March 12, 2007

Two weeks till PhD Defense

SUBJECT: PhD Dissertation Defense

BY: Andy Perkins

TIME: Tuesday, March 27th, 2007, 10:00am

LOCATION: MARC building, Room 331

TITLE: Investigation and Prediction of Solder Joint Reliability for Ceramic Area Array Packages under Thermal Cycling, Power Cycling, and Vibration Environments

COMMITTEE: Dr. Suresh Sitaraman (ME), Chair
Dr. Daniel Baldwin (ME)
Dr. Richard Neu (ME)
Dr. Rao Tummala (ECE)
Dr. Kamal Sikka (IBM)

SUMMARY

Microelectronic systems are subjected to thermal cycling, power cycling, and vibration environments in various applications. These environments, whether applied sequentially or simultaneously, affect the solder joint reliability. Literature is scarce on predicting solder joint fatigue failure under such multiple loading environments. This thesis aims to develop a unified modeling methodology to study the reliability of electronic packages subjected to thermal cycling, power cycling, and vibration loading conditions. Such a modeling methodology is comprised of an enriched material model to accommodate time-, temperature-, and direction-dependent behavior of various materials in the assembly, and at the same time, will have a geometry model that can accommodate thermal- and power-cycling induced low-cycle fatigue damage mechanism as well as vibration-induced high-cycle fatigue damage mechanism. The developed modeling methodology is applied to study the reliability characteristics of ceramic area array electronic packages with lead-based solder interconnections. In particular, this thesis aims to study the reliability of such solder interconnections under thermal, power, and vibration conditions individually, and validate the model against these conditions using appropriate experimental data either from in-house experiments or existing literature. Once validated, this thesis also aims to perform a design of simulations study to understand the effect of various materials, geometry, and thermal parameters on solder joint reliability of ceramic ball grid array and ceramic column grid array packages, and use such a study to develop universal polynomial predictive equations for solder joint reliability. The thesis also aims to employ the unified modeling methodology to develop new understanding of the acceleration factor relationship between power cycling and thermal cycling. Finally, this thesis plans to use the unified modeling methodology to study solder joint reliability under the sequential application of thermal cycling and vibration loading conditions, and to validate the modeling results with first-of-its-kind experimental data. A nonlinear cumulative damage law is developed to account for the nonlinearity and effect of sequence loading under thermal cycling, power cycling, and vibration loading.

Posted by andyp at March 12, 2007 11:18 PM | TrackBack
Comments

WHEW! I hope your spirits are high as you reach your deadline! And I have to say, I read all of your summary (I didn't just skim) and I pretty much understood what it was! I hope you find the time to squeak out the last little bit of work, and I hope you find peace from our Lord to breeze through presentations. I hope your peace impresses your profs along with your research. Blessings, blessings!!

Posted by: katiek at March 13, 2007 9:16 AM

We're praying daily for you, Andy! Jerry and I are so proud of you. I'm amazed at how well you have balanced being a husband, father, and student. But mostly I'm amazed at how you've managed to always serve the Lord while doing all three! Well done!

Posted by: Cindy at March 13, 2007 11:07 AM

If you arrive to the defense in a keg racer, I bet that would make a great impression.

Posted by: K at March 13, 2007 12:55 PM

praying for you bear! I'm very proud of you.

Posted by: bobw at March 13, 2007 1:18 PM

BTW ~ Don't forget to wear 'the suit'! We're all pulling for you and praying for March 27th. You're gonna do great! God's richly blessed you with an amazing intellect and I'm glad you're using it to honor Him.

Posted by: Cindy at March 14, 2007 6:00 AM

Nice work bro. Is the thesis doing the work, or are you? Nice way to not have to use personal pronouns.

I am going to submit my rough manuscript to my advisor tomorrow! He will tear it apart and then I will resubmit it again, and then I should be done!!!! YAYAYAYAYYA.
Thinking and praying for you on that day!
Dan

Posted by: Danbro at March 15, 2007 10:09 PM