grain boundary grooves
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2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert F. Cook ◽  
Frank W. DelRio ◽  
Brad L. Boyce

Abstract The populations of flaws in individual layers of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) structures are determined and verified using a combination of specialized specimen geometry, recent probabilistic analysis, and topographic mapping. Strength distributions of notched and tensile bar specimens are analyzed assuming a single flaw population set by fabrication and common to both specimen geometries. Both the average spatial density of flaws and the flaw size distribution are determined and used to generate quantitative visualizations of specimens. Scanning probe-based topographic measurements are used to verify the flaw spacings determined from strength tests and support the idea that grain boundary grooves on sidewalls control MEMS failure. The findings here suggest that strength controlling features in MEMS devices increase in separation, i.e., become less spatially dense, and decrease in size, i.e., become less potent flaws, as processing proceeds up through the layer stack. The method demonstrated for flaw population determination is directly applicable to strength prediction for MEMS reliability and design.


2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Maire ◽  
Emily Redston ◽  
Maria Persson Gulda ◽  
David A. Weitz ◽  
Frans Spaepen

2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Maire ◽  
Emily Redston ◽  
Maria Persson Gulda ◽  
David A. Weitz ◽  
Frans Spaepen

2016 ◽  
Vol 102 ◽  
pp. 364-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shang-Chun Lin ◽  
Ming-Wei Liu ◽  
Mogadalai P. Gururajan ◽  
Kuo-An Wu

Author(s):  
Prabjit Singh ◽  
Ying Yu ◽  
Robert E. Davis

Abstract A land-grid array connector, electrically connecting an array of plated contact pads on a ceramic substrate chip carrier to plated contact pads on a printed circuit board (PCB), failed in a year after assembly due to time-delayed fracture of multiple C-shaped spring connectors. The land-grid-array connectors analyzed had arrays of connectors consisting of gold on nickel plated Be-Cu C-shaped springs in compression that made electrical connections between the pads on the ceramic substrates and the PCBs. Metallography, fractography and surface analyses revealed the root cause of the C-spring connector fracture to be plating solutions trapped in deep grain boundary grooves etched into the C-spring connectors during the pre-plating cleaning operation. The stress necessary for the stress corrosion cracking mechanism was provided by the C-spring connectors, in the land-grid array, being compressed between the ceramic substrate and the printed circuit board.


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