RE>>fwd: FAB: Tenting Au/Ni vias with LPI? 4/4/96
Dave,
Outstanding reply.
I've also seen some PWB failures that were caused by PTH corrosion from entrapped water soluble fluxes after only about 4-6 months in the field. Not sure whether the fluxes were from board fab (HASL operation) or from assembly, but it was interesting to see how much of the barrel was corroded.
I was with a large computer manufacturer at the time, too. We had some great equipment, people, and time to look into such failures. I realize that not everyone has these luxuries, which might contribute to the lack of data on this subject (and other failure mechanisms) within the industry as a whole. Otherwise, such failures may simply be treated as "bare board problems" and scrapped without more in-depth analysis.
Greg Bartlett
Mercury Computer Systems
Chelmsford, MA
[log in to unmask]
-------------------------
YES I have seen PWB failures apparently attributed to
corrosion, (visible green / white crud), in plated
holes that were tented with a dry film solder mask
on product less than 1 year old.
At a large computer mfg. corp. I was a pwb process
development, manufacturing, and product application
engineer, specializing in pwb photolithography,
Laser drilling of blind vias and pwb technology
definition for specific product applications.
Over 25 years ago I worked on reliability testing
of PWB designs in "Hostile Environments" and
office (which is often contain corrosive (hostile)
gasses. I believe that today's user enviroments are
more varied and are as corrosive as in the 70's.
In my definition of any PWB technology, I personnally
would not tent any via / hole without thoroughly
examining the type of hole (aspect ratio, blind,
through, plating thickness, plating void criteria)
the processes and chemicals that the via / hole sees
from initial drilling through final product (box)
ship, the type of tenting material, the processes
and chemicals the tented holes sees after tenting.
Smaller holes, higher aspect ratio holes and blind
holes (by design, by blockage, by partial solder
fill) are all suject to corrosion failure. Holes
of .016" and less in diameter are the concern.
I am (and am not) surprised when a PWB manufacturer
says that they have seen no corrosion failures related
to entraped contaminates in PWB holes. The least
that any PWB manufacturer do is design a state of the
art pwb reliability test vehicle to test various hole
sizes, tenting materials, ... in addition to other
pwb design features, (line widths, Cu to Cu spacings,
SIR, etc. , etc., etc.)
I don't doubt that this has been done and that someone
reading this note has done it. The question that the
pwb design engineer has to ask, "Do I feel lucky today"
If not, do more homework. All pwb mfgs are not equal.
All pwb usages are not equal, End of life for a PWB
varies upon application. Reliability requirments vary.
So what if the holes fail after product end of life.
Reference notes below:
==========================================================
> From [log in to unmask] Wed Apr 3 14:04:01 1996
> Resent-Date: Wed, 3 Apr 1996 12:48:42 -0800
> Resent-Sender: [log in to unmask]
> Old-Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: 03 Apr 96 10:59:38 EST
> From: Tony King <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: fwd: FAB: Tenting Au/Ni vias with LPI?
> Resent-Message-Id: <"QqBtO2.0.Vq7.IFgOn"@ipc>
> Resent-From: [log in to unmask]
> X-Mailing-List: <[log in to unmask]> archive/latest/3285
> X-Loop: [log in to unmask]
> Resent-Sender: [log in to unmask]
> Content-Length: 3230
>
> ======== Original Message ========
> Sender: [log in to unmask]
> Received: from simon.ipc.org (IPC.ORG [168.113.24.64]) by
> arl-img-7.compuserve.com (8.6.10/5.950515)
> id IAA00673; Wed, 3 Apr 1996 08:14:54 -0500
> Received: from ipc.org by simon.ipc.org via SMTP
> (940816.SGI.8.6.9/940406.SGI)
> id HAA29355; Wed, 3 Apr 1996 07:14:47 -0800
> Resent-Date: Wed, 3 Apr 1996 07:14:47 -0800
> Received: by ipc.org (Smail3.1.28.1 #2)
> id m0u4S0K-00006mC; Wed, 3 Apr 96 06:49 CST
> Resent-Sender: [log in to unmask]
> Old-Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]>
> From: "Dill, Norm J" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: "'IPC Technet Input'" <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: FAB: Tenting Au/Ni vias with LPI?
> Date: Wed, 03 Apr 96 07:44:00 EST
> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]>
> Encoding: 12 TEXT
> X-Mailer: Microsoft Mail V3.0
> Resent-Message-ID: <"jnwkP2.0.P7F.ZFdOn"@ipc>
> Resent-From: [log in to unmask]
> X-Mailing-List: <[log in to unmask]> archive/latest/3278
> X-Loop: [log in to unmask]
> Precedence: list
> Resent-Sender: [log in to unmask]
>
>
> Typically when LPI is used to tent vias, one side of the board will seal
>
> and the other may have pin holes or openings in the mask that covers the
> via. This creates a copper lined cup capable of trapping any subsequent
> chemistry liquids that it may be exposed to (fluxes, cleaners, etc.).
> Is this concern reduced when nickel/gold are plated over the entire
> copper board?
> Please share your via tenting experiences. Thanks.
>
> Norm Dill
> RF Communications
> [log in to unmask]
> ======== Fwd by: Tony King / N ========
> I hear this concern sometimes from customers or designers, yet as a board
> manufacturer have never seen a failure in a printed circuit board attributed
> to copper attack in a hole partially filled with mask. Further indication of
> entrapped solutions in the hole should be detected at ionic cotamination
> testing, yet again has not been seen.
>
> There are several options to consider when designing product for plugging
> holes with mask, in reference to the solder mask artwork design, a hole
> should be plugged (exposed to light) from both sides of the hole or neither
> side (not plugged). The LPI process outcome is very unpredictable when
> exposing a mask filled hole from one side only at image.(dependent on the
> amount of mask in the holes, the degree of developing, light intensity etc.)
> If the design requires the holes to be plugged completely, this can be done
> prior to (or after) primary lpi coat using a screened dot pattern. The dot
> pattern plugging operation can also be performed after HAL to allow solder
> coating of the copper prior to plugging if corrosion is a concern.
>
> Some customers absolutely require holes to be plugged from one side while
> leaving the other side open for testing reasons. This dot pattern screening
> operation must be done after HAL to insure the partially plugged hole is
> adequately cleaned after soler coat.
>
> Though I have not seen copper fail, I would expect nickel/gold to present
> better protection against possible corrosion, though the gold would be too
> porous if immersion coated, electroplated gold would be better.
>
>
> Tony King
> Elexsys International Inc
> 603-886-0066
> [log in to unmask]
>
>
|