Abstract

The thermal fatigue of vias in rigid–flex printed circuit boards (PCB) is considered in the paper. Dedicated printed circuit boards have been designed with different geometrical configurations (plating thickness, drilled hole diameter and PCB thickness). The PCB is made of hundreds of vias or holes which are wired by copper path to create a daisy chain. The PCB is subject to cyclic thermal loading (−55°C, +125°C). Electrical connectivity is recorded during tests. Cross sectioning is performed finally to characterize the loss of electrical connectivity. Fracture of plated copper, due to the thermal expansion mismatch between constituents, is shown to be responsible for the failure of the PCB. In addition to environmental tests, finite element model is developed to analyze the deformation of PCBs during thermal cycling. Areas of strain concentration determined by Finite Element Analysis (FEA) are consistent with locations where cracks were observed in experiments. In addition, the numerical estimation of the plastic strain increment per cycle enables the prediction of the fatigue life. The results confirm that for rigid flex boards, the fatigue life of vias increases with higher plating thickness, larger drilled hole size and lower PCB thickness. Numerical results are shown to be in good agreement with experiments.

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