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Internal Package and Die Contamination
Internal package contamination is the presence of a foreign material, whether attached or unattached, anywhere inside the package of the device. Since certain contaminants can affect the performance and reliability of the device, internal contaminants need to be identified promptly and, if necessary, traced to their root cause. Corrective actions may then be implemented to prevent recurrence.
The
criteria
for rejecting internal
Internal
contaminants can come from
anywhere. Common internal contaminants
include but are not limited to the following : organic residues on leadframes, die attach material on
the die; epoxy resin bleed-out on the package and bonding posts; silicon
sawdust; unetched glass on bond pads; organic contaminants containing halides such as spittle; solder
balls inside the cavity; and molten/burned lint and fibers from
production materials.
Examples of FA techniques used for identifying internal contaminants include: EDX Analysis, FTIR Analysis, Auger Analysis, and Ion Chromatography.
In certain cases, reliability assessment of samples with internal
contamination is required. The corrosive
effects of internal contaminants may be
accelerated
by PCT and HAST.
See also: External Contamination; Package Failure Mechanisms; Failure Analysis
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