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Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances of conductive adhesives as a lead-free alternative in electronic packaging: Materials, processing, reliability and applications

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TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss the materials, applications and recent advances of electrically conductive adhesives as an environmental friendly solder replacement in the electronic packaging industry, and discuss the potential of ECAs to replace tin-lead metal solders in all applications.
Abstract
Tin–lead solder alloys are widely used in the electronic industry. They serve as interconnects that provide the conductive path required to achieve connection from one circuit element to another. There are increasing concerns with the use of tin–lead alloy solders in recognition of hazards of using lead. Lead-free solders and electrically conductive adhesives (ECAs) have been considered as the most promising alternatives of tin-lead solder. ECAs consist of a polymeric resin (such as, an epoxy, a silicone, or a polyimide) that provides physical and mechanical properties such as adhesion, mechanical strength, impact strength, and a metal filler (such as, silver, gold, nickel or copper) that conducts electricity. ECAs offer numerous advantages over conventional solder technology, such as environmental friendliness, mild processing conditions (enabling the use of heat-sensitive and low-cost components and substrates), fewer processing steps (reducing processing cost), low stress on the substrates, and fine pitch interconnect capability (enabling the miniaturization of electronic devices). Therefore, conductive adhesives have been used in liquid crystal display (LCD) and smart card applications as an interconnect material and in flip–chip assembly, chip scale package (CSP) and ball grid array (BGA) applications in replacement of solder. However, no currently commercialized ECAs can replace tin–lead metal solders in all applications due to some challenging issues such as lower electrical conductivity, conductivity fatigue (decreased conductivity at elevated temperature and humidity aging or normal use condition) in reliability testing, limited current-carrying capability, and poor impact strength. Considerable research has been conducted recently to study and optimize the performance of ECAs, such as electrical, mechanical and thermal behaviors improvement as well as reliability enhancement under various conditions. This review article will discuss the materials, applications and recent advances of electrically conductive adhesives as an environmental friendly solder replacement in the electronic packaging industry.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidation Prevention and Electrical Property Enhancement of Copper-Filled Isotropically Conductive Adhesives

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the development and characterization of isotropically conductive adhesives (ICAs) incorporating copper powders as electricallyconductive fillers, along with a silane coupling agent for oxidation protection of copper powder for microelectronics packaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent Progress in Rapid Sintering of Nanosilver for Electronics Applications

TL;DR: A review of recent progress in the rapid sintering of nanosilver pastes is presented, and emphasis is placed on the properties of sintered joints obtained by different sintered processes such as electric current assisted sinteration, spark plasma sinterings, and laser sinters, etc.
Journal ArticleDOI

A preliminary study on the thermal and mechanical performances of sintered nano-scale silver die-attach technology depending on the substrate metallization

TL;DR: This study focuses on the thermal and mechanical performances evaluation of sintered nano-scale silver die-attach towards the substrate metallization and the thermal resistance evolution through thermal cycling (−40 °C/+125 °F) ageing and as well as the shear strength are focused on in order to provide some hints on the reliability of this technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

High performance electrically conductive adhesives from functional epoxy, micron silver flakes, micron silver spheres and acidified single wall carbon nanotube for electronic package

TL;DR: In this article, Li et al. developed high performance electrically conductive adhesives (ECAs), bi-modal ECAs were prepared by a matrix resin, micron silver flakes and micron nano silver spheres, and tri-mode ECAs are prepared by acidified single wall carbon nanotube (ASWCNT).
Journal ArticleDOI

The synthesis of metallic and semiconducting nanoparticles from reactive melts of precursors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey all examples known to us of this approach to nanoparticle synthesis and present a review of the most common examples of self-capping self-melting reactions for nanoparticles.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the properties of polymers and their application in the field of chemical engineering, including the following: Coextrusion, Injection Molding, Flexible Packaging, Fibers, Polymer-Clay, and Plasticizers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lead-free Solders in Microelectronics

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Silane Coupling Agents

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Silane coupling agents

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