4.7 Article

TEM investigation of interfacial microstructure and fracture mode of the Sn-Ag-Cu/Ni joint system

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2017.08.116

Keywords

Cu concentration effect; Sn-Ag-Cu; Intermetallic compound (IMC); Au/Ni/Cu; Fracture mode; HSBS test

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (R.O.C.) [MOST105-2628-E-155-001-MY3, MOST105-2221-E-155-006-MY2, MOST106-2622-E-155-006-CC3]

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The effects of Cu concentration (x) on the interfacial microstructure between a molten Sn-3Ag-xCu alloy and an electrolytic Au/Ni/Cu multilayer and its mechanical reliability were investigated via transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and high-speed ball shear (HSBS) testing. The x values were 0, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.7, and 1.0 (wt %). An increase in x caused an interfacial intermetallic compound (IMC) transition from a dense (Ni,Cu)(3)Sn-4 layer (x = 0 and 0.3) to the coexistence of (Ni,Cu)(3)Sn-4 and (Cu,Ni)(6)Sn-5 (x = 0.4 and 0.5), and to a dense (Cu,Ni)(6)Sn-5 layer (x = 0.7 and 1.0) after soldering reaction at 250 degrees C for 2 min. An increase in the reaction time enhanced the IMC growth and induced the nucleation of a (Ni,Cu)(3)Sn-4 nanolayer beneath (Cu,Ni)(6)Sn-5 in the high x case. The TEM and HSBS characterizations showed that a single, thin (Ni,Cu)(3)Sn-4 layer grown at the interface possessed better shear resistance than a single (Cu,Ni)(6)Sn-5 layer, and the presence of a dual layer structure of (Cu,NO6Sn5/(Ni,Cu)(3)Sn-4 substantially degraded the mechanical properties of the joint interface. These observations indicated that the Cu concentration in Sn-3Ag-xCu alloy plays a crucial role in the interfacial reaction, which, in turn, dominates the mechanical reliability of microelectronic joints.

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