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| General: |
Soldering temperature profiles used must provide adequate
temperature rise time and cool-down time to prevent damage
due to thermal shock. These guidelines are emphasized because
cracking or other damage caused by handling or thermal shock
is not necessarily apparent under ordinary visual inspection
techniques. The damage can be very small (micro-cracks) and
can occur under the terminations where even high magnification
cannot detect them. The problem is further complicated by
the fact that these micro-cracks may not be initially detectable
by standard electrical testing. Once initiated, the cracks can
grow with time and cause latent failures. Attention to these
details will aid in the successful use of the inherently reliable
multilayer ceramic capacitor.
Ceramic capacitors larger then EIA size 1812 are known to be
very susceptible to thermal shock damage due to their large
ceramic mass. These large parts require more care during installation
than smaller surface mount devices. |
| Solder Pre-Heat Cycle: |
| Proper preheating is essential to prevent thermal shock cracking
of the capacitor. The circuit assembly should be preheated as
shown in the recommended profiles at a rate of 1.0 to 2.0°C per
second to within approximately 100°C of the maximum soldering
temperature. Temperature change should be distributed as
evenly as possible throughout large capacitor bodies as applying
heat or cold to a localized spot on the device may result in
thermal gradients great enough to cause cracking. |
| SMT Soldering Temperature: |
| Solders typically utilized in SMT have melting points between
179°C and 188°C. Activation of rosin fluxes occurs at about
200°C. Based on these parameters, typical maximum reflow
temperatures run between 210 to 230°C. Use of thermal profiling
is advised for accurate characterization of circuit heat
absorption and maximum component temperature conditions
that occur during the soldering process. |
| Solder Reflow: |
| Recommended temperature profiles for reflow soldering are
shown in Figures 1 & 2. A maximum heating rate of 3°C/sec.
(4°C/sec. for vapor phase) should not be exceeded between the
pre-heat cycle and maximum soldering temperature. |
| Solder Wave: |
| Wave soldering can be utilized, but the preheat requirements
generally make this process very difficult to accomplish. Recommended
temperature profile for wave soldering is shown in
Figure 3. Wave soldering is not recommended for ceramic
MLCCs larger then 1210 size due to the incompatibility of
the chip’s mass with the steep temperature gradient typically
present in this process. |
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| Soldering Iron: |
Cool Down Cycle: |
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Ceramic capacitor attachment with a soldering iron is discouraged
due to the inherent process control limitations. In
the event that a soldering iron must be employed the following
precautions are recommended.
Preheat circuit and capacitors to 150
°C
Never contact the capacitor with the
iron tip
30 watt iron output ((max)
280 °C tip temperature (max)
3.0 mm tip diameter ((max)
Limit soldering time to 5 sec..
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After the solder reflows properly the assembly should be
allowed to cool gradually, again maintaining the thermal
gradient of 2°C/sec. maximum at room ambient conditions.
Attempts to speed this cooling process or immediate
exposure of the circuit to cold cleaning solutions increase
the possibility of thermal shock cracking of the ceramic
capacitor. |
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IPC 7351 Land Pattern Guidelines:
Appropriate pad design, solder application, and component orientation
are all ingredients of a quality, defect-free soldering process. The
Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits (IPC)
has developed and published IPC 7351 “Surface Mount Design and
Land Pattern Standard”. This standard presents industry consensus on
optimum dimensions based on empirical knowledge of fabricated land
patterns. The standard also contains an excellent analysis of solder
joints and their relation to component, PCB, and placement tolerances.
A summary of the IPC land pattern design recommendations for solder
reflow and solder wave processes are listed in table below. It is highly
recommended that the PCB designer/SMT process engineer obtain the
complete IPC 7351 standard (http://www.ipc.org) |
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Tomb Stoning / Chip Movement:
Tomb-stoning or draw bridging is illustrated in figure 1.
Tomb-stoning or other undesirable chip movements may
result if unequal surface tension forces exist as the molten
solder wets the MLCC terminations and mounting pads.
This tendency can be minimized by insuring that all factors
at both solder joints are equal, namely; pad size, solder
mass, termination size, component position and heating.
Tomb-stoning is easily avoided through proper design,
material selection and proofing of the process.
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