{"id":23531,"date":"2025-04-30T14:39:22","date_gmt":"2025-04-30T06:39:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.meetyoucarbide.com\/?p=23531"},"modified":"2025-04-30T14:46:58","modified_gmt":"2025-04-30T06:46:58","slug":"drilling-thick-copper-pcb","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.meetyoucarbide.com\/ko\/drilling-thick-copper-pcb\/","title":{"rendered":"Drilling Thick Copper Board(PCBs): How to Tackle High-Difficulty Challenges and Improve Product Quality?"},"content":{"rendered":"
In the PCB manufacturing industry, thick copper boards have become the core substrate for power modules, high-power electronic devices, and industrial control systems due to their exceptional conductivity and thermal dissipation properties. As copper thickness increases from the conventional 1-3 ounces to 6 ounces or even higher, their processing technology faces unprecedented challenges.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n Drilling, as a critical process in PCB production, presents unique physical phenomena and process contradictions when working with thick copper boards:<\/p>\n The high thermal conductivity significantly reduces cutting temperatures<\/p>\n The plastic deformation characteristics of copper cause secondary issues like copper wrapping and material adhesion<\/p>\n Behind these contradictions lies a complex interplay of materials science, mechanical processing, and thermodynamics.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n With a thermal conductivity of 401 W\/(m\u00b7K) – approximately 1.8 times that of aluminum and 5 times that of iron – copper exhibits unique thermal behavior during drilling operations. The rapid heat dissipation through the copper substrate theoretically suppresses temperature rise between tool and workpiece, yielding dual benefits:<\/p>\n \u2022 Tool wear rate reduction by ~30%<\/p>\n \u2022 Over 50% decrease in positional accuracy deviation caused by thermal deformation<\/p>\n These characteristics make it particularly suitable for high-precision multilayer board processing.<\/p>\n However, this seemingly ideal thermal property conceals a paradox:<\/p>\n During initial drill penetration, copper’s instantaneous plastic flow creates a high-pressure zone ahead of the cutting edge. While bulk temperatures remain low, frictional heat at microscopic contact points can momentarily reach copper’s recrystallization temperature (~200\u00b0C).<\/p>\n This phenomenon causes dynamic softening of the copper surface layer, forming a viscous metal flow. When drill speed exceeds 80,000 RPM, the contact time between chips and the tool’s rake face shortens to microsecond levels. However, the ductility of copper chips makes them difficult to break effectively, instead forming long spiral chips under centrifugal force. These copper wires entangle between the drill shank and chip flutes, not only hindering coolant penetration but also generating secondary frictional heat. Experimental data shows that when copper thickness exceeds 4 ounces, the localized temperature rise caused by chip entanglement can reach 40% of the base cutting temperature, creating a “low-temperature cutting with localized high-temperature” paradox effect.<\/p>\n Pure copper has an elongation rate as high as 45%, and this excellent plasticity manifests as three-stage deformation characteristics during drilling: lattice slip during initial shear, dislocation multiplication during plastic flow, and necking before fracture. When drilling thick copper boards, increased axial cutting depth makes the material removal process closer to an orthogonal cutting model, reducing the shear plane angle to 15\u00b0-25\u00b0 and increasing chip thickness by 30%-50%. These thick, continuous chips intermittently contact the hole wall during ejection, forming a periodic stick-slip dynamic process.<\/p>\n The essence of copper adhesion is interfacial metallurgical bonding. When cutting temperature reaches copper’s recrystallization temperature, fresh copper surfaces undergo atomic diffusion with the tool surface under high pressure. Even with relatively low bulk temperatures, instantaneous temperatures at microscopic asperities can exceed 500\u00b0C, sufficient to cause micro-welding. When using tungsten carbide drills, cobalt binder phase precipitation accelerates this adhesion. EDX analysis shows adhesion layers can contain up to 8.3wt% cobalt, forming Co-Cu intermetallic compounds. These metallurgical bonding layers have shear strength up to 350MPa – three times copper’s own strength – causing negative offset of the tool’s effective rake angle and increasing cutting force by over 25%.<\/p>\n Addressing thick copper board drilling challenges requires establishing a multi-dimensional process control system. For cutting parameters, the “high speed-low feed” strategy presents contradictions: increasing speed to 90,000 RPM can reduce feed per tooth to 0.01mm, helping thin chips, but greater centrifugal force increases entanglement risk. Recent research shows that variable-frequency oscillatory feed technology, superimposing 10-50Hz axial vibration, can reduce chip length by 70%. Combined with pulsed coolant systems injecting high-pressure coolant (7MPa) during vibration retraction effectively clears chip flute accumulation.<\/p>\n Innovative tool geometry design is more critical. Reducing drill point rake angle from conventional 30\u00b0 to 15\u00b0 increases cutting force but enhances edge strength, suppressing plastic flow. Adjusting helix angle from 40\u00b0 to 35\u00b0 maintains chip removal capability while reducing chip spiral curvature radius to promote breakage. A German tool manufacturer’s “dual-wave edge” technology creates periodic corrugations on cutting edges (0.8mm wavelength, 0.05mm amplitude), inducing mandatory bending strain that increases chip breakage probability to 92%.<\/p>\n In coating technology, multilayer composite coatings demonstrate unique advantages. The base layer uses 1\u03bcm-thick CrN to improve bonding strength, the intermediate layer is a 0.5\u03bcm MoS\u2082 solid lubricant layer, and the surface layer deposits 2\u03bcm diamond-like carbon (DLC) film. This structure reduces the friction coefficient from 0.6 to 0.15 and decreases adhesion by 80%. A Taiwanese PCB manufacturer using this coated drill for 6-ounce thick copper boards increased tool life from 1,200 to 4,500 holes while maintaining hole wall roughness Ra below 1.6\u03bcm.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
The Thermodynamic Paradox in Thick Copper PCB Drilling<\/h1>\n
Plastic Behavior of Materials and Generation Mechanism of Machining Defects<\/h1>\n
Coordinated Optimization of Process Parameters and Tool Design<\/h1>\n
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Coating Technology for copper board drilling<\/a><\/h2>\n
New Opportunities from Material Modification<\/h1>\n