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Conformal Coating Over No-clean Flux
Board Talk
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TranscriptPhil Welcome to Board Talk. This is Jim Hall and Phil Zarrow, the Assembly Brothers, pick and place, or place and pick. Today we have an interesting question. Jim Phil One of the simplest tests was the adhesion test, where you would coat the surface with packing tape and let it sit for a while, and then pull it and check under a UV light. Going back a number of years ago, basically most of the no cleans were compatible, both the tests we did, tests that Alpha Solder did and basically there was compatibility, whether it was acrylic, silicone, really any of them. However, now we fast forward to the modern days and, Jim, you have a different take. Jim If you have some hydroscopic contaminant from your no clean residue, it will actually attract water, and concentrate that water under the conformal coating. So that's where the controversy comes up. But, certainly, many people are conformal coating over no clean residues. That's a very standard practice. Like everything else, in my opinion, it comes down to what is the reliability level of your product? How critical a product is it? What is the potential, what's the life? Are these service environments going to be in high humidity? Why is it being conformally coated? It the product going to be subjected to a lot of moisture? All those questions will enter into the equation. Phil Back in the old days of the RMA and no clean fluxes with the 63/37 solder, there was good adhesion. But the chemistries in the fluxes, and hence, the residues, have changed so radically because of the higher thermal excursions, principally for lead-free. There is a bit of a game changer, if you will. JimThere is also the issue of smaller components where you need more flux to hang around so that you're sure you don't re-oxidize the pads and terminations on your ultra fine resistors and capacitors. Phil Jim Phil |
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