DocumentCode
987551
Title
Printed Circuits and Microelectronics
Author
Danko, S.F.
Author_Institution
Electronic Components Research Dept., U. S. Army Research and Development Lab., Fort Monmouth, N.J.
Volume
50
Issue
5
fYear
1962
fDate
5/1/1962 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
937
Lastpage
945
Abstract
In the two decades since the concept of ceramic based "printed circuits" was first suggested for an Army Ordnance application, substantial changes have taken place in the techniques of electronic circuit construction in the United States. Today, such ceramic circuits, in simple and complex networks, are complemented by printed wiring assemblies in several variations. Both technologies, now well established and in mass use on production lines, represent the current plateaus in miniature circuit construction for general commercial and military usage. Other construction philosophies and technologies are now shaping in the country\´s industrial and military laboratories, all aimed at new orders of size reduction of electronic equipments. In the several microelectronic techniques under development, the elemental electronic part appears destined to lose its logistic identity completely, and yield its classical position as a building block to black boxes called "circuit functions." The paper provides a summary review of the evolution of current ceramic printed circuits and printed wiring practices and, in the light of today\´s microelectronic activities, frames the trend in equipment design in the years ahead.
Keywords
Assembly; Ceramics; Complex networks; Construction industry; Defense industry; Electronic circuits; Mass production; Microelectronics; Printed circuits; Wiring;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IRE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-8390
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JRPROC.1962.288377
Filename
4066800
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