Experimental Investigation of Solder Joint Defect Formation and Mitigation in Reduced-Gravity Environments
Author(s) -
J. Kevin Watson,
Peter M. Struk,
Richard Pettegrew,
Robert Downs
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of spacecraft and rockets
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.758
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1533-6794
pISSN - 0022-4650
DOI - 10.2514/1.22842
Subject(s) - spacecraft , missile , aerospace engineering , joint (building) , spacecraft design , space (punctuation) , systems engineering , space environment , aerospace , space station freedom , space shuttle , soldering , space research , space technology , mechanical engineering , space vehicle , engineering , computer science , materials science , structural engineering , geology , composite material , geophysics , operating system
This paper documents a research effort on reduced gravity soldering of plated through hole joints which was conducted jointly by the National Center for Space Exploration Research, NASA Glenn Research Center, and NASA Johnson Space Center. Significant increases in joint porosity and changes in external geometry were observed in joints produced in reduced gravity as compared to normal gravity. Multiple techniques for mitigating the observed increase in porosity were tried, including several combinations of flux and solder application techniques, and demoisturizing the circuit board prior to soldering. Results were consistent with the hypothesis that the source of the porosity is a combination of both trapped moisture in the circuit board itself, as well as vaporized flux that is trapped in the molten solder. Other topics investigated include correlation of visual inspection results with joint porosity, pore size measurements, limited pressure effects (0.08 MPa - 0.1 MPa) on the size and number of pores, and joint cooling rate.
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