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Fully Automatic FOG FOB FOF TFOG TFOF Bonder

Fully Automatic FOG FOB FOF TFOG TFOF Bonder

Fully Automatic FOG FOB FOF TFOG TFOF Bonder

1. What the acronyms really mean


FOG = Flex On Glass
FOB = Flex On Board (rigid PCB)
FOF = Flex On Flex (two flexible circuits)
TFOG = Tape (or Tab) Flex On Glass
TFOF = Tape Flex On Flex

In short, a “fully automatic FOG/FOB/FOF/TFOG/TFOF bonder” is one unified platform that can assemble any combination of flexible printed circuits (FPC), rigid PCBs, glass substrates, polyimide tapes, copper flex heaters, even ultra-thin stainless-steel stiffeners—by using Anisotropic Conductive Film (ACF) and a servo-controlled pulse-heat or constant-heat bonding head.

One machine, five processes, zero manual intervention after loader.

2. Why “fully automatic” changes everything


Legacy semi-automatic cells need an operator every 8–12 seconds to place covers, align gold-fingers, close the vacuum tray and press “start”.

A fully automatic bonder integrates:

• 3-axis or 4-axis linear-motor stages with 0.5 µm encoder feedback


• Dual-gantry pick-and-place for 2-second substrate swap


• Up-looking and down-looking 5-MP vision pairs + coaxial lighting for fiducial, pin-mark and edge alignment


• ACF cut-feed-tack module that indexes the tape in 10 µm steps。removes 5 µm of backing liner and pre-tacks in one motion


• Pulse-heat power supply (typ. 2 kW, 400 kHz) that can ramp the thermode from 25 °C to 400 °C in 180 ms and cool to 80 °C in 120 ms


• Force-controlled Z-axis (0.01 MPa resolution) with real-time piezo sensor to prevent “over-squeeze” of 25 µm pitch ACF


• In-line four-wire Kelvin tester that measures contact resistance (mΩ) and isolation (GΩ) before the panel is released


• SMEMA-compatible conveyor so the machine drops straight into an SMT line

Result: UPH jumps from 250 pcs/h (manual) to 750–900 pcs/h (fully automatic) while holding ±1 µm alignment and ±0.5 °C temperature repeatability—numbers that are impossible for human hands.

3. Core working principle, step by step


Step 1 – Loader: robot arm picks the incoming tray (glass, PCB or flex) and places it on the pre-heating stage (60–80 °C).


Step 2 – ACF application: the feeder advances the anisotropic conductive film by the exact length of the bond area (±0.1 mm); a ceramic cutter slices at 45° to avoid stringers; vision confirms no air bubbles; a silicone roller tacks the ACF at 0.2 MPa and 90 °C.


Step 3 – Pre-alignment: the lower camera maps the substrate fiducials; the upper camera maps the flex tail gold-fingers; software calculates X, Y, θ offset and warpage compensation.


Step 4 – Final placement: the gantry places the flex or second substrate onto the ACF with 50 µm gap remaining.


Step 5 – Bonding: the pulse-heat thermode descends at 5 mm/s; when force reaches set-point (e.g. 1.0 MPa) the power supply delivers a programmed profile—typically 1.5 s at 190 °C for 25 µm ACF, followed by a −3 °C/ms ramp to 80 °C under maintained pressure to freeze the conductive particles.


Step 6 – Quick cool & release: embedded TEC cold-plate drops the bond line to 50 °C in 2 s; the head lifts; the stage shuttles to the unloader.


Step 7 – Electrical test: Kelvin probes contact test pads; if resistance > 100 mΩ or isolation < 1 GΩ, the panel is routed to the rework conveyor; good parts stack in JEDEC trays or go directly to the next SMT machine.

4. Critical hardware modules explained


Pulse-heat power supply: uses high-frequency IGBT switching to deliver 1 kA within 2 ms; closed-loop PID watches both thermocouple and IR sensor to prevent overshoot.
Thermode materials: molybdenum or titanium alloy, plasma-coated with anti-flux to stop ACF bleed; interchangeable cartridges allow 50 µm to 5 mm bond widths.
Vision algorithm: sub-pixel edge detection + golden-template comparison; handles low-contrast glass edges, laser-cut flex outlines, even mirror-finished ITO.
Force decoupling: flexure-based Z-stage isolates lateral forces, so when the thermode touches a 0.3 mm glass edge the system still reports true vertical load.
Clean-room package: ISO Class 5 mini-environment with ionizer bars and ESD-safe coating; reduces particle defects from 300 ppm to <30 ppm on Gen-6 glass.

5. Software & data traceability


Every bond creates a digital twin: temperature graph, force curve, ACF lot number, operator ID, humidity, particle count. CSV files feed automatically into MES (Manufacturing Execution System) for full 21 CFR Part 11 traceability. When a smartphone OEM sees a field failure, engineers can trace back to the exact bond head, thermode serial number and ACF roll within minutes—something impossible in manual lines.

6. Applications you touch every day


• Smartphone OLED driver flex (FOG) – 25 µm pitch, 1 200 pins, 3-sided bonding
• Automotive curved cluster (TFOG) – 12.3-inch glass, −40 °C to 95 °C thermal shock spec
• Tablet touch sensor (FOF) – 10 µm ACF, ITO-to-metal-mesh, 120 Hz report rate
• Industrial wearables (FOB) – 4-layer rigid-flex, 0.4 mm total thickness, IP68 waterproof
• Medical disposable catheter (FOF) – 8 µm polyimide, biocompatible ACF, lot tracking for FDA

7. Choosing the correct model: key specifications


Panel size: modern platforms cover 1-inch smart-watchring up to 100-inch TV mother-glass; check max bond length (single-side vs shuttle).
Pin pitch: entry-level heads handle 80 µm; high-end models with 5 µm alignment stage achieve 20 µm pitch on COF (Chip On Flex).
Temperature range: standard 25–400 °C; for Cu-to-Cu micro-bumps order the 500 °C option.
Force range: 5–500 N programmable; for stainless-steel flex heaters you may need 1 000 N high-force head.
Cycle time: specify “dry cycle” vs “production cycle” (with vision + test); some vendors quote 3 s dry but real throughput is 8 s.
UPH claim: ask for guaranteed number with ≤100 ppm defect rate, not best-case lab data.

8. Maintenance & uptime tips


Daily: wipe thermode with lint-free cloth + ethanol; inspect ACF cutter under microscope; run 5-point force calibration.
Weekly: replace silicone cushion (compression set >0.1 mm); check camera calibration plate; back-up parameter database.
Monthly: grease linear rails with PFPE vacuum grease; run full temperature uniformity map (≤3 °C across 300 mm).
Yearly: send pulse-heat power supply for calibration; rebuild vacuum generator; update cyber-security patch on IPC.

9. Future roadmap – where the industry is heading


• 10 µm pitch roadmap: vendors are testing 40 000-pixel COF for 8K micro-LED; next-generation bonders will use 200 nm resolution encoders and active warpage compensation with piezo actuators.
• Hybrid thermodes: combine laser pre-heat + contact thermode to bond silver-nano-ink on temperature-sensitive PET.
• AI process window: machine-learning model watches 50 sensor streams in real time, predicts void risk 200 ms before it happens and auto-corrects force or temperature.
• Sustainability: lead-free, halogen-free ACF pastes; low-temp curing (120 °C) to cut energy 35 %; recyclable carrier film.
• Modular micro-factories: tabletop “bonder cells” (600 mm wide) that plug together like LEGO for rapid reconfiguration between FOG, FOB and FOF in the same shift.

10. Take-away


A fully automatic FOG FOB FOF TFOG TFOF bonder is no longer a niche machine hidden in display giants—it is the productivity engine that lets start-ups build wearables in Shenzhen, suppliers launch curved OLED clusters, and medical companies print disposable ECG patches.

By unifying ACF application, micron alignment, pulse-heat bonding and in-line electrical test inside one closed-loop platform, the latest generation delivers three things every production manager dreams of: higher throughput (750+ UPH), lower defect rate (<50 ppm) and complete digital traceability.

If your roadmap includes narrower pitches, thinner glass or flexible hybrid electronics, investing early in a fully automatic FOG/FOB/FOF/TFOG/TFOF bonder is the safest way to guarantee yield, scalability and speed-to-market for the next decade.

szolian