Deposition of silver layer on nonconducting substrate
US6224983A · kind A · utility
Assignee
Inventors
Key dates
| Filing date | Aug 13, 1999 |
| Grant date | May 1, 2001 |
| Priority date | — |
| Expiry date | Aug 13, 2019 |
Classification
- Technology area (CPC Y)Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies
- CPC primaryY10T428/31707
- WIPO fieldMedical technology
- WIPO sectorInstruments
Abstract
Metallic silver is deposited upon the surface of a nonconducting substrate using a multi-step wet deposition process. The surface is cleaned, and then activated in an aqueous solution containing stannous tin. The silver is deposited as a colloidal material from an aqueous solution of a silver-containing salt, a reduction agent that reduces the salt to form the metallic silver, and a deposition control agent that prevents the silver from nucleating throughout the solution. After the substrate is coated, the coating is stabilized in an aqueous solution of a salt of a metal from the platinum group or gold, dissolved in dilute hydrochloric acid. The process is particularly effective for depositing uniform-films of 2 to 2000 Angstroms thickness, which strongly adhere to the substrate.
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.