• Title of article

    The effect of cooling rate on the dendritic spacing and morphology of Ag3Sn intermetallic particles of a SnAg solder alloy

  • Author/Authors

    Leonardo R. Garcia، نويسنده , , Wislei R. Osorio، نويسنده , , Maria C. F. Ierardi and Amauri Garcia، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    3008
  • To page
    3012
  • Abstract
    The size and morphology of intermetallic compounds of Sn–Ag solder alloys can have a significant influence on the mechanical strength of solder joints. The aim of the present study is to characterize the as-cast microstructure of a Sn–2 wt.% Ag solder alloy, and to correlate the resulting scale of the dendritic matrix and the morphology of the Ag3Sn intermetallic compound (IMC) with the corresponding solidification cooling rate. Pre-heated low-carbon steel molds and a water-cooled solidification apparatus were used permitting a significant range of solidification cooling rates to be experimentally examined. It is shown that under very slow cooling conditions (0.02 °C/s) the microstructure of the sample is formed by a coarse dendritic matrix and a mixture of fiber and plate-like Ag3Sn IMC in the interdendritic region with the fibers located along the board line separating the matrix. For cooling rates from 0.15 to 1.15 °C/s a mixture of spheroid and fiber-like IMC and secondary dendrite arm spacings between 15 and 40 μm, with the spheroids located in the center of the interdendritic region. At higher cooling rates, of about 8 °C/s only Ag3Sn spheroids (of about 0.5 μm in diameter) prevail in the eutectic mixture.
  • Journal title
    Materials and Design
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Materials and Design
  • Record number

    1069793