DocumentCode :
3040011
Title :
Amplitude modulated droplet formation in high precision solder droplet printing
Author :
Liu, Qingbin ; Leu, Ming C. ; Orme, Melissa
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. & Aerosp. Eng. & Eng. Mech., Missouri Univ., Rolla, MO, USA
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
123
Lastpage :
128
Abstract :
There are many methods used at present to apply solder to wafers, ceramics, laminate and flex circuit boards, and other substrates. Among these, high-precision solder droplet printing technology, which is noncontact, data driven, flexible and environmentally friendly, is a key enabling technology. This technology selectively deposits solder droplets only where required, and therefore needs no mask or secondary resist removal, uses materials more efficiently and creates less waste than other methods. Currently, continuous droplet formation from capillary streams is mainly achieved by application of the well-known Rayleigh instability in which a sinusoidal disturbance is applied to the stream, resulting in evenly spaced and sized droplets. However, changing droplet configurations for various products or varying the size or depth of solder joints is difficult. Amplitude modulated disturbance is employed in this work to generate arbitrary solder stream configurations. The final configuration is mainly determined by several parameters: (1) the degree of modulation of the waveform; (2) the phase difference between the carrier and modulation signals; (3) the charging voltage; and (4) the frequency ratio between the carrier signal and the modulation signal. Many different patterns can be achieved with the proper combination of frequency ratio, phase difference, degree of modulation, and charging voltage. A simulation code was developed to simulate the merging process and determine the parameters needed to achieve certain droplet configurations
Keywords :
amplitude modulation; assembling; capillarity; drops; electronic engineering computing; flow instability; packaging; soldering; Rayleigh instability; amplitude modulated disturbance; amplitude modulated droplet formation; arbitrary solder stream configurations; capillary streams; carrier signal; carrier signal/modulation signal frequency ratio; carrier signal/modulation signal phase difference; ceramics substrates; charging voltage; continuous droplet formation; data driven process; degree of modulation; droplet configurations; environmentally friendly process; evenly spaced/sized droplets; flex circuit boards; flexible process; laminate circuit boards; materials usage efficiency; merging process; modulation signal; noncontact process; process waste; secondary resist removal; selective deposition; simulation code; sinusoidal disturbance; solder application; solder droplet printing; solder droplet printing technology; solder droplets; solder joint depth; solder joint size; wafers; waveform modulation; Amplitude modulation; Ceramics; Flexible electronics; Frequency; Laminates; Phase modulation; Printing; Resists; Voltage; Waste materials;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Packaging Materials: Processes, Properties and Interfaces, 2001. Proceedings. International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Braselton, GA
Print_ISBN :
0-930815-64-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISAOM.2001.916561
Filename :
916561
Link To Document :
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