DocumentCode :
1953756
Title :
Reliability modeling of electronic systems subjected to high strain rates
Author :
Lall, Pradeep ; Shantaram, Sandeep ; Locker, David
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Auburn Univ., Auburn, AL, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
16-18 April 2012
Firstpage :
42386
Abstract :
Electronic products are subjected to high G-levels during mechanical shock and vibration. Failure-modes include solder-joint failures, pad cratering, chip-cracking, copper trace fracture, and underfill fillet failures. The second-level interconnects may be experience high-strain rates and accrue damage during repetitive exposure to mechanical shock. Industry migration to leadfree solders has resulted in proliferation of a wide variety of solder alloy compositions. One of the popular tin-silver-copper alloys is Sn3Ag0.5Cu. The high strain rate properties of leadfree solder alloys are scarce. Typical material tests systems are not well suited for measurement of high strain rates typical of mechanical shock. Previously, high strain rates techniques such as the Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar (SHPB) can be used for strain rates of 1000 per sec. However, measurement of materials at strain rates of 1-100 per sec which are typical of mechanical shock is difficult to address. In this paper, a new test-technique developed by the authors has been presented for measurement of material constitutive behavior. The instrument enables attaining strain rates in the neighborhood of 1 to 100 per sec. High speed cameras operating at 300,000 fps have been used in conjunction with digital image correlation for the measurement of full-field strain during the test. Constancy of cross-head velocity has been demonstrated during the test from the unloaded state to the specimen failure. Solder alloy constitutive behavior has been measured for SAC305 solder. Constitutive model has been fit to the material data. Samples have been tested at various time under thermal aging at 25°C and 125°C. The constitutive model has been embedded into an explicit finite element framework for the purpose of life-prediction of leadfree interconnects. Test assemblies has been fabricated and tested under JEDEC JESD22-B111 specified condition for mechanical shock. Model predictions have been correlated- with experimental data.
Keywords :
ageing; assembling; cameras; copper alloys; cracks; electronic products; electronics packaging; failure analysis; finite element analysis; fracture; integrated circuit interconnections; life testing; materials testing; reliability; silver alloys; solders; tin alloys; vibrations; G-levels; JEDEC JESD22-B111 specified condition; SHPB; chip-cracking; copper trace fracture; cross-head velocity; damage; digital image correlation; electronic products; electronic systems; failure-modes; finite element framework; full-field strain; high speed cameras; industry migration; leadfree interconnects; leadfree solder alloys; leadfree solders; life-prediction; material constitutive behavior; material tests systems; mechanical shock; model predictions; pad cratering; reliability modeling; repetitive exposure; second-level interconnects; solder alloy compositions; solder alloy constitutive behavior; solder-joint failures; specimen failure; split Hopkinson pressure bar; strain rate property; strain rates; test assembly; thermal aging; tin-silver-copper alloys; underfill fillet failures; vibration; Displacement measurement; Heating; Lead;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Thermal, Mechanical and Multi-Physics Simulation and Experiments in Microelectronics and Microsystems (EuroSimE), 2012 13th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Cascais
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1512-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ESimE.2012.6191789
Filename :
6191789
Link To Document :
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