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Implementing Lead-Free Electronics (Professional Engineering) [Hardcover]

Jennie Hwang (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 19, 2004 0071443746 978-0071443746 1
By 2006, any company selling electronics to European Union nations and China will have to convert to a lead-free manufacturing process. This resource shows manufacturers how to select the right Lead Free process and make the conversion as efficient and inexpensive as possible.

Contents: Selecting Component Lead Coating * Selecting PCB Surface Finish * Manufacturing Approaches * Solder Paste Application * Reflow Soldering * Wave Soldering * Other Manufacturing Techniques and Common Defect Consideration * Reliability and Compatibility. (20041215)


Editorial Reviews

Review

REVIEWED BY: Dr. George Riley, FlipChips Dot Com

Dr. Jennie Hwang's second major book on lead-free electronics plays the ministerial role to its magisterial predecessor. It is the facilitator, carrying us from the calm of the laboratory to the clamor of the factory floor, where theories and realities collide. In the lead-free as in other worlds, implementation, not theory, ultimately determines survival.

The book patterns itself on the flow of factory implementation, moving from selecting the best approach, to choosing proper materials, to controlling the soldering operation, to concerns about compatibility, costs, and reliability. The prelude is a reality check of present manufacturing practices.

Here Dr. Hwang shows us how the actual conditions of use for today's eutectic lead-tin solders, rather than theoretical arguments, justify the "drop-in" approach to lead-free replacements. Present peak soldering temperatures of 230° C to 245° C are robust process parameters for printed-circuit board assembly with present surface-mount technology. Several lead-free solder formulations applicable in that temperature range promise a smooth transition to lead-free soldering, at lower costs.

Manufacturing implementation follows upon a five-step evaluation. The key is recognizing the interdependence of process decisions, to insure compatibility at every stage. Solder selection summarizes some of the voluminous technical detail of Dr. Hwang’s prior book, supplemented with side-by-side solder comparisons. It segues smoothly into stencil selection and solder paste application. Dr. Hwang applies an interdisciplinary headlock to embrace the physics, chemistry, metallurgy, and rheology of solder. Who would have thought that tiny little spheres could cause us so many problems?

Once we are well pasted and on our way with compatible components, we are ready for the oven. Mass reflow soldering and wave soldering comprise separate chapters, again starting from a solid base of "real-world production demands." For mass reflow soldering, these include the difficulty of monitoring and controlling temperatures in a fast-moving environment. A six-pack of case studies with photographs illustrates the best practice in defect reduction. The specialty approaches of nitrogen atmosphere reflow, convection reflow, and vapor phase soldering are treated briefly, but with lead-free respect.

Wave soldering is dismembered in detail. New hobgoblins here are dross, corrosion, turbulence, and compositional stability. Again, case studies tie the text to factory-based data. The specialized approaches of selective soldering and laser soldering are examined and found not wanting in lead-free suitability.

Compatibility checklists remind us that no solder pot is an island. Cost simulations are presented as case studies, based upon manufacturer’s models. The reliability discourse highlights the causes and cures of commonly occurring production ills.

The open, bullet-point format of much of the material will make this a handy reference book, as well as a worthy supplement to its predecessor. Dr. Hwang has enlisted her long industry experience, her understanding of solder manufacturing, and her sensitivity to the concerns of students in her lead-free training courses to present an exhaustive, normative, two-volume approach to lead-free technology and implementation. (Flipchips.com )

From the Back Cover

AN ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING LEAD-FREE MANUFACTURING

Implementing Lead-Free Electronics provides magisterial, timely information on the choices and tradeoffs facing manufacturers seeking the most efficient and cost-effective ways to meet the challenge of converting to lead-free manufacturing.

The book is laid out as a quick guide, providing successful examples in conjunction with the basic principles of the implementation and production of lead-free electronics on a global basis.

This book shares the knowledge gained from the author's 15-year lead-free development leadership and her 25-year real-world SMT manufacturing experience.

An impressive, unparalleled resource for manufacturing technology in the electronics/microelectronics industry, with real-world application value, this is a must for all involved in research, manufacturing, and decision-making management.

Comprehensive Content From An International Expert:
Introduction * Manufacturing Approaches * Selecting Interconnecting Solder Alloy * Selecting Component Coating * Selecting PCB Surface Finish * Solder Paste Application * Reflow Soldering * Wave Soldering * Other Manufacturing Techniques and Common Defect Considerations * System Reliability and Compatibility


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 473 pages
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional; 1 edition (November 19, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0071443746
  • ISBN-13: 978-0071443746
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,047,898 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Has lots of information but needs organization and rigor; reads somewhat like a stream of consciousness, November 24, 2006
This review is from: Implementing Lead-Free Electronics (Professional Engineering) (Hardcover)
As one with a background in electronic materials and device reliability, including solder fatigue, I found this book to be basic and lacking rigor. It's essentially a hodgepodge of sundry facts and studies concerning surface-mount practices, with similar facts grouped into various chapters on different soldering techniques, the available Pb-free alloys, coatings for PCBs and components, and reliability. The shortcoming with this approach, as I see it, is that Ms. Hwang tends to toss out lots of facts and let the reader draw his own conclusions. In those places where she does offer definitive conclusions, she follows the party line while offering little else. I'd expect an author of such a book to not only discuss the state of knowledge but also synthesize that knowledge into firm guidelines that can be extrapolated to any manufacturing scenario, not just the specific ones cited. This book lacks that, which I see as its primary weakness. For example, one sometimes gets faced with a bewildering array of facts (for example, solder x exhibited a wetting force of 10 at temperature a whereas solder y exhibited a wetting force of 20 at temperature b, but solder z exhibits a wetting force of 30 at temperature c) and left to consider the implications for, say, solder w. Many times Ms. Hwang summarizes the conclusions, but not always. As another example, the chapter on accelerated cycling merely stated typical temperature extremes and cycle quantities but never mentioned how those accelerated tests correlated to real diurnal cycling (as through, for instance, the Coffin-Manson or Engelmaier formulations). Thus, I don't see how anyone could use that information to design an intelligent accelerated reliability test. The result is that the book didn't always give me that full, satisfying feeling of a well-planned guide.

On the positive side, this book contains numerous case studies that illustrate manufacturing practice. There is also decent background given on the basics of relevant technologies such as solder paste and reflow soldering. There are useful data to be found in this book, surely. Overall, though, it's not THE definitive guide, notwithstanding the blurb on the book's back cover. Perhaps this is because Dr. Hwang didn't intend for this book to be an in-depth examination of manufacturing practice and theory or maybe because the state of knowledge of Pb-free practices isn't that advanced. Even then, in my opinion the book could have been more thorough and seamless. For that, I highly recommend _Handbook of Lead-Free Solder Technology for Microelectronic Assemblies_, edited by Puttlitz and Stalter and published in 2004 by Marcel Dekker.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Implementation: the crucial step to lead-free electronics, December 15, 2004
By 
George Riley (Worcester, MA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Implementing Lead-Free Electronics (Professional Engineering) (Hardcover)
Dr. Jennie Hwang's second major book on lead-free electronics plays the ministerial role to its magisterial predecessor. It is the facilitator, carrying us from the calm of the laboratory to the clamor of the factory floor, where theories and realities collide. In the lead-free as in other worlds, implementation, not theory, ultimately determines survival.

The book follows the flow of factory implementation, moving from selecting the best approach, to choosing proper materials, to controlling the soldering operation, to concerns about compatibility, costs, and reliability. The prelude is a reality check of present manufacturing practices. Here Dr. Hwang shows us how the actual conditions of use for today's eutectic lead-tin solders, rather than theoretical arguments, justify the "drop-in" approach to lead-free replacements.

The key to manufacturing implementation is recognizing the interdependence of process decisions, to insure compatibility at every stage. Solder selection summarizes some of the voluminous technical detail of Dr. Hwang's prior book, supplemented with side-by-side solder comparisons.

Mass reflow soldering and wave soldering comprise separate chapters, again starting from a solid base of "real-world production demands." For mass reflow soldering, these include the difficulty of monitoring and controlling temperatures in a fast-moving environment. Wave soldering is dismembered in detail. New hobgoblins here are dross, corrosion, turbulence, and compositional stability. Again, case studies tie the text to factory-based data.

The open, bullet-point format of much of the material will make this a handy reference book, as well as a worthy supplement to its predecessor. Dr. Hwang has enlisted her long industry experience, her understanding of solder manufacturing, and her sensitivity to the concerns of students in her lead-free training courses to present an exhaustive, normative, two-volume approach to lead-free technology and implementation.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the electronics industry, market demand and an ever-shortening life cycle of electronic gadgets have been driving technological development. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Electrochemical Publications, New York, United States, Environment Friendly Electronics, Great Britain, Texas Instruments, Circuits Assembly, Environmentally-Friendly Electronics, No-clean General, Nihon Superior Company, Van Nostrand Reinhold, Donald Abbott, Interconnect Technology Symposium, San Diego, Solder Temperature, The Viscosity of Liquids, Circuit World, Composite Solders, Course Handbook, International Lead-Free Conference, Jennie Hwang, Professional Advancement Courses, San Jose, Solid State Technology, Staggered Oblong
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