Electronics Forum | Thu Nov 04 21:36:36 EST 1999 | chris
Hi John, Thanks to your reply, just one question is it possible that the solder paste ( flux material )applied to the pads cause the non-wet. regards Chris
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 28 09:25:35 EDT 1999 | Dave F
Chris: Typical non-wetting causes are: * Poorly controlled soldering process * Incorrect material * Surface contamination * Insufficient preheat * Misapplied solder mask * Shadowing Without intending to insult you, all of the causes of non-w
Electronics Forum | Thu Oct 28 20:45:38 EDT 1999 | chris
Hi Dave, We suspect that the organic FM causes the non-wetting problem. FTIR analysis confirm that the FM is a flux residue. Dave we only used FTIR to detect organic contaminants, we also used SEM/EDX to determined the elemental composition of the
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 29 09:36:42 EDT 1999 | Dave F
Chris: Thanks. SMTnet has a "Library." Buried deep within it is a listing of terms. The following is from that listing: Shadowing. When a component blocks the heat or solder wave flow from certain areas of the printed circuit board, resulting in
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 29 10:02:28 EDT 1999 | John Thorup
Chris A lot of people have reported sudden, fab lot related problems with Ni/Au pads. These are usually characterized by a discoloration of the gold and called cheerful names like "black pad disease". This can be a process problem at your fab house
Electronics Forum | Wed Nov 06 10:03:59 EST 2013 | rgduval
Hi, Peter, I'm not an authority on surface finish thickness, and it's effect on reflowing, so, I can't advise on that front. If the boards are a week old, and ENIG, I would not suspect surface contamination. It's always a consideration, of course,
Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 11 10:58:58 EST 1998 | Earl Moon
| | What does the term "poor wetting" mean as a defect code ? "Poor" should mean unacceptable when surface (component or PCB solder termination areas) wetting does not provide acceptable solder joints. Unacceptable wetting of PCB solder termination
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 26 17:09:05 EDT 2021 | kwalker
Sounds like you are getting oxidation of the nickel under the gold layer. If the gold is porous it will allow the nickel underneath to oxidize, which is the dark dull layer you are seeing, and why when you apply flux it solders just fine - the flux i
Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 13 11:41:18 EDT 2021 | jeremy_leaf
I have a SAC305 preform with which I am attempting to bond a gold coated component to an ENIG coated PCB pad. I've specified 2 microinches of gold for the ENIG. It worked previously but now with a new batch of boards, I am having an issue where the p
Electronics Forum | Mon May 17 13:21:45 EDT 2021 | SMTA-64387881
PWB Bake out or other elevated temperture processes can cause issues with oxidation of that Nickel layer. The gold porosity can vary from batch to batch, but also process changes can contribute. Are you baking the boards or have previous reflow pro