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HDP User Group 2017 European Meeting Highlights Technology Progress
June 7, 2017 | Pete Starkey, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 18 minutes
Returning to the HDP User Group programme the topic was assembly and lead-free projects. Marketing Director Larry Marcanti in person, together with Richard Coyle from Nokia by WebEx link, gave an update on the Harsh Use Environment Alloy Evaluation project which was at the definition phase. The project objective was to evaluate high reliability lead-free solders suitable for harsh or more severe environmental use conditions such as automotive under-the-hood, and military and defence applications for which high-silver SAC alloys were not always suitable. The project was being carried out in collaboration with iNEMI, using accelerated thermal cycling to determine the thermal fatigue performance of multiple third-generation commercial lead-free alloys. The test vehicle had been developed for original iNEMI Alloy Project and had been used in the HDP User Group SAC-Ageing2 and SAC-Ageing3 projects, from which a significant amount of alloy ATC data existed. A series of BGAs were daisy-chained to enable in situ resistance monitoring during thermal cycling.
Third generation lead-free solder alloys fell into two categories: higher reliability alloys more suited for automotive, military-defence, avionics and telecom industries, and alloys with silver content lower than SAC305, designed for better drop/shock resistance, lower processing temperatures and lower cost. The current focus of the project was to compare thermal fatigue reliability data from aggressive thermal cycling relevant to automotive and military-defence applications. The test matrix included 15 alloys plus SAC305 and SAC105 as controls, on 167 assemblies with a total of 4848 components, and the thermal cycling was being carried out at four participating laboratories.
The second part of the project was concerned with vibration and mechanical shock testing. It was acknowledged that vibration testing was a complex subject and it was important that the test was designed to evaluate alloy performance whilst avoiding board and component effects. Two approaches had been explored: the NASA test vehicle which has been used for 305 and eutectic studies, and a new design that could be simulated prior to test to give some predictability.
Michael Carano from RBP Chemical Technology called-in on WebEx to deliver his update on the Solder Joint Reliability with Surface Finishes project, which was at the definition phase. The objective was to evaluate the toughness of solder joints on boards coated with various surface finishes and assembled with large and fine-pitch components using different solder alloys. It had been decided to differentiate from earlier work by using and testing alloys in a harsh use environment, with the test vehicle from the Harsh Use Environment Alloy Evaluation. Project goals were to determine the comparative advantages and disadvantages of the PCB surface finishes under study, to identify what components and what sizes were suitable for which type of surface finishes, and the impact of board thickness and the thickness of surface finishes. The surface finishes chosen for evaluation were ENEPIG, OSP, immersion silver and direct palladium, with SAC305 and SN100CV solder alloys. Phase 1 of the project would study BGA and LGA components on thick boards, phase 2 would study CSP and QFN components on thin boards. Temperature cycling would be carried out to JESD22-A104D, -40°C to 125°C, and vibration testing to JESD22-B103B. Details of the test vehicle were being finalised, and the project was expected to transition to implementation by end of June 2017 and be completed by end of June 2018.
Yaw Obeng from National Institute of Standards and Technology called-in on WebEx with a status report on the Pitting/Crevice Corrosion project, which was at the definition stage. The background was that small defects in solder mask could expose underlying copper and provide a place for contamination to accumulate. In an extreme example, assemblies shipped from China with batteries already in place were dead-on-arrival because of circuit etch-outs corresponding with pinholes in the solder mask. There was currently no satisfactory test method for identifying such defects in solder mask; the current J-STD-004B test protocols were originally developed to identify highly ionic contaminant levels after a cleaning process and were not completely effective at identifying pitting/crevice corrosion from no-clean flux residues. The project set out to develop and validate a test method for determining the pitting/crevice corrosion potential of solder fluxes and submit it to the IPC Cleaning and Coating Committee for consideration as an additional test within J-STD-004, and to work with the committee to implement the recommendations.
The second guest presentation came from Joan Tourné of NextGIn Technology, who generated enormous interest with his VeCS “vertical conductive structures” approach to Z-axis interconnect formation, which overcame the major conductor-density limitation of established HDI technologies whilst simplifying the build-up, improving signal integrity and eliminating CAF. In the VeCS approach, the plated hole was replaced by a vertical trace or half-cylinder, giving the designer the opportunity to create more vertical connections per unit area as well as freeing up space for routing conductors. And the vertical conductors could connect to multiple internal layers as required. This was achieved using standard PCB manufacturing processes. No special equipment was required and the technology was well within the scope of any PCB fabricator with HDI capability.
The basic procedure was to form a slot by a conventional routing operation, metallise and electroplate it by standard PCB processes, then to drill into the plated slot with a larger diameter drill bit to remove the copper from the areas between the desired vertical conductors. Tool manufacturers could supply router bits designed to minimise burring, and drill-smear problems were avoided because in principle the tool was not withdrawn from the hole it had just cut but was traversed along the slot. Moreover, plating blind slots was more straightforward than plating blind holes of similar diameter and aspect ratio because of better solution penetration and less gas entrapment. Cost savings were realised as a result of reduced layer count for a given interconnection density. If necessary VeCS design features could be incorporated locally on otherwise conventional layouts, for example to overcome fan-out problems under fine-pitch array packages. A further benefit of the VeCS principle was less disruption of internal planes, again improving signal integrity. Designs were being evaluated by leading OEMs, in cooperation with selected fabricators and assemblers, and EDA vendors were beginning to incorporate VeCS layout capability into their CAD systems.
It’s not often we see a radical development in PCB interconnection technology, and such was the level of interest within the room that it would be no surprise to see a new HDP User Group project arise as an outcome of Torné’s presentation!
Back once again to the HDP User Group programme for the final topic group: PWB Technology and Design projects. And the first presentation was a call-in from Erkko Helminen at TTM, an idea-stage project to develop an ultra-thin HDI test vehicle. Ultra-thin HDI now dominated mobile and wearable designs, such as cameras, pods and watches, and future versions might resemble IC packages. But standard IPC, ANSI and JEDEC test vehicles no longer reflected form factors, density and interconnect methods, and did not capture the failure modes of fine pitch BGA technology. They did not provide adequate data for product development, and had fallen into disuse by OEMs.
So a new test vehicle was required that would reflect emerging processes, materials and designs. It was proposed to promote the use of the open source ALV-HDI test vehicle established in the previous Ultra-Thin HDI TV project, and to encourage buy-in from suppliers, fabricators, and assemblers and secure an owner for the final specification, whether IPC, ANSI, JEDEC or a Chinese standards organisation. The plan was to test thin dielectrics from three different suppliers, fabricated at three different company locations and assembled at multiple assembly shops involved. The project was still open, and additional participants were welcome to join.
Still on the materials theme, Tony Senese called-in from Panasonic Electric Works with another idea-phase project, this time for a test vehicle for characterising conductive anodic filamentation (CAF). He commented that, although that sounded straightforward, he anticipated it becoming very complicated! CAF appeared to be a function of so many possible contributing factors, some predictable, some less so, and was probably even influenced by the phase of the moon! The project would attempt to reduce design and process effects that had nothing to do with the material, and develop a test vehicle and method to allow the CAF performance evaluation to be limited to the laminate only. This would enable shorter testing time for CAF material qualification and provide inputs to international standards bodies to develop a “materials only” CAF test methodology. There were already 17 participating, including OEMs, EMS companies, laminate manufacturers, test laboratories and standards organisations.
The final presentation of the session was again on the subject of CAF, this time an idea-phase project concerned with determining a better CAF acceleration equation, described by HDP User Group facilitator, Alun Morgan. Project goals were to determine a better acceleration factor equation for CAF and quantify the effects of voltage, temperature and humidity, to enable shorter testing time for CAF material qualification, to evaluate the higher voltage requirements of the automotive sector and hopefully prove that testing at higher voltages was not necessary, and to provide inputs to update international specifications on CAF testing.
Previous work had shown that conductive anodic filament growth was a two-step process, the first being the creation of a path by hydrolysis resulting in de-bonding of the glass-to-resin interface, and the second being electrochemical growth along that pathway. If there was no pathway, there could be no electrochemical growth and hence no CAF. Therefore, commonly-used acceleration factor equations that attempted to model the process as a single step were incorrect. For example the Sun Model included a voltage term in the equation although voltage clearly had no effect on the path formation but only had an effect after the path was formed and the electrochemical cell had been set up, after which CAF growth could be expected to be directly proportional to the strength of the electric field.
So to have a good CAF acceleration equation, it was necessary to separate the two stages and be able to detect and measure the onset of CAF. A statistical Design of Experiments was proposed as a means of evaluating the interactions between temperature and humidity at constant voltage. The project was still at the idea phase, and it remained to create the project team, with participation from the automotive sector, identify materials, agree on a test vehicle stack-up, then build and test the test vehicles and complete the statistical analysis of the results.
Jack Fisher wrapped up the day’s proceedings, thanking all present for their participation, including those presenters who had been unable to attend in person but had called in with their contributions, and put out an open invitation for new project suggestions. New project proposals should include the principal idea, with a brief background statement, a problem statement describing the issues that needed to be addressed, and a potential project output, for example an HDP report or a new IPC specification.
This was the third HDP User Group’s European meeting I had been invited to attend, and although the day was long and technically intense, it offered another great learning and networking opportunity. I’ve said it before, but the spirit of community and the willingness of people and their companies to share knowledge, skills and resources to drive the technology forward never ceases to impress. Once again, thank you HDP User Group for making me so welcome.
I am grateful to Alun Morgan for allowing me to use his photographs.
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