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Solvent and Curing Effects on Diffusion at Polyimide Interfaces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2011

S. F. Tead
Affiliation:
Cornell University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Bard Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-1501
E. J. Kramer
Affiliation:
Cornell University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Bard Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-1501
T. P. Russell
Affiliation:
IBM Almaden Research Center, 650 Harry Road, San Jose, CA 95120-6099
W. Volksen
Affiliation:
IBM Almaden Research Center, 650 Harry Road, San Jose, CA 95120-6099
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Abstract

Interdiffusion at interfaces between deuterated polyamic acid (d-PAA) and polyimide (PI) films was investigated with forward recoil spectrometry, an ion beam analysis technique. The PI films were prepared by spin - coating a solution of PAA on a silicon substrate, followed by an anneal at a temperature Ti, which produced partial or complete conversion of the PAA to PI. An overlayer of d-PAA was added in one set of samples by spin - coating from solution and in another set by transferring (in the absence of solvents) a dry d-PAA film onto the PI surface. The bilayer samples were then either annealed at a temperature Td or allowed to stand at room temperature. Bilayers prepared by spin - coating d-PAA from solution directly on partially cured PI films had interdiffusion distances w that decreased with increasing values of Ti to immeasurable levels by Ti = 200 °C. The decrease in w with increasing Ti is thought to be caused by a positive Flory parameter between PAA and PI which increases with the imide fraction in the PI film; the result is an increasing immiscibility between the swollen polymer layers. No interdiffusion occurred in the solventless - transfer samples for any combination of temperatures Ti or Td from room temperature up to 400 °C. Post - annealing of spin - coated bilayers at a temperature Td up to 400 °C was ineffective in producing any additional interdiffusion. Both of these results indicate that thermally activated interdiffusion (even for initially unimidized samples) does not exist in the absence of solvents, an effect attributed to the rapid increase of the glass transition temperature of the polymer with imidization.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1989

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