Effect of Isothermal Aging on the Long-Term Reliability of Fine-Pitch Sn–Ag–Cu and Sn–Ag Solder Interconnects With and Without Board-Side Ni Surface Finish

2014 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  
pp. 4126-4133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tae-Kyu Lee ◽  
Jeng-Gong Duh
2010 ◽  
Vol 2010 (1) ◽  
pp. 000298-000305
Author(s):  
Tae-Kyu Lee ◽  
Weidong Xie ◽  
Thomas R. Bieler ◽  
Kuo-Chuan Liu ◽  
Jie Xue

The interaction between isothermal aging and long-term reliability of fine pitch ball grid array (BGA) packages with Sn-3.0Ag-0.5Cu (wt%) solder ball interconnects are investigated. In this study, 0.4mm fine pitch packages with 0.3mm diameter Sn-Ag-Cu solder balls are used. Two different die sizes and two different package substrate surface finishes are selected to compare the internal strain impact and alloy effect, especially the Ni effect during thermal cycling. To see the thermal impact on the thermal performance and long-term reliability, the samples are isothermally aged and thermal cycled from 0 to 100°C with a 10minute dwell time. Based on weibull plots for each aging condition, the lifetime of the package reduced approximately 44% with 150°C aging precondition. The microstructure evolution is observed during thermal aging and thermal cycling with different phase microstructure transformations between electrolytic Ni/Au and OSP surface finishes, focusing on the microstructure evolution near the package side interface. Different mechanisms after aging at various conditions are observed, and their impacts on the fatigue life of solder joints are discussed.


Author(s):  
Jiawei Zhang ◽  
Sivasubramanian Thirugnanasambandam ◽  
John L. Evans ◽  
Michael J. Bozack ◽  
Richard Sesek

Author(s):  
Anand Kannabiran ◽  
Sreekanth Varma Penmatsa ◽  
S. Manian Ramkumar ◽  
Reza Ghaffarian

The primary objective of this experimental research is to understand the common issues faced in a manufacturing environment that assembles products containing a variety of fine-pitch devices. The testing phase of the research, relates to characterizing the thermo-mechanical integrity of surface mount mixed (Sn-Pb & lead-free) assembly solder joints. The investigation involves both forward and backward compatibility in electronics assemblies on Pb-free PWB surface finishes. A full factorial design is used in the investigation, with 3 factors — solder paste, component finish and PWB surface finish. Eutectic Sn-Pb paste (63–37% wt) and SAC305 (Sn 3.0%Ag0.5%Cu) paste are used as Pb-containing and Pb-free levels respectively. For component finish metallization, Sn-Pb termination finish/bump composition is used for Pb-containing level while Sn termination/SAC 405 bump composition represents the Pb-free level. Immersion Silver (ImAg) and Electroless Nickel Immersion Gold (ENIG) surface finish on printed wiring board (PWB) is used for testing and analysis. The testing was aimed at providing results for a wide variety of fine-pitch components commonly used in surface mount solder assemblies. Hence, a PWB containing flip chip (0.4mm pitch), Ultra chip scale package (UCSP), micro-lead frame (MLF) or quad flat pack no-lead (QFN), thin small outline package (TSOP −0.5 mm pitch) and plastic ball grid array (PBGA −1156 I/O and 256 I/O −1 mm pitch) devices was designed and used for testing. The test vehicle also includes resistors (0201, 0402 & 0603). The stencil thickness and openings were selected to accommodate both the large PBGA (1156 I/O) and finer pitch components. The reflow profile was designed taking into account the component maximum temperature exposure limitations, due to non-uniformity in heating, determined from thermocouples during initial assembly. Lessons learned from the design, reflow process optimization and manufacturing are presented in this paper. The solder joints were subjected to isothermal aging followed by mechanical shock test, attempting to establish a relationship between the intermetallic growth at the solder/PWB interface and the mechanical integrity of the solder joint. The compounding of test, unlike singular test methods, provides a more realistic estimate of the reliability and life of the joint in the field. The assemblies were cross-sectioned after the tests and the microstructure of the solder joints will be analyzed to study the intermetallic growth upon isothermal aging.


2005 ◽  
Vol 91 (12) ◽  
pp. 888-896 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi YAGUCHI ◽  
Shogo MURAKAMI ◽  
Nobuyuki FUJITSUNA ◽  
Tomohiko SHINYA ◽  
Masato YAMADA ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Lewis ◽  
Hilary Sasso

Abstract Processing fine pitch flip chip devices continues to pose problems for packaging and manufacturing engineers. Optimizing process parameters such that defects are limited and long-term reliability of the assembly is increased can be a very tedious task. Parameters that effect the robustness of the process include the flux type and placement parameters. Ultimately, these process parameters can effect the long-term reliability of the flip chip assembly by either inhibiting or inducing process defects. Therefore, care is taken to develop a process that is robust enough to supply high yields and long term reliability, but still remains compatible with a standard surface mount technology process. This is where process optimization becomes most critical and difficult. What is the optimum height of the flux thin film used for a dip process? What force is required to insure that the solder bumps make contact with the pads? What are the limiting boundaries in which high yields and high reliabilities are achieved, while maintaining a streamlined, proven process? The following study evaluates a set of process parameters and their impact on process defects and reliability. The study evaluates process parameters including, flux type, flux application parameters, placement force and placement accuracy to determine their impact. Solder voiding, inadequate solder wetting, and crack propagation and delamination in the underfill layer are defects examined in the study. Assemblies will be subjected to liquid-to-liquid thermal shock testing (−55° C to 125°C) to determine failure modes due to the aforementioned defects. The results will show how changes in process parameters effect yield and reliability.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (DPC) ◽  
pp. 001531-001563
Author(s):  
Arnd Kilian ◽  
Gustavo Ramos ◽  
Rick Nichols ◽  
Robin Taylor ◽  
Vanessa Smet ◽  
...  

One constant in electronic system integration is the continuous trend towards smaller devices with increased functionality, driven by emerging mobile and high-performance applications. This brings the need for higher bandwidth at lower power, translating into increased I/O density, to enable highly-integrated systems with form factor reduction. These requirements result in the necessity of interconnection pitch-scaling, below 30 μm in the near future, and substrates with high wiring densities, leading to routing with sub 5 μm L/S where standard surface finishes (ENIG, ENEPIG) are no longer applicable. Copper pillar with solder caps technology is currently the prevalent solution for off-chip interconnections at fine pitch, dominating the high performance and mobile market with pitches as low as 40 μm in production. However, this technology faces many fundamental limitations in pitch scaling below 30 μm, due to solder bridging, IMC-solder interfacial stress management, and poor power handling capability of solders. All-copper interconnections without solder are very sought after by the semiconductor industry and have been applied to 3D-IC stacking, however no cost effective, manufacturable and scalable solution has been proposed to date for HVM and application to non CTE matched package structures. The low temperature Cu-Cu interconnection technology without solder recently patented by Georgia Tech PRC is one of the most promising solutions to this problem. The main bottleneck of copper oxidation is dealt with by application of ENIG on the Cu bumps and pads, enabling formation of a reliable metallurgical bond by thermocompression bonding (TCB) at temperatures below 200°C, in air, with cycle-times compatible with HVM targets. However, to ensure a bump collapse of 3 μm to overcome non-coplanarities and warpage, a pressure of 300MPa is used in the Process-of-Record (PoR) conditions, limiting the scalability of this technology. This paper introduces a novel Electroless Palladium / Autocatalytic Gold (EPAG) surface finish process, to enable the next generation of high density substrates and interconnections. With circa 100nm-thin Pd and Au layers, the EPAG finish can be applied to fine L/S wiring, with no risk of bridging adjacent Cu traces, even with spacing below 5 μm. Further, the EPAG finish is compatible with current interconnection processes; such as wire bonding, and the Cu pillar and solder cap technology for fine-pitch applications. For further pitch reduction, the EPAG surface finish was coupled to GT PRC's low-temperature Cu-interconnections, in an effort to reduce the bonding load for enhanced manufacturability without degrading the metallurgical bond or reliability. This paper is the first demonstration of such interconnections. The effect of the surface finish thickness and composition on the bonding load, assembly yield, quality of the metallurgical bond was extensively evaluated based on analysis of the metal interface microstructures and the chemical composition of the joints. The current PoR using Electroless Nickel / Immersion Gold (ENIG) coated Cu pillars and pads was used as reference. A novel surface finish is introduced, which allows formation of Cu-Cu interconnections without solder at lower pressure, between a silicon die and glass, organic or silicon substrate at fine pitch, allowing the performance improvements demanded by the IC Packaging Industry.


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