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
Link To Document