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Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish

Since the use of the most stable Pb-based materials in the electronic industry has been banned due to human health concerns, numerous research studies have focused on Pb-free materials such as pure tin and its alloys for electronic applications. Pure tin, however, suffers from tin whiskers’ formatio...

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Autores principales: Fadil, Nor Akmal, Yusof, Siti Zahira, Abu Bakar, Tuty Asma, Ghazali, Habibah, Mat Yajid, Muhamad Azizi, Osman, Saliza Azlina, Ourdjini, Ali
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8623119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34832218
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14226817
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author Fadil, Nor Akmal
Yusof, Siti Zahira
Abu Bakar, Tuty Asma
Ghazali, Habibah
Mat Yajid, Muhamad Azizi
Osman, Saliza Azlina
Ourdjini, Ali
author_facet Fadil, Nor Akmal
Yusof, Siti Zahira
Abu Bakar, Tuty Asma
Ghazali, Habibah
Mat Yajid, Muhamad Azizi
Osman, Saliza Azlina
Ourdjini, Ali
author_sort Fadil, Nor Akmal
collection PubMed
description Since the use of the most stable Pb-based materials in the electronic industry has been banned due to human health concerns, numerous research studies have focused on Pb-free materials such as pure tin and its alloys for electronic applications. Pure tin, however, suffers from tin whiskers’ formation, which tends to endanger the efficiency of electronic circuits, and even worse, may cause short circuits to the electronic components. This research aims to investigate the effects of stress on tin whiskers’ formation and growth and the mitigation method for the immersion of the tin surface’s finish deposited on a copper substrate. The coated surface was subjected to external stress by micro-hardness indenters with a 2N load in order to simulate external stress applied to the coating layer, prior to storage in the humidity chamber with environmental conditions of 30 °C/60% RH up to 52 weeks. A nickel underlayer was deposited between the tin surface finish and copper substrate to mitigate the formation and growth of tin whiskers. FESEM was used to observe the whiskers and EDX was used for measuring the chemical composition of the surface finish, tin whiskers, and oxides formed after a certain period of storage. An image analyzer was used to measure the whiskers’ length using the JEDEC Standard (JESD22-A121A). The results showed that the tin whiskers increased directly proportional to the storage time, and they formed and grew longer on the thicker tin coating (2.3 μm) than the thin coating (1.5 μm). This is due to greater internal stress being generated by the thicker intermetallic compounds identified as the Cu(5)Sn(6) phase, formed on a thicker tin coating. In addition, the formation and growth of CuO flowers on the 1.5 μm-thick tin coating suppressed the growth of tin whiskers. However, the addition of external stress by an indentation on the tin coating surface showed that the tin whiskers’ growth discontinued after week 4 in the indented area. Instead, the whiskers that formed were greater and longer at a distance farther from the indented area due to Sn atom migration from a high stress concentration to a lower stress concentration. Nonetheless, the length of the whisker for the indented surface was shorter than the non-indented surface because the whiskers’ growth was suppressed by the formation of CuO flowers. On the other hand, a nickel underlayer successfully mitigated the formation of tin whiskers upon the immersion of a tin surface finish.
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spelling pubmed-86231192021-11-27 Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish Fadil, Nor Akmal Yusof, Siti Zahira Abu Bakar, Tuty Asma Ghazali, Habibah Mat Yajid, Muhamad Azizi Osman, Saliza Azlina Ourdjini, Ali Materials (Basel) Article Since the use of the most stable Pb-based materials in the electronic industry has been banned due to human health concerns, numerous research studies have focused on Pb-free materials such as pure tin and its alloys for electronic applications. Pure tin, however, suffers from tin whiskers’ formation, which tends to endanger the efficiency of electronic circuits, and even worse, may cause short circuits to the electronic components. This research aims to investigate the effects of stress on tin whiskers’ formation and growth and the mitigation method for the immersion of the tin surface’s finish deposited on a copper substrate. The coated surface was subjected to external stress by micro-hardness indenters with a 2N load in order to simulate external stress applied to the coating layer, prior to storage in the humidity chamber with environmental conditions of 30 °C/60% RH up to 52 weeks. A nickel underlayer was deposited between the tin surface finish and copper substrate to mitigate the formation and growth of tin whiskers. FESEM was used to observe the whiskers and EDX was used for measuring the chemical composition of the surface finish, tin whiskers, and oxides formed after a certain period of storage. An image analyzer was used to measure the whiskers’ length using the JEDEC Standard (JESD22-A121A). The results showed that the tin whiskers increased directly proportional to the storage time, and they formed and grew longer on the thicker tin coating (2.3 μm) than the thin coating (1.5 μm). This is due to greater internal stress being generated by the thicker intermetallic compounds identified as the Cu(5)Sn(6) phase, formed on a thicker tin coating. In addition, the formation and growth of CuO flowers on the 1.5 μm-thick tin coating suppressed the growth of tin whiskers. However, the addition of external stress by an indentation on the tin coating surface showed that the tin whiskers’ growth discontinued after week 4 in the indented area. Instead, the whiskers that formed were greater and longer at a distance farther from the indented area due to Sn atom migration from a high stress concentration to a lower stress concentration. Nonetheless, the length of the whisker for the indented surface was shorter than the non-indented surface because the whiskers’ growth was suppressed by the formation of CuO flowers. On the other hand, a nickel underlayer successfully mitigated the formation of tin whiskers upon the immersion of a tin surface finish. MDPI 2021-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8623119/ /pubmed/34832218 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14226817 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fadil, Nor Akmal
Yusof, Siti Zahira
Abu Bakar, Tuty Asma
Ghazali, Habibah
Mat Yajid, Muhamad Azizi
Osman, Saliza Azlina
Ourdjini, Ali
Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title_full Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title_fullStr Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title_full_unstemmed Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title_short Tin Whiskers’ Behavior under Stress Load and the Mitigation Method for Immersion Tin Surface Finish
title_sort tin whiskers’ behavior under stress load and the mitigation method for immersion tin surface finish
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8623119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34832218
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14226817
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