Method for Elucidating the Structural Evolution of a Nanoscale Release Layer in Double Copper Foils Under Thermal Exposure

Authors

Bhusari R., Bardon J., Guillot J., Philippe A.M., Scholzen S., Kaidi Z., Addiego F.

Reference

Materials, vol. 18, n° 14, art. no. 3316, 2025

Description

Double ultrathin copper foils (DTH), widely used for producing conductive tracks in electronics, consist of an ultrathin copper functional foil (FF), a nanometric release layer (RL), and an ultrathin copper carrier foil (CF). Achieving stable release strength of the CF during DTH lamination remains a key challenge, largely due to limited knowledge about the structure of the RL. In this study, a comprehensive characterization methodology is proposed to investigate the physico-chemical structure of a chromium-based RL, both before and after thermal exposure at 230 °C. Peel-off testing, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were employed. The main structural transformation identified is the oxidation of the RL at the FF–RL interface, resulting in the formation of a chromium oxide layer. This transformation may underlie the significant increase in release strength, which rises from 5.9 N/m before thermal exposure to 163 N/m afterward.

Link

doi:10.3390/ma18143316

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