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Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to describe a local melt process of solder bumping employed in electronic packaging applications by an induction heating reflow method, for a combined numerical and experimental study involving a temperature measurement using an infrared thermometer during the reflow process and microstructural observations after reflow, which can be used to control the height and shape of solder interconnects.

Design/methodology/approach

In the induction heating reflow process, the temperature distribution within the solder ball during the heating phase is of prime importance for the success of the process and the geometry control quality of final joints. This paper investigates the local melt process of solder balls reflowed onto Cu/Ni/Au pads, and focuses on the effect of the inductive heat on the thermal distribution during the melting process. A finite‐element model is applied to simulate the thermal field in a solder bump during the induction heating period in a reflow process. The effects of the coil current and the electromagnetic frequency on the thermal performance are investigated by using the validated thermal model. The local melt phenomenon in the solder joint is observed and identified by the microstructures taken using scanning electron microscopy.

Findings

In this paper, the numerical results match the experimental results quite well to validate the finite element modeling model. The local melt phenomenon predicted by simulation, and verified by experiments, is demonstrated to be capable of controlling the solder joint shape. Several parametric studies are carried out to understand the effects of different frequencies during assembly, and to suggest that a higher frequency is easier to get a greater temperature gradient, thus a more obvious local melt phenomenon, which is good for achieving the geometry control for solder joints.

Originality/value

The findings of this paper will help to understand the detailed solder bumping process during induction heating reflow and the effects of electromagnetic field frequency on solder joint shape controlling.

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