A Continuously Updated Package-Degradation Model reflecting Thermomechanical Changes at Different Thermo-Oxidative Stages of Moulding Compound

Conference Paper (2023)
Author(s)

A. Inamdar (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials)

Michiel van Soestbergen (NXP Semiconductors)

Amar Mavinkurve (NXP Semiconductors)

W. D. van van Driel (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials)

Guo Qi Zhang (TU Delft - Electronic Components, Technology and Materials)

Research Group
Electronic Components, Technology and Materials
Copyright
© 2023 A.S. Inamdar, Michiel van Soestbergen, Amar Mavinkurve, W.D. van Driel, Kouchi Zhang
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/EuroSimE56861.2023.10100833
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 A.S. Inamdar, Michiel van Soestbergen, Amar Mavinkurve, W.D. van Driel, Kouchi Zhang
Research Group
Electronic Components, Technology and Materials
ISBN (electronic)
9798350345971
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Moulding compounds used for encapsulating electronics typically occupy a large portion of package volume and are most exposed to the external environment. Under harsh conditions such as high temperature, humidity, and mechanical vibrations, constituent materials of electronic components degrade, resulting in a change in their thermal, mechanical, electrical, and chemical behaviour. High-temperature ageing of electronic packages causes the oxidation of epoxy moulding compounds (EMC), forming a layer exhibiting significantly different thermomechanical properties. This reflects in the modified mechanical behaviour of the entire package, which accelerates certain failure modes and affects component reliability. Thus, it is crucial to consider gradual degenerative changes in EMC for a more accurate estimation of the component lifetime. This paper proposes a three-step modelling approach to replicate thermo-chemical changes in package encapsulation. A parametric geometry of a test package was incorporated with the ageing stage-dependent changes in thermomechanical properties of the oxidized layer. The mechanical behaviour of oxidized EMC at multiple stages of thermal ageing (at 150°C for up to 3000 hours) was first experimentally characterized and then validated using warpage measurements on thermally aged test packages and Finite Element (FE) simulations. Lastly, a trend-based interpolation of material model parameters for intermediate stages of ageing was followed, and a continuously updated degradation model (physics-based Digital Twin) was achieved. The proposed model is capable of reproducing degraded stages of the test package under thermal ageing along with its modified thermomechanical behaviour. Its limitations and significance in the domain of health monitoring of microelectronics are also discussed.

Files

A_Continuously_Updated_Package... (pdf)
(pdf | 0.791 Mb)
- Embargo expired in 23-10-2023
License info not available