When higher preheat temps and longer contact time don’t improve hole fill, what’s next?

Problem

PCB Description

Process and Equipment




Diagnosis

Improvement strategy

Results

Run 1: Change flux; maintain same process parameters and evaluate results.

Run 2: Begin increasing preheat temperatures with small step of 30°F per preheat zone.


Run 3: Increase preheat setting by additional 50°F per zone.

Run 4: Increase preheat settings by another 50°F per zone. Increase flux loading by changing valve factor parameter from 50% to 70%.



New process:

Karl Seelig is vice president of technology at AIM Solder; kseelig@aimsolder.com. Carlos Tafoya is technical applications manager at AIM.

What is Flux Burnout?

Flux burnout occurs in wave soldering when the flux’s activators get spent in the preheat portion of the process, before the circuit board reaches the solder wave. It can happen to no-clean and water-washable fluxes, and can present big problems on thermally massive PCB assemblies.

When heated, flux activators begin removing existing oxides from solderable surfaces, and continue removing new ones that form during the heating process. They should remain active throughout the soldering cycle to facilitate wetting, but have a finite lifespan. If the activators are fully expended during the preheat cycle, new oxides build up and hinder joint formation.

PCB assemblies with high thermal mass challenges – design elements like thick copper planes, bulky components or poor thermal relief on ground ties – need extended preheat cycles to warm them to soldering temperature and extended wave contact times to let solder wick up the holes. It is not uncommon for thermally challenging assemblies to experience flux burnout, especially with the slower conveyor speeds of Pb-free wave soldering processes.

Diagnosing flux burnout. Try this simple test: slow the wave solder machine’s conveyor speed and examine hole fill.

Most wave soldering fluxes are designed to maintain activity and reliability across a wide process window, from fast and cool profiles to slow and hot ones. When high thermal mass PCBs demand extreme time-temperature exposure, typical flux activators may not survive. Specialized activators with enhanced thermal endurance are needed to ensure good solder wetting, acceptable hole fill and reliable mechanical performance.

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