Board-Level Solder Joint Reliability Study of Land Grid Array Packages for RF Application Using a Laser Ultrasound Inspection System

2010 ◽  
Vol 132 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Yang ◽  
Lizheng Zhang ◽  
I. Charles Ume ◽  
Camil Ghiu ◽  
George White

Microelectronics packaging technology has evolved from through-hole, and bulk configuration to surface-mount, and small-profile ones. Today’s electronics industry is also transiting from SnPb to Pb-free to meet environmental requirements. Land grid array (LGA) package has been becoming popular in portable electronics in terms of low profile on the printed wiring boards and direct Pb-free assembly process compatibility. With the package profile shrinking and operating power increasing, solder joint quality and reliability has become a major concern in microelectronics manufacturing. The solder joint failure at the package level or board level will cause electronic devices not to function during service. In this paper, board-level solder joint reliability of the LGA packages under thermal loading is studied through thermal cycling tests. A novel laser ultrasound-interferometric system developed by the authors is applied to inspect solder joint quality during the thermal cycling tests. While the laser ultrasound inspection technique has been successfully applied to flip chips and chip scale packages, this study is the first application of this technique to overmolded packages. In this study, it is found out that the LGA packages can withstand 1000 temperature cycles without showing crack initiation or other failure mechanisms in the solder joints. The laser ultrasound inspection results match the visual observation and X-ray inspection results. This study demonstrates the feasibility of this system to solder joint quality inspection of overmolded packages. In particular, the devices constituting the objective of this study are radio frequency modules, which are encapsulated through overmolding and are mounted on a typical four-layer FR4 board through LGA terminations.

2021 ◽  
Vol 37 ◽  
pp. 693-703
Author(s):  
M C Liao ◽  
P S Huang ◽  
T C Huang ◽  
M Y Tsai

ABSTRACT To meet the requirement of the high I/O and fine-pitch interconnects, the conventional insertion-mount socket for central processing unit (CPU) has been changed to surface-mount one with ball grid array. The solder ball joint reliability of the socket used in the CPU assembly becomes very important. In this study, the socket's solder joint reliability of the backplate-reinforced CPU assembly and its related mechanics under mechanical and thermal loadings are investigated experimentally using strain gauge and shadow moiré, and numerically by a finite element method (FEM). The validated FEM results have suggested that maximum stress of solder balls increases almost linearly with decreasing the backplate thickness under mechanical loading during the CPU assembly, but is insensitive to the backplate thickness under thermal loading during the thermal cycling. It is also found that the residual (bending) strain on the PCB proportional to the maximum von Mises stresses of solder joints (or balls) can be used as a key parameter to correlate with the solder joint failures or cracks during the thermal cycling. Overall, experimental and FEM results in this study reveal that solder joint reliability in the CPU assembly during thermal cycling can be improved by adopting the thicker reinforced backplate.


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