Abstract
The control of interfacial microstructural stability is of utmost importance to the reliability of liquid solder interconnects in high temperature electronic assemblies. This is primarily due to excessive intermetallic compounds (IMCs) that can form and continuously grow during high temperature operation, which renders conventional barrier metallisations inadequate. With the intention of reducing such excessive IMC growth, electrically conducting, NbOx containing Ni coatings were developed using electrodeposition and were assessed as solder diffusion barrier layers in terms of their electrical conductivity and barrier property. The present work adopts a novel electrochemical route to produce Ni-NbOx composite coatings of good uniformity, compactness and purity, from non-aqueous glycol-based electrolytes consisting of NiCl2 and NbCl5 as metal precursors. The effects of cathodic current density and NaBH4 concentrations on the surface morphology, composition and thickness of the coatings were examined. Increased NaBH4 concentrations were found to elevate the maximum deposit thickness (above 10 µm), although these led to a reduction in the co-deposited Nb content. The composite coatings generally exhibited good electrical conductivity. The reaction between a liquid 52In-48Sn solder and Ni-NbOx, with Nb contents up to 6 at.%, was studied at 200ºC. The results indicate that, Ni-NbOx with sufficient layer thickness and higher Nb content, offered longer service lifetime. Nb enrichment was generally observed at or close to the reaction front after high temperature storage which suggests evident effectiveness of the enhanced diffusion barrier characteristics. A mechanism for the role of Nb as a barrier performance enhancer was postulated.
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