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1.
Copper (Cu) has been widely used in the under bump metallurgy of chip and substrate metallization for chip packaging. However, due to the rapid formation of Cu–Sn intermetallic compound (IMC) at the tin-based solder/Cu interface during solder reaction, the reliability of this type of solder joint is a serious concern. In this work, electroless nickel–phosphorous (Ni–P) layer was deposited on the Cu pad of the flexible substrate as a diffusion barrier between Cu and the solder materials. The deposition was carried out in a commercial acidic sodium hypophosphite bath at 85 °C for different pH values. It was found that for the same deposition time period, higher pH bath composition (mild acidic) yields thicker Ni–P layer with lower phosphorous content. Solder balls having composition 62%Sn–36%Pb–2%Ag were reflowed at 240 °C for 1 to 180 min on three types of electroless Ni–P layers deposited at the pH value of 4, 4.8 and 6, respectively. Thermal stability of the electroless Ni–P barrier layer against the Sn–36%Pb–2%Ag solder reflowed for different time periods was examined by scanning electron microscopy equipped with energy dispersed X-ray. Solder ball shear test was performed in order to find out the relationship between the mechanical strength of solder joints and the characteristics of the electroless Ni–P layer deposited.The layer deposited in the pH 4 acidic bath showed the weak barrier against reflow soldering whereas layer deposited in pH 6 acidic bath showed better barrier against reflow soldering. Mechanical strength of the joints were deteriorated quickly in the layer deposited at pH 4 acidic bath, which was found to be thin and has a high phosphorous content. From the cross-sectional studies and fracture surface analyses, it was found that the appearance of the dark crystalline phosphorous-rich Ni layer weakened the interface and hence lower solder ball shear strength. Ni–Sn IMC formed at the interfaces was found to be more stable at the low phosphorous content (14 at.%) layer. Electroless Ni–P deposited at mild acidic bath resulting phosphorous content of around 14 at.% is suggested as the best barrier layer for Sn–36%Pb–2%Ag solder.  相似文献   

2.
The Sn3.5Ag0.75Cu (SAC) solder joint reliability under thermal cycling was investigated by experiment and finite element method (FEM) analysis. SAC solder balls were reflowed on three Au metallization thicknesses, which are 0.1, 0.9, and 4.0 μm, respectively, by laser soldering. Little Cu–Ni–Au–Sn intermetallic compound (IMC) was formed at the interface of solder joints with 0.1 μm Au metallization even after 1000 thermal cycles. The morphology of AuSn4 IMC with a small amount of Ni and Cu changed gradually from needle- to chunky-type for the solder joints with 0.9 μm Au metallization during thermal cycling. For solder joints with 4 μm Au metallization, the interfacial morphology between AuSn4 and solder bulk became smoother, and AuSn4 grew at the expense of AuSn and AuSn2. The cracks mainly occurred through solder near the interface of solder/IMC on the component side for solder joints with 0.1 μm Au metallization after thermal shock, and the failure was characterized by intergranular cracking. The cracks of solder joints with 0.9 μm Au metallization were also observed at the same location, but the crack was not so significant. Only micro-cracks were found on the AuSn4 IMC surface for solder joints with 4.0 μm Au metallization. The responses of stress and strain were investigated with nonlinear FEM, and the results correlated well with the experimental results.  相似文献   

3.
This paper develops an analysis procedure to study the effects of intermetallic compound (IMC) growth on the fatigue life of 63Sn-37Pb (lead-rich)/96.5Sn-3.5Ag (lead-free) solder balls for flip-chip plastic ball grid array packages under thermal cycling test conditions. In this analysis procedure, the thickness of the IMC increased with the number of thermal cycles, and was determined using the growth rate equation. A series of non-linear finite element analyses was conducted to simulate the stress/strain history at the critical locations of the solder balls with various IMC thicknesses in thermal cycling tests. The simulated stress/strain results were then employed in a fatigue life prediction model to determine the relationship between the predicted fatigue life of the solder ball and the IMC thickness. Based on the concept of continuous damage accumulation and incorporated with the linear damage rule, this study defines the damage of each thermal cycle as the reciprocal of the predicted fatigue life of the solder joints with the corresponding IMC thickness. The final fatigue failure of the solder ball was determined as the number of cycles corresponding to the cumulative damage equal to unity. Results show that the solder joint fatigue life decreased as the IMC thickness increased. Moreover, the predicted thermal fatigue life of lead-rich solders based on the effects of IMC growth is apparently smaller than that without considering the IMC growth in the reliability analysis. Results also show that the influence of the IMC thickness on the fatigue life prediction of the lead-free solder joint can be ignored.  相似文献   

4.
Assurance of board level reliability is necessary and required for adopting any new packages into products. This paper presents board level reliability test results of a flex substrate BGA under thermal and bend cyclic tests. It is well known that solder joint reliability is affected by many factors, such as the size of chip, joint stand-off height, pad design, test board surface finish, substrate gold plating thickness and the utilization of underfill material, etc. However, most of the works have been conducted are BGA on rigid substrates. In this work, thermal cyclic test is performed to re-examine these factors using package housed on a flex substrate. Bending test with two deflections is also performed to investigate solder joint fatigue life and failure modes under mechanically repetitive loading.Two-parameter Weibull model is used to analyze joint fatigue life. Failure analysis is conducted and discussed for each case. Under temperature cycling test, chip size, polyimide thickness and underfill material utilization were found to have significant impacts on joint fatigue life, especially the effect of applying underfill material to the joint. Epoxy thickness was found to have little effect on the joint fatigue life for this case.The effects of test board surface finish and substrate gold plating thickness on the joint fatigue life were found coupled. The term “substrate” here refers to the chip carrier, while the “board” here refers to motherboard, which is the board to assemble test vehicles on. The gold thickness here all refers to the electrolytic gold plating on the substrate. Using organic solderability preservative boards, substrate gold plating thickness affects joint fatigue life slightly, but with Au–Ni test boards, the effect is tremendous. The difference is due to different intermetallic compounds (IMC) formed. In other words, different IMC systems are formed due to different combination of test board surface finish and substrate gold plating thickness. As a result, different IMC induces different failure modes. The joint fatigue life under cyclic bend test with different deflections is also probed and shown. The corresponding failure modes are also discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Board-level drop impact testing is a useful way to characterize the drop durability of the different soldered assemblies onto the printed circuit board (PCB). The characterization process is critical to the lead-free (Pb-free) solders that are replacing lead-based (Pb-based) solders. In this study, drop impact solder joint reliability for plastic ball grid array (PBGA), very-thin quad flat no-lead (VQFN) and plastic quad flat pack (PQFP) packages was investigated for Pb-based (62Sn–36Pb–2Ag) and Pb-free (Sn–4Ag–0.5Cu) soldered assemblies onto different PCB surface finishes of OSP (organic solderability preservative) and ENIG (electroless nickel immersion gold). The Pb-free solder joints on ENIG finish revealed weaker drop reliability performance than the OSP finish. The formation of the brittle intermetallic compound (IMC) Cu–Ni–Sn has led to detrimental interfacial fracture of the PBGA solder joints. For both Pb-based and Pb-free solders onto OSP coated copper pad, the formation of Cu6Sn5 IMC resulted in different failure sites and modes. The failures migrated to the PCB copper traces and resin layers instead. The VQFN package is the most resistant to drop impact failures due to its small size and weight. The compliant leads of the PQFP are more resistant to drop failures compared to the PBGA solder joints.  相似文献   

6.
Second (board) level reliability of a stacked chip scale package (SCSP) under cyclic bending is conducted to evaluate the structural integrity of solder interconnects. The test vehicle (on-board SCSP) is simply supported at both ends and subjected to repetitive deflection in the middle (three-point bend). Cyclic deformation histories such as sinusoidal, triangular, and square waveforms are examined. Tremendous joint damage is observed as square-wave loading history was applied. Approximately 80% fatigue life degradation is found by bending several thermally aged samples having Ni/Au surface finish on Cu pads of package substrates and printed circuit boards. The observed failure mode is a brittle type fracture of intermetallic compound system, which is also known as effects of solder embrittlement.Measured fatigue life is characterized by two-parameter Weibull model with cumulative damage plot for each test condition. In addition to the comparisons of characteristic fatigue life for various package configuration and cyclic bending conditions, failure analysis is also employed to identify failure sites and mechanisms such as crack initiation and continuous growth to the complete fracture of solder joints.  相似文献   

7.
The reliability of electronics under drop-shock conditions has attracted significant interest in recent years due to the widespread use of mobile electronic products. This review focuses on the drop-impact reliability of lead-free solder joints that interconnect the integrated circuit (IC) component to the printed circuit board (PCB). Major topics covered are the physics of failure in drop-impact; the use of board level and component level test methods to evaluate drop performance; micro-damage mechanisms; failure models for life prediction under drop-impact; modelling and simulation techniques; and dynamic stress–strain properties of solder joint materials. Differential bending between the PCB and the IC component is the dominant failure driver for solder joints in portable electronics subjected to drop-impact. Board level drop-shock tests correlate well with board level high speed cyclic bending tests but not with component level ball impact shear tests. Fatigue is the micro-damage mechanism responsible for the failure of solder joints in the drop-shock of PCB assemblies and the fatigue strength of solder joints depends strongly on the strain rate, test temperature, and the sequence of loading. Finally, tin-rich lead-free solders exhibit significantly higher strain rate sensitivity than eutectic SnPb solder.  相似文献   

8.
The formation of intermetallic compounds in the solder joint of a flip chip or chip scale package depends on the under bump metallurgy (UBM), the substrate top surface metallisation, the solder alloy and the application conditions. To evaluate the influence of intermetallic compounds on the solder joint reliability, a detailed study on the influence of the UBM, the gold finish thickness of the substrate top surface metallisation, the solder alloy and the aging conditions has been conducted. Flip chips bumped with different solder alloys were reflow-mounted on low temperature co-fired ceramic substrates. The flip chip package was then aged at high temperature and a bump shear test followed to examine the shear strength of the solder joint at certain aging intervals. It was found that the type of UBM has a great impact on the solder joint reliability. With Ni(P)/Au as the UBM, well-documented gold embrittlement was observed when the gold concentration in the eutectic SnPb solder was about 3 wt%. When Al/Ni(V)/Cu was used as the UBM, the solder joint reliability was substantially improved. Copper dissolution from the UBM into the solder gives different intermetallic formations compared to Ni(P)/Au as UBM. The addition of a small amount of copper in the solder alloy changed the mechanical property of the intermetallic compound, which is attributed to the formation of Sn–Cu–Ni(Au) intermetallic compounds. This could be used in solving the problem of the AuSn4 embrittlement. The formation and the influence of this Sn–Cu–Ni(Au) intermetallic phase are discussed. The gold concentration in the solder joint plays a role in the formation of intermetallic compounds and consequently the solder joint reliability, especially for the Sn–Ag–Cu soldered flip chip package.  相似文献   

9.
Solder joint fatigue failure is a serious reliability concern in area array technologies, such as flip chip and ball grid array packages of integrated-circuit chips. The selection of different substrate materials could affect solder joint thermal fatigue life significantly. The mechanism of substrate flexibility on improving solder joint thermal fatigue was investigated by thermal mechanical analysis (TMA) technique and finite element modeling. The reliability of solder joints in real flip chip assembly with both rigid and compliant substrates was evaluated by accelerated temperature cycling test. Finite element simulations were conducted to study the reliability of solder joints in flip chip on flex assembly (FCOF) and flip chip on rigid board assembly (FCOB) applying Anand model. Based on the finite element analysis results, the fatigue lives of solder joints were obtained by Darveaux’s crack initiation and growth model. The thermal strain/stress in solder joints of flip chip assemblies with different substrates were compared. The results of finite element analysis showed a good agreement with the experimental results. It was found that the thermal fatigue lifetime of FCOF solder joints was much longer than that of FCOB solder joints. The thermal strain/stress in solder joints could be reduced by flex buckling or bending and flex substrates could dissipate energy that otherwise would be absorbed by solder joints. It was concluded that substrate flexibility has a great effect on solder joint reliability and the reliability improvement was attributed to flex buckling or bending during temperature cycling.  相似文献   

10.
Leaded and lead-free ball grid array (BGA) components were tested in board level drop test defined in the Joint Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC) standard under different load levels. Finite element analysis (FEA) models were established using ANSYS. The stress and strain in the solder joint and the average strain energy density (SED) in the solder–pad interface accumulated in one cycle were calculated using ANSYS/LS-DYNA explicit solver. The results of experiment and simulation were employed to re-calculate the constants contained in the Darveaux model to extend its application to the drop test. Then, FEA models with different height and pitch of solder joints were established to obtain the SED to calculate the fatigue life of solder joint under different geometrical conditions through this modified model. The experiment and simulation reveal that the failures mainly occur in the solder–PCB interface in lower load level, the other way round, in a higher load level, the cracks are more possibly formed in solder–package interface; comparing to dropping in horizontal direction with package faces down, the solder joints are much harder to fail when dropping in vertical direction; An optimal height and smaller pitch of solder joints lead to lowest SED and best reliability in the drop test.  相似文献   

11.
In this paper, the shear cycle fatigue properties of plastic ball grid array (PBGA) assemblies' solder joints reflowed with three different profiles, and aged at 125°C for four, nine, 16, 25, and 36 days are studied. The profiles were devised to have the same "heating factor," which was defined as the integral of the measured temperature above the liquidus (183°C) with respect to dwell time in the reflow profile, but to have different conveyor speeds. The effects of conveyor speed on the solder joint (nonaged and aged) fatigue lifetimes were investigated. It was found hat with increasing the conveyor speed the solder joint shear fatigue lifetime could be improved substantially. Also, the shear fatigue lifetimes of aged solder joints decreased with increasing aging time and variation in fatigue lifetimes increased for faster conveyor speed. SEM and optical micrographs show that faster cooling rate caused a rougher interface of solder/IMC and less crystallization microstructure in solder joints. Rougher interface solder joints have a longer nonaged fatigue life. The thickness of IMC increases with increasing aging time and the growth rate for solder with faster cooling rate was larger. SEM cross section views reveal that cracks initiated at the acute position near the solder pad, then propagated along the interface of the bulk solder/IMC layer. Thicker IMC layers deteriorated fatigue life, so the fatigue lifetime variation of aged solder joints with fast cooling rate was larger  相似文献   

12.
Solder joints are required to have high impact strength for use in portable electronic products. To make solder joints with high impact strength, qualitative evaluation methods of impact strength are required. Ball impact tests have been widely adopted in evaluating the impact strength of solder joints because of their easy implementation. Impact load curves obtained from ball impact tests are used as an evaluation indicator of impact strength of solder joint. However, a relation between fracture behavior and impact load curve has not yet been clarified, and an explanation of the impact load curve has not yet been provided in detail. In addition to this, detailed study about the relation between IMC layer thickness and impact strength has not been performed, although the IMC layer thickness formed at the interface would significantly affect the impact strength of the solder joint. This study aimed to explain the impact load curve in the ball impact test and to reveal the effect of the IMC layer thickness on the impact strength of the solder joint. Sn–3.0Ag–0.5Cu solder was reflowed on an electroless Ni–P plated Cu substrate (Ni–P), and a ball impact test was then carried out to evaluate the impact strength. This study found that the ball impact test is effective to evaluate the interfacial strength of solder joints. In the impact load curve, it is estimated that the solder bump keeps deforming until the interfacial crack initiates (maximum load), and the interfacial crack initiates after the maximum load and propagates along the interface between the solder and Ni–P. The suitable evaluation of impact strength became possible by measuring the correspondence relation between the deformation distance of the solder bump after fracture and the energy until maximum load and the relation between the area fraction of the residual solder on the fractured pad and the energy after maximum load. And, it is proved that the impact strength decreased with increasing aging time because the growth of the IMC layer remarkably degraded the interfacial strength of the solder joint.  相似文献   

13.
The 63Sn-37Pb solder ball (φ=300 μm) was attached to gold-nickel-plated plastic ball grid array (PBGA) substrates, with gold and nickel thicknesses of 0.6 μm and 7 μm, respectively. The thickness of the intermetallic compound (IMC) in solder balls was measured following each instance of infrared (IR) reflow (90 sec at 230 °C), level II preconditioning, a pressure cooking test (for 96 h or 168 h), and a temperature cycle test (with 500 or 1,000 cycles). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to identify the cross-section sites of the solder balls following testing. Following all the reliability tests, the IMC demonstrated that an IMC thickness exceeding 5 μm will reduce the solder ball shear strength owing to diffusion of Ni into the solder balls.  相似文献   

14.
Stacked die BGA has recently gained popularity in telecommunication applications. However, its board level solder joint reliability during the thermal cycling test is not as well-studied as common single die BGA. In this paper, solder joint fatigue of lead-free stacked die BGA with mixed flip-chip (FC) and wirebond (WB) interconnect is analyzed in detail. 3D fatigue model is established for stacked die BGA with considerations of detailed pad design, realistic shape of solder ball, and non-linear material properties. The fatigue model applied is based on a modified Darveaux’s approach with non-linear viscoplastic analysis of solder joints. Based on the FC–WB stack die configuration, the critical solder ball is observed located between the top and bottom dice corner, and failure interface is along the top solder/pad interface. The modeling predicted fatigue life is first correlated to the thermal cycling test results using modified correlation constants, curve-fitted from in-house lead-free TFBGA46 (thin-profile fine-pitch BGA) thermal cycling test data. Subsequently, design analyzes are performed to study the effects of 20 key design variations in package dimensions, material properties, and thermal cycling test conditions. In general, thinner PCB and mold compound, thicker substrate, larger top or bottom dice sizes, thicker top die, higher solder ball standoff, larger solder mask opening, smaller PCB pad size, smaller thermal cycling temperature range, longer ramp time, and shorter dwell time contribute to longer fatigue life. SnAgCu is a common lead-free solder, and it has much better board level reliability performance than eutectic solder based on modeling results, especially low stress packages.  相似文献   

15.
For thin-profile fine-pitch BGA (TFBGA) packages, board level solder joint reliability during the thermal cycling test is a critical issue. In this paper, both global and local parametric 3D FEA fatigue models are established for TFBGA on board with considerations of detailed pad design, realistic shape of solder joint, and nonlinear material properties. They have the capability to predict the fatigue life of solder joint during the thermal cycling test within ±13% error. The fatigue model applied is based on a modified Darveaux’s approach with nonlinear viscoplastic analysis of solder joints. A solder joint damage model is used to establish a connection between the strain energy density (SED) per cycle obtained from the FEA model and the actual characteristic life during the thermal cycling test. For the test vehicles studied, the maximum SED is observed at the top corner of outermost diagonal solder ball. The modeling predicted fatigue life is first correlated to the thermal cycling test results using modified correlation constants, curve-fitted from in-house BGA thermal cycling test data. Subsequently, design analysis is performed to study the effects of 14 key package dimensions, material properties, and thermal cycling test condition. In general, smaller die size, higher solder ball standoff, smaller maximum solder ball diameter, bigger solder mask opening, thinner board, higher mold compound CTE, smaller thermal cycling temperature range, and depopulated array type of ball layout pattern contribute to longer fatigue life.  相似文献   

16.
Package-level ball impact test and board-level drop test are performed and correlated using a specific chip-scale package with solder joints of different Sn–Ag–Cu solder compositions. A positive correlation is found between characteristics of the impact force profile and reliability from the drop test, which provides a supporting basis for the package-level ball impact test to serve as a substitute of the timely and costly board-level drop test.  相似文献   

17.
In the past few years, many studies have reported on the formula of solder metal alloy materials. This paper discusses the influence of organic materials characters, the decomposing rate of flux in lead-free solder paste and coefficients of thermal expansion (CTE) of halogen-free mold compounds during the on-board reliability test, and the failure mechanism in both 63Sn/37Pb and Sn–3.5Ag–0.5Cu lead-free solder balls was reported.The thermal decomposing behavior of flux in the solder paste induced voids in solder joints was examined by thermo-gravimetric analysis (TGA) and X-ray perspective, respectively. On-board temperature cycle test (TCT) reliability failed specimens were sectioned and analyzed by the optical microscope (OM) and X-ray. The evolutions of package warpage change of two kinds of potential halogen-free compounds during the TCT reliability process were monitored by specially designed thermal mechanic analysis (TMA) experiments.The experimental results show that higher IR-reflow peak temperature induced voids forming in the solder joints and then failure mode change from interface between intermetallic and solder to cracks cut across the big voids during TCT test, worse TCT reliability performance ensued. Moreover, according to on-board reliability testing data show that the compound with larger package warpage change generated larger cumulate plastic work in solder joint that caused early failure during TCT process.  相似文献   

18.
The interfacial reactions and ball shear properties of ball grid array (BGA) solder joints aged at 170 °C for up to 21 days were investigated with different displacement rates. Two different kinds of solders, Sn–37Pb and Sn–3.5Ag (all wt.%), and an electroplated Ni/Au BGA substrate were employed in this work. A continuous Ni3Sn4 intermetallic compound (IMC) layer was formed at the interfaces between both the Sn–37Pb and Sn–3.5Ag solders and the substrate during reflow. After aging, two different reaction layers, consisting of (AuxNi1−x)Sn4 IMC and Pb-rich phase, were additionally observed between the Sn–37Pb solder and the Ni3Sn4 IMC layer. The thicknesses of these interfacial reaction layers increased with increasing aging time. After reflow, all the fractures occurred inside the bulk solder. The fracture location of the Sn–37Pb solder joints was shifted toward the solder/Ni interface with increasing aging time and displacement rate, whereas the fracture of the Sn–3.5Ag solder joints mainly occurred inside the bulk solder, irrespective of the aging time and displacement rate. Consequently, the shear properties of the Sn–37Pb solder joints significantly decreased with increasing aging time, whereas those of the Sn–3.5Ag solder joints slightly decreased. The tendency toward brittle fracture of the Sn–37Pb solder joints was intensified with increasing displacement rate. The shear properties of the ductile solder joints increased with increasing displacement rate, while the displacement until fracture, deformation energy and displacement rate sensitivity of the brittle solder joints significantly decreased with increasing displacement rate.  相似文献   

19.
In this paper, a variety of wafer level packaging (WLP) structures, including both fan-in and fan-out WLPs, are investigated for solder joint thermo-mechanical reliability performance, from a structural design point of view. The effects of redistribution layer (RDL), bump structural design/material selection, polymer-cored ball application, and PCB design/material selection are studied. The investigation focuses on four different WLP technologies: standard WLP (ball on I/O WLP), ball on polymer WLP without under bump metallurgy (UBM) layer, ball on polymer WLP with UBM layer, and encapsulated copper post WLP. Ball on I/O WLP, in which solder balls are directly attached to the metal pads on silicon wafer, is used as a benchmark for the analysis. 3-D finite element modeling is performed to investigate the effects of WLP structures, UBM layer, polymer film material properties (in ball on polymer WLP), and encapsulated epoxy material properties (in copper post WLP). Both ball on polymer and copper post WLPs have shown great reliability improvement in thermal cycling. For ball on polymer WLP structures, polymer film between silicon and solder balls creates a ‘cushion’ effect to reduce the stresses in solder joints. Such cushion effect can be achieved either by an extremely compliant film or a ‘hard’ film with a large coefficient of thermal expansion. Encapsulated copper post WLP shows the best thermo-mechanical performance among the four WLP structures. Furthermore, for a fan-out WLP, it has been found that the critical solder balls are the outermost solder balls under die-area, where the maximum thermal mismatch takes place. In a fan-out WLP package, chip size, other than package size, determines the limit of solder joint reliability. This paper also discusses the polymer-cored solder ball applications to enhance thermo-mechanical reliability of solder joints. Finally, both experimental and finite element analysis have demonstrated that making corner balls non-electrically connected can greatly improve the WLP thermo-mechanical reliability.  相似文献   

20.
Board level solder joint reliability performance during drop test is a critical concern to semiconductor and electronic product manufacturers. A new JEDEC standard for board level drop test of handheld electronic products was just released to specify the drop test procedure and conditions. However, there is no detailed information stated on dynamic responses of printed circuit board (PCB) and solder joints which are closely related to stress and strain of solder joints that affect the solder joint reliability, nor there is any simulation technique which provides good correlation with experimental measurements of dynamic responses of PCB and the resulting solder joint reliability during the entire drop impact process. In this paper, comprehensive dynamic responses of PCB and solder joints, e.g., acceleration, strains, and resistance, are measured and analyzed with a multichannel real-time electrical monitoring system, and simulated with a novel input acceleration (Input-G) method. The solder joint failure process, i.e., crack initiation, propagation, and opening, is well understood from the behavior of dynamic resistance. It is found experimentally and numerically that the mechanical shock causes multiple PCB bending or vibration which induces the solder joint fatigue failure. It is proven that the peeling stress of the critical solder joint is the dominant failure indicator by simulation, which correlates well with the observations and assumptions by experiment. Coincidence of cyclic change among dynamic resistance of solder joints, dynamic strains of PCB, and the peeling stress of the critical solder joints indicates that the solder joint crack opens and closes when the PCB bends down and up, and the critical solder joint failure is induced by cyclic peeling stress. The failure mode and location of critical solder balls predicted by modeling correlate well with experimental observation by cross section and dye penetration tests.  相似文献   

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