Tin Whisker Electrical Short Circuit Characteristics—Part I

Existing risk simulations make the assumption that when a free tin whisker has bridged two adjacent exposed electrical conductors, the result is an electrical short circuit. This conservative assumption is made because shorting is a random event that has a currently unknown probability associated with it. Due to contact resistance, electrical shorts may not occur at lower voltage levels. In this experiment, we study the effect of varying voltage on the breakdown of the contact resistance which leads to a short circuit. From this data, we can estimate the probability of an electrical short, as a function of voltage, given that a free tin whisker has bridged two adjacent exposed electrical conductors. In addition, three tin whiskers grown from the same Space Shuttle Orbiter card guide used in the aforementioned experiment were cross sectioned and studied using a focused ion beam (FIB).

[1]  Jay Brusse,et al.  Zinc whiskers: hidden cause of equipment failure , 2004, IT Professional.

[2]  J. S. Dowker,et al.  Fundamentals of Physics , 1970, Nature.

[3]  Gary J. Ewell,et al.  TIN WHISKERS: ATTRIBUTES AND MITIGATION , 2002 .

[4]  S. M. Arnold,et al.  Growth of Metal Whiskers , 1953 .

[5]  R. Schetty Electrodeposited tin properties & their effect on component finish reliability , 2004, Proceedings of 2004 International Conference on the Business of Electronic Product Reliability and Liability (IEEE Cat. No.04EX809).

[6]  J. Conrad,et al.  Pb-free plating for peripheral/leadframe packages , 2001, Proceedings Second International Symposium on Environmentally Conscious Design and Inverse Manufacturing.

[7]  G. Galyon,et al.  Annotated tin whisker bibliography and anthology , 2005, IEEE Transactions on Electronics Packaging Manufacturing.

[8]  Jay Brusse,et al.  NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Tin Whisker (and Other Metal Whisker) Homepage , 2004 .

[9]  G. Samsonov,et al.  The Oxide Handbook , 1973 .

[10]  A. Mendizza,et al.  Filamentary Growths On Metal Surfaces – “Whiskers”★ , 1951 .

[11]  J. Downs,et al.  THE PHENOMENON OF ZINC WHISKER GROWTH AND THE ROTARY SWITCH : (OR, HOW THESWITCH INDUSTRY CAPTURED THE ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN) , 1994 .

[12]  R. H. Myers,et al.  Probability and Statistics for Engineers and Scientists , 1978 .

[13]  Paul G. Slade,et al.  Electrical contacts : principles and applications , 1999 .

[14]  Simos G. Meintanis,et al.  Estimation in the three-parameter inverse Gaussian distribution , 2005, Comput. Stat. Data Anal..