Abstract This work discusses the experimental set-up and data interpretation for high temperature and current stress tests of flip chip solder joints using the four-point Kelvin measurement technique. The single solder joint resistance responses are measured at four different four-point Kelvin structure locations in a flip chip package. Various temperatures (i.e., 125–165 °C) and electric current (i.e., 0.6–1.0 A) test conditions are applied to investigate the solder joint resistance degradation behavior and its failure processes. Failure criterion of 20% and 50% joint resistance increases, corresponding to solder and interfacial voiding, are employed to evaluate the solder joint electromigration reliability. The absolute resistance value is substantially affected by the geometrical layout of the metal lines in the four-point Kelvin structure, and this is confirmed by finite element simulation. Different current flow directions and strengths yielded different joint resistance responses. The anode joint, where electrons flow from the die to the substrate, usually measured an earlier resistance increase than the cathode joint, where electrons flow in the opposite direction. The change in measured joint resistances can be related to solder and interfacial voiding in the solder joint except for ±1 A current load, where resistance drop mainly attributed to the broken substrate Cu metallization as a result of “hot-spot” phenomenon. The solder joint temperature increases above the oven ambient temperature by ∼25 °C, ∼40 °C and ∼65 °C for 0.6 A, 0.8 A and 1.0 A stress current, respectively. It is found that two-parameter log-normal distribution gives a better lifetime data fitting than the two-parameter Weibull distribution. Regardless of failure criterion used, the anode joint test cells usually calculated a shorter solder joint mean life with a lower standard variation of 0.3–0.6, as compared to the cathode joint test cells with a higher standard variation of 0.8–1.2. For a typical flip chip solder joint construction, electromigration reliability is mainly determined by the under bump metallization consumption and dissolution, with intermetallic compound formation near the die side of an anode joint.
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