DocumentCode
3222771
Title
Biostability of Electronic Packaging Materials
Author
Beshchasna, Natalia ; Uhlemann, Jürgen ; Wolter, Klaus-Jürgen
Author_Institution
Electron. Packaging Lab., Technische Univ. Dresden
Volume
2
fYear
2006
fDate
5-7 Sept. 2006
Firstpage
1047
Lastpage
1053
Abstract
Biostability is concerned with the interactions take place between an integrated electronic system, restoring physiological functions often with a long time application and the components of the human body (tissues, fluids, gases, and applied medicaments). Organism with its specific inner conditions (temperature, pressure, pH-value, liquid flow rate, concentration and complex chemical compound) assures for systems constituents (conduct materials, allows, organic and inorganic semiconductor) a stressed medium which accelerates degradable processes (destruction, migration, dissolution, corrosion, delaminating, functions loss, structure alterations, etc.). These processes - difficult interactions mostly on the boundary surface that stand in depending from the contact time. Our main goal is to consider the principles of these interactions, to study alterations through living organisms dynamic loading, to modulate a long time stability of packaging arrangement under bio-stress, to make dynamic measurements with packaging and housing materials and simulated body fluids (for example physiological sodium chloride water solution, synthetic plasma, simulate liquor cerebrospinalis fluid), to definite quantitative und qualitative alterations of the fluid and materials surface, to rationalize a selection of biomaterials
Keywords
biological tissues; biomedical materials; electronics packaging; microorganisms; biostability; boundary surface; degradable processes; dynamic measurements; electronic packaging materials; housing materials; human body; integrated electronic system; living organisms dynamic loading; physiological functions; simulated body fluids; Biological materials; Biomedical materials; Electronics packaging; Fluid dynamics; Gases; Humans; Organisms; Plasma measurements; Plasma simulation; Plasma stability;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronics Systemintegration Technology Conference, 2006. 1st
Conference_Location
Dresden
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0552-1
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0553-x
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ESTC.2006.280140
Filename
4060865
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