Title of article :
Vapor pressure and residual stress effects on mixed mode toughness
of an adhesive film
Author/Authors :
H.B. Chew، نويسنده , , T.F. GUO and L. CHENG، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Temperature- and moisture- induced delamination leading to popcorn package cracking is
a major package reliability issue for surface-mount plastic encapsulated microcircuits (PEM). Crack
propagation along one of the interfaces of a ductile adhesive joining two elastic substrates is modeled
to study interface delamination and toughness of PEMs. The polymeric adhesive is stressed by
remote loading and residual stress. Along the crack front, the film-substrate interface is modeled by a
strip of cells that incorporates vapor pressure effects on void growth and coalescence through a Gurson
porous material relation. Results show that under high levels of vapor pressure, increasing film
thickness will produce smaller enhancement on the steady-state fracture resistance of the interface,
also referred to as the joint toughness. Across all mode mixity levels, vapor pressure effects dominate
over residual stress. The adverse effects of vapor pressure are greatest in highly porous adhesives subjected
to a strong mode II component. The latter is representative of the likely state of loading in
IC packages since residual stress, resulting from the film-substrate thermal mismatch, induces a predominantly
mode II component
Keywords :
Adhesive , damage , Polymers , Porous material , void growth. , Fracture toughness
Journal title :
International Journal of Fracture
Journal title :
International Journal of Fracture