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Electronics Manufacturing Cell Phones

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100 billion parts handled per year. Almost all come from ... Voltmeter and caliper used to check quality. Metalizing of contacts spraying on molten metal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronics Manufacturing Cell Phones


1
Electronics ManufacturingCell Phones
  • James Farrell
  • Amanda Feather
  • Ellie Heidingsfelder
  • Kevin Kelly
  • Scott Owens

2
Overview
  • James Farrell

3
Basic Parts (Sony-Ericsson W300)
LCD screen
Camera/lens
Keypad
Microchips
PCBs
Plastic housing
Rechargeable battery
4
General Process - Nokia
  • Made entirely in-house
  • 10 factories worldwide
  • Make 325 million per year
  • 10 per second
  • Gross margin 33
  • Best in industry

5
Components
  • 100 billion parts handled per year
  • Almost all come from outside suppliers
  • Factory for final assembly, integration, and test

6
Circuit Boards
  • Electrical components added to printed circuit
    board
  • Parts loaded onto spindles with tape
  • Feed into automated machines that pull parts off
    the tape
  • Lays parts onto the printed circuit boards
  • Boards baked for 7 minutes

7
Testing
  • Completed PCBs receive software
  • Chips configured
  • Tested for proper functionality

8
Hand Work
  • Remainder of parts installed by hand
  • LCDs, cameras, casing, keypads, etc.
  • Different for each customer

9
Customization
  • Handset put into cradle
  • Given unique serial number
  • Customer specific software downloaded into phone
  • Custom menus, features, logos added
  • Final testing
  • Visual inspection and cleaning
  • Phones shipped to wireless companies

10
Printed Circuit Boards(PCB)
  • Scott Owens

11
What Are PCBs?
  • A flat plastic or fiberglass board on which
    interconnected circuits and components are
    laminated or etched
  • Chips and other electronic components are mounted
    on the circuits
  • Single side circuitry printed on only one side
    of the board
  • Double side circuitry printed on both sides of
    the board
  • Multi-layered circuitry printed in combined
    layers (ideally used for communications)

12
PCB Components
  • The board made from nonconductive material
    (normally plastic)
  • The circuitry made from conductive material
    (normally copper)

13
PCB History
  • 1930s first PCBs invented
  • Invented by Dr. Paul Eisler, Australian Engineer
  • Graduated from Vienna University 1930
  • 1950-60s Single side PCBs dominated
  • Mid 1960s-70s Double sided PCBs became industry
    standard
  • Mid 1980s emergence of multi-layered PCBs

14
Manufacturing Processes
  • Drilling
  • 1st Copper Plating
  • Imaging (Photosensitive Resist)
  • 2nd Copper Plating Tin/Lead Plating
  • Resist removal
  • Etching
  • Tin/Lead Removal Solder masking (Polymer)
  • Final plating (Electroless Nickel, Immersion
    Gold)

15
Manufacturing Processes
  • Overall process takes about 3 hours (advanced
    circuits)
  • The process can vary depending on the
    manufacturer and design
  • The following Process Map is from Morris
    Productions

16
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17
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18
Microchips
  • Ellie Heidingsfelder

19
Manufacturing Steps
  • Silicon conversion
  • Wafer fabrication
  • Final cleaning
  • Etching
  • Layering
  • Ion implantation

20
Silicon Conversion
  • Raw silicon dioxide heated with wood and coke
  • Produces MGS silicon
  • MGS silicon is transformed into EGS silicon
  • EGS is continuously tested until acceptable
    purity level is reached
  • Large silicon ingot/cylinder is grown to be later
    processed into wafers
  • Expose small seed of purified silicon to a molten
    batch of silicon (1500-2000C)
  • Molten silicon attaches to purified silicon

21
Wafer Fabrication
  • Silicon ingot placed on a precision lathe to
    ensure size consistency
  • Placed under X-ray observation to check for
    impurities
  • Flat surface ground on one ingot side
  • Water acts as lubricant
  • Sliced into wafers with diamond wire saw
  • Can be as thin as .020
  • Wafers checked for consistency
  • Damaged silicon removed by chemical etching using
    potassium hydroxide
  • Wafers polished and shipped to wafer fabrication
    plant

22
Wafer Fabrication Plant
  • Silicon wafers converted from raw silicon to
    microchips
  • Highly sterile environment
  • On average one particle of contaminant in the air
    per square foot
  • Typical hospital operating room has an average of
    10,000 times more contaminants in the air
  • If only a few particles get onto wafer, it is
    ruined

23
Final Cleaning
  • Electronic film placed onto wafer
  • Bathed in combination of chemical acids to remove
    any more contaminants (deposition)
  • Insulating layer placed on silicon wafer
    (metallization)
  • Microscopic pieces of metal placed over
    insulating layer
  • Gas flows over the insulating layer to get rid of
    any impurities

24
Etching
  • Surface of wafer coated with photoresist
  • Photolithography
  • Mask placed over the wafer
  • Ultraviolet light exposed to wafer
  • Creates a gooey surface of photoresist
  • Wafer dipped into a bath of developer to remove
    photoresist
  • Pattern exposed
  • Each chip has own unique pattern
  • Wafer dipped into a chemical bath to expose
    silicon dioxide

25
Layering
  • Microprocessors have many unique layers
  • Etching process continued by growing new silicon
    dioxide on top of old layers

26
Ion Implantation
  • Wafer exposed to a stream of ions through an ion
    implanter
  • Ions alter the way the silicon conducts
    electricity throughout the chip
  • Ions alter the surface properties of the
    semiconductor surface
  • After ion implantation, atoms of metals placed
    between layers
  • Creates electrical connections between layers
  • Process repeated many times depending on
    complexity of microchip

27
Manufacturing Steps
28
Battery and LCD
  • Kevin Kelly

29
Cell Phone Battery
  • Types
  • Lithium-Ion (Li-Ion) Lithium Ion Polymer
  • Nickel-Metal Hydride and Nickel-Cadmium
  • Lead Acid
  • Lithium ? Superior Energy Density
  • Electrodes and Electrolytes
  • Separated From Phone
  • Vibrate

30
Battery
  • Two designs
  • Prismatic
  • Benefits due to packing efficiency
  • Stronger casing needed to avoid bulging/swelling
  • Cylindrical
  • Sensitive
  • Protect from moisture ? Dewpoint control
  • 4 elements
  • Lithium anode
  • Metallic oxide cathode
  • Dry solid polymer electrolyte
  • Metallic current collector

31
Battery Manufacturing
  • 5kg Lithium stock extruded into sheet 250 microns
    thick
  • Laminated ? further thinning to 20-40 microns
  • Rolled up into separate cell sections
  • Heated in vacuum oven 90 min at 80C
  • Voltmeter and caliper used to check quality
  • Metalizing of contacts ? spraying on molten metal
  • Casing/insulating sleeve
  • Injection molded plastics
  • Insert moldings and overmolding
  • Part of the battery outer casing for cell phone

32
Tolerances
  • Allow for alternative cells
  • Allow for potential swelling (up to 10)
  • 3 of voltage

33
Cell Phone LCD
  • OLEDs (Organic Light Emitting Diodes)
  • Current causes it to become opaque
  • Sandwiching liquid crystal between layers of
    plastic

34
LCD Manufacturing Process
  • Preparing the glass/plastic substrates
  • Creating electrode pattern
  • Coating with Indium Tim Oxide, Masking (Silk
    Screening)
  • Etching
  • Applying the polymer
  • Coat with polymer
  • Stroke in parallel fashion
  • Sealing resin
  • Plastic spacers
  • Inject liquid crystal
  • Polarizers
  • Final assembly

35
LCD
  • Glass edge polishing units
  • Glass substrate conveyor equipment
  • LCD panel prober table units
  • Lasers
  • Silicon annealing (Excimer Lasers)
  • Glass edge polishing

36
Tolerances
  • Testing electrical characteristics
  • LCD panel prober table units
  • Quality control
  • Clean rooms
  • AMLCDs 50 rejection rate
  • Tight dimensional tolerances
  • Philips ? zero tolerance (manufacturing process
    defects)
  • Zero bright dot policy in 2001

37
Plastic Technologies and Recycling
  • Amanda Feather

38
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40
Plastic Technologies
  • Crude Oil Natural Gas Chemicals Plastics
  • Active Disassembly Research Ltd.
  • Heated 60-150C (40-302F) to activate
  • Memory plastics and metals used during
    manufacture to activate memory state
  • Completely reversible so that disassembly is
    cheap and fast

41
Plastic Parts
  • Screws
  • Hot Melt Adhesives

42
Metal Parts
  • Metals used are Martensite and Austenite
  • Same as in eye glasses with Flexon frames
  • Metal rivets, zippers, pushing ribbons

43
Hazardous Materials
  • EPA and Basel Action Network classify cell phones
    as hazardous waste
  • When thrown into landfills, dangerous materials
    seep into ground and water
  • Lead
  • Affects brain, nervous system, and circulatory
    system
  • Mercury
  • Causes brain damage
  • Cadmium
  • Carcinogenic and acutely toxic
  • Arsenic
  • Carcinogen and causes multiple organ failure

44
End of life
  • Constantly updating technology leads to high
    turnover
  • Phones used for average of 18 months
  • Estimated 750 million cell phones currently in
    waste stream or in peoples drawers
  • 130 million phones discarded yearly, resulting in
    about 65,000 tons of waste
  • Only 625,000 recycled yearly, less than 1 percent
  • Numerous organizations accept used cell phones
    for recycling and reuse

45
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