Title :
Grain boundary sliding in surface mount solders during thermal cycling
Author :
Lee, Seong-Min ; Stone, Donald S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mater. Sci. & Eng., Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI, USA
fDate :
9/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The authors report the growth of fatigue cracks in near-eutectic surface mount solder joints during cyclic, thermal displacement-controlled loading. Ceramic leadless chip carriers (LLCCs) and small outline J-leaded (SOJ) packages undergo thermal displacement-induced fatigue with a frequency of 1/h. Two ranges of temperature were utilized: -36-125°C and -20-75°C. Surfaces and cross sections of the solder joints were inspected using scanning electron microscopy. Individual grains (colonies of lamellae or globulae) were found to slide relative to one another during thermal cycling. Cracks initiate at sites where the boundaries between colonies intersect the outer surface of the solder fillet. In the case of the LLCC solder joints, cracks also initiate beneath the chip carrier. These cracks rapidly reach the bulk portion of the fillet, where they are observed to prefer travel along interfaces between phases
Keywords :
failure analysis; soldering; surface mount technology; thermal stress cracking; -36 to 125 C; 2.8E-4 Hz; SOJ packages; ceramic leadless chip carriers; colonies of lamellae; grain boundary sliding; growth of fatigue cracks; near-eutectic surface mount solder joints; scanning electron microscopy; surface mount solders; thermal cycling; thermal displacement-controlled loading; thermal displacement-induced fatigue; Ceramics; Fatigue; Frequency; Grain boundaries; Lead; Packaging; Soldering; Surface cracks; Temperature distribution; Thermal loading;
Journal_Title :
Components, Hybrids, and Manufacturing Technology, IEEE Transactions on