scholarly journals High Speed Oblique CT System for Solder Bump Inspection

Author(s):  
Atsushi Teramoto ◽  
Muneo Yamada ◽  
Takayuki Murakoshi ◽  
Masatoshi Tsuzaka ◽  
Hiroshi Fujita
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achraf BAHLOUL ◽  
Antoine VERGER ◽  
Alain BLUM ◽  
Mohammad Bilal CHAWKI ◽  
Mathieu PERRIN ◽  
...  

Abstract This study aimed to determine whether absolute quantification obtained with a high-speed CZT SPECT/CT system provides consistent results on phantom and in bone scintigraphy-based longitudinal monitoring of patients with vertebral fractures and/or fracture cascades.Materials and Methods. SPECT images were reconstructed as recommended for clinical routine. Both image quality and accuracy of measured activity were evaluated using an IEC body phantom. The optimized reconstruction process was applied to routine ≤ 15 min 99mTc-HDP SPECT spine recordings, which had been previously acquired from 25 patients (74±12 years old) at both early (1.3±1.1 months) and late (5.2±2.3 months) stage assessments of an acute vertebral fracture of a traumatic and/or osteoporotic origin.Results. A SPECT reconstruction with 32 equivalent iterations was used based on high levels of foci detectability in spheres as small as 0.6 mL in volume, and accuracy of measured activity, although the latter was affected by partial volume effect for spheres ≤ 5.8 mL. SUVmax from patients’ intact T1 vertebrae, used as a reference, remained stable between 1st and 2nd SPECT recordings (5.7±1.1 vs. 5.8±1.1, p=0.76). SUVmax from the initially fractured vertebrae were 3-fold higher on 1st SPECT (21.0±8.5, p<0.001 vs. T1 SUVmax) and markedly decreased on 2nd SPECT (11.2±4.2, p<0.001 vs. 1st SPECT). Inverse changes in SUVmax were documented for newly compacted fractures apparent on the 2nd SPECT (1st SPECT: 7.4±2.0 vs. 2nd SPECT: 21.8±10.3, p=0.002) together with an increased bone density on CT (in mean Hounsfield Units: 121±28 vs.190±39, p=0.003). Rate of SUVmax > 7.5 was 98% (56/57) for measurements obtained in vertebrae fractured in the preceding 7-months, whereas this rate was only 4% for the reference intact vertebrae (2/50).Conclusion. High-speed recordings with this CZT-SPECT/CT system provide reliable SUV measurements that may attest to longitudinal changes in vertebral bone metabolism and especially changes related to fracture healing or recurrence.


Author(s):  
Nicholas Kao ◽  
Jeng Yuan Lai ◽  
Jase Jiang ◽  
Yu Po Wang ◽  
C. S. Hsiao

With the trend of electronic consumer product toward more functionality, high performance and miniaturization, IC chip is required to deliver more I/Os signals and better electrical characteristics under same package form factor. Thus, Flip Chip BGA (FCBGA) package was developed to meet those requirements offering better electrical performance, more I/O pins accommodation and high transmission speed. For high-speed application, the low dielectric constant (low-k) material that can effectively reduce the signal delays is extensively used in IC chips. However, the low-k material possesses fragile mechanical property and high coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) compared with silicon chip, which raises the reliability concerns of low-k material integrated into IC chip. The typical reliability failure modes are low-k layer delamination and bump crack under temperature loading during assembly and reliability test. Delamination is occurred in the interface between low-k dielectric layers and underfill material at chip corner. Bump crack is at Under Bump Metallization (UBM) corner. Thus, the adequate underfill material selection becomes very important for both solder bump and low-k chips [1]. This paper mainly characterized FCBGA underfill materials to guide the adequate candidates to prevent failures on low-k chip and solder bump. Firstly, test vehicle was a FCBGA package with heat spreader and was investigated the thermal stress by finite element models. In order to analyze localized low-k structures, sub-modeling technique is used for underfill characterizations. Then, the proper underfill candidates picked from modeling results were experimentally validated by reliability tests. Finally, various low-k FCBGA package structures were also studied with same finite element technique.


2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 055401 ◽  
Author(s):  
William M Thompson ◽  
William R B Lionheart ◽  
Edward J Morton ◽  
Mike Cunningham ◽  
Russell D Luggar

Author(s):  
Atsushi Teramoto ◽  
Takayuki Murakoshi ◽  
Masatoshi Tsuzaka ◽  
Hiroshi Fujita

The high density LSI packages such as BGA is being utilized in the car electronics and communications infrastructure products. These products require a high-speed and reliable inspection technique for their solder joints. In this paper, an automated X-ray inspection system for BGA mounted substrate based on oblique computed tomography are proposed. Automated inspection consisted of OCT capturing, position adjustment, bump extraction, character extraction and judgment. Five characteristic features related to the bump shape are introduced. And by combining the characteristic features using artificial neural network, the condition of solder bump was judged. In the experiments, these techniques were evaluated using actual BGA mounted substrate. As a result, the correct rate of judgment reached 99.7%, which shows the clear evidence that proposed techniques may be useful in the practice.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Do Hyun Jung ◽  
Shalu Agarwal ◽  
Santosh Kumar ◽  
Jae Pil Jung

Soft errors in microelectronics devices, responsible for the malfunction of electronic systems, have become a hot issue for miniaturized and high-density packaging like three-dimensional (3D) packaging. Low alpha solder generates very few α-radiation-caused errors and malfunction in electronic devices compared with regular solder. It can improve performance and reliability of through-Si-via (TSV) packaging, prompting the need to adopt low alpha solder for bumping in TSV packaging. TSV technology has emerged as a popular choice for 3D packaging and chip stacking. In this study, the bonding properties of low alpha solder on Cu-filled TSV were investigated. TSVs were fabricated in a Si wafer by deep reactiveion etching, and Cu was filled in the via by electroplating using the periodic pulse-reverse current waveform. Cu filling in the via was achieved in 4 h without any defects at a cathodic current density of −8 mA/cm2. The LC-3 class of a low alpha solder ball (alpha emission &lt; 0.05 cph/cm2) having a composition of Sn-1.0 wt.% Ag-0.5 wt.% Cu (SAC105) and a diameter of 80 μm was reflowed on the Cu-filled TSV to form the solder bump. High-speed shear test was performed on the bumped low alpha solder ball to assess the shear strength and to investigate the fracture mode. The shear strength of the low alpha solder bump showed a maximum value of 369.63 mN at 1.0 m/s shearing speed and 17.6 μm tip height. The fraction of brittle fracture increased with increasing shearing speed.


2005 ◽  
Vol 125 (6) ◽  
pp. 652-658 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atsushi Teramoto ◽  
Takayuki Murakoshi ◽  
Isao Horiba

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