Effect of cold hydrostatic extrusion on processes occurring during heating and cooling of high-speed steels

1979 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 795-798
Author(s):  
Yu. F. Chernyi ◽  
F. K. Tkachenko ◽  
V. Z. Spuskanyuk ◽  
A. I. Mel'nichenko ◽  
A. A. Lyadskaya
1997 ◽  
Vol 50 (9) ◽  
pp. 477-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Earl A. Thornton

This review article describes aerospace thermal-structural testing technology. It begins with discussions of aerodynamic heating and space radiation heating. The review continues with a general discussion of thermal-structural test technology including heating and cooling, instrumentation, and thermal-structural boundary conditions. Then illustrative thermal structural tests are presented for high speed flight in the atmosphere and flight in space. Experiments conducted in the laboratory as well as flight tests are described. Several experiments are reviewed to demonstrate the diversity of thermal-structural phenomena. This article includes 120 references.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 000100-000106
Author(s):  
Tom Colosimo ◽  
Horst Clauberg ◽  
Evan Galipeau ◽  
Matthew B. Wasserman ◽  
Michael Schmidt-Lange ◽  
...  

Advancements in electronic packaging performance and cost have historically been driven by higher integration primarily provided by fab shrinks that has followed the well-known Moore's law. However, due to the tremendous and continuously increasing cost of building new fabs, the performance/cost improvements achieved via node shrinks are negated. This leaves packaging innovation as the vehicle to achieve future cost-performance improvements. This has initiated a More-than-Moore idea that has led to vigorous R&D in packaging. Advanced packages which employ ultra-fine pitch flip chip technology for chip-to-substrate, chip-to-chip, or chip-to-interposer for the first level interconnect have been developed as an answer to obtaining higher performance. However, the costs are too high as compared to traditional wire bonding. The status today is that the fundamental technical hurdles of manufacturing the new advanced packages have been solved, but cost reduction and yield improvements have to be addressed for large-scale adoption into high volume manufacturing. In traditional flip chip assembly silicon chips are tacked onto a substrate and then the solder joints are melted and mass reflowed in an oven. This mass reflow technique is troublesome as the pitch of the solder bumps become finer. This is due to the large differences in the thermal expansion coefficient of the die and the substrate, which creates stress at the solder joints and warpage of the package when the die and substrate are heated and cooled together. To mitigate and resolve this issue, thermo-compression bonders have been developed which locally reflow the solder without subjecting the entire substrate to the heating and cooling cycle. This requires that the bondhead undergo heating past the melting point of solder and then cooling down to a low enough temperature to pick the next die from the wafer that is mounted to tape. Machines in the market today can accomplish this temperature cycle in 7 to 15 seconds. This is substantially slower than the standard flip chip process which leads to high cost and is delaying the introduction of these new packages. This paper shows a flip chip bonder with a new heating and cooling concept that will radically improve the productivity of thermo-compression bonding. Data and productivity cycles from this new bond head with heating rates of over 200°C/sec and cooling of faster than 100°C/sec are revealed. Experimental results are shown of exceptional temperature accuracy across the die of 5°C throughout the cycle and better than 3°C at the final heating stage. The high speed thermo-compression bonds are analyzed and the efficacy of the new concept is proven. Excellent temperature uniformity while heating rapidly is an absolute necessity for enabling good solder joints in a fast process. Without good temperature uniformity, additional dwell times need to be incorporated to allow heat to flow to all of the joints, negating any benefits from rapid heating. Whereas the current state-of-that-art is often to program temperature in steps, this bonder can be commanded and accurately follows more complex temperature profiles with great accuracy. Examples of how this profiling can be used to enhance the uniformity and integrity of the joints with non-conductive pastes, film, and without underfill along with the associated productivity improvements will be shown. Tests that show portability across platforms that will lead to set up time and yield improvements and are identified and quantified. Additionally new ideas for materials and equipment development to further enhance productivity and yield are explored.


Micromachines ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 334 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinxin Fu ◽  
Qian Chen ◽  
Xinyu Chen ◽  
Liang Zhang ◽  
Aibin Yang ◽  
...  

Thermal nanoimprint lithography is playing a vital role in fabricating micro/nanostructures on polymer materials by the advantages of low cost, high throughput, and high resolution. However, a typical thermal nanoimprint process usually takes tens of minutes due to the relatively low heating and cooling rate in the thermal imprint cycle. In this study, we developed an induction heating apparatus for the thermal imprint with a mold made of ferromagnetic material, nickel. By applying an external high-frequency alternating magnetic field, heat was generated by the eddy currents and magnetic hysteresis losses of the ferromagnetic nickel mold at high speed. Once the external alternating magnetic field was cut off, the system would cool down fast owe to the small thermal capacity of the nickel mold; thus, providing a high heating and cooling rate for the thermal nanoimprint process. In this paper, nanostructures were successfully replicated onto polymer sheets with the scale of 4-inch diameter within 5 min.


1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 120-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Gecim ◽  
W. O. Winer

This study utilizes an integral transform technique in order to solve the heat conduction equation in cylindrical coordinates. The major assumption is the high speed (i.e., large Peclet number) assumption. The boundary value problem is governed by the parabolic form of the heat equation representing the quasi-stationary state. The boundary conditions are a combination of Neumann and mixed type due to simultaneous heating and cooling on the surface of the cylinder. The surface temperature reaches a peak value over the heat source and gradually decreases to a nearly constant level over the cooling zone. Thermal penetration in the radial direction is shown to be only a few percent of the radius, leaving the bulk of the body at a uniform temperature. The width of the heat source and the total heat input are shown to be effective on the level of temperature whereas the input distribution is shown to be unimportant. The dimensionless numbers involved are the Biot and the Peclet numbers where the solution is governed by the ratio of the Biot number to the square root of the Peclet number.


Author(s):  
Matthew Staymates ◽  
Greg Gillen ◽  
Wayne Smith ◽  
Richard Lareau ◽  
Robert Fletcher

Efforts are underway in the Surface and Microanalysis Science Division at the National Institute of Standards and Technology to study trace aerodynamic sampling of contraband materials (explosives or narcotics) in non-contact trace detection systems. Trace detection systems are designed to screen people, personal items, and cargo for particles that have contaminated surfaces. In a typical implementation of people screening, a human subject walks into a confined space where they are interrogated by a series of pulsed air jets and are screened for contraband materials by a chemical analyzer. The screening process requires particle and vapor removal, transport, collection, desorption, and detection. Aerodynamic sampling is the critical front-end process for effective detection. In this paper, a number of visualization techniques are employed to study non-contact aerodynamic sampling in detail. Particle lift-off and removal is visualized using high-speed videography, transport of air and particles by laser light scattering, and desorption surface heating and cooling patterns by infrared thermography. These tools are used to identify sampling inefficiencies and may be used to study next-generation screening approaches for aerodynamic sampling of particles and vapors.


2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 9196-9216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anson Wong ◽  
Yanting Guo ◽  
Chul Park ◽  
Nan Zhou

1944 ◽  
Vol 151 (1) ◽  
pp. 326-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Walker

The paper deals with the factors affecting the temperature rise of totally enclosed self-lubricated gearboxes, with particular reference to worm gearboxes, and is based on observations obtained from a power circulating apparatus through worm gears which has provision for the accurate measurement of efficiency and temperature rise under variable load and speed. The theory underlying the heating and cooling of gearboxes is discussed, for gears running under continuous load and also under a repeated cycle of intermittent load. Temperature rise depends on the heat-dissipating capacity of the gearbox and the power losses within the box; heat-dissipating capacity is dealt with in relation to surface area of the box, speed of the gears, and artificial cooling by air fan; power losses are discussed under the headings of efficiency and oil drag losses. It is shown that gear speed and turbulence in the lubricant contribute considerably to heat-dissipating capacity, and that oil drag losses play an important part, particularly on large gears running at moderate or high speed. Cooling by air or other means is shown to result in an increase in power capacity (for a given allowable temperature rise) much more than in proportion to the increase in heat-dissipating capacity of the box, owing to a higher overall efficiency when transmitting heavier loads. Results of worm gear efficiency tests carried out in the past on the Daimler-Lanchester testing machine at the National Physical Laboratory on the author's design of worm gear, which gave the highest efficiency of any published tests carried out on this machine, are reconsidered in the light of recent work and it is contended that the National Physical Laboratory machine gives efficiency figures which are in general higher than the true efficiency.


2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 206-217
Author(s):  
Hamid Reza Karimi Zarchi ◽  
Ali Khajesarvi ◽  
Seyed Sadegh Ghasemi Banadkouki ◽  
Mahesh C. Somani

AbstractThe microstructural characterizations and partitioning of carbon element in the weld heat affected zones of a commercial API 5L X60 line pipe steel were studied by applying a high speed heating and cooling dilatometry technique in the present research work. The hollow cylindrical specimens were quickly heated to 1000°C, soaked for only 5 s followed by continuous cooling to ambient temperature. Besides the construction of CCT diagram of this high strength low alloy steel using the dilatation data, the hardening response, microstructural features and carbon partitioning of weld simulated specimens were investigated. The obtained results showed that the hardening response of samples increased from 142 to 261HV10kg with increasing cooling rates. These hardening variations were attributed to the changes in microstructural features and carbon partitioning that occurred between the microconstituents present in the microstructures of weld simulated samples.


1989 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tony Pan ◽  
Steve Poon

AbstractHigh density thin film interconnects are expected to be widely used for multi-chip module application to accommodate next generation high I/O and high speed integrated circuits. These interconnects typically use polyimide as the dielectric, and aluminum or copper (with protective overcoat) as the conductor. The interconnects are typically built on silicon or alumina substrates. Large film stress occurs due to the high processing temperature required to cure polyimide and due to the mismatch in thermal coefficients of expansion (TCE) between the film materials and substrate materials. This work studies film stress for these materials.An instrument which measures thin film stress in-situ at temperatures between 25 and 450°C was used to characterize the stress in polyimide, nickel, and copper films. Two substrate materials, silicon and sapphire, were used in order to extract the TCE and elastic modulus for each film material. Three polyimide materials were evaluated. One of the polyimides studied showed complete stress relaxation at temperatures above 300°C and was almost completely elastic upon heating and cooling between 25 and 300°C. The TCE was calculated to be 41×10−6/°C and the biaxial elastic modulus was 4.0×109 Pascal. The nickel had very low stress asplated, however, high tensile stress was observed after 350°C annealing as a result of TCE mismatch. After first annealing, the nickel was almost completely elastic upon cooling and repeated heating and cooling between 25 and 350°C. Copper, on the other hand, was not completely elastic under similar thermal treatments. High thermal stress caused plastic deformation to occur in copper films. The room temperature stress in copper film after 350°C annealing depended on yield strength instead of TCE mismatch. The stress in these materials and its effects on processing and reliability for high density interconnect will be reported.


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