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This instruction has been written for a supervised session performed in a chemical lab. Be careful when applying to a different environment.
In the first lab you designed a PCB from a given circuit in EAGLE. This lab is about producing the printed circuit board from that design. There are two major techniques for PCB manufacturing. For prototyping purposes it is popular to use a special milling machine for PCBs. The faculty uses a LPKF ProtoMat S62 in its electronics workshop. The EAGLE board design is exported to gerber and excellon files and after making some adjustments in a CAM tool like CircuitCAM the design can be used for milling out copper-clad boards. The machine isolates all traces on the board and drills holes where necessary.
The technique we will cover today employs a chemical process to create PCBs. To put it simply it is a four step procedure:
This process is widely used in industry for producing PCBs.
At the end of today's experiment each student will have his/her own layout etched to a board.
Magnetrührer, Waage, Spatel, Glasrührstab, Becherglas 2l, 500ml, Becherglas für 300g, Thermometer, Ethanol, Papiertücher, Torx-Schraubendreher, Tacker, Scheren ruler, scissors, plate shear, chemistry lab, sink, fume extractor, safety goggles, lab coat, gloves, printer, transparent foil, uv exposer devices, fotosensitive base material, development and etching solution, containers, etching bath, aceton, Wattepads, Lötlack
Please read the chemistry lab safety rules on Moodle before taking the experiment. The safety rules will also be pointed out at the beginning of the experiment.
We will work with the following substances in this lab:
Get your safety equipment. This includes glasses, lab coat and gloves. Make yourself familiar with the provided tools.
Fig. 4: Remove protection foil
Fig. 5: UV exposure device
Fig. 6: Board under plate
Fig. 7: Check vacuum