• DocumentCode
    29349
  • Title

    Survey of High-Temperature Polymeric Encapsulants for Power Electronics Packaging

  • Author

    Yiying Yao ; Guo-Quan Lu ; Boroyevich, Dushan ; Ngo, Khai D. T.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Mater. Sci. & Eng., Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
  • Volume
    5
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Feb. 2015
  • Firstpage
    168
  • Lastpage
    181
  • Abstract
    Semiconductor encapsulation is crucial to electronic packaging because it provides protection against mechanical stress, electrical breakdown, chemical erosions, α radiations, and so on. Conventional encapsulants are only applicable below 150 °C. However, with increasing demand for high-density and high-temperature packaging, encapsulants that are functional at or above 250 °C are required. In this paper, five types of encapsulants, including conformal coatings, underfills, molding compounds, potting compounds, and glob tops, are surveyed. First, recommended properties and selection criteria of each type of encapsulant are listed. Second, standard test methods for several crucial properties, including glass-transition temperature (Tg), coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), dielectric strength, and so on are reviewed. Afterward, commercial products with high-operation temperature are surveyed. However, the results of the survey reveal a lack of high-temperature encapsulants. Therefore, this paper reviews recent progress in achieving encapsulants with both high-temperature capability and satisfactory properties. Material compositions other than epoxy, such as polyimide (PI), bismaleimide (BMI), and cyanate ester (CE), are potential encapsulants for high-temperature (250 °C) operation, although their CTE needs to be tailored to limit internal stress. Fillers are reported to be efficient in reducing the CTE. In addition, fillers may also have a beneficial impact on the thermal stability of silicone-based encapsulants, whose high-temperature capability is limited by their thermal instability.
  • Keywords
    conformal coatings; electric strength; electronics packaging; encapsulation; high-temperature electronics; polymers; power electronics; thermal expansion; thermal stability; α radiations; CTE; chemical erosions; coefficient of thermal expansion; conformal coatings; dielectric strength; electrical breakdown; electronic packaging; epoxy; fillers; glass-transition temperature; glob tops; high-density packaging; high-temperature packaging; high-temperature polymeric encapsulants; internal stress; material compositions; mechanical stress; molding compounds; potting compounds; power electronics packaging; selection criteria; semiconductor encapsulation; silicone-based encapsulants; standard test methods; thermal instability; thermal stability; underfills; Coatings; Compounds; Dielectric breakdown; Materials; Packaging; Temperature; Temperature measurement; Encapsulant; high-temperature; plastic integrated circuit packaging; power electronic packaging; semiconductor device packaging; semiconductor device packaging.;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Components, Packaging and Manufacturing Technology, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2156-3950
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TCPMT.2014.2337300
  • Filename
    7015607