Journal of Surface Mount Technology, 37(1), 2–7. DOI: doi.org/10.37665/smt.v37i1.41

Criteria for Solder Alloy Adoption


Deng Yun Chen1, Michael Osterman1, Carol Handwerker2, and Sa’d Hamasha3
1University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
2Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA
3Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA

For more information about this article and related research, please contact Dr. Michael Osterman.

Abstract:

Solder is a critical component in modern electronic systems – past, present, and future. While solder is used within packaged electrical devices, the highest volume of solder is used for fabrication of printed circuit board assemblies. Historically, tin-lead solder was the dominant solder used in printed circuit board assemblies. However, tin-silver-copper solder replaced tin-lead solder starting in 2006 after European Union regulations banned the use of lead for a wide range of electronic products. Despite the successful transition to tin-silver-copper lead-free solder and over fifteen years of high volume lead-free electronic production, a number of aerospace and defense products have not converted to tin-silver-copper or other lead-free solders over reliability concerns. Reliability should be a concern for all product manufacturers and end-users. This begs the question, what has convinced industries that are currently producing lead-free products that the reliability was sufficient and what is keeping defense and aerospace electronic equipment manufacturers from adopting lead-free solder. This paper reviews decision processes for adopting solder for printed circuit board assembly.

The article is available for free online here.


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