Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing Glossary

 

Ambient – The surrounding environment coming into contact with the system or component in question.

Annular Ring – That portion of conductive material completely surrounding a hole.

AOI  (Automated Optical Inspection) - Automatic laser/video inspection of  traces and pads on the surface of inner-layer cores or outer-layer  panels. The machine uses cam data to verify copper feature positioning,  size and shape. Instrumental in locating “open” traces, missing features  or “shorts”.

AQL  (Acceptance Quality Level) - The maximum number of defectives likely to  exist within a population (lot) that can be considered to be  contractually tolerable; normally associated with statistically derived  sampling plans.

Array – A group of elements or circuits arranged in rows and columns on a base material.

Artwork – An accurately scaled configuration of electronic data used to produce the artwork master or production master.

Artwork Master – The photographic image of the PCB pattern on film used to produce the circuit board, usually on a 1:1 scale.

Aspect Ratio – The ratio of the PCB thickness to the diameter of the smallest hole.

B-Stage  – An intermediate stage in the reaction of a thermosetting resin in  which the material softens when heated and swells, but does not entirely  fuse or dissolve, when it is in contact with certain liquids.

Barrel – The cylinder formed by plating the walls of a drilled hole.

Bare Board – An unassembled (unpopulated) printed board.

Base Material  – The insulating material used to form the conductive pattern. It may  be rigid or flexible or both. It may be a dielectric or insulated metal  sheet.

Base Material Thickness – The thickness of the base material excluding metal foil or material deposited on the surface.

Bed of Nails  – A test fixture consisting of a frame and a holder containing a field  of spring-loaded pins that make electrical contact with a planar test  object.

Blind Via – A via extending only to one surface of a printed board. Does not extend from the top to the bottom layer.

Blister  – A localized swelling and/or separation between any of the layers of a  laminated base material, or between base material or conductive foil.  It is a form of Delamination.

Board House – Board vendor. A manufacturer of printed circuit boards.

Board Thickness – The overall thickness of the base material and all conductive material deposited thereon.

Book  – A specified number of Prepreg plies which are assembled along with  inner-layer cores in preparation for curing in a lamination press.

Bond Strength – The force per unit area required to separate two adjacent layers of a board by a force perpendicular to the board surface.

Bow  – The deviation from flatness of a board characterized by a roughly  cylindrical or spherical curvature such that, if the product is  rectangle, its four corners are in the same plane.

Border Area – The region of a base material that is external to that of the end product being fabricated within it.

Buried Via – A via hole drilled through inner-layers of a multilayer board that does not extend to the surface layers.

Burr – A ridge surrounding the hole left on the outside copper surface after drilling.

C-Stage Resin – A resin in its final state of cure.

CAD  (Computer  Aided Design) – A system where engineers create a design and see the  proposed product in front of them on a graphics screen or in the form of  a computer printout or plot. In electronics, the result would be a  printed circuit layout.

CAM   (Computer Aided Manufacturing) – The interactive use of computers  systems, programs, and procedures in various phases of a manufacturing  process wherein, the decision-making activity rests with the human  operator and a computer provides the data manipulation functions.

CAM Files  – The data files used directly in the manufacture of printed wiring.  The file types are: (1) Gerber files, which control a photo-plotter. (2)  NC Drill file, which controls an NC Drill machine. (3) Fabrication  drawings in Gerber, HPGL or any other electronic format. Hard copy  prints may be available also. CAM files represent the final product of  PCB design. These files are given to the board house which further  refines and manipulates CAM in their processes, for example in step-  and-repeat panelization

Card – Another name for a printed circuit board.

Capacitance  - The property of a system of conductors and dielectrics that allows  the storage of electricity when a potential difference exists between  the conductors.

Catalyst – A chemical that is used to initiate the reaction or increase the speed of the reaction between a resin and a curing agent.

Castellated Holes – Half holes that run along the very edge of a PCB. Can be either plated or non-plated. Commonly referred as Half Moon Holes.

Center to Center Spacing  – The nominal distance between the centers of adjacent features on any  single layer of a printed board, e.g.; gold fingers and surface mounts.

Check Plots – Pen plots, or plotted film, that are suitable for checking and for design approval by customers.

Circuit – A number of electrical elements and devices that have been interconnected to perform a desired electrical function.

Clad  – A copper object on a printed circuit board. Specifying certain text  items for a board to be “in clad,” means that the text should be made of  copper, not silkscreen.

Clearance Hole – A hole in the conductive pattern that is larger than, and coaxial with a hole in the base material of a printed board.

CNC (Computer Numerical Control) – A system that utilizes a computer and software as the primary numerical control technique.

Component – Any of the basic parts used in building electronic equipment, such as a resister, capacitor, DIP or connector, etc.

Component Hole  – A hole that is used for the attachment and/or electrical connection  of component terminations, including pins and wires, to a printed board.  

Component Side - The side of the circuit board on which most of the components will be located. Also called the “top side.”

Conductive Pattern  – The configuration pattern or design of the conductive material on a  base material. (This includes conductors, lands, vias, heat sinks and  passive components when those are integral parts of the printed board  manufacturing process.

Conductor Spacing – The observable distance between adjacent edges (not center to center spacing) of isolated patterns in a conductor layer.

Continuity – An uninterrupted path for the flow of electrical current in a circuit. .

Conformal Coating  – An insulating & protective coating that conforms to the  configuration of the object coated and is applied on the completed board  assembly.

Connection – One leg of a net.

Connector  – A plug or receptacle, which can be easily joined to or be separated  from its mate. Multiple-contact connectors join two or more conductors  with others in one mechanical assembly.

Controlled Impedance  – The matching of substrate material properties with trace dimensions  and locations in an effort to create specific electric impedance for a  signal moving along a trace.

Core Thickness – The thickness of the laminate base without copper.

Crosshatching – The breaking up of large conductive area by the use of a pattern of voids in the conductive material.

CTE   (Coefficient of Thermal Expansion) – The measure of the amount a  material changes in any axis per degree of temperature change.

Curing – The act of applying heat and pressure to the laminate materials in order to produce a bond.

Database – A collection of interrelated data items stored together without unnecessary redundancy, to serve one or more applications.

Date Code – Marking of products to indicate their date of manufacture.  Standard is W/Y (week/year),

Datum  – The theoretically-exact point, axis or plane that is the origin from  which the location of geometric characteristics of features of a part  are established.

Delamination  – A separation between plies within a base material, between a base  material and a conductive foil, or any other planner separation with a  printed board.

Depth Drill – Controlling the depth of a  drilled hole, when a thru hole or a blind via hole is not able to be  used. Normally used to break the connection within a plated thru hole.  Also referred to as BackDrill.

Design Rule Checking  - (DRC) The use of a computer-aided program to perform continuity  verification of all conductors routing in accordance with appropriate  design rules.

Desmear – The removal of friction-melted resin and drilling debris from a hole wall.

Dewetting  - A condition that results when molten solder has coated a surface and  then receded. It leaves irregularly shaped mounds separated by areas of  thin solder. The base material is not exposed.

Dielectric – A material with a high resistance to the flow current, and which is capable of being polarized by an electrical field.

Dimensional Stability  – A measure of the dimensional change of a material that is caused by  factors such as temperature changes, humidity changes, chemical  treatment, and stress exposure.

Dimensioned Hole  – A hole in a printed board whose location is determined by physical  dimensions or coordinate values that do not necessarily coincide with  the stated grid.

DIP  (Dual In-Line Package) – A type of housing for integrated circuits.

Double-Sided Board - A printed board with a conductive pattern on both sides.

Double Track – Slang for fine line design with two traces between DIP pins.

Dry-Film Resists  – Coating material specifically designed for use in the manufacture of  printed circuit boards and chemically machined parts. They are resistant  to various electroplating and etching processes.

Dry Film Solder Mask  – A solder mask film applied to a printed board using photographic  methods. This method can manage the higher resolution required for fine  line design and surface mount.

Electrod Eposition – The deposition of a conductive material from a plating solution by the application of electrical current.

Electro Less Deposition – The deposition of conductive material from an autocatalytic plating solution without the application of electrical current.

Electroplating  - The electro-deposition of a metal coating on a conductive object. The  object to be plated is placed in an electrolyte and connected to one  terminal of a direct current (DC) voltage source. The metal to be  deposited is similarly immersed and connected to the other terminal.

ENIG – Electroless Nickel / Immersion Gold final finish. Excellent Solderability and Lead Free process.

Standard thickness 120-200 Ni / 2-4 Au (measured in Micro Inches)

ENEPIG – Electroless Nickel / Electroless Palladium / Immersion Gold. Lead Free Process.

Excellent Solderability and Excellent for Gold Wire Bond.

Etchback  – The controlled removal by a chemical process, to a specific depth, of  nonmetallic materials from the sidewalls of holes in order to remove  resin smear and to expose additional internal conductor surfaces.

Etching – The chemical, or chemical and electrolytic, removal of unwanted portions of conductive or resistive material.

Fab – Fabrication.

Fabrication Drawing  – A drawing used to aid the construction of a printed circuit board. It  shows all of the locations of the holes to be drilled, their sizes and  tolerances, dimensions of the board edges, and notes on the materials  and methods to be used. Called “fab Drawing” for short. It relates the  board edge to at least one hole location as a reference point so that  the NC Drill file can be properly aligned.

Fiducial Mark  – A printed board feature (or features) that is created in the same  process as the conductive pattern and that provides a common measurable  point for component mounting with respect to a land pattern or land  patterns.

Fine Pitch  – Refers to chip packages with lead pitches below .050. The largest  pitch in this class of parts is about .031. Lead pitches as small as  .020 are used.

Finger – A gold-plated terminal of a card-edge connector. (Derived from its shape.)

First Article  - A sample part or assembly typically manufactured prior to the start  of production for the purpose of ensuring that the manufacturer is  capable of producing a product that will meet specified requirements.

Flying Probe  – A type of bare board electrical test machine that uses probes on the  ends of mechanical arms to locate and touch the pads on the board. The  probes move quickly across the board verifying continuity of each net as  well as resistance to adjacent nets.

FR-1 – A paper material with a phenolic resin binder. FR-1 has a TG of about 130°C.

FR-2 – A paper material with phenolic resin binder similar to FR-1 – but with a TG of about 105°C.

FR-3  – A paper material that is similar to FR-2 – except that an epoxy resin  is used instead of phenolic resin as a binder. Used mainly in Europe.

FR-4  – The UL-designated rating for a laminate composed of glass and epoxy  that meets a specific standard for flammability. FR-4 is the most common  dielectric material used in the construction of PCBs.

G10  – A laminate consisting of woven epoxy-glass cloth impregnated with  epoxy resin under pressure and heat. G10 lacks the anti-flammability  properties of FR-4. Used mainly for thin circuits such as in watches.

Gerber File  – Data file used to control a photo-plotter. Named after the Gerber  Scientific Co., who made the original vector photo-plotter.

Golden Board - See Known Good Board.

Ground – A common reference point for electrical circuits returns, shielding or heat sinking.

Ground Plane  – A conductor layer, or portion thereof that serves as a common  reference for electrical circuit returns, shielding or heat sinking.

HASL   (Hot Air Solder Level) A method of coating exposed copper with solder  by inserting a panel into a bath of molten solder then passing the panel  rapidly past jets of hot air.

HDI   (High Density Interconnect)  Ultra fine-geometry multi-layer PCB  constructed with conductive microvia connections. These boards also  usually include buried and/or blind vias and are made by sequential  lamination.

Hole Breakout – A condition in which a hole is not completely surrounded by the land.

Hole Density – The quantity of holes in a unit area of a printed board.

I-Gold – See ENIG 


Imaging  - The process of transferring electronic data to the photo-plotter,  which in turn uses light to transfer a negative image circuitry pattern  onto the panel or film.

Immersion Plating – The chemical deposition of a thin metallic coating over certain metals without the use of electrolytic current.

Impedance  – The resistance to the flow of current, represented by an electrical  network of combined resistance, capacitance and inductance reaction, in a  conductor as seen by an AC source of varying time voltage. The unit of  measure is ohms.

Inclusions  – Foreign particles, metallic or nonmetallic, that may be entrapped in  an insulating material, conductive layer, plating, base material, or  solder connection.

Inner-Layers – The internal layers of laminate and metal foil within a multi-layer board.

Insulation Resistance  – The electrical resistance of an insulating material that is  determined under specific conditions between any pair of contacts,  conductors, or grounding devices in various combinations.

IPC –  (The Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits)   The final American authority on how to design and manufacture printed  wiring.

KGB – (Known Good Board)  A board or assembly that is verified to be free of defects. Also known as a Golden Board.

Laminate – A product made by bonding together two or more layers of materials.

Laminate Thickness – Thickness of the metal-clad base material, single- or double-sided, prior to any subsequent processing.

Laminate Void – An absence of epoxy resin in any cross-sectional area that should normally contain epoxy resin.

Land  – The portion of the conductive pattern on printed circuits designated  for the mounting or attachment of components. Also called a pad.

Laser Photo-Plotter  – A plotter that uses a laser, which simulates a vector photo-plotter  by using software to create a raster image of the individual objects in a  CAD database, then plots the image as a series of lines of dots at a  very fine resolution. A laser photo-plotter is capable of more accurate  and consistent plots than a vector plotter.

Lead – A terminal on a component.

Legend  - A format of lettering or symbols on the printed circuit board: e.g.  part number, serial number, component locations, and patterns.

LPI   (Liquid Photo Imageable) - An ink that is developed off using  photographic imaging techniques to control deposition. It is the most  accurate method of mask application and results in a thinner mask than  dry film solder mask. It is often preferred for dense SMT. Application  can be spray, curtain coat or squeegee.

Mask  – A material applied to enable selective etching, plating, or the  application of solder to a PCB. Also called solder mask or resist.

Measling  - Discrete white spots or crosses below the surface of the base  laminate that reflect a separation of fibers in the glass cloth at the  weave intersection.

Metal Foil  - The plane of conductive material of a printed board from which  circuits are formed. Metal foil is generally copper and is provided in  sheets or rolls.

Micro-Sectioning  – The preparation of a specimen of a material, or materials, used in  metallographic examination. This usually consists of cutting out a  cross-section followed by encapsulation, polishing, etching, and  staining.

Microvia  – Usually defined as a conductive hole with a diameter of 0.005″ or  less that connects layers of a multi-layer PCB. Often used to refer to  any small geometry connection holes created by laser drilling.

Mil – One thousandth of an inch.

Mounting Hole  – A hole that is used for the mechanical support of a printed board or  for the mechanical attachment of components to a printed board.

Multi-Layer Board  – Printed boards consisting of a number (three or more) of separate  conducting circuit planes separated by insulating materials and bonded  together into relatively thin homogeneous constructions with internal  and external connections to each level of the circuitry as needed.

NC Drill   (Numeric Control drill machine) - A machine used to drill the holes in a  printed board at exact locations, which are specified in a data file.

Negative  – A reverse-image copy of a positive, useful for checking revisions of a  PCB and is often used for representing inner layer planes. When a  negative image is used for an inner-layer it would typically have  clearances (solid circles) and thermals (segmented donuts) that either  isolate holes from the plane or make thermally relieved connections  respectively.

Net – A collection of terminals all of which are, or must be, connected electrically. Also known as signal.

Netlist  – List of names of symbols or parts and their connection points which  are logically connected in each net of a circuit. A netlist can be  captured from properly prepared schematic-drawing files of an electrical  CAE application.

Nomenclature – Identification symbols applied to the board by means of screen printing, LPI Processes or laser processes. SeeLegend.

Open – Open circuit. An unwanted break in the continuity of an electrical circuit which prevents current from flowing.

Outer-Layer – The top and bottom sides of any type of circuit board.

Pad -See Land.

Panel – Material (most commonly an epoxy- copper laminate know as FR-4) sized for fabrication of printed circuit boards.

Pattern  – The configuration of conductive and nonconductive materials on a  panel or printed board. Also, the circuit configuration on related  tools, drawing, and masters.

Pattern Plating - The selective plating of a conductive pattern.

PCB – Printed circuit board.

PD Gold – See ENEPIG

Photo Plotter – Device used to generate photographically by plotting objects onto film for use in manufacturing printed wiring.

Photo Resist  – A material that is sensitive to portions of the light spectrum and  that, when properly exposed can mask portions of a base metal with a  high degree of integrity.

Phototool  – A transparent film that contains the circuit pattern, which is  represented by a series of lines of dots at a high resolution.

Pin – A terminal on a component, whether SMT or through-hole. Also called a lead.

Plating – The chemical or electrochemical deposited metal on a surface.

Plated-Through Hole  – A hole in a PWB with metal plating added after it is drilled. Its  purpose is to serve either as a contact point for a through-hole  component or as a via.

Positive  – A developed image of photo-plotted file, where the areas selectively  exposed by the photo plotter appear black and unexposed areas are clear.  For outer-layers, color will indicate copper. Positive inner-layers  will have clear areas to indicate copper.

Prepreg – A sheet of material that has been impregnated with a resin cured to an intermediate stage. I.e. B-stage resin.

Printed Circuit Board  – A flat plate or base of insulating material containing a pattern of  conducting material. It becomes an electrical circuit when components  are attached and soldered to it. The conducting material is commonly  copper which has been coated with solder or plated with tin-lead alloy.  The usual insulating material is epoxy laminate but there are many other  kinds of materials used in more exotic technologies. Single sided  boards have all conductors on one side of the board. With two-sided  boards, the conductors, or copper traces, can travel from one side of  the board to the other through plated-thru holes called vias, or feed  throughs. In multilayer boards, the vias can connect to internal layers  as well as either side.

Probe Test – A spring-loaded metal device used to make electrical contact between test equipment and the unit under test.

Pulse Plating - A method of plating that uses pulses instead of a direct current.

Reflow  - The melting of electrodeposited tin/lead followed by solidification.  The surface has the appearance and physical characteristics of being  hot-dipped.

Reference Designator  – The name of components on a printed circuit by convention beginning  with one or two letters followed by a numeric value. The letter  designates the class of component; eg. “Q” is commonly used as a prefix  for transistors. Reference designators appear as usually white or yellow  epoxy ink (the “silkscreen”) on a circuit board. They are placed close  to their respective components but not underneath them. So that they are  visible on the assembled board.

Reference Dimension  – A dimension without a tolerance that is used only for informational  purposes that does not govern inspection or other manufacturing  operations.

Resist  – A coating material that is used to mask or protect select areas of a  pattern during manufacturing or testing from the action of an etchant,  plating, solder, etc.

Rout  – A layout or wiring of a connection. The action of creating such a  wiring. The term is also used for the actual milling of a PCB.

Schematic  – A diagram which shows, by means of graphic symbols, the electrical  connections and functions of a specific circuit arrangement.

Scoring  - A technique in which grooves are machined on opposite sides of a  panel to a depth that permits individual boards to be separated from the  panel after component assembly.

Screen Printing - A process for transferring an image to a surface by forcing suitable media through a stencil screen with a squeegee.

Short  – Short circuit. An abnormal connection of relatively low resistance  between two points of a circuit. The result is excess (often damaging)  current between these points. Such a connection is considered to have  occurred in a printed wiring CAD database or artwork anytime conductors  from different nets either touch or come closer than the minimum spacing  allowed for the design rules being used

Silkscreen  –The decals and reference designators in epoxy ink on a printed wiring  board so called because of the method of application – the ink is  “squeegeed” through a silk screen. Also called “silkscreen legend”.

SMOBC  (Solder Mask Over Bare Copper) - A method of fabricating a printed  circuit board that results in final metallization being copper with no  protective metal. The non-coated areas are coated by solder resist,  exposing only the component terminal areas. This eliminates tin lead  under the mask.

SMD – Surface mount device.

SMT – Surface mount technology.

Solder – An alloy that melts at relatively low temperatures and is used to join or seal metals with higher melting points.

Solder Coat – A layer of solder that is applied directly from a molten solder bath to a conductive pattern.

Solder Leveling – The process by which the board is exposed to hot oil or hot air to remove excess solder from holes and lands.

Solder Mask  – A technique wherein everything on a circuit board is coated with a  mask except 1) the contacts to be soldered, 2) the gold-plated terminals  of any card-edge connectors and 3) fiducial marks.

Step-and-Repeat – The successive exposure of a single image on order to produce a multiple-image production master. Also used in CNC programs.

Stuff – Components are attached and soldered to a printed wiring board. Often done by an assembly house.

Sub-Panel  – A group of printed circuits arrayed in a panel and handled by both  the board house and the assembly house as though it were a single  printed circuit board. The sub-panel is usually prepared at the board  house by routing most of the material separating individual modules  leaving small tabs.

Surface Mount  – Surface mount technology. Components are soldered to the board  without using holes. The result is higher component density, allowing  smaller PWBs. Abbreviated SMT.

Tented Via  – A via with solder mask completely covering both its pad and its  plated-thru hole. This completely insulates the via from foreign  objects, thus protecting against accidental shorts, but it also renders  the via unusable as a test point. Sometimes vias are tented on the  topside of the board and left uncovered on the bottom side to permit  probing from that side only with a test fixture.

Tenting – The covering of holes in a printed board and the surrounding conductive pattern with a dry film resist.

Terminal  – A point of connection for two or more conductors in an electrical  circuit; one of the conductors is usually an electrical contact or lead  of a component.

Test Board  – A printed board that is deemed to be suitable for determining the  acceptability of a group of boards that were. Or will be, produced with  the same fabrication process.

Test Fixture – A device that interfaces between test equipment and the unit under test.

TG  – Glass transition temperature. The point at which rising temperatures  cause resin inside the solid base laminate to start to exhibit soft,  plastic-like symptoms. This is expressed in degrees Celsius (°C).

Through-Hole – Having pins designed to be inserted into holes and soldered to pads on a printed board. Also spelled “thru-hole”.

Trace – Segment of a conductor route or net.

Track – Trace.

UL   (Underwriter’s Laboratories, Inc.) - A corporation supported by some  underwriters for the purpose of establishing safety standards on types  of equipment or components.  

 

Via – Feed  through. A plated-through hole in a PWB used to route a trace vertically  in the board, that is, from one layer to another.

VIP  (Via in Pad) – Used when the PC Board is too dense to be able to use  the conventional via to trace connection. The plated thru via is  normally filled with either a conductive or non-conductive via fill  material, planarized flush with the surface copper and plated over  creating a flat solderable pad.

Void – The absence of any substances in a localized area. (Ex: missing plating in a hole)

Wave Soldering  – Assembled printed boards are brought in contact with a continuously  flowing and circulating mass of solder, typically in a bath to connect  the leads of components to through hole pads and barrels.

Wicking – Migration of copper salts into the glass fibers of the insulating material found in the barrel of a plated hole.

X-Axis – The horizontal or left-to-right direction in a two-dimensional system of coordinates.

Y-Axis – The vertical or bottom-to-top direction in a two-dimensional system of coordinates.

Z-Axis  – The axis perpendicular to the plane formed by the X and Y datum  reference. This axis usually represents the thickness of the boards.