TY - GEN
T1 - Influence of nickel-phosphorus surface roughness on both wettability and pores formation in solder joints for high power electronic applications
AU - Vivet, L.
AU - Joudrier, A. L.
AU - Tan, K. L.
AU - Morelle, J. M.
AU - Etcheberry, A.
AU - Chalumeau, L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© VDE Verlag GMBH ∙ Berlin ∙ Offenbach, Germany
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - Electroless nickel-high-phosphorus Ni-P plating is used as substrate coating in the electronic component technology. The ability to minimize pores formation in solder joints and the wettability of the Ni-P layer remain points of investigation. The qualities and the control of the physical and chemical properties of the deposits are essential for the reliability of the products. In this contribution it has been measured how a controlled change of one property of the Ni-P surface, its average roughness, changes the wettability of this surface before soldering completion, at ambient temperature and under ambient air, and how it contribute to change the amount and size of pores inside solder joints, after soldering completion. Before all, observations of the Ni-P surfaces using scanning electron microscopy have been achieved. Then the wettability has been measured through the determination of both the disperse and the polar fractions of the substrate surface tension, based on the measurements of the wetting angle for droplets of four different liquids, under ambient air and at room temperature (classical sessile drop technique). Finally the X-Ray micro-radiography measurements of both the area fraction of pores and the size of the largest pore inside the solder joint of dice laser soldered on the studied substrate, using high melting temperature solder (300°C, PbSnAg) have been achieved. This study clearly demonstrates that both the ability to minimize pores formation in solder joints and the wettability under ambient conditions of the Ni-P substrate decrease and become more variable when its average roughness increases.
AB - Electroless nickel-high-phosphorus Ni-P plating is used as substrate coating in the electronic component technology. The ability to minimize pores formation in solder joints and the wettability of the Ni-P layer remain points of investigation. The qualities and the control of the physical and chemical properties of the deposits are essential for the reliability of the products. In this contribution it has been measured how a controlled change of one property of the Ni-P surface, its average roughness, changes the wettability of this surface before soldering completion, at ambient temperature and under ambient air, and how it contribute to change the amount and size of pores inside solder joints, after soldering completion. Before all, observations of the Ni-P surfaces using scanning electron microscopy have been achieved. Then the wettability has been measured through the determination of both the disperse and the polar fractions of the substrate surface tension, based on the measurements of the wetting angle for droplets of four different liquids, under ambient air and at room temperature (classical sessile drop technique). Finally the X-Ray micro-radiography measurements of both the area fraction of pores and the size of the largest pore inside the solder joint of dice laser soldered on the studied substrate, using high melting temperature solder (300°C, PbSnAg) have been achieved. This study clearly demonstrates that both the ability to minimize pores formation in solder joints and the wettability under ambient conditions of the Ni-P substrate decrease and become more variable when its average roughness increases.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85084019400
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85084019400
T3 - CIPS 2014 - 8th International Conference on Integrated Power Electronics Systems, Proceedings
BT - CIPS 2014 - 8th International Conference on Integrated Power Electronics Systems, Proceedings
PB - VDE Verlag GmbH
T2 - 8th International Conference on Integrated Power Electronics Systems, CIPS 2014
Y2 - 25 February 2014 through 27 February 2014
ER -