In situ monitoring of interface delamination by the 3ω-method

Today, there is no non-destructive, simple, inexpensive and yet accurate in-situ monitoring technique for cracks and delamination available for routine use in electronic package testing. However, such a method is highly desirable, as delamination testing is part of every qualification programme in i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in20th International Workshop on Thermal Investigations of ICs and Systems pp. 1 - 8
Main Authors Schulz, Marcus, Sheva, Sergey, Walter, Hans, Mrobko, Raul, Guanda Yang, Keller, Jurgen, Wunderle, Bernhard
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.09.2014
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Summary:Today, there is no non-destructive, simple, inexpensive and yet accurate in-situ monitoring technique for cracks and delamination available for routine use in electronic package testing. However, such a method is highly desirable, as delamination testing is part of every qualification programme in industry. Rapid failure analytical techniques which allow introspect and easy-to-interpret information on adhesion loss during stress testing, analogous to e.g. resistance testing for solder joint reliability, would enable considerable speed up of the development process of advanced packaging technologies, especially also for situations where not even classical ex-situ methods like scanning acoustic microscopy or pulse phase thermography are applicable. So this paper proposes a radically new approach using local thermal impedance variations caused by cracks to generate electrically detectable signals by the 3ω-Method designed as highly local thermal sensors array in analogy to a pixel matrix for readout as image from a delamination camera. We show the proof of concept of the method, its robustness with respect to electrical readout and the very good correlation between experiment and simulation, enabling unequivocal detection of thermal impedance changes and its insensitivity to cross effects, e.g. moisture ingress. Guidelines and estimations for future applications are given.
DOI:10.1109/THERMINIC.2014.6972529