Discussion
Data Scatter
The scatter of the Sn-3.5Ag literature data
is better described as erratic rather than random since
none of the reported studies was statistical in nature.
There are many possible reasons for this, including differences
in specimen size and geometry, specimen preparation and
treatment, interfacial metallurgical effects in the case
of shear specimens, test and loading conditions (e.g., tensile
test at constant strain rate versus loadcontrolled creep
test), possible specimen misalignment and other experimental
differences and errors. Also, load-controlled creep tests
are not exactly constant-stress tests although the data
is often treated as if they were. Last, the initial loading
rate has an impact on the entire deformation history but,
often, this initial loading rate is not reported.
The various tests that were investigated
did not follow a unique standard and the reports that were
examined had variable levels of completeness. For example,
the microstructural features of solder joints or specimens
were not always available and, when they were, representative
dimensions (such as the length and distribution density
of intermetallic precipitates) were not given and were difficult
to evaluate on micrograph reproductions.
Multiaxial Conditions
The Sn-3.5Ag compression, bulk solder data
suggests higher strength or creep resistance in compression
than in tension. However, we were not able to find a correlation
between shear and tensile test results.
The often-used Von Mises yield criterion leads
to a simple (and useful) transformation between tensile
(
,
)
and shear (
,
)
stresses and strains:
= 
3, an
=
/
3.
This criterion has been validated at strain rates above
10-4/sec for near-eutectic SnPb based on mechanical
testing of bulk tensile and torsion specimens (Low and Fields,
1991).
To our knowledge, the Von Mises criterion,
and the resulting stress / strain transformations, remain
to be investigated before they can be applied to Sn-3.5Ag.
Constitutive Modeling
The data that was analyzed was fitted to
simplified hyperbolic sine creep models. These do not constitute
a full-fledge constitutive model per se but provide a simple
equation that allows for some consolidation of secondary
creep data. The hyperbolic sine models have been found to
work well for engineering metals that exhibit significant
creep deformations and they are easily implemented in commercial
finite element models.
The reviewed data does not allow for the
development of a complete constitutive model since mostly
secondary or steady state creep was reported on. However,
it is noteworthy that the study by Darveaux et al. (1995)
provides a tentative constitutive model for Sn3.5Ag solder
joints. The Darveaux model is of the additive type whereby
strains are broken up in their elastic, plastic, primary
and secondary creep components. The reader is referred to
the original work by Darveaux et al. (1995) for pertinent
details of this model. Yang, H. et al. (1996) also stressed
the need to investigate primary creep for Sn3.5Ag solder.
Given the parallelism between Darveaux's
CCC and Wiese et al.'s flip chip data, it is worthwhile
applying the Darveaux model to the stress/strain analysis
of Sn-3.5Ag solder assemblies. As always, such an analysis
would have further merit if it were validated against independent
experimental data.
More advanced constituve models have been
proposed for Sn-3.5Ag and Sn-4Ag, such as Unified Creep
Plasticity (UCP) models (see Wen, 2001, and Neu et al.,
2001, for example). These models treat plastic and creep
strains as a single visco-plastic or inelastic strain. In
the formulation of inelastic strain rates, applied stresses
are reduced by an internal back-stress that reflects the
resistance of intermetallic precipitates, or other obstacles,
to dislocation motions. Back-stresses are state variables
that follow their own evolution equations. The latter are
semi-empirical and may call for a large number of fitting
constants depending on the complexity of the back-stress
model.
One advantage of the UCP models is that they
allow for the simulation of entire stress/strain histories,
prior to and after initiation of cumulative damage. However,
to this author's knowledge, the user implementation of UCP
models in commercial finite element codes is not readily
available.
Recommendations
Based on our review of Sn-3.5Ag properties,
further analysis is warranted before the full range of deformations
can be characterized accurately and before a workable constitutive
model can be used in engineering / design applications.
Whatever type of constitutive model is developed, it is
important that the model be validated against independent
data. Often, model constants are obtained from a set of
test results from a single source and the model is validated
(when it is) against other or similar results from the same
test matrix.
Three types of stress/strain measurements
are useful for model validation: