There are two main material substrates that can be used to make flexible circuits. The first is commonly referred to as Kapton – DuPont’s trade name for polyimide film. Because polyimide/Kapton can withstand very high temperatures, post processing of etched copper circuitry is possible. The second substrate is polyester film printed with silver conductive ink. Polyester is a very robust polymer, but not as heat resistant as Kapton. However polyester has other excellent properties that make it outstanding for many flexible circuits.
Kapton can be thought of more like a printed circuit board (PCB) with very thin/flexible (.005” thick material). The conductive traces are copper just like a PCB and processed similarly. Many companies offer and design Kapton circuits as an option, however most companies do not process it in-house. Kapton circuits require a special chemical processing, similar to PCB boards – it is a subtractive process (chemical intensive, not eco-friendly), in comparison silver printing is an additive process and better for the environment.
Both Kapton/copper and polyester/printed silver can be covered with a dielectric cover layer for protection of the circuit traces from oxidation, abrasion, or electrical shorts. While the two materials do have their similarities, they also have their differences; Kapton offers some advantages over printed silver circuits:
So why would anyone make a flexible circuit on something other than Kapton with copper traces? Simple – it comes down to cost and flexible manufacturing! Kapton comes at a premium price – perhaps 2x the cost of polyester, and the copper etching / stripping process is a more capital intensive process than screen printing. Because screen printing is a more user friendly additive process, it can be used to print incredible silver circuits for membrane switches and many other printed electronic applications.