Polishing a substrate enables much finer line geometries, tighter tolerances, and greater consistency from piece to piece. An as-fired surface finish can be adequate for thick-film applications with link thickness down to 5 mils and thin-film applications with line thickness down to 1 mil. However, for tighter tolerances and smaller dimensional lines, lapping, and for even greater refinement, polishing, are used to condition a substrate to allow for higher performing films.
Typical Polishing Benefits Include:
Enables thinner resistor layers for increased sheet resistance and higher value resistors in smaller areas
Allows for much denser circuit designs with tighter tolerances and greater consistency
Facilitates the development of RF/Microwave circuit features that require tight tolerances and a high degree of integration, such as bandpass filters, circulators, Lange couplers, and Wilkinson power dividers.
Grants the ability to develop more intricate metallization patterns with finer pitch and thinner metal layers, which may be required to build high-performance spiral inductors, high density interconnect, and intricate serpentine resistor patterns.