-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- design007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueDesigning Through the Noise
Our experts discuss the constantly evolving world of RF design, including the many tradeoffs, material considerations, and design tips and techniques that designers and design engineers need to know to succeed in this high-frequency realm.
Learning to Speak ‘Fab’
Our expert contributors clear up many of the miscommunication problems between PCB designers and their fab and assembly stakeholders. As you will see, a little extra planning early in the design cycle can go a long way toward maintaining open lines of communication with the fab and assembly folks.
Training New Designers
Where will we find the next generation of PCB designers and design engineers? Once we locate them, how will we train and educate them? What will PCB designers of the future need to master to deal with tomorrow’s technology?
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - design007 Magazine
New Methods for Quantifying PCB Design Weaknesses and Manufacturing Challenges
November 18, 2021 | Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Nolan Johnson recently spoke with Summit Interconnect’s Gerry Partida about disruptive new methods for analyzing and quantifying potential manufacturing challenges in designs while still in the design phase.
Nolan Johnson: Gerry, what’s the background for the new methods we’re about to discuss?
Gerry Partida: The industry is at a new point in evolving how we look at building boards. Our industry has historically built boards and then tried to find a test for them. Then, when they found a test for it, they figured out that it needed to be analyzed before they built the board. We did this with electrical test. We built boards and down the road, as people started asking, “Why am I buying bad boards? We should electrically test them,” electrical test was introduced, reluctantly, into the test part of manufacturing printed circuit boards by suppliers or fabricators. Then they embraced it. But when we started testing boards, we did comparison tests. We would build a bunch of boards, put the first one on a tester, tell it to self-learn, and compare all the boards to the first board. If they all matched, they all shipped as matched boards, but if they had the same defect, they all shipped with the same defect. This did happen.
It wasn’t for another 10 or 15 years that we took extracted netlist from the CAD software and compared it to the Gerber data that would be used to fabricate the board, to find out whether everything was corrected before we started manufacturing. We would find that there was a problem, and we would fix it or get new data. Then when we knew we had a match, we started to manufacture the boards and downloaded the program to the tester. But this was an evolution of about 15 to 25 years. It depends on what point of view you take from it.
We’ve done the same thing with microvias. We’ve been building microvias. There are datasheets that talk about the modulus and the CTE expansion after reflow, before Tg, and after Tg, but no one really would do any math or science behind it. The PCB fabricator would just build the boards and ship them. Sometimes there are assembly problems, and the industry says, “There’s something going on with microvias. Three-stack and four-stack are not as safe as a single microvia and staggering them.” Everybody is trying to find out how strong or how weak they are. Most people were finding out at assembly because the standard IPC-6012 performance specs in the evaluation couldn’t identify a weak microvia very well. So, we came up with the OM tester, which is using the IPC-TM 650 2.6.27 test method, which actually takes a coupon with the same structures that are in the board and simulates reflow on the coupon before we ship the boards.
If that structure, which is in the board that we’re trying to ship, can survive reflow in a tester, then we know that the boards are more than likely going to pass and survive reflow and assembly. This works great. It will tell fabricators that if we process everything right, the board is going to be reliable through reflow. However, after a couple years of having the tester, we discovered we did everything right, but occasionally it wasn’t working. They were failing 6X reflow. Utilizing our extensive experience in microvia fabrication, our portfolio of reliability testing data, materials expertise and software tools, we can simulate the stack-up; you can actually input the microvia structure and the data output will tell you if it can survive six reflows or not.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the November 2021 issue of PCB007 Magazine, click here.
Suggested Items
Real Time with... IPC APEX EXPO 2025: Improving the Electronics Industry With Advanced Packaging
04/30/2025 | Real Time with...IPC APEX EXPODevan Iyer, the Chief Strategist for Advanced Packaging at IPC, shares insights from his recent presentation at the EMS Leadership Summit. The discussion covers the importance of understanding market segments in IoT, power electronics, and high-performance computing. EMS companies are encouraged to specialize, invest wisely, and collaborate to meet customer needs.
Real Time with... IPC APEX EXPO 2025: The Role of AI in Advanced Packaging
04/30/2025 | Real Time with...IPC APEX EXPOIn a follow-up to his keynote, Dr. Ahmad Bahai, discusses the critical intersection of advanced packaging, computing, and AI in semiconductor innovation with Nolan Johnson and Devan Iyer. He emphasizes the need for new approaches to handle the data economy and highlights AI's role in optimizing electronics manufacturing. The conversation covers challenges in power and thermal management, the impact of AI on EDA tools, and bio-inspired innovations. Predictions about future trends point towards increased efficiency in design and manufacturing.
New IPC Standard Sets First Global Benchmark for E-Textile Wearable Reliability
04/29/2025 | IPCIPC announces the release of IPC-8981, Quality and Reliability of E-Textile Wearables. This first-of-its-kind standard sets baselines for testing and classifying e-textile wearables, addressing key challenges in product reliability, performance, and quality assurance.
Choosing the Right Strategic Path
04/29/2025 | Marcy LaRont, PCB007 MagazineTom Yang, CEO of CEE PCB, discusses the current economic challenges, noting reduced purchasing power post-pandemic. He highlights the growing demand for HDI in consumer electronics due to AI growth. Tom also expresses concerns about tariffs under the new U.S. administration, prompting CEE to diversify production locations, including new plants in Southeast Asia. He emphasizes the need for PCB manufacturers to adapt strategically amidst rising costs and fierce competition, particularly for mid-sized shops facing unique challenges in the industry.
Rising Star Award: Paavo Niskala, TactoTek
04/28/2025 | Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007Paavo Niskala joined the IPC community in 2022 as part of the inaugural steering group for in-mold electronics. He led the development of standard IPC-8401, Guidelines for In-Mold Electronics, chairing the project from its inception to its publication in 2024. Currently, Paavo serves as vice chair of the D-84A Plastronics Accelerated Reliability Testing Task Group, contributing his expertise to advancing reliability standards in the field.