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Age-aware solder performance models : level 2 milestone completion

Holm, Elizabeth A.; Neilsen, Michael K.; Vianco, Paul T.; Neidigk, Matthew N.

Legislated requirements and industry standards are replacing eutectic lead-tin (Pb-Sn) solders with lead-free (Pb-free) solders in future component designs and in replacements and retrofits. Since Pb-free solders have not yet seen service for long periods, their long-term behavior is poorly characterized. Because understanding the reliability of Pb-free solders is critical to supporting the next generation of circuit board designs, it is imperative that we develop, validate and exercise a solder lifetime model that can capture the thermomechanical response of Pb-free solder joints in stockpile components. To this end, an ASC Level 2 milestone was identified for fiscal year 2010: Milestone 3605: Utilize experimentally validated constitutive model for lead-free solder to simulate aging and reliability of solder joints in stockpile components. This report documents the completion of this milestone, including evidence that the milestone completion criteria were met and a summary of the milestone Program Review.

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Compression stress-strain behavior of Sn-Ag-Cu solders

Journal of Electronic Materials

Lopez, Edwin P.; Vianco, Paul T.; Rejent, Jerome A.; George, Carly S.; Kilgo, Alice C.

New Pb-free alloys that are variations of the Sn-Ag-Cu (SAC) ternary system, having reduced Ag content, are being developed to address the poor shock load survivability of current SAC305, SAC396, and SAC405 compositions. However, the thermal mechanical fatigue properties must be determined for the new alloys in order to develop constitutive models for predicting solder joint fatigue. A long-term study was initiated to investigate the time-independent (stress-strain) and time-dependent (creep) deformation properties of the alloy 98.5Sn-1.0Ag-0.5Cu (wt.% SAC105). The compression stress-strain properties, which are reported herein, were obtained for the solder in as-cast and aged conditions. The test temperatures were -25°C, 25°C, 75°C, 125°C, and 160°C and the strain rates were 4.2 × 10 -5 s -1 and 8.3 × 10 -4s -1. The SAC105 performance was compared with that of the 95.5Sn-3.9Ag-0.6Cu (SAC396) solder. Like the SAC396 solder, the SAC105 microstructure exhibited only small microstructural changes after deformation. The stress-strain curves showed work-hardening behavior that diminished with increased temperature to a degree that indicated dynamic recrystallization activity. The aging treatment had a small effect on the stress-strain curves, increasing the degree of work hardening. The yield stresses of SAC105 were significantly less than those of SAC396. The aging treatment caused a small drop in yield stress, as is observed with the SAC396 material. The static modulus values of SAC105 were lower than those of SAC396 and exhibited both temperature and aging treatment dependencies that differed from those of the SAC396 material. These trends clearly show that the stress-strain behavior of Sn-Ag-Cu solders is sensitive to the specific, individual composition. © 2009 U.S. Department of Energy.

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An analysis of the pull strength behaviors of fine-pitch, flip chip solder interconnections using a Au-Pt-Pd thick film conductor on Low-Temperature, Co-fired Ceramic (LTCC) substrates

Vianco, Paul T.; Kilgo, Alice C.; Zender, Gary L.; Rejent, Jerome A.; Grazier, J.M.

The assembly of the BDYE detector requires the attachment of sixteen silicon (Si) processor dice (eight on the top side; eight on the bottom side) onto a low-temperature, co-fired ceramic (LTCC) substrate using 63Sn-37Pb (wt.%, Sn-Pb) in a double-reflow soldering process (nitrogen). There are 132 solder joints per die. The bond pads were gold-platinum-palladium (71Au-26Pt-3Pd, wt.%) thick film layers fired onto the LTCC in a post-process sequence. The pull strength and failure modes provided the quality metrics for the Sn-Pb solder joints. Pull strengths were measured in both the as-fabricated condition and after exposure to thermal cycling (-55/125 C; 15 min hold times; 20 cycles). Extremely low pull strengths--referred to as the low pull strength phenomenon--were observed intermittently throughout the product build, resulting in added program costs, schedule delays, and a long-term reliability concern for the detector. There was no statistically significant correlation between the low pull strength phenomenon and (1) the LTCC 'sub-floor' lot; (2) grit blasting the LTCC surfaces prior to the post-process steps; (3) the post-process parameters; (4) the conductor pad height (thickness); (5) the dice soldering assembly sequence; or (5) the dice pull test sequence. Formation of an intermetallic compound (IMC)/LTCC interface caused by thick film consumption during either the soldering process or by solid-state IMC formation was not directly responsible for the low-strength phenomenon. Metallographic cross sections of solder joints from dice that exhibited the low pull strength behavior, revealed the presence of a reaction layer resulting from an interaction between Sn from the molten Sn-Pb and the glassy phase at the TKN/LTCC interface. The thick film porosity did not contribute, explicitly, to the occurrence of reaction layer. Rather, the process of printing the very thin conductor pads was too sensitive to minor thixotropic changes to ink, which resulted in inconsistent proportions of metal and glassy phase particles present during the subsequent firing process. The consequences were subtle, intermittent changes to the thick film microstructure that gave rise to the reaction layer and, thus, the low pull strength phenomenon. A mitigation strategy would be the use of physical vapor deposition (PVD) techniques to create thin film bond pads; this is multi-chip module, deposited (MCM-D) technology.

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AWS breaks new ground with soldering specification

Proposed for publication in Welding Journal.

Vianco, Paul T.

Joining technologies continue to advance with new materials, process innovations, and inspection techniques. An increasing number of high-valued, high-reliability applications -- from boilers and ship hulls to rocket motors and medical devices -- have required the development of industry standards and specifications in order to ensure that the best design and manufacturing practices are being used to produce safe, durable products and assemblies. Standards writing has always had an important role at the American Welding Society (AWS). The AWS standards and specifications cover such topics as filler materials, joining processes, inspection techniques, and qualification methods that are used in welding and brazing technologies. These AWS standards and specifications, all of which are approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), have also provided the basis for many similar documents used in Europe and in Pacific Rim countries.

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Results 101–125 of 171
Results 101–125 of 171