Encapsulation Technologies for Electronic Applications (Materials and Processes for Electronic Applications)

Encapsulation Technologies for Electronic Applications (Materials and Processes for Electronic Applications)

by Michael Pecht (Author), JamesJ.Licari (Series Editor), HalehArdebiliDr. (Author), JiaweiZhang (Author)

Synopsis

Encapsulation Technologies for Electronic Applications, Second Edition, offers an updated, comprehensive discussion of encapsulants in electronic applications, with a primary emphasis on the encapsulation of microelectronic devices and connectors and transformers. It includes sections on 2-D and 3-D packaging and encapsulation, encapsulation materials, including environmentally friendly 'green' encapsulants, and the properties and characterization of encapsulants. Furthermore, this book provides an extensive discussion on the defects and failures related to encapsulation, how to analyze such defects and failures, and how to apply quality assurance and qualification processes for encapsulated packages. In addition, users will find information on the trends and challenges of encapsulation and microelectronic packages, including the application of nanotechnology. Increasing functionality of semiconductor devices and higher end used expectations in the last 5 to 10 years has driven development in packaging and interconnected technologies. The demands for higher miniaturization, higher integration of functions, higher clock rates and data, and higher reliability influence almost all materials used for advanced electronics packaging, hence this book provides a timely release on the topic.

$177.95

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 550
Edition: 2
Publisher: William Andrew
Published: 01 Oct 2018

ISBN 10: 0128119780
ISBN 13: 9780128119785

Author Bio
Dr. Haleh Ardebili has a BS honors degree in Engineering Science and Mechanics from Pennsylvania State University at University Park, MS degree in Mechanical Engineering from Johns Hopkins University and PhD degree in Mechanical Engineering from University of Maryland at College Park. She has three years of industry experience as research scientist at General Electric Global Research Center at Niskayuna, New York. She is a recipient of GE Invention Fulcrum of Progress Award. She has several years of experience teaching engineering courses at University of Houston. In Sep 2010, she joined as Assistant Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at University of Houston. Her research work is mainly focused on nanomaterials for Energy Storage and Electronics. Jiawei Zhang has 10 years of experience working in the development and implementation of advanced packages. He is currently Staff Engineer at Qualcomm, San Diego. Previously, he served as Development Senior Staff Engineer at Broadcom Corporation responsible for IC package co-design flow (Die/Package/System). He is experienced in advanced package, FCBGA, MCM, and SiP. He has published over 30 external papers, including two which won best Conference Paper Awards (2012 IMAPS and 2014 SMTAI) He has been honored with one Broadcom Corporation Outstanding Technical Achievement Awards for design flow. He also served on the IWLPC Technical Committee from 2013 to 2015 and as the session Chair in 2013. has his own consulting firm, AvanTeco, specializing in materials and processes for electronics. He holds a BS in Chemistry from Fordham University and a PhD in Chemistry from Princeton University, where he was a DuPont Senior Fellow. His areas of expertise include materials and processes for electronic applications, primarily for high reliability systems, hybrid microcircuits, printed wiring circuits, and other interconnect packaging technologies. He is an expert on polymeric materials including adhesives, coatings, encapsulants, insulation, reliability based on failure modes and mechanisms. Dr. Licari has had a forty-year career dedicated to the study and advancement of microelectronic materials and processes. Notable achievements throughout this career include conducting the first studies on the reliability and use of die-attach adhesives for microcircuits, which he did in the mid-1970s through the early 1980s, making industry and the government aware of the degrading effects of trace amounts of ionic contaminants in epoxy resins. He conducted early exploratory development on the use of non-noble metal (Cu) thick-film conductor pastes for thick-film ceramic circuits. He carried out the first studies on the use of Parylene as a dielectric and passivation coating for MOS devices and as a particle immobilizer for hybrid microcircuits. He developed the first photo-definable thick-film conductor and resistor pastes that were the forerunners of DuPont's Fodel process, for which he received a patent was granted in England. And he developed the first photocurable epoxy coating using cationic photoinitiation by employing a diazonium salt as the catalytic agent (U.S. 3205157) . The work was referenced as pioneering work in a review article by J.V. Crivello The Discovery ad Development of Onium Salt Cationic Photoinitiators, J. Polymer Chemistry (1999)