Activation of aluminum for electrodeposition or electroless deposition
Method for treating an aluminum alloy surface for electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal or alloy on the surface, the surface is oxidized (e.g. anodized) to form aluminum oxide, and then the oxidized surface is chemically etched to render the surface amenable for electrodeposition or electroless deposition of the metal or alloy thereon. A metallic coating can be electrodeposited or electroless deposited on the treated surface.
Latest Patents:
This application claims benefits and priority of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/601,917 filed Aug. 16, 2004.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates to treatment of a surface comprising an aluminum alloy in a manner to render the surface amenable to electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal or alloy, such as a noble metal or alloy, on the surface.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe surface of aluminum metal is spontaneously oxidized in the ambient atmosphere. This oxidation creates a dielectric film of native aluminum oxide, which has an adverse effect on electrodeposition or electroless deposition of metals or alloys such as Ni, Ag, Au, and Cu and their alloys.
With respect to overcoming the problem of electrodeposition, the zincate process has been employed in industry for the deposition of adhesive metallic films on aluminum. The process consists of immersing the aluminum substrate in a strong alkaline zincate solution. The native aluminum oxide is dissolved, and zinc is deposited on the surface via galvanic displacement of aluminum. As a result, the zinc-coated aluminum surface becomes amenable for electrodeposition of adhesive layers of metals, including nickel and copper. Zincate surface activation of aluminum has proven to be a cost-effective process for nickel bumping of wafers prior to flip-chip assembly.
Regardless of the acceptance of the zincate process in commercial applications, there are incentives for developing alternative methods for the electrodeposition of metals on aluminum and its alloys since the zincate method is sensitive to many variables. For example, direct electrodeposition of copper on aluminum has been reported for several copper complexes. A plating procedure for nickel displacement of aluminum followed by electroless nickel deposition has also discussed. In addition, an organic solvent has been used to lay a seed layer of copper or palladium on aluminum substrates. Then, electroless deposition with a reducing agent was utilized to deposit substantially more copper.
In addition to being useful for metallization of the aluminum surface, electrodeposition of noble metals on aluminum and its alloys has a variety of potential applications. For example, a porous network of electrodeposited metalic particles electrodeposited on the aluminum surface can be utilized for fabrication of heat dissipation systems, energy conversion and storage devices. In addtion, gold nanoparticles deposited on aluminum alloys may exhibit useful catalytic and electrocatalytic properties.
The electroless deposition of metals (e.g. Au, Ag, Cu) by galvanic displacement on semiconductor or metal surfaces is a well-known process. This deposition process proceeds via two concurrent electrochemical reactions, which involve the reduction of ions of metals and the oxidation of the substrate surface. The driving force for this process is determined by a difference in half-cell potentials (e.g. redox potentials for corresponding metal/metal ion and oxidized substrate/substrate pairs). The half-cell potential of the reduced species has to be more positive than that of the oxidized substrate. Chemical etching, which effectively removes the surface layer of oxide, precedes and/or takes place simultaneously with the deposition of a film of metal. Galvanic displacement has been reported for deposition of Au on Si, Au on Ge, Pt on Ge, Cu on TaN, Cu on Si, Cu on Al, Zn on Al, Ni on Al and other combinations.
Electroless deposited films of silver on aluminum and aluminum alloys can be utilized in a number of diverse applications, including, for example, miniature silver-zinc batteries. The electroless deposition of silver can also be used to fabricate optical devices for surface enhanced FT-IR spectroscopy, surface enhanced Raman scattering and metal-enhanced fluorescence. In addition, composite materials with silver particles are shown to have useful photo-catalytic, anti-microbial properties and tunable surface plasmon resonances.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention provides a method for treating a surface comprising an alloy of aluminum for electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal or alloy on the treated surface.
In an illustrative embodiment of the invention, the surface to be treated is comprised of an alloy of aluminum and a second element (e.g. Cu, Si, and/or others), the surface is oxidized by anodizing to form aluminum oxide, and then the anodized surface is chemically etched to remove aluminum oxide for a time to render the surface amenable for deposition of the metal or alloy thereon. The deposited coating can be either a particle type or continuous. Although anodizing is described as the oxidizing process for the illustrative embodiment, the invention is not so limited since alternative oxidizing processes to anodizing can be used in practice of the invention such as including, but not limited to, polishing, alkaline etching, acid pickling, electropolishing and any other treatment (e.g. thermal treatment by heating up to 700° C. in an oxygen bearing atmosphere such as air), which results in oxidation of aluminum alloy and formation of aluminum oxide on the surface where the coating is to be deposited.
In other embodiments of the invention, a particle-type coating comprising a metal or alloy of one or more noble metals can be deposited on the treated surface by electrodeposition with both controlled particle density and controlled particle size distribution of the deposited material. A coating comprising a metal or alloy of one or more noble metals also can be deposited on the treated surface by electroless deposition.
In other embodiments of the invention, a porous and multi-layer network of interconnected metalic particles is deposited on the oxidized (e.g. anodized) and etched surface by electroless deposition (galvanic displacement).
In other embodiments of the invention, electrodeposition of a metal or metal alloy on oxidized (e.g. anodized) and etched aluminum/copper films is used to fabricate a porous electrode built from electrically interconnected and spherical nanoparticles with the mean particle diameter ranging from 10 to 1000 nm.
In other embodiments of the invention, electrodeposition of a metal or metal alloy on oxidized (e.g. anodized) and etched aluminum/copper films is used to deposit a continious film.
Features and advantages of the invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description taken with the following drawings.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention provides a method for treating a surface comprised of an alloy of aluminum to render the surface amenable to electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal on the surface. The surface to be treated can comprise an alloy of aluminum and one or more alloying elements to provide a binary, ternary, quaternary, etc. aluminum alloy. For purposes illustration and not limitation, the alloying element can include, but is not limited to, one or more of Cu, Si, Mg, Zn and/or other alloying elements. Although the invention is especially useful as a surface treatment prior to deposition of one or more noble metals, the invention is not so limited since the invention can be practiced as a surface treatment prior to deposition of any metal or alloy on the surface wherein the term “metal or alloy” includes, but is not limited to, a metal or an alloy or mixture of two or more metals deposited concurrently or sequentially to provide a metallic deposit on the surface. For purposes of illustrating and not limiting the invention, the metal or alloy to be deposited can comprise Au, Ag, Pt, Pd, Cu, Ni, Cr, Cd, Pb, Sn, or W, or alloy thereof with one another, or with one or more other alloying elements such as including but not limited to one or more of Ni, Co, Fe, Cr, Mo, and W, whereby the deposited material comprises a binary alloy deposit (e.g. Ag—W, Ag—Co, etc.), ternary alloy deposit, quaternary alloy deposit and so on.
The method envisions providing a surface that is comprised of an alloy of aluminum and one or more alloying elements where the alloying element(s) is/are present in an amount effective to render the treated surface amenable to electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal or alloy thereon. The surface to be treated pursuant to the invention can include, but is not limited to, any type of substrate, layer, film, or other surface on which the metal or alloy is to be deposited by electrodeposition or electroless deposition.
The method of the invention involves oxidizing the surface to form aluminum oxide thereon and then chemically etching the oxidized surface (i.e. etching the aluminum oxide layer formed on the surface) in a manner to render the surface amenable for electrodeposition or electroless deposition of the metal or alloy thereon. The invention can be practiced using anodizing to oxidize the surface to form aluminum oxide thereon. Practice of the invention is not limtied to any particular anodizing process. For example, the anodizing process can vary with particular type of surface to be treated. Any conventional anodizing process can be used with the type of electrolyte and parameters of anodizing, such as anodization voltage, electrical current density, temperature and electrolyte acidity being selected as desired. For example, the anodizing process can be conducted in any conventional aqueous electrolyte that includes, but is not limited to, solutions of oxalic acid, sulfuric acid, phosporic acid, chromic acid, and mixtures of two or more of these acids. The invention also can be practiced using other oxidizing processes to form aluminum oxide on the surface. For purposes of illustration and nto limitation, alternative oxidizing treatments to anodization include polishing, alkaline etching, acid pickling, electropolishing, heating up to 700° C. in an oxygen bearing atmosphere such as air, and any other treatment, which results in oxidation of the aluminum alloy surface and formation of aluminum oxide on the surface.
Practice of the invention is not limited to any particular etching process. For example, the etching process can vary with particular type of surface to be treated. Any conventional etching process can be used with the type of etchant and time of etching being selected empirically to achieve a desired etched surface that amenable to electrodeposition or electroless deposition. For example, the etching process can be conducted in any conventional acid etchant that includes, but is not limited to, a pure acidic solution (phosphoric acid, oxalic acid, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid) and a mixture of an acid and an inhibitor of aluminum oxidation such as a chromic acid. Other inhibitors can be used as an alternative to chromate. Etching also can be performed in an alkaline solution of sodium hydroxide, or any other hydroxide.
Although the Examples set forth below involve anodizing using an aqueous oxalic acid solution using certain anodizing parameters and acid etching using an aqueous solution of phosphoric acid and chromic acid, these are offered merely for purposes of illustrating and not limiting the invention. Similarly, although the Examples are described with respect to a surface of a thin film or layer of an alloy of Al and Cu where Al and Cu are present in respective amounts of 99.5 weight % and 0.5 weight % of the alloy, the Examples are offered merely for purposes of illustrating and not limiting the invention.
EXAMPLE 1 ElectrodepositionThis Example describes an illustrative method pursuant to an embodiment of the invention for the pretreatment of an aluminum surface that makes it amenable for the electrodeposition of gold. This illustrative method is achieved by alloying aluminum with copper, anodizing the surface, and then chemically etching the anodized surface (i.e. etching the aluminum oxide layer on the surface) prior to electrodepostion.
In particular, aluminum-copper alloy covered wafers used in this Example were fabricated as follows: First, a 600-nm layer of SiO2 was thermally grown by steam oxidation of each silicon wafer. Second, a 3-μm thick layer Al—Cu alloy (99.5 weight % aluminum and 0.5 weight % copper) was deposited on the layer of SiO2 by physical vapor deposition (PVD). Third, each wafer having the Al—Cu alloy layer was anodized in an electrochemical cell at 50 V dc for 20 min in 3% weight by volume oxalic acid aqueous solution at 0° C. Fourth, the porous and barrier aluminum oxide layers formed by the anodization were chemically etched in an aqueous solution of 0.4 M phosphoric acid and 0.2 M chromic acid at 60° C. for approximately 2 hours. Fifth, gold electrodeposition on the treated Al—Cu alloy layer was carried out at room temperature (22° C.) in 1.0 M Na2SO3 (pH 8) with the Oromerse Part B gold plating solution avialable commercially from Technic Inc., Anaheim, Calif. The final concentration of Na3Au(SO3)2 of the plating solution was 4.3 mM.
Anodization of the Al—Cu alloy layer was carried out with a platinum mesh counter electrode and a Hewlett-Packard 4140B pA meter/dc voltage source. Electrodeposition, cyclic voltammetry (CV), and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) were performed in a three-electrode cell with the same platinum counter electrode and either a platinum wire (quasireference) or Ag/AgCl reference electrode. All experiments were performed with an IM6-e impedance measurement unit (BAS-Zahner). EIS data were acquired at open-circuit potential (OCP) over a frequency range between 1 Hz and 100 kHz with an AC potential amplitude of 5 mV and were normalized to the electrode geometric area of 1.4 cm2. The surface morphology of the deposited gold was evaluated with a Hitachi (S-5200) scanning electron microscope equipped with a PGT spectrometer for energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). The microscope was operated at 10 kV for imaging and at 25 kV for EDS. As used in this example, the term “processed” wafer refers to a silicon wafer with an aluminum-copper alloy film or layer that has been anodized and etched, whereas the phrase “unprocessed” wafer refers to a silicon wafer with an aluminum-copper alloy film or layer that has not been anodized and etched.
The films or layers comprised of 99.5% aluminum and 0.5% copper were anodized and chemically etched to activate the film or layer surface for subsequent electrodeposition of gold. Whereas anodization forms both barrier and porous aluminum oxide layers, etching results in complete dissolution of the porous aluminum oxide and partial dissolution of the barrier aluminum oxide.
To further characterize the electrodeposition of gold, a Tafel plot (
where E is the potential, R is the gas constant, T is the absolute temperature, α is the cathodic charge-transfer coefficient, n is the number of electrons, F is the Faraday constant, and j is the current density. The Tafel slope of the shown data (E vs In |j|) is found to be −0.022 V. This value indicates that the reduction of the gold complex in solution is a one-electron process, assuming that α is equal to 1. A slope of −0.026 V is expected from eq 1. The one-electron process corresponds to the following electrochemical reaction
Au(SO3)23−+e−→Au(s)+2(SO3)2− (2)
EIS was employed as method for in situ monitoring of the thickness of the layer of barrier aluminum oxide after anodization and during chemical etching. An equivalent circuit (inset in
In addition to monitoring of the etching rate of barrier aluminum oxide, EIS can be used as a convenient quality-control method to observe changes in the interfacial electrical properties induced by the electrodeposition of gold particles on the aluminum-copper alloy film substrate.
In addition to changes in the interfacial electrical properties, it is worthwhile to note a systematic increase in the deposition potential during galvanostatic deposition (
where m is the mass of gold deposited (μg), A is the geometric electrode area (cm2), t is the electrodeposition time (s), and M is the atomic weight of gold (g/mol). Analysis of
The mechanism of electrodeposition, i.e., nucleation and growth of gold particles, was investigated by generating four samples at two different current densities of −0.54 and −1.1 mA/cm2 and two electrodeposition times of 10 and 20 s. During these experiments, the electrodeposition potential at which the aluminum/copper electrode was polarized at the end of electrodeposition became only slightly more positive than its initial value. FIGS. 7 and 8 present micrographs of the aluminum-copper alloy film electrodes with deposited gold particles. Histograms shown as insets in
The EIS data (
The effect of electrodeposition time on the particle density and particle diameter is determined from examination of
Gold electrodeposition can be compared with electroless deposition of silver on the aluminum-copper alloy film substrate described in Example 2. In a dramatic contrast to electroless deposition, the electrodeposition of gold allows control of both the particle density and particle diameter. Whereas electroless deposition is determined by the overpotential and the elecrodepositon is controlled by the electrodeposition time. Therefore, electrodeposition is the method of choice for fabrication of particle-type films with a controlled particle density and a narrow distribution of particle diameters. For example, electrodeposition of a metal or metal alloy on oxidized etched Al/Cu films can be used to make a porous electrode built from electrically interconnected and spherical nanoparticles with mean particle diameter of from 10 to 1000 nm.
Example 1 described above demonstrates that aluminum-copper alloy films are made amenable for subsequent electrodeposition by anodization followed by chemical etching of aluminum oxide on the anodized surface. Scanning electron microscopy examination of aluminum-copper alloy films following gold electrodeposition shows the presence of gold particles with densities of 105-107 particles cm−2. The relative standard deviation of mean particle diameters is approximately 25%. Whereas the gold particle density was determined by the overpotential, the gold particle diameter was controlled by the electrodeposition time. Therefore, electrodeposition is the method of choice for the fabrication of particle-type noble metal films with a controlled particle density and a narrow particle size distribution. The fabricated films of gold particles with a controlled particle density and particle diameter distribution can be utilized in a number of applications, including catalysis, electrocatalysis, and optical and electronic devices. The method of the invention thus can be used as an alternative to the traditionally used zincate process for electrodeposition on aluminum.
EXAMPLE 2 Electroless DepositionThis Example describes an illustrative method pursuant to another embodiment of the invention for the pretreatment of an aluminum surface that makes it amenable for the electroless deposition of silver (Ag). This illustrative method is achieved by alloying aluminum with copper, anodizing the surface, and then chemically etching the anodized surface (i.e. etching the aluminum oxide layer on the surface) prior to electroless deposition.
In particular, aluminum-copper alloy covered wafers used in this Example were fabricated as follows: First, a 600 nm thick layer of SiO2 was thermally grown by steam oxidation of a Si wafer. Second, a 3 micron thick layer (99.5 weight % aluminum and 0.5 weight % copper) was deposited on the layer of SiO2 by physical vapor deposition (PVD). Third, each wafer was anodized in an electrochemical cell, described in detail elsewhere, at 50 V DC for 20 minutes in 3% weight by volume oxalic acid aqueous solution at 0° C. Fourth, the porous and barrier aluminum oxides were etched in a mixture of 0.4 M phosphoric and 0.2 M chromic acids at 60° C. for approximately 2 hours. Fifth, AgNO3 was added to the etching solution to obtain the 1.1 mM concentration of Ag+ to effect electroless deposition of silver. Electroless deposition was carried out in the etching solution at 60° C. and with no stirring. That is, silver (Ag) was deposited on the treated surface of the Al—Cu alloy films or layers by the galvanic displacement mechanism (electroless deposition) during the etching step by adding AgNO3 to the etching solution. Copper in and/or underneath the film or layer as a result of anodizing appears to act as a reducing agent, although applicants do not intend to be bound by this. The invention also envisions using an external reducing agent during electroless deposition.
Anodization of aluminum-copper alloy films prior to etching was carried out with a platinum mesh counter electrode and a Hewlett-Packard 4140B pA meter/DC voltage source. EIS experiments were performed in a three-electrode cell with the same working and counter electrodes and a platinum wire as a quasi-reference electrode. EIS was carried out with an IM6-e impedance measurement unit (BAS-Zahner) and the acquired EIS data were analyzed with impedance modeling software (BAS-Zahner). EIS data were acquired at open circuit potential (OCP) over a frequency range between 1 Hz and 100 kHz and with an AC potential amplitude of 5 mV. A low amplitude of AC potential is customarily employed in EIS in order to satisfy the condition of linearity. The impedance data were normalized to the geometric electrode area, 1.4 cm2. The surface morphology of deposited silver films was evaluated by a Hitachi (S-5200) scanning electron microscope equipped with a PGT spectrometer for energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). The microscope was operated at 5-6 kV for imaging and at 25 kV for EDS.
The anodization of aluminum-copper alloy films and subsequent etching were carried out in order to generate a clean surface with a controlled thickness of a layer of barrier aluminum oxide. While anodization forms barrier and porous aluminum oxide layers, etching results in complete dissolution of porous aluminum oxide and partial dissolution of barrier aluminum oxide.
The etching of the layer of barrier aluminum oxide was followed by EIS measurements. The thickness of the barrier oxide layer was calculated according to Equation [1′], where (Cbl) is capacitance of the barrier aluminum oxide, (d) is its thickness, A is the geometric surface area, 1.4 cm2, (ε0) is the permittivity of vacuum, 8.85×10−12 F/m and (ε) is the dielectric constant of aluminum oxide, 8.6.
Cbl=εε0A/d (1′)
The capacitance of the barrier aluminum oxide layer was assumed to be equal to the magnitude of CPE1 because the frequency dissipation factor (α1) was almost equal to 1 (0.96±0.01). Due to a slow rate of dissolution, the layer of barrier aluminum oxide was considered to be quasi-stable over the time period of EIS measurements (about 3 minutes). The EIS scan was repeated every 10 minutes. The left part of
Establishment of the utility of EIS provides a method to monitor the electroless deposition of silver.
In order to investigate the electroless deposition of silver, the galvanic displacement was interrupted after 9, 60, 120 and 180 minutes of continuous deposition. The silver deposits were examined by SEM (
In order to further study silver electroless deposition on the aluminum-copper alloy films or layers, control experiments were performed under the same conditions, but with the pure aluminum substrate (99.997% aluminum foil). These experiments revealed no increase in the interfacial capacitance over of a period of 2 hours after addition of the same amount of AgNO3 during the etching step. In addition, SEM examination of the samples revealed no particles of silver. Aluminum is known to be a stronger reducing agent than copper (the redox potential of Al3+/Al is about 2.0 V more negative than that of Cu2+/Cu. Therefore, the driving force for galvanic displacement of aluminum by silver is significantly larger than that of copper by silver (0.46 V). However, aluminum is also a very inert metal due to the presence of the surface oxide layer. Thus, it was not surprising that galvanic displacement of aluminum by silver was not observed under our experimental conditions (1.1 mM AgNO3, a mixture of chromic and phosphoric acids, pH 1.8, 60° C.). These results confirm that the electroless deposition of silver on pure aluminum substrates is a kinetically prohibited process due the presence of the layer of barrier aluminum oxide, which prevents the electron transfer from the aluminum substrate to cations of silver.
EIS measurements at OCP indicate that magnitudes of CPE1 and, as a result, the thickness of barrier aluminum oxide are approximately the same for the treated alumium-copper alloy films or layers treated pursuant to the invention and the 99.997% pure aluminum foil were anodized and chemically etched. However, the samples show the aforementioned striking difference toward the electroless silver deposition.
Upon completion of etching (0.4 M phosphoric and 0.2 M chromic acids, pH 1.8, 60° C.) OCP of the aluminum-copper alloy film or layer is determined to be sufficiently negative (−0.70 V vs. a Ag/AgCl reference electrode). Although not wishing to be bound by any theory or explanation, applicants note that this measurement suggests that the oxidation state of copper incorporated in the layer of barrier aluminum oxide is zero such that silver may deposit by galvanic displacement of such copper.
Additional experiments also demonstrated that the elevated temperatures were necessary in order to accelerate the electroless deposition of silver. At a room temperature, the electroless deposition of silver was achievable, but occurred at a significantly slower rate as determined by EIS and SEM. For example, the electroless deposition of silver for 2 hours at 22° C. increased the magnitude of CPE1 to only 7-8 μF/cm2. In contrast, the same increase was achieved after electroless deposition for only 4-5 minutes at 60° C.
Scanning electron micrographs show that electroless deposition results in the formation of films composed of silver particles on the aluminum-copper alloy films. By varying the conditions for silver electroless deposition (e.g. duration and temperature), it is possible to fabricate silver particles with a range of diameters (10-200 nm). These films are of interest for fabrication of miniature silver-zinc batteries, optical devices for surface enhanced Raman scattering and FT-IR spectroscopy, composite materials with photocatalytic properties and surfaces with anti-microbial properties.
Moreover, traditionally, zincating or stannating processes are used as the initial treatment of aluminum surfaces for sequential electroless or electrodeposition of metals (e.g. Ni). The method of the invention described in this Example 2 to achieve electroless deposition of silver particles by galvanic displacement can be used as an alternative method to zincating or stannating. As a result of the activation, the aluminum-copper alloy surface can be further coated with a metal (e.g. Ni, Ag, Au, etc.) by means of electroless deposition.
In addition, methods have been develpoed for patterning and anodization of the aluminum films only in those areas, which do not have a protective mask. A combination of these methods and electroless deposition of silver pursunt ot the invention is attractive for selective metallization of aluminum surfaces. Therefore, structures with particles of silver deposited only in the selective areas can be fabricated by combining of electroless deposition pursuant to the invention and photolithographic methods.
Although the invention has been described in connection with certain embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention is not limited to these illustrative embodiments and that changes and modifications can be made thereto within the scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims
Claims
1. Method of treating a surface comprising aluminum for electrodeposition or electroless deposition of a metal or alloy on the surface, comprising the steps of: providing a surface comprising an alloy of aluminum and an alloying element, oxidizing the surface on the alloy to form aluminum oxide thereon, and chemically etching the oxidized surface to render the surface amenable for electrodeposition or electroless deposition.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the surface is provided as an alloy of aluminum and an element selected from the group consisting of copper, silicon, magnesium, zinc, silver, gold, tungsten, chromium, lead, nickel, titanium or combination thereof.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the surface is provided on a film or layer of the alloy.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the film or layer is deposited on a substrate by physical vapor deposition.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein the alloy includes about 0.5 weight % copper and balance aluminum.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the surface is oxidized by anodizing, polishing, alkaline etching, acid pickling, electropolishing, or heating in an oxygen bearing atmosphere.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the anodized surface is acid etched for a time to render the surface amenable for deposition of the metal or alloy thereon.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the surface is acid etched by contact with a mixture of phosphoric acid and chromic acid.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the metal or alloy comprises one or more noble metals.
10. The method of claim 1 wherein the metal or alloy comprises a non-noble metal including Cu, Ni, Cr, Cd, Pb, Sn, or a combination thereof.
11. The method of claim 9 wherein the metal or alloy further comprises another metal including Ni, Co, Fe, Cr, Mo, W, or a combination thereof.
12. The method of claim 1 including the additional step of electrodepositing the metal or alloy on the surface.
13. The method of claim 1 wherein the metal or alloy is electrodeposited on the surface as a metallic coating.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein the coating comprises a particle-type noble metal coating with both controlled particle density and controlled narrow particle size distribution.
15. The method of claim 1 including the additional step of electroless depositing the metal or alloy on the surface.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein the metal or alloy comprises one or more noble metals.
17. The method of claim 15 wherein the metal or alloy comprises a non-noble metal including Cu, Ni, Cr, Cd, Pb, Sn, or a combination thereof.
18. The method of claim 16 wherein the metal or alloy further comprises another metal including Ni, Co, Fe, Cr, Mo, W, or a combination thereof.
19. The method of claim 15 wherein the metal or alloy is electroless deposited as a metallic coating on the surface.
20. The method of claim 15 wherein the electroless depositing occurs in the presence of an external agent or by galvanic displacement where a reducing agent resides in and/or underneath the aluminum oxide.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 11, 2005
Publication Date: Feb 16, 2006
Applicant:
Inventors: Dmitri Brevnov (Albuquerque, NM), Tim Olson (Albuquerque, NM), Gabriel Lopez (Albuquerque, NM), Plamen Atanassov (Albuquerque, NM)
Application Number: 11/201,766
International Classification: C25D 5/34 (20060101);