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Bright nickel vs sulfamate nickel as an undercoating

September 23, 2008

Hi everyone,
I work for a electronics company that makes connectors. Many of these connectors use gold over nickel contacts. The contacts are made from either brass or copper. When we plate these contacts we use nickel as a undercoat (50 to 150 microinches). We are currently using sulfamate nickel as the undercoat, mainly because the gold adheres to it better. Recently I've been asked if I could use a bright nickel as a undercoat, so the contacts look brighter when finished. My question is can I use bright nickel as a undercoating? And if so, will I start having ahesion problems? Which is the best undercoating?

Jerry Hannibal
plating shop employee - Beverly, massachusetts USA
  ^- Privately contact this inquirer -^
September 23, 2008

Hi, Jerry. I would not expect an adhesion problem, but bright nickel occludes organics (that's why it's bright) that will cause a problem if the connector gets quite hot. I believe it's considered a poor idea to use bright nickel in electronics applications.

Regards,

pic of Ted Mooney Teds signature
Ted Mooney, P.E.
finishing.com
Brick, New Jersey


September 24, 2008

Bright nickel often contains organic compounds that can cause adhesion problems when another coating is applied. You can overeecome this by using a nickel-cobalt bath, but thsi gets expensiveand needs careful control.

I would suggest you use normal dull nickel with no additives. If the nickel is bing overplated, why do you want it bright - is it just to maintain the reflectivity once it is recoated?

Trevor Crichton
R&D practical scientist The Pheasantries - Chesham, U.K.

First of two simultaneous responses -- September 24, 2008

From my experience of reel-to-reel plating of electronic connectors....I NEVER used bright nickel ALWAYS sulphamate nickel under gold, tin-lead, etc.I was lead to believe there was conductivity issues/ oxidation layers associated with the organics in bright but I would recommend another contributor to confirm this?

Nigel Gill, BSc MIMF MRSC
- Glasgow, Scotland


Second of two simultneous responses -- September 24, 2008

Jerry,
Ted is correct. Bright Ni does not fare well in electronic applications. There are semi - bright Ni sulfamate formulations that may suit you and are fine for what you do. I always believed that jewelry should look bright, connector finishes should be plated to achieve the best electrical properties possible. Bright is not always better. Good Luck!

Mark Baker
Process Engineer - Syracuse, New York


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