不同热暴露条件下SAC+Bi无铅焊料力学性能的演变

Mohammad Al Ahsan, S. Hasan, M. A. Haq, J. Suhling, P. Lall
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Further aging effects can occur during the ramp periods between the low and high temperature extremes.While changes in solder materials during aging have been examined in detail in prior studies, there have been limited studies examining material evolution occurring during other thermal exposures such as thermal cycling and thermal shock. In our recent papers, the mechanical behavior evolutions occurring in SAC305 and SAC+3%Bi (SAC_Q) lead free solders have been characterized for up to 20 days of exposure to four different thermal profiles including isothermal aging, slow thermal cycling, thermal shock, and thermal ramping. The degradations in the mechanical properties (modulus, UTS, yield strength) were observed for both miniature bulk samples and solder joints, and then the results were compared for the different exposure profiles. For both bulk samples and joints, the largest changes were observed for the slow thermal cycling profile. 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引用次数: 4

摘要

电子组件中的焊点在其使用寿命或在加速寿命测试期间经常暴露在热循环环境中,温度变化从极低到高温。由于装配材料的CTE不匹配,循环温度导致焊点剪切疲劳损伤累积。此外,在极端高温下的停留时间将导致热老化现象和额外的微观组织演变和材料性能退化。进一步的老化效应可能发生在低温和高温极值之间的斜坡期。虽然在之前的研究中已经详细研究了老化过程中焊料材料的变化,但在其他热暴露(如热循环和热冲击)过程中,对材料演变的研究有限。在我们最近的论文中,SAC305和SAC+3%Bi (SAC_Q)无铅焊料在四种不同的热环境下暴露长达20天,包括等温老化、慢热循环、热冲击和热斜坡,对其力学行为的演变进行了表征。观察了微型大块样品和焊点的力学性能(模量,UTS,屈服强度)的下降,然后比较了不同暴露剖面的结果。对于大块样品和接头,最大的变化是观察到的慢热循环剖面。此外,对于所有考虑的热轮廓,SAC+3%Bi焊料样品的变化远小于SAC305焊料样品。在目前的研究中,我们扩展了之前的研究,研究了几种不同铋含量的SAC+Bi钎料合金。特别地,在四种不同的热暴露曲线(等温时效、慢热循环、热冲击和热斜坡)下研究了含有1%、2%和3% Bi的SAC+Bi合金族。本研究的主要目的是确定在无铅合金中需要多少铋来缓解热暴露期间的微观结构和材料性能演变。使用较低的铋含量可以降低焊料成本,还可以提高高应变率负载(如冲击/跌落/振动)的可靠性。采用可控回流曲线制备了三种SAC+Bi合金的单轴微体试样。制作完成后,样品在无应力条件下通过热暴露进行预处理,最长可达100天。研究了从-40℃到125℃的几种热暴露曲线,包括:(1)高温极端条件下的等温老化(老化),(2)150分钟循环,45分钟斜坡和30分钟停留(慢热循环),(3)空气对空气热冲击暴露,30分钟停留和接近瞬时斜坡(热冲击),以及(4)90分钟循环,45分钟斜坡和0分钟停留(热斜坡)。通过热暴露预处理后,测试了样品的材料行为和微观结构演变特征。对单轴体试件进行应力应变测试,测量其有效弹性模量和极限拉伸强度(UTS)等力学性能。对于每种SAC+Bi合金的微型体焊料样品,每种热暴露剖面的力学性能和微观结构的演变特征都是热暴露时间的函数。然后进行了一些比较,包括:(1)比较观察到的三种SAC+Bi合金的力学性能演变,(2)比较三种SAC+Bi合金的显微组织演变,以及(3)比较每种合金在四种不同热暴露曲线下发生的降解的相对严重程度。对于所有合金,缓慢热循环暴露的退化最大,而等温时效的退化最小。增加SAC+Bi合金的Bi含量导致所有暴露剖面的热降解效应的缓解增加。减小了SAC+Bi合金试样的微观组织演变是其抗力学行为变化能力提高的主要原因。含有2%铋和3%铋的样品的拉伸强度结果几乎相同,这表明较低的铋含量可以满足许多应用。
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Mechanical Property Evolution in SAC+Bi Lead-Free Solders Subjected to Various Thermal Exposure Profiles
Solder joints in electronic assemblies are frequently exposed to thermal cycling environments in their service life or during accelerated life testing where temperature variations occur from very low to high temperature. Due to the CTE mismatches of the assembly materials, cyclic temperature leads to damage accumulation due to shear fatigue in the solder joints. In addition, dwell periods at the high temperature extremes will cause thermal aging phenomena and additional microstructural evolution and material property degradation. Further aging effects can occur during the ramp periods between the low and high temperature extremes.While changes in solder materials during aging have been examined in detail in prior studies, there have been limited studies examining material evolution occurring during other thermal exposures such as thermal cycling and thermal shock. In our recent papers, the mechanical behavior evolutions occurring in SAC305 and SAC+3%Bi (SAC_Q) lead free solders have been characterized for up to 20 days of exposure to four different thermal profiles including isothermal aging, slow thermal cycling, thermal shock, and thermal ramping. The degradations in the mechanical properties (modulus, UTS, yield strength) were observed for both miniature bulk samples and solder joints, and then the results were compared for the different exposure profiles. For both bulk samples and joints, the largest changes were observed for the slow thermal cycling profile. In addition, the changes in the SAC+3%Bi solder samples were much smaller than those experienced in the SAC305 solder samples for all of the considered thermal profiles.In the current investigation, we have extended our prior study to examine several different SAC+Bi solder alloys with various bismuth contents. In particular, a family of SAC+Bi alloys with 1%, 2%, and 3% Bi were studied with four different thermal exposure profiles (isothermal aging, slow thermal cycling, thermal shock, and thermal ramping). The primary objective of this study was to determine how much bismuth is needed in the lead-free alloy to mitigate microstructure and material property evolutions during thermal exposures. Use of lower Bi content can lower solder cost and also increase reliability in high strain rate loadings such as shock/drop/vibration.Uniaxial miniature bulk specimens were prepared for the three SAC+Bi alloys using a controlled reflow profile. After fabrication, the samples were then preconditioned by thermal exposure under stress-free conditions for various durations up to 100 days. Several thermal exposure profiles from -40 C to 125 C were examined including: (1) isothermal aging at the high temperature extreme (aging), (2) 150 minute cycles with 45 minutes ramps and 30 minutes dwells (slow thermal cycling), (3) air-to-air thermal shock exposures with 30 minutes dwells and near instantaneous ramps (thermal shock), and (4) 90 minute cycles with 45 minutes ramps and 0 minutes dwells (thermal ramping). After preconditioning via thermal exposure, the samples were tested to characterize their material behavior and microstructure evolutions. The uniaxial bulk specimens were subjected to stress-strain testing to measure their mechanical properties including effective elastic modulus, and Ultimate Tensile Strength (UTS).For the miniature bulk solder samples of each SAC+Bi alloy, the evolutions of the mechanical properties and microstructure for each thermal exposure profile were characterized as a function of the duration of thermal exposure. Several comparisons were then made including: (1) comparing the observed mechanical properties evolutions for the three SAC+Bi alloys to each other, (2) comparing the microstructural evolutions for the three SAC+Bi alloys, and (3) comparing the relative severity of degradations in each alloy occurring for the four different thermal exposure profiles.For all of the alloys, the degradations for the slow thermal cycling exposure were the largest, while those for isothermal aging were surprisingly the smallest. Increasing the Bi content of the SAC+Bi alloy led to increased mitigation of thermal degradation effects for all of the exposure profiles. Reduced microstructural evolution in the SAC+Bi alloy samples was found to be the major reason for the improved resistance to mechanical behavior changes. The tensile strength results for samples with 2% Bi and 3% were nearly the same, suggesting that lower bismuth content could be sufficient for many applications.
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