Abstract

Electronic systems under extreme shock and vibration environments may sustain several failure modes simultaneously. Previous experience indicates that the dominant failure modes experienced by packages in a drop and shock framework are in the solder interconnects including cracks at the package and the board interface, pad cratering, copper trace fatigue, and bulk-failure in the solder joint. In this paper, a method has been presented for failure mode classification using a combination of Karhunen Loeve transform with parity-based stepwise supervised training of a perceptrons. New is the early classification of multiple failure modes in the pre-failure space using supervised neural networks in conjunction with a Karhunen Loeve transform. The feature space has been formed by joint time frequency analysis. Because the cumulative damage may be accrued under repetitive loading with exposure to multiple shock events, the area array assemblies have been exposed to shock and feature vectors constructed to track damage initiation and progression. The error back propagation learning algorithm has been used for stepwise parity of each particular failure mode. The classified failure modes and failure regions belonging to each particular failure mode in the feature space are also validated by simulation of the designed neural network used for parity of feature space. Statistical similarity and validation of different classified dominant failure modes is performed by multivariate analysis of variance and Hotelling's T-square. The results of different classified dominant failure modes are also correlated with the experimental cross sections of the failed test assemblies. The methodology adopted in this paper can perform real-time fault monitoring with identification of a specific dominant failure mode, and is scalable to system level reliability.

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