Innovations using Ethyl Nonafluorobutyl Ether Provide Superior Solvent Properties for Defluxing No-Clean and Microelectronic Assemblies

The evaluation of a new solvent blend to clean printed wire boards is reported. Ethyl nonafluorobutyl ether (HFE-
7200) provides the fluid dynamics to build engineered cleaning fluids that exhibit superior cleaning on a wide range
of flux technologies. Environmentally engineered solvent substitutes for CFCs have done an adequate job on rosin
based flux technology but have exhibited poor cleaning efficacy on many of the low solids flux technologies. As
such,not in kind aqueous and semi-aqueous cleaning fluids have found favor in the market.
Trends and changes in technology drive the development of electronic materials. As microelectronics converges
with surface mount technology,cleaning fluids must exhibit high solvency,low surface tension and superior wetting
properties. New innovations in engineered cleaning fluids are required to satisfy the diverse technologies facing
industry today.
Properties including solvency,viscosity,surface tension,ozone depletion potential,global warming potential and
flash point are reported and compared to commercially available cleaning solvents. Fluids engineered with ethyl
nonafluorobutyl ether have similar physical properties compared to other commercially available cleaning solvents,
and have favorable environmental,safety and health properties.
The results indicate that newly engineered solvent blends containing ethyl nonafluorobutyl ether can be used to
safely and effectively clean printed wire boards containing advanced packages. Solvent cleaning processes using
cost of ownership will be presented. Performance data will be reported on leading flux technologies. Information
needed to support the manufacturing,environmental,safety and health improvement efforts of the electronic
assembly industry will likewise be reported.

Author(s)
David Hill,Mike Bixenman
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Novel,VOC-Compliant Aqueous Cleaning Agents for Post-Solder Defluxing

To meet today’s environmental demands,new VOC-free and low-VOC cleaning agents have been formulated that exhibit
outstanding cleaning performance for a variety of flux residues. The new cleaning agents were tested for defluxing watersoluble,
no-clean,and RMA residues from tin/lead and lead-free solders. Cleanliness was assessed by visual inspection and
ionic contamination measurements. Currently-available aqueous defluxers were included in the test matrix,and the
cleanliness data was used as a baseline.

Author(s)
Julie A. Wadford,Jay Soma,Beth A. Bivins,John R. Sanders,Geoffrey Beckwith,Ning-Cheng Lee
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Cleaning For Tomorrow

As technologies evolve with the onset of smaller and smaller components,different flux residues,and the no-lead
solders,manufacturing companies are asking questions regarding what they need to consider for the future to
effectively clean and dry circuit board assemblies. The physical obstacles encountered in the cleaning process are
described in detail herein. This abstract will provide examples of the components and the technologies used to
achieve acceptable cleanliness and drying while using No-Lead solder,water-soluble and no clean fluxes,and
evolving component packages.

Author(s)
Debbie Alavezos
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

A Novel Epoxy Flux for Lead-Free Soldering

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A novel liquid halide-free PK-002,epoxy flux,is reported for SnAgCu soldering,where the thermally cured flux
residue is designed to provide an interference-free service performance,in addition to the low cost advantage of a
no-clean process. epoxy flux exhibits a slightly lower flux activity than conventional fluxes. However,soldering
wetting for flip chip assembly process is outstanding. Presumably this is due to the lower flux viscosity of epoxy
flux which allows a higher flux volume to be picked up at flip chip flux dipping step. At ribbon connector assembly,
the peel strength of epoxy flux is the highest,attributable to the combined effect of solder bond strength and epoxy
adhesion. The flux residue of epoxy flux is virtually fully cured when processed through a simulated hot-bar
soldering cycle,as evidenced by DSC and solvent cleaning test. BGA solder bumping and BGA assembly are
accomplished satisfactorily. The voiding content in the solder bumps and BGA joints made with epoxy flux is lower
than all conventional fluxes tested,mainly attributable to the negligible outgassing rate of epoxy flux at soldering
temperature.

Author(s)
Wusheng Yin,Ning-Cheng Lee
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC Fall Meetings 2003

Key Application Issues for Implementing Package-Applied Underfill

Applying underfill materials to the bottom of components prior to shipping to the 2nd level end-user is very desirable
in that it would eliminate the underfill process from the end-users assembly line. The overall value to the end-user is
tremendous. It eliminates the need for special equipment to process underfill materials,allows more flexibility
during the product design phase and minimizes employee exposure to wet chemicals.
This paper will examine the key application and process challenges associated with implementing the use of
package-applied underfill. Included in this will be the challenges of physically putting the underfill on the
components at the 1st level component suppliers as well as the effects on 2nd level assembly operations,such as
component placement,reflow (effect on interconnect) and reliability performance.

Author(s)
Douglas Katze
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Method for Determining the Adhesion of Reflow Encapsulant Attached Components

A simple and cost effective method has been developed in order to test adhesion of components to a circuit board
via a reflow encapsulant. Originally,a mechanical shock test similar to current methods was used that involved
physically dropping the test board from a given height and orientation. However,the majority of the reflow
encapsulant materials tested were able to withstand numerous drops without any signs of failure. A standard die
shear test did not provide the mechanical shock that the board would experience when being physically dropped. For
those reasons,a guillotine type of device was constructed which provided the opportunity to reproducibly deliver a
force to any desired area of the test vehicle. The "blade" of the device was fitted with a known mass,which is easily
varied. The test vehicle used in this test contained three types of components; two BGA's (225I/O,15x15 Ball
Matrix,Full Array,1.5mm Pitch),three CSP's (48I/O,10x10 Ball matrix,Perimeter Array,1.0mm pitch),and one
quartz slide (12mm x 12mm). Several failure types have been observed and noted. Electrical continuity was used as
a failure mode where applicable. Another mode of failure was observed as cracking/delamination around the fillet of
the BGA's and CSP's,and underneath the quartz test dies. The final failure mode noted was where the components
were entirely broken off of the circuit board. The details of the testing apparatus will be presented along with the
results on materials with differing abilities to survive the test cycle.

Author(s)
John Stipp,Amir Fattahian,Sandhya Shashipadme
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Use of Underfill to Enhance the Thermal Cycling Reliability of Small BGAs

In this work,we have evaluated the use of underfill to enhance the reliability of small BGAs in the automotive
thermal cycling environment. Best parameters for underfilling of BGAs were developed during a processing study,
and then a set of test boards was assembled with several 15 and 17 mm body size BGA components from two
different vendors,and four different underfill encapsulants. Larger 23 mm BGAs (non-underfilled) have also been
included in the test matrix as a control/reference. The assembled test vehicles have been subjected to 6000 thermal
cycles over the range -40 to 125 oC,and the daisy-chain resistances of the various components were monitored
throughout the testing. Logged failures have been statistically analyzed using two parameter Weibull models. The
analysis results have allowed the board level reliabilities of the examined BGA components to be compared and
ranked,and the reliability enhancements achieved with various underfills to be accessed. Detailed failure analyses
have also been performed to find the locations of solder joint fatigue crack growth,and to identify other failure
modes occurring in underfilled parts. Finally,heat transfer studies have also shown that use of underfill can
significantly reduce the junction to case thermal resistance of the BGAs.

Author(s)
Jeffrey C. Suhling,R. Wayne Johnson,John L. Evans,Roy W. Knight,Nokibul Islam,Jing Liu,Shyam Gale,Yasser Elkady,James R. Thompson
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Capabilities of Tools Used to Measure Voids to Industry Standards

It is stated that some degree of voiding is acceptable and inevitable when soldering electronic components,and
specifically BGAs. There have been many publications which discuss this phenomena,the reasons for,how to
detect,what is and isn’t acceptable,reliability etc. this paper looks from a practical approach,in a production
environment as to the causes,minimisation,detection and measurement of voiding,and some discussion on it’s
impact on reliability.
A void is defined as a “bubble” of air entrapped within a solder joint. Due to surface tension effects this is
generally spherical in shape. There can also be single void,or multiple voids within any joint; the significance
of these is also discussed.

Author(s)
Steve Harris,Harjinder Ladhar,Sundar Sethuraman
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Board Level Manufacturability and Reliability Assessment of 0.5 mm Wafer Level CSP with Over-Sized Balls

The endless quest for increased performance in less space has recently manifested itself in 0.5mm pitch Chip Scale
Packages (CSP). The footprints of these packages are only about half the size that of a 0.8 mm-pitch CSP but they
require much tighter control of the assembly process. It becomes particularly challenging when various CSP
packages with structural differences are present. One new type of 0.5mm CSP is manufactured in wafer form,and
contains solder balls that are about 50% larger in volume than the typical CSP component for this pitch. In general,
the BGA type component with higher standoff height is theoretically more reliable during thermal cycling.
However,the enlarged ball on a 0.5 mm pitch device introduces new challenges to the assembly process. This paper
describes the manufacturability and reliability assessment of the 0.5 mm Wafer Level CSP (WLCSP) component
with oversized balls. This work was conducted by a development team comprising of members from different sites
of a global contract manufacturing company. The design and assembly process variables were isolated to determine
their effect on board level reliability. The results can further enhance the PCB assembly process for this type of
components in the future production environment.

Author(s)
A.C. Shiah,Xiang Zhou
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003

Printing and Profiling Fine Feature Devices

To characterize the paste printing process,both the individual aspects of the process and the interactions between the
aspects must be understood. The main aspects of the printing process are paste,stencil,printer and board. Each can
be singularly optimized to obtain desired results,but the system as a whole should be optimized to yield the most
robust process.
The profiling process can often be overshadowed by the importance of proper printing. It is in the reflow process
where the interconnections are permanently formed,and great care should be taken to ensure that these connections
are formed under the proper thermal conditions. Profiling methods,profile types,and resulting reflow recipes are
also discussed.

Author(s)
Chrys Shea,Bruce Moloznik
Resource Type
Technical Paper
Event
IPC APEX 2003