Grain-Scale Anisotropic Analysis of Steady-State Creep in Oligocrystalline SAC Solder Joints
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Abstract
Heterogeneous integration is leading to unprecedented miniaturization of solder joints, often with thousands of joints within a single package. The thermomechanical behavior of such SAC solder joints is critically important to assembly performance and reliability, but can be difficult to predict due to the significant joint-to-joint variability caused by the stochastic variability of the arrangement of a few highly-anisotropic grains in each joint. This study relies on grain-scale testing to characterize the mechanical behavior of such oligocrystalline solder joints, while a grain-scale modeling approach has been developed to assess the effect of microstructure that lacks statistical homogeneity. The contribution of the grain boundaries is modeled with isotropic cohesive elements and identified by an inverse iterative method that extracts material properties by comparing simulation with experimental measurements. The properties are extracted from the results of one test and validated by verifying reasonable agreement with test results from a different specimen. Equivalent creep strain heterogeneity within the same specimen and between different specimens are compared to assess typical variability due to the variability of microstructure.