North America continued to lose some share. China has outpaced most other countries in PCB production growth. Though slowing, China’s growth is about twice the global rate of growth for PCB production.

Techno-Service enlarges PCB production capacity

During the past few years, the company already invested around €400,000 in the development of its PCB production capacity. Techno-Service purchased a Schmoll drill, AOI and photoploter from Mania as well as an AgfaLine developer.

The total production capacity is 3,000 sqm PCB’s per month. The company also continues the construction of its own waste-waster treatment facility - an investment of around €150,000, which is partly funded (40%) by the EU.

Techno-Service was set up in 1956 and among other activities runs business units in the PCB and EMS sectors. Techno-Service specializes in two-sided and multilayer boards. The PCB division currently employs 102 staff at its facility in a suburb of Gdańsk (Poland). The PCB production is mainly exported to Germany, Lithuania and Scandinavia.