Ring-Opening-Induced Toughening of a Low-Permittivity Polymer-Metal Interface
Data(s) |
01/05/2010
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Resumo |
Integrating low dielectric permittivity (low-k) polymers to metals is an exacting fundamental challenge because poor bonding between low-polarizability moieties and metals precludes good interfacial adhesion. Conventional adhesion-enhancing methods such as using intermediary layers are unsuitable for engineering polymer/metal interfaces for many applications because of the collateral increase in dielectric permittivity. Here, we demonstrate a completely new approach without surface treatments or intermediary layers to obtain an excellent interfacial fracture toughness of > 13 J/m(2) in a model system comprising copper. and a cross-linked polycarbosilane with k similar to 2.7 obtained by curing a cyclolinear polycarbosilane in air.Our results suggest that interfacial oxygen catalyzed molecularring-opening and anchoring of the opened ring moieties of the polymer to copper is the main toughening mechanism. This novel approach of realizing adherent low-k polymer/metal structures without intermediary layers by activating metal-anchoring polymer moieties at the interface could be adapted for applications such as device wiring and packaging, and laminates and composites. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/28372/1/am1001597.pdf Singh, B and Garg, S and Rathore, J and Moore, R and Ravishankar, N and Interrante, L and Ramanath, Ganpati (2010) Ring-Opening-Induced Toughening of a Low-Permittivity Polymer-Metal Interface. In: Acs Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2 (5). pp. 1275-1280. |
Publicador |
American Chemical Society |
Relação |
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/am1001597 http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/28372/ |
Palavras-Chave | #Materials Research Centre |
Tipo |
Journal Article PeerReviewed |