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Gold plating

Gold plating is a method of depositing a thin layer of gold onto the surface of another metal, most often copper or silver (to make silver-gilt), by chemical or electrochemical plating. Plating refers to modern coating methods, such as the ones used in the electronics industry, whereas gilding is the decorative covering of an object with gold, which typically involve more traditional methods and much larger objects.

Gold-plated aluminium cover on Voyager space craft that protects a gold-plated Sounds of Earth record
A gold plated desktop Stirling engine

Gold plating chemistry edit

There are five recognized classes of gold plating chemistry:

  1. Alkaline gold cyanide, for gold and gold alloy plating
  2. Neutral gold cyanide, for high-purity plating
  3. Acid gold plating for bright hard gold and gold alloy plating
  4. Non-cyanide, generally sulphite or chloride-based for gold and gold alloy plating
  5. Miscellaneous

Jewelry edit

Gold plating of silver is used in the manufacture of jewelry. The thickness of gold plating on jewellery is noted in microns (or micro-meters). The microns of thickness determines how long the gold plating lasts with usage. The jewellery industry denotes different qualities of gold plating in the following terminology

  1. Gold flashed / Gold washed - gold layer thickness less than 0.5 micron
  2. Gold plated - gold layer thickness greater than or equal to 0.5 micron
  3. Heavy gold plated / Vermeil - gold layer thickness greater than or equal to 2.5 micron

Gold plated silver jewellery can still tarnish as the silver atoms diffuse into the gold layer, causing slow gradual fading of its color and eventually causing tarnishing of the surface. This process may take months and even years, depending on the thickness of the gold layer. A barrier metal layer is used to counter this effect - these can be nickel or rhodium. Copper, which also migrates into gold, does so more slowly than silver. The copper is usually further plated with nickel. A gold-plated silver article is usually a silver substrate with layers of copper, nickel, and gold deposited on top of it.

Space applications edit

Gold, applied by evaporated methods or electroplating, has been specified by NASA to thermally control spacecraft instruments, due to its 99.4% reflectivity in infrared wavelengths.[1]

Electronics edit

 
Gold-plated electrical connectors

Gold plating is often used in electronics, to provide a corrosion-resistant electrically conductive layer on copper, typically in electrical connectors and printed circuit boards.

With direct gold-on-copper plating, the copper atoms tend to diffuse through the gold layer, causing tarnishing of its surface and formation of an oxide and/or sulphide layer.

A layer of a suitable barrier metal, usually nickel, is often deposited on the copper substrate before the gold plating. The layer of nickel provides mechanical backing for the gold layer, improving its wear resistance. It also reduces the impact of pores present in the gold layer.

Both the nickel and gold layers can be plated by electrolytic or electroless processes. There are many factors to consider in selection of either electrolytic or electroless plating methods. These include what the deposit will be used for, configuration of the part, materials compatibility and cost of processing. In different applications, electrolytic or electroless plating can have cost advantages.

At higher frequencies, the skin effect may cause higher losses due to higher electrical resistance of nickel; a nickel-plated trace can have its useful length shortened three times in the 1 GHz band in comparison with the non-plated one. Selective plating is used, depositing the nickel and gold layers only on areas where it is required and does not cause the detrimental side effects.[2]

Gold plating may lead to formation of gold whiskers.

Wire bonding between gold plated contacts and aluminium wires or between aluminium contacts and gold wires under certain conditions develops a brittle layer of gold-aluminium intermetallics, known as purple plague.

Types edit

There are several types of gold plating used in the electronics industry:[3]

  • Soft, pure gold plating is used in the semiconductor industry. The gold layer is easily soldered and wire bonded. Its Knoop hardness ranges between 60 and 85. The plating baths have to be kept free of contamination.
  • Soft, pure gold is deposited from special electrolytes. Entire printed circuit boards can be plated. This technology can be used for depositing layers suitable for wire bonding.
  • Bright hard gold on contacts, with Knoop hardness between 120–300 and purity of 99.7–99.9% gold. Often contains a small amount of nickel and/or cobalt; these elements interfere with die bonding, therefore the plating baths cannot be used for semiconductors.
  • Bright hard gold on printed circuit board tabs is deposited using lower concentration of gold in the baths. Usually contains nickel and/or cobalt as well. Edge connectors are often made by controlled-depth immersion of only the edge of the boards.

Soldering issues edit

 
Gold-plated printed circuit board

Soldering gold-plated parts can be problematic as gold is soluble in solder. Solder which contains more than 4–5% gold can become brittle. The joint surface is dull-looking.

Gold reacts with both tin and lead in their liquid state, forming brittle intermetallics. When eutectic 63% tin – 37% lead solder is used, no lead-gold compounds are formed, because gold preferentially reacts with tin, forming the AuSn
4
compound. Particles of AuSn
4
disperse in the solder matrix, forming preferential cleavage planes, significantly lowering the mechanical strength and therefore reliability of the resulting solder joints.

If the gold layer does not completely dissolve into the solder, then slow intermetallic reactions can proceed in the solid state as the tin and gold atoms cross-migrate. Intermetallics have poor electrical conductivity and low strength. The ongoing intermetallic reactions also cause Kirkendall effect, leading to mechanical failure of the joint, similar to the degradation of gold-aluminium bonds known as purple plague.

A 2–3 µm layer of gold dissolves completely within one second during typical wave soldering conditions. Layers of gold thinner than 0.5 µm (0.02 thou) also dissolve completely into the solder, exposing the underlying metal (usually nickel) to the solder. Impurities in the nickel layer can prevent the solder from bonding to it. Electroless nickel plating contains phosphorus. Nickel with more than 8% phosphorus is not solderable.[citation needed] Electrodeposited nickel may contain nickel hydroxide. An acid bath is required to remove the passivation layer before applying the gold layer; improper cleaning leads to a nickel surface difficult to solder. A stronger flux can help, as it aids dissolving the oxide deposits. Carbon is another nickel contaminant that hinders solderability.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Gold Coating | NASA Spinoff". spinoff.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2024-04-22.
  2. ^ "Nickel-gold plating copper PCB traces". Polar Instruments. 2003. from the original on 2022-12-07. Retrieved 2007-03-28.
  3. ^ Weisberg, Alfred M. (1997). "Gold Plating". Products Finishing Magazine. from the original on 2017-04-11. Retrieved 2013-04-03.[1] 2022-11-30 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  •   Media related to Gold plating at Wikimedia Commons

gold, plating, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidel. For other uses see Gold plating disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2024 This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic Please help improve this article possibly by splitting the article and or by introducing a disambiguation page or discuss this issue on the talk page January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gold plating is a method of depositing a thin layer of gold onto the surface of another metal most often copper or silver to make silver gilt by chemical or electrochemical plating Plating refers to modern coating methods such as the ones used in the electronics industry whereas gilding is the decorative covering of an object with gold which typically involve more traditional methods and much larger objects Gold plated aluminium cover on Voyager space craft that protects a gold plated Sounds of Earth record A gold plated desktop Stirling engine Contents 1 Gold plating chemistry 2 Jewelry 3 Space applications 4 Electronics 4 1 Types 4 2 Soldering issues 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksGold plating chemistry editThere are five recognized classes of gold plating chemistry Alkaline gold cyanide for gold and gold alloy plating Neutral gold cyanide for high purity plating Acid gold plating for bright hard gold and gold alloy plating Non cyanide generally sulphite or chloride based for gold and gold alloy plating MiscellaneousJewelry editGold plating of silver is used in the manufacture of jewelry The thickness of gold plating on jewellery is noted in microns or micro meters The microns of thickness determines how long the gold plating lasts with usage The jewellery industry denotes different qualities of gold plating in the following terminology Gold flashed Gold washed gold layer thickness less than 0 5 micron Gold plated gold layer thickness greater than or equal to 0 5 micron Heavy gold plated Vermeil gold layer thickness greater than or equal to 2 5 micron Gold plated silver jewellery can still tarnish as the silver atoms diffuse into the gold layer causing slow gradual fading of its color and eventually causing tarnishing of the surface This process may take months and even years depending on the thickness of the gold layer A barrier metal layer is used to counter this effect these can be nickel or rhodium Copper which also migrates into gold does so more slowly than silver The copper is usually further plated with nickel A gold plated silver article is usually a silver substrate with layers of copper nickel and gold deposited on top of it Space applications editGold applied by evaporated methods or electroplating has been specified by NASA to thermally control spacecraft instruments due to its 99 4 reflectivity in infrared wavelengths 1 Electronics edit nbsp Gold plated electrical connectors Gold plating is often used in electronics to provide a corrosion resistant electrically conductive layer on copper typically in electrical connectors and printed circuit boards With direct gold on copper plating the copper atoms tend to diffuse through the gold layer causing tarnishing of its surface and formation of an oxide and or sulphide layer A layer of a suitable barrier metal usually nickel is often deposited on the copper substrate before the gold plating The layer of nickel provides mechanical backing for the gold layer improving its wear resistance It also reduces the impact of pores present in the gold layer Both the nickel and gold layers can be plated by electrolytic or electroless processes There are many factors to consider in selection of either electrolytic or electroless plating methods These include what the deposit will be used for configuration of the part materials compatibility and cost of processing In different applications electrolytic or electroless plating can have cost advantages At higher frequencies the skin effect may cause higher losses due to higher electrical resistance of nickel a nickel plated trace can have its useful length shortened three times in the 1 GHz band in comparison with the non plated one Selective plating is used depositing the nickel and gold layers only on areas where it is required and does not cause the detrimental side effects 2 Gold plating may lead to formation of gold whiskers Wire bonding between gold plated contacts and aluminium wires or between aluminium contacts and gold wires under certain conditions develops a brittle layer of gold aluminium intermetallics known as purple plague Types edit There are several types of gold plating used in the electronics industry 3 Soft pure gold plating is used in the semiconductor industry The gold layer is easily soldered and wire bonded Its Knoop hardness ranges between 60 and 85 The plating baths have to be kept free of contamination Soft pure gold is deposited from special electrolytes Entire printed circuit boards can be plated This technology can be used for depositing layers suitable for wire bonding Bright hard gold on contacts with Knoop hardness between 120 300 and purity of 99 7 99 9 gold Often contains a small amount of nickel and or cobalt these elements interfere with die bonding therefore the plating baths cannot be used for semiconductors Bright hard gold on printed circuit board tabs is deposited using lower concentration of gold in the baths Usually contains nickel and or cobalt as well Edge connectors are often made by controlled depth immersion of only the edge of the boards Soldering issues edit nbsp Gold plated printed circuit board Soldering gold plated parts can be problematic as gold is soluble in solder Solder which contains more than 4 5 gold can become brittle The joint surface is dull looking Gold reacts with both tin and lead in their liquid state forming brittle intermetallics When eutectic 63 tin 37 lead solder is used no lead gold compounds are formed because gold preferentially reacts with tin forming the AuSn4 compound Particles of AuSn4 disperse in the solder matrix forming preferential cleavage planes significantly lowering the mechanical strength and therefore reliability of the resulting solder joints If the gold layer does not completely dissolve into the solder then slow intermetallic reactions can proceed in the solid state as the tin and gold atoms cross migrate Intermetallics have poor electrical conductivity and low strength The ongoing intermetallic reactions also cause Kirkendall effect leading to mechanical failure of the joint similar to the degradation of gold aluminium bonds known as purple plague A 2 3 µm layer of gold dissolves completely within one second during typical wave soldering conditions Layers of gold thinner than 0 5 µm 0 02 thou also dissolve completely into the solder exposing the underlying metal usually nickel to the solder Impurities in the nickel layer can prevent the solder from bonding to it Electroless nickel plating contains phosphorus Nickel with more than 8 phosphorus is not solderable citation needed Electrodeposited nickel may contain nickel hydroxide An acid bath is required to remove the passivation layer before applying the gold layer improper cleaning leads to a nickel surface difficult to solder A stronger flux can help as it aids dissolving the oxide deposits Carbon is another nickel contaminant that hinders solderability See also editDaniel Davis Jr inventor who was first to do gold plating as a business Gold filled jewelryReferences edit Gold Coating NASA Spinoff spinoff nasa gov Retrieved 2024 04 22 Nickel gold plating copper PCB traces Polar Instruments 2003 Archived from the original on 2022 12 07 Retrieved 2007 03 28 Weisberg Alfred M 1997 Gold Plating Products Finishing Magazine Archived from the original on 2017 04 11 Retrieved 2013 04 03 1 Archived 2022 11 30 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Gold plating at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gold plating amp oldid 1220268130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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