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Design for Mass Production Prototype Production Design • One of a kind or few of a kind • Mass Production Quantities • Represents abstract of production design • Typically Use Surface Mount Technology • Typically Thru Hole Components • Mat & Asm Cost is an allocated requirement • Cost is not part of requirements allocation • Mat Cost use est annual production volumes • Assembly process is not of interest • Assembly levels, PCBs do NOT match PD • Define Assembly process flow diagram(s) • Define Assembly levels • Used for verification of requirements • Mfg test process part of Asm costs • Major Deliverables: Model • Major Deliverables: Paper Exercise • Working Demonstration Model • Costed Bill of Materials incl package info • Demonstrate Major Functions • Minimal Documentation • PCB Asm-Test Process Flow Diagrams • Plan, Parts List, PCB Layouts • Demonstration Photos/Videos • Assembly Level Diagram • PCB Layouts (optional) Both are Required Design for Mass Production Manufacturing Processes • Printed Circuit Board Assembly (PCB): Must specify or account for all components mounted into, onto or attached in some way to a printed circuit board as well as test for same – Electrical Components: Passives, IC’s, Optical, ElecMech, ElecMag, Connectors, Switches, Sensors, Protection Devices, etc – Mechanical Components: Heat Sinks, Thermal Grease, Pullers, Stiffeners, Mounting Hardware, Sensors, Protection Devices, etc • High Level Assembly (HLA): Must specify or account for all elements or parts of an assembly level including testing – Electrical Elements: PCB’s, Cables, Harnesses, Fans, Power Supplies, Sensors, Protection Devices, User Displays, Switches, etc – Mechanical Elements: Enclosures, Feet, Standoffs, Card Guides, Gaskets, Sealants, Fasteners, Hardware, etc Design for Mass Production Printed Circuit Board Assemblies • Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs): – Convenient form of interconnecting electrical components using industry standard attachment processes – 3 Basic Types of PCB-Component Assembly Technology • Thru Hole (TH) • Surface Mount (SMT) • Micro-electronic Multi-Chip-Module (MCM) – 3 Basic Types of PCB substrate systems (fabs) • Rigid epoxy including FR4, BT and others • Ceramic, Alumina (Al203), AlNi or other exotics • Flexible Substrate (flex circuit) – Single, Double and Multi-Layered Design for Mass Production PCB Manufacturing Guide Links •fullnet.com/u/tomg/gooteepc.htm •ee.washington.edu/circuit_archive/text/design.html •precisioncircuits.com.au/cid/hm_cid.html •amscourseware.com/guidelines.htm •filtranmicro.com/design.html •goldengategraphics.com/pcgloss.htm •elchempub.com/files/electroc2.htm •pcbprotech.com/Dh3/DH3right.htm •pcbprototyping.com/html/html_edu.htm Design for Mass Production Plated VIAs Design for Mass Production Basic Photo-Etch PCB Mfg Process Plated Through Hole PCB Cross Section Design for Mass Production VIA Aspect Ratio – Very Important Aspect Ratio = Bd Thickness VIA Diameter Aspect Ratios > 5 May Challenge Drilling, Plating & other PCB Mfg Processes Cross Section Example of Failed VIA due to poor drilling, plating Design for Mass Production Cu PCB Trace Width & Depth IPC Current Capacity Limitations Design for Mass Production Cu PCB Trace Conductor IPC* Spacing vs Voltage Summary (*Simplified) Design for Mass Production Signal Routing is Important! The PCB is part of the circuit Good Signal Routing Equal Lengths, Uniform Good Power Bus Routing Poor Power Routing Bypass Caps Closest to IC Power Pins Bypass Caps and 1 Conductor too Lengthy Poor Signal Routing Un-Equal Lengths, Non-uniform Design for Mass Production PCB Ionic Cleanliness is Important • Acetate & Formate - These organic acids can be extracted from some solder masks. High levels can be indicative of an incompletely cured solder mask. Incomplete cure can allow exposure of the copper traces to the environment resulting in corrosion and board failure. • Bromide: Brominated compounds are added to laminates as a flame retardant. Some laminates are employing alternate, non-bromine, flame retardants. These are usually called specified as containing non-halogen flame retardants. The surface bromide concentration is a function of the laminate heat history. Bromide has also been identified as a component in some marking ink formulations and some solder masks. • Chloride - Chloride ions are the single most damaging material that can be on the board. High levels are usually due to insufficient washing prior to applying the solder mask. Chloride can also be transferred to the board by handling. • Nitrate and Ammonium - Both of these can be introduced in various plating processes. • Sulfate - Sulfate is rarely a problem. High levels are usually caused by poor housekeeping: dirty equipment, unpainted walls or unsealed floors. • Sodium & Potassium - Sodium can be induced by handling but is also a component of tap water and may be indicative of poor water treatment. In this case, chloride, calcium and magnesium should also be present. • Calcium and Magnesium - Calcium and magnesium come from rinse water and are indicative of poor water quality. • Citrate - Citrate salts and acids are components of some gold plating solutions. They also are in many environmentally friendly cleaners. IPC-6012 mandates the total ionic cleanliness prior to solder mask be <10ug/in2 in NaCl equivelants (IPC-TM-650) Most Low Signal Or High Bias, High Reliability Designs Require Much Lower Levels on Individual Ions Design for Mass Production TH: Thru-Hole Technology Design for Mass Production Thru-Hole Device Packages • Passives and Discretes Axial Leaded (2 terminal, lying down) o Resistors, Capacitors, Inductors, Diodes Radial Leaded (2 terminal, standing up) o Capacitors, Inductors, LEDs, MOVs, Power Resistors, … T0 – Series (2-N terminals, Most Accommodate Std Heat Sink hardware) o T0-92 Small Signal Transistors, Regulators, References o T0-220 Moderate Power (~1W) Transistors, Regulators, Amplifiers o T0-3 Higher Power (~3W) Transistors, Regulators, Amplifiers Design for Mass Production Transistor Package Examples Design for Mass Production Thru-Hole Device Packages • Integrated Circuits, Resistors, Relays DIP (Dual In-Line Package) PDIP, CDIP SIP (Single In-Line Package) Rectangular Design for Mass Production P-DIP (plastic) and C-DIP (ceramic) Examples Design for Mass Production SMT: Surface Mount Technology Design for Mass Production SMT – Surface Mount Technology Generations 20mm DIP Small Outline Package Shrink SO Package Thin Shrink SOP 3 mm Depopulated, Very Thin, Quad Flat Pack, No Leads Design for Mass Production Discretes: Rectangular (Example 0402) Design for Mass Production SOT – Small Outline Transistors (SOT-3, SOT-223) Design for Mass Production QFP – Quad Flat Packs Design for Mass Production Quad Flat Pack – QFP, PQFP Design for Mass Production PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carriers Design for Mass Production BGA – Ball Grid Arrays Design for Mass Production Typical BGA Pin Layout Design for Mass Production Electronic Assembly Quality Design for Mass Production Electronic Assembly Quality and Standards Design for Mass Production Component Procure Setup Substrate (Fab) Fabrication Fab, Comp Prep Bake, Clean Thru Hole Mechanical Hand Operations Simplified Comparison of Thru Hole and SMT PCB Assembly Process SMT Screen Solder Paste Auto Component Insertion Vision System Inspection Auto Component Placement Wave Solder Vision System Inspection Reflow Solder (Oven) Lead Trim Stresses and Test Processes Vision/Xray System Inspection Design for Mass Production Setup Screen Print SMT Placement Hand Assembly Wave Solder Final Assembly In Circuit Test Stress Screen Functional Test Reflow Wash Pack / Ship Typical SMT Complex Circuit Board Assembly Design for Mass Production Solder Geometry Variability in SMT and THT Design for Mass Production IPC = Institute of Printed Circuits, WWW.IPC.ORG Association Connecting Electronics Industries • • • • • • IPC-A-610 Acceptability of Electronic Assemblies IPC-6011 Series of Board PCB Performance Standards IPC/EIA J-STD-001 Requirements for Soldered Electrical and Electronic Assemblies IPC-7095 Design and Assembly Process Implementation for BGAs IPC-2221 Generic Std for Printed Board Design IPC-D-279 Design Guidelines for Reliable Surface Mount Technology Printed Board Assemblies Quality! Design for Mass Production IPC Electronic Assembly Classifications 3. High Reliability Electronic Products: Ref: IPC-A-610, IPC-JSTD-001, IPC-7095 PROCESS CONTROL – PROCESS QUALITY • 2. 1. Aerospace, Military Continued performance, performance on demand, and extended life is critical and equipment downtime cannot be tolerated. Equipment must function when required with a high level of reliability assurance. # of Bds, # of solder joints # of Mechanical Cycles • End-use environment is harsh • Includes equipment for commercial, military products, and for such applications as life support or missile systems. Dedicated Service Electronic Products: 10 Yr Stresses 4# of Power Cycles # of Therm Cycles, Excursion Telecom & Certain Medical • Continued performance, extended life and uninterrupted service is desired but not critical. • Typically the end-use environment would not cause failures • Includes communications equipment, sophisticated business machines, instruments and military equipment General Electronic Products: • Function of the completed assembly is the major requirement • Cosmetic imperfections are not important • Includes consumer, some computer, peripherals, general military HW Design for Mass Production IPC Workmanship Classes: Solder Volume, Shape, Placement Control 3. High Reliability Electronic Products: Includes the equipment for commercial and military products where continued performance or performance on demand is critical. Equipment downtime cannot be tolerated, and functionality is required for such applications as life support or missile systems. Printed board assemblies in this class are suitable for applications where high levels of assurance are required and service is essential. • 2. Dedicated Service Electronic Products: Includes communications equipment, sophisticated business machines, instruments and military equipment where high performance and extended life is required, and for which uninterrupted service is desired but is not critical. Typically the end-use environment would NOT cause failures. • 1. Requirement for Aero-Space, Certain Military, Certain Medical Requirement for High Eng Telecom, COTS Military, Medical General Electronic Products: Includes consumer products, some computer and peripherals, as well as general military hardware suitable for applications where cosmetic imperfections are not important and the major requirement is function of the completed printed board assembly. 100 % 100 % 75 % 75 % 50 % 50 % 25 % 25 % 0% 0% Min PTH Vertical Fill: Class 2 = 75% Ref: IPC-A-610, IPC-JSTD-001 IPC-7095 BGA Std Class 1 Class 2 Class 3 Max Void Size 60% Dia 36% Area 45% Dia 20.3% Area 30% Dia 9% Area Max Void Size at Interfaces 50% Dia 25% Area 35% Dia 12.3% Area 20% Dia 4% Area Class 3 = 100% Design for Mass Production BGA Void Size and Locations, Uniform Void Position Distributions Sampling_Grid Position Model Solder_Joint_Radius Void_Distance Void_Radius Void_Solder Interface Distance S = Shell Potential for Early Life Failure (ELFO) if S < D/10 = (solder_joint_radius)/10 S =Shell = solder_joint_radius – (void_distance + void_radius) S Design for Mass Production CLASS 1 Solder Joint_Radius: 0.225 mm Void_Radius: 0.135 mm Void_Area: 36% of Joint Area Failure criteria: D/10 P(D<10) = 81.11 % CLASS 2 Solder Joint_Radius: 0.225 mm Void_Radius: 0.1013 mm Void_Area: 20% of Joint Area Failure criteria: D/10 P(D<10) = 52.21 % CLASS 3 Solder Joint_Radius: 0.225 mm Void_Radius: 0.0675 mm Void_Area: 9% of Joint Area Failure criteria: D/10 P(D<10) = 27.00 % Design for Mass Production Class vs Shell Size Relative Probabilities ~ 2x more likely to exceed D/10 threshold with Class 2 vs Class 3 S = Shell Depth Design for Mass Production Physics of Failure: Accumulated Fatigue Damage (AFD) is related to the number of stress cycles N, and mechanical stress, S, using Miner’s rule Exponent B comes from the S-N diagram. It is typically ~3 for 63/37 SnPb Solders Example: Solder Joint Shear voids Effective cross-sectional Effective crossForce Area: D/2 F sectional Area: D Applied stress: Let = 10, then Applied stress: AFD with voids will “age” about 1000x faster than AFD with no voids Voids in solder joints Design for Mass Production IPC-A-610 Conditions • IPC-A-610 Workmanship Conditions – Target Condition- This is the most desired condition and previously was referred to as preferred. It is not always essential to achieve this condition for reliability considerations. – Acceptable Condition- is a condition that, while not at a Target Condition, will result in a reliable product for the application. Corrective actions shall be directed to move toward the Target Condition. – Nonconforming Process Indicator- Is when a condition exists which does not affect the use of the product, but is not optimum. May result in repair, rework or scrap depending upon the customer’s requirements. Corrective action is necessary to bring the result back toward the Target. – Nonconforming Defect Condition- is when a condition exists that does not meet the reliability or performance in the application. Correction action is mandatory. There are three key words used in the workmanship standards: Must, Shall and Should. All the IPC-A-610 Measurements utilize • • • Temp (Deg F/C) Mass (Oz/Kg) Distance (mils/mm) Must means mandatory for Class 1, 2, & 3 Shall means mandatory for Class 3 only. Should means recommended only for Class 1,2 & 3. Quality! Design for Mass Production Solder Joints • Solder Joints: A solder joint is formed when two metal surfaces are soldered together. The solder fills the void between the surfaces and is the area most important. It provides the majority of “strength of attachment.” A solder fillet is formed after the solder joint is filled, and, is the visible solder verifying the presence of the solder joint. – – – – Blow Hole Defects: Blowholes are solder voids visible from the surface going into the solder joint alongside a through-hole lead. A blowhole is a nonconforming process indicator provided the solder connection meets the minimum circumference and depth requirements. Dewetting Defects: Solder joints are visually inspected for wetting characteristics. Dewetting occurs because the flux has been burned off and moisture attacks the surfaces. A good indicator of dewetting is solder pooling and pulling back off leads or lands. Oxidation Defects: When moisture in the air attacks a solder joint, it forms a protective rust-like layer. This is referred to as oxidation, which attacks metal surfaces. Oxidation dramatically reduces the transfer efficiency of thermal energy. Dimensional Defects: For any of the above in addition to poor placement, screening, reflow and other processes, solder joint geometric defect limits are clearly specified in these Stds (see above) Design for Mass Production Discrete Component Geometries NOTES 1. The maximum fillet may overhang the land or extend onto the top of the chip cap metallization; however the solder shall not extend further onto the component body. 2. Properly wetted fillet evident. Design for Mass Production J-Lead Component Geometries NOTES 1. The maximum solder fillet shall not touch package body. 2. Properly wetted fillet evident. Design for Mass Production Gull Wing Component Geometries NOTES 1. Solder fillet may extend through the top bend. Solder must not touch the package body or end seal, except for low profile SMD devices, e.g., SOICs, SOTs. Solder should not extend under the body of low profile surface mount components whose leads are made of Alloy 42 or similar metals. 2. Must not violate minimum design conductor spacing. 3. Properly wetted fillet evident. Design for Mass Production Thru-Hole Component Geometries NOTES 1. Wetted solder refers to solder applied by the solder process. 2. The 25% unfilled volume includes both source and destination side depressions. Design for Mass Production Advanced Packaging Design for Mass Production Through Hole Surface Mount CSP / WLP (CSP = Chip Scale Package, WLP = Wafer Level Package) TSOP CSP/WLP 25 mil pitch Area array 0.8 mm to 0.5 mm Limited by perimeter leads Limited by substrate wiring 100 mil pitch Limited by through hole spacing IC Packaging Progression: Design for Mass Production Fujitsu SuperCSP Redistribution Trace (Cu) SiN Al Pad Polyimide Layer Die Encapsulant Barrier Metal Solder Ball Metal Post (Cu) • Solder balls on copper posts • Redistribution wiring to posts • Encapsulant is molded onto wafer Design for Mass Production Wafer Level Packaging Will Become Std VOLUME Thru Hole •DIP •Pin Grid 1960 Surface Mount •QFP •TSOP •SOJ •BGA 1980 2000 YEAR Chip Scale •CSP •Wafer Level •Stacked Die •SiP Design for Mass Production 10000 Flip-Chip Underfill+ µProcessor 1000 ASICs Pins (#) DRAM SRAM Flash 100 Passives Analog ICs 10 Power ICs Discretes 1 1 10 100 Die Area (mm2) 1000 Design for Mass Production Process Flow: Wafer Level Packaging vs. Conventional Packaging * From Motorola Design for Mass Production Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Restrictions on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) European Community Directives 2002/95/EC & 2002/96/EC Will impact global electronics industry (incl USA) Design for Mass Production WEEE Directive 2002/96/EC “on Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment“ Producers must take back waste electronic equipment from collection points Financing: Producers/Importers are responsible for financing and treatment of waste equipment from private households (which includes most small businesses) Product sales can show a visible fee for up to 10 years Producers and users others than private households may conclude agreements stipulating other financing methods Products have to be marked with the brand of the producer, recycling symbol & date Producers must provide specific disassembly information for treatment facilities Targets are set in the directive for reuse, recovery and recycling (ex. Medical) Producers/Importers have to be registered with local systems Member states have to report on the targets; so record keeping required Labeling Must Include the WEEE Symbol and Guidance Info Date of manufacture: month / year “This symbol indicates that the waste of electrical and electronic equipment must not be disposed as unsorted municipal waste and must be collected separately. Please contact t he manufacturer or other authorized disposal company to decommission your equipment.” Typical Guidance Statement for Industrial Equipment Design for Mass Production WEEE Regulated Materials and Devices • 1) Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) containing capacitors in accordance with Council Directive 96/59/EC of 16 September 1996 on the disposal of polychlorinated biphenyls and polychlorinated terphenyls (PCB/PCT) (1). • 2) Mercury containing components, such as switches or backlighting lamps, • 3) Batteries Including, Lithium batteries Alkali-Manganese batteries Dry cell batteries Nickel-cadmium rechargeable batteries Lead rechargeable batteries Silver round cell batteries • 4) Printed circuit boards of mobile phones generally, and of other devices if the surface of the printed circuit board is greater than 10 square centimeters. • 5) Toner cartridges, liquid and pasty, as well as color toner. • 6) Plastic containing brominated flame retardants. • 7) Asbestos waste and components which contain asbestos. Design for Mass Production WEEE Regulated Materials and Devices • 8) Cathode ray tubes • 9) Refrigerant including chlorofluorocarbons, hydrochlorofluorocarbons, hydrofluorocarbons & hydrocarbons • 10) Gas discharge lamps such as halogen, neon, xenon, etc • 11) Liquid crystal displays (together with their casing where appropriate) of a surface greater than 100 square centimeters and all those back-lighted with gas discharge lamps • 12) External electric cables • 13) Components containing refractory ceramic fibers as described in Commission Directive 97/69/EC of 5 December 1997 adapting to technical progress Council Directive 67/548/EEC relating to the classification, packaging and labeling of dangerous substances (2). • 14) Components containing radioactive substances (except components below exemption thresholds set in Art. 3 of and Annex I to Directive 96/29/Euratom of 13 May 1996 laying down basic safety standards for the protection of the health of workers and the general public against the dangers arising from ionizing radiation (3)) . • 15) Electrolytic capacitors containing substances of concern (height > 25 mm, diameter > 25 mm or proportionately similar volume) . Design for Mass Production WEEE Implementation Difficulties – Member States can expand the equipment list – Producers will be accountable for records of annual mass of each restricted substance shipped into each EC country – But conflicts among accounting firms on how to reserve for WEEE obligations, some countries may charge up-front • Firms may have to pay into a deposit system; • and reserve for a contingent liability – Some European wide associations being formed to manage WEEE • But member states have strong incentive to keep all waste in their system to maximize fee income – Definition of “producer” is problematic • What happens if distributors ship equipment from one member state to another? Who is responsible as the “producer”? Design for Mass Production Recycling Passport Master Recycling Passport WEEE requires special identification of waste for recycling or special handling Model Type xxx Type Number (Operator Manual) 03/2003 Page 1 of 41 mailto:[email protected] File: 2003.03.04_rp neu.doc ( ++49 89 6207-3681 / FAX: ++49 89 6207-7140 1. General view of the device 8 5 6 4 1 1 7 1 2 Example: Agfa Copier Edition: 1 Editor / Department 2 3 9 1 0 1 1 3 Design for Mass Production China RoHS Key Elements SJ P.R.C. Electronic Industry Standards SJ╳╳╳—200╳ • • Product Labeling Substance Limit Table IPC 1752 Material Declaration • Packaging Labeling Marks of Preventing and Controlling Pollution by Electronic Information Products and Marking Requirements Promulgated on 200╳-╳╳-╳╳ ╳╳-╳╳ Effective as of 200 ╳- Promulgated by PRC Ministry of Information Industry Design for Mass Production 1. Labeling Logo 1: Labeling for RoHS compliant product China RoHS Compliance: Comply to EU 1000PPM for all substances except Cadmium at 100PPM (Homogenous Substance Limits) No Exemptions Allowed Logo 2: Labeling for RoHS non-compliant product Number indicates Environmental Protection Use Period – Period in years that worst case substance remains user safe (Operating lifetime of the product unless maintenance items have noncompliance) Design for Mass Production • For products whose Hazardous Substance concentration exceeds limits, in addition to Symbol 2, the names and contents of hazardous substances shall be specified in instruction brochure • Example of the table is shown below: Part name Part 1 Part 2 Toxic and Hazardous Substances and Elements Lead (Pb) Mercury (Hg) Cadmium (Cd) × ○ ○ ○ ○ × Hexavalent Polybromina Polybromited nated Chromium biphenyls diphenyl (Cr6+) (PBB) ethers (PBDE) × ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ Hazardous Substance exceeds MCV limit Hazardous Substance is below MCV (i.e. contained) limit The Table shall be in Chinese. The height of Chinese(i.e. characters, numbers and not contained) alphabetical [symbols] used in the marking should not be smaller than 1.8 mm. 2. Over-Under Table Design for Mass Production • Producers or importers shall follow the material codes prescribed in GB 18455-2001 (Packaging Recycling Marks) to indicate what material is used in the packaging. The packaging material codes shall be marked on the packages of the products. • Table of Packaging Material Codes Type Name Codes I Plastic High density polyethylene HDPE; Low density polyethylene LDPE; Polyvinyl chloride PVC; Polyester PET; Polypropylene PP; Polystyrene PS II Paper Paper WPP; Paperboard PB; Corrugated cardboard CB; Corrugated fiberboard FB; Non-corrugated fiberboard NCFB III Metal Steel FE; Aluminum ALU IV Composite Material V VI Glass Colorless GL1; Brown GL2; Green GL3 Wood Natural wood NW Plastic/aluminum 11; Plastic/tin 12; Plastic/mixed metals 13; Plastic/glass 14;Glass/aluminum 21; Glass/tin 22; Glass/mixed metals 23; Paper or fiberboard/plastic 31; Paper or fiberboard/aluminum 32; Paper or fiberboard/tin 33; Paper or fiberboard/mixed metals 34; Paper or fiberboard /plastic/metal 41 3. Marking of Packaging Materials Design for Mass Production EU RoHS Directive 2002/95/EC “on the Restriction of certain Hazardous Substances in Electrical and Electronic Equipment“ (ROHS) Requirements: Covered Equipment put on the market after July 1, 2006 is not allowed to contain (1000PPM mass or less in homogenious materials, 100PPM or less for Cd): Lead Mercury Cadmium Hexavalent Chromium (used mostly for corrosion protection) Polybrominated Biphenyls (PBB) or Polybrominated Diphenyl ethers (PBDE) (flame retardants) Limited, but critical exemptions (medical devices for example) Design for Mass Production 2006 – Products/Industries 2012? – Med Devices • • • • • • • • Large household appliances Small household appliance IT and telecommunications equipment Consumer equipment Lighting equipment Electrical and electronic tools Toys, leisure and sports equipment Automatic dispensers • • • DI Products (X-Ray, MR, CT, etc.) Patient Monitoring EKG, Lab Eq, Dialysis Category 8 and 9 Exclusions May End 2012 Design for Mass Production Pb Free Replacement Solder Properties Alloy Composition Liquidus Temp. (ºC) Sn-37Pb (63% Tin, 37% Lead) Reflow Temp. (ºC) Sn-3.5Ag 221 200-220 240 – 250 Sn-0.7Cu 227 245 – 255 Sn-3.0Ag-0.5Cu* 220** 238 – 248 Sn-3.2Ag-0.5Cu 218 238 – 248 Sn-3.5Ag-0.75Cu* 218 238 – 248 Sn-3.8Ag-0.7Cu 220** 238 – 248 Sn-4.0Ag-1.0Cu* 220** 238 – 248 Sn-4.7Ag-1.7Cu* 244** 237 – 247 Sn-0.2Ag-2Cu-0.8Sb* 285** 246 - 256 Sn-2.5Ag-0.8Cu-0.5Sb* 225 233 – 243 Sn-2Ag-7.5Bi* 216** 220 – 230 Sn-3Ag-3Bi* 218** 233 – 243 Sn-3Ag-5Bi* 216** 230 – 240 Sn-3.4Ag-4.8Bi* 215** 225 – 235 Sn-3.5Ag-3Bi* 217** 230 – 240 Sn-3.2Ag-1.1Cu-3Bi* 240** 230 – 240 Sn-3.5Ag-3In-0.5Bi* 215** 230 – 240 Sn-4.0Ag-0.5Cu 176-183 217-218 217-210 217-219 Sn-5Sb Sn-3Bi-8Zn Melting Range# (ºC) 217-220 232-240 226-228% 200-216 189-199 **V. Solberg, "No-Lead Solder for CSP: The Impact of Higher Temperature SMT Assembly Processing," Proc. NEPCON West 2000 Conf. (Feb. 28 - Mar. 2, 2000) Anaheim, CA (Source: Indium Corp.) #N.-C. Lee, "Lead-Free Chip-Scale Soldering of Packages," Chip Scale Review, March-April 2000 *Many of the above are Patented compositions; may require licensing or royalty agreements before use. Design for Mass Production Design for Mass Production Design for Mass Production Metal Migration • Voltage-Humidity Stresses • Migration, Tin Whiskers PCB VIA Cracking • Thermal Cycling Stress • PCB Insulation Material High Density Interconnect Failures • Voiding in Solder Joints, Underfills • Crack Propagations • Compromising Reliability New Pb Free Materials New Failure Modes Design for Mass Production Covered Equipment Categories of electrical and electronic equipment covered by RoHS, Annex IA 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) 9) 10) Large household appliances Small household appliances IT and telecommunications equipment Consumer equipment Lighting equipment Electrical and electronic tools (with the exception of large-scale stationary industrial tools) Toys, leisure and sports equipment Medical devices (with the exception of all implanted and infected products) Monitoring and control instruments Automatic dispensers Not currently in scope of EU Directive Design for Mass Production RoHS Definition of “Equipment“ falling into scope Equipment, which: 1. Is dependent on electric current or electromagnetic fields in order to work properly (electric current or electromagnetic fields as primary energy), and equipment for the generation, transfer and measurement of such currents and fields, and 2. Is covered by the categories set out in annex I A, and 3. is listed in annex I B (examples for the categories), and 4. Is designed for use with a voltage rating not exceeding 1000 Volt for alternating current and 1500 Volt for direct current, and 5. Is not a product which is intended for specifically military purposes, and 6. Is not part of another type of equipment that does not fall under the scope of the directive