Save 15% in 15 minutes on your reflow’s energy consumption

Topic: 15% electricity savings in 15 minutes

Save Electricity in 15 mins. R0909B DRAFT

Date: Friday, September 25, 2009
Time: 1:00 pm, Pacific Daylight Time (GMT -07:00, San Francisco)
Meeting Number: 336 789 255
Meeting Password: (This meeting does not require a password.)

To join the online meeting
1. Go to https://kicthermal.webex.com/kicthermal/j.php?ED=107946437&UID=1013415122
2. Enter your name and email address.
3. Enter the meeting password: (This meeting does not require a password.)
4. Click “Join Now”.
5. Follow the instructions that appear on your screen.

Topic: 15% electricity savings in 15 minutes
Date: Friday, September 25, 2009
Time: 1:00 pm, Pacific Daylight Time (GMT -07:00, San Francisco)
Meeting Number: 336 789 255
Meeting Password: (This meeting does not require a password.)

——————————————————-
To join the online meeting

——————————————————-
1. Go to https://kicthermal.webex.com/kicthermal/j.php?ED=107946437&UID=1013415122
2. Enter your name and email address.
3. Enter the meeting password: (This meeting does not require a password.)
4. Click “Join Now”.
5. Follow the instructions that appear on your screen.

Share

Running lead free and eutectic PCBs simultaneously on the same reflow oven

Surface Mount Technology ran a piece titled Parallel Processes: Simultaneous Lead and Lead-free Soldering with a Single Reflow System written by Hans Bell of Rehm Thermal Systems GmbH.  Hans details a study where by controlling conveyor speed of each lane of a dual-lane system, it is possible to run both a lead and lead free product simultaneously.

The devil of course is always in the details:

Definition of the process window must always be based on the “weakest link,” namely the component with least amount of thermal stability during the soldering process. If two different processes are to be set up next to each other in the same reflow system, and if thermally sensitive components are included on the PCB, great flexibility is required for parameters configuration.

The ability to develop process windows for each product leaving enough room for each to call upon the same oven zone set points is key and of course taking into account special temperature tolerant components on each board.  Hans’ idea is intriguing.  Based on my experience in a world were many PCBs manufacturers struggle to profile or perhaps do not profile at all,  this is certainly a tall order.  Nevertheless his idea is do’able for perhaps many processes, since changing just the conveyor speed to reduce product changeover on a single lane oven is being done today (click here for an excellent application note using KIC product’s to achieve this end).  Why this couldn’t be adopted to a dual lane system running both lead and lead free simultaneously has its merits.

Share

No Waste: Beyond PCBs in Reflow Profiling

Article is from SMT Magazine

In many situations, EMS providers cannot waste a PCB for thermal profiling. Some ovens are equipped with profiling tools to generate an accurate reflow recipe without thermal profiling. This saves time, labor, money, and materials, but there are limitations.

By Brian O’Leary, KIC

There is a right way and a wrong way to set up a reflow oven to manufacture a new PCB assembly. This article suggests using the wrong method, but for the right reason. If an electronics manufacturer is prevented from following the correct method for setting up the reflow oven for a new production run, does a fallback position exist where they can still expect good results? For example, contract manufacturers find themselves in a not-so-uncommon situation where the manufacturer receives 100 boards and is expected to give a 100 assembled boards back. Sacrificing a single PCB to the profiling process is not an option. In another example, a manufacturer has PCBs that run in the several thousands of dollars. A suitable scrap board is not available for profiling, due to the cost incurred for the lost PCB.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Traditional Reflow Oven Set-up

The traditional method for setting up a reflow oven to manufacture a new PCB assembly is to attach thermocouples (TCs) to the PCB and run a series of profiles. Multiple profiles are usually required for the technician to adjust the oven recipe until an in-spec or deep in-spec profile is found. The introduction of lead-free assemblies has made this task more difficult and time-consuming. However, automatic prediction software and process optimization software have significantly cut down on the number of profile iterations required to determine the oven recipe that provides an in-spec process.

The benefit of this conventional reflow profiling method is clear: It achieves a deep in-spec and therefore stable process that is fundamental to good end-product quality. It also provides documentation to the client that proper process development work was performed.

These procedures, however, tend to sacrifice one or more PCBs. One reason for this concerns the TC attachment method. There are several TC attachment solutions, some more destructive to the PCB assembly than others. The use of high-temperature solder wire is a reliable method, but tends to damage the PCB assembly. Aluminum tape is also a reliable and repeatable method with the added benefit that the tape can be removed after the profile without damaging components.

year_Par_30864_Image_400_240_1

A second cause of PCB damage is the fact that each subsequent thermal cycle through the reflow oven raises the risk of latent or real defects as solder joints are re-reflowed, components are exposed to multiple reflow cycles, and the properties of the substrate changing. The PCB gets lighter, discolored, and more brittle with multiple profiles. Therefore, even with non-destructive TC attachment methods, such as aluminum tape, the PCB may need to be discarded when several profiles are run.

A final risk is that the technician selects, often guessing, a wrong initial oven recipe prior to the first profile. The initial recipe could damage the PCB. This could happen when the peak temperature is too high, the slope too steep, the soak prematurely dries out the volatiles in the paste, etc.

Profiling the Reflow Oven, Not the PCB

Modern reflow ovens are a far cry from their legacy siblings. Each oven model produced in volume tends to have very tight and similar thermal characteristics to each other. Equally important, these properties do not change over time as rapidly as in the past due to better flux management, improved oven control systems, more precise mechanics, etc. This enables new thermal process tools that “learn” the behavior of each oven model. To capture the thermal properties of a specific oven model, numerous profiles are run on a variety of PCB assemblies under differing process windows. This database will cover all but the most unusual applications encountered in SMT production. Once this work has been done, it is a simple matter of copying the information onto all the similar oven models. At that point, the operator could simply enter the basic information of the application, such as the length, width, and weight of the PCB assembly as well as the appropriate process window, and the oven will find its suitable recipe (zone temperatures and conveyor speed). This recipe will yield an in-spec profile in the vast majority of the cases without the need to run a profile or attach TCs. Experience with such technologies also suggests that when the recipe generated by the new thermal process tools does not yield an in-spec profile, it is usually very close.

Some U.S. oven manufacturers have completed this work. These reflow oven makers ship ovens with a fully functional database that essentially allows their customers to set up for new production runs without the need for profiling and sacrificing PCBs.

These systems do have limitations. The first was alluded to above, namely that there will be a small percentage of the applications that will not be processed in-spec. The fail-safe method is to wait for the oven to stabilize on the suggested recipe and then run an old-fashioned profile to verify whether it is in-spec. If out of spec, it should, in the vast majority of the cases, be close enough to achieve an in-spec profile on the second try. One profiling pass through the reflow oven, with aluminum tape used for TC attach, should not damage the PCB assembly.

year_Par_87154_Image_500_579_1

Another limitation is that an oven will, given enough time, eventually change its thermal properties. Wear and tear, changes in exhaust conditions, preventive maintenance, and a host of other factors will have an accumulative effect on the behavior of the reflow oven. Therefore, the initial database will need to be updated. This can be achieved by running some real-life profiles from time to time, and feeding this fresh information back into the database.

The final limitation is the fact that a system that eliminates profiling, by definition, does not have a profile recorded for the specific assembly. This means that there is no documentation or evidence that the PCB was indeed processed in-spec. Some customers will accept this, while others will not and require reflow profile documentation.

Conclusion

The correct method for reflow oven set up with a new application is to profile the PCB and dial the processed deep in-spec using prediction software. If the electronics manufacturer either cannot or will not perform this task, there are now thermal process tools available that achieve a more than 80% effective solution. Oven-inherent programming produces an in-spec recipe in the vast majority of the situations with no need to profile or sacrifice a circuit board. This technology also saves set up time and associated labor.

Using a profiling technology without an actual PCB profile run is also far better than doing nothing. Many manufacturers in our industry currently do not profile at all, or they limit their profiling to a single application a few times a year. If you do not want to do traditional profiling at all, oven-generated recipes can be an intermediary, rather than blindly reflowing.

Share

Minimize Energy Consumption through profiling software

The days of cheap energy are gone and in this economic environment, we are all looking to consume less and cut costs!   You can start looking for energy savings in your solder paste specification and the component layout of your PCBs.  Using simpler designed products with fewer components is an excellent way to begin. This, of course, is not always an option, especially for contract manufacturers.

What if your profiling software can reduce your oven’s energy consumption, while maintaining a process that’s in spec? I can do this by defining the minimum allowable conveyor speed for the reflow oven.  Many engineers will set the conveyor to be a little faster than the bottleneck on their SMT line. Also, the engineer will define how much of their process window can be used or how close to the limits of their specification are they willing to run their process.

optimizeenergy

In a few seconds, your profiling software searches billions of combinations.  It will settle on a profile that uses the lowest oven set points.

Share

Minimize Product Changeover through Profiling Software

Since it is not always possible to run all products under a single profile, most factories require product change over time in order to reset the oven to a new set of temperatures, per product class or board. Depending on the variations of PCBs, changeover time can add up to hours, days or weeks of lost production time.

So, what can you do to minimize this dead period? Determine, in advance, the best grouping of products that have shared profiles and then schedule product runs over available equipment that minimizes changeover. It is worth every minute of company effort and time to review daily production in order to run products that require small set point changes.

It is entirely possible, in an organized methodical way to consolidate groups of PCBs under the umbrella of one or more Thermal profile, I like to think of putting them into small, medium and large buckets.  Testing can be done to prove to yourself and/or your customers that the profile is both producing a product within specification and, quantifiably, how deep within spec.  Yes, it is possible to have your cake and eat it too!

buckets

Profiling software can do some of the heavy lifting for you.  You can reload past profiles to see whether or not they can be produced at given oven set points.  Every time you ask the profiling software to run a prediction analysis, it searches billions of possible combinations.  If you want the deepest in spec process, it will pick the one closest to the center of all variable specs.  If you want to maximize conveyor speed, it will search for that one profile that gives you the highest throughput without violating any of your parameters.  As it is crunching through these possible combinations, there are millions of other profiles in spec that you don’t see because they are not the optimal profile for a given request. This is not to say that they are any worse.  When you reload a recorded profile to determined fixed oven set points, there may very well be profiles that are still deep within spec that can be run under your new Reflow oven configuration. Perhaps, instead of changing your oven over 4-5 times a day, it now only needs to be changed 1-2 times.

Share

Maximize Throughput | Profiling Software

Many of you will have an issue with “bottlenecks” in your process. This can happen at any point in the SMT Reflow process. Depending on the product that you are manufacturing, it is also likely that the “bottleneck” will jump from equipment set to equipment set.  For our purposes, let’s look at the reflow process when it is identified as your bottleneck.

I have seen several methods that address a reflow bottleneck. The obvious solution is to increase the conveyor speed of the reflow oven. This is a task that requires a bit of skill.  Your profiler becomes the single most effective tool to improve the Throughput Time (TPT) of the reflow process.

Let’s look at the fundamental changes of your profile with an increase in conveyor speed.  First, the PCB will spend less time in each zone. Also, your process will move toward the shorter end of your spec as defined in seconds.  For example, if soak time is defined as 30 to 90 seconds,  your actual process will be perhaps in the 30-50 second range as opposed to a comfortable 50-70 second range that was established at slower conveyor speeds.

The longer the oven, the more wiggle room you have for increasing conveyor speed without having to make significant changes to your profile.  Having a longer oven suggests that the PCB stays in the reflow process for a longer period of time, but keep in mind that it really comes down to how many products per minute exit the oven. Whether the oven is 10 feet or 30 feet in length, a higher conveyor speed will increase the number of products that exit the oven per minute.

Work In Process (WIP) is determined from the time the lot enters the SMT process to the time it is ready for shipment as a finished product. This duration is stated normally in hours and can add up to a few days to weeks, depending on the product. Having a longer oven does not mean increased TPT nor does it violate your WIP objectives.

It is tricky working with shorter ovens with fewer zones since they do require higher temperatures per zone to reach the desired specifications, as compared to longer ovens. I have found that using solder paste that uses a Ramp to Spike (RTS) profile works better in ovens with fewer zones. The RTS pays less attention to the soak and more to the overall length of the profile (the soak, of course, is often not listed in the solder spec for an RTS profile). Also, shorter ovens impact the slope in the RTS profile. For example, if you have a 5 zone oven, the first zones will need to be set at a fairly high set point in order to process the rest of the profile. At this point, the slope becomes very steep as the PCB moves from ambient to 160°C.  160°C could be the set point of the first zone! Also, in a distance of just a few feet, the product will need to rise in temperature to greater than 217°C in PB Free and above 183°C in eutectic solder. Many specifications will call for a peak of 200 to 240°C, which puts further demands on your shorter oven. In this instance, it is desirable to calculate the slope over the entire profile, setting it from 130°C to 180°C over a shorter period of time. Again, you need to look at how long (in seconds) the PCB stays in each area of the profile when designing your spec.

Now that we have looked at oven length when considering an increased throughput, how do we develop a profile that will remain within specification at higher conveyor speeds?  Some profiling software will allow you to make a desired change to conveyor speed and then return a predicted profile. This typically can be completed in seconds, before even running your first profile.

A clever feature of some profiling software is that you can set a range of allowable conveyor speeds while maintaining acceptable limits to your process window.  For example, when factoring the variability (drift) in your oven, you can comfortably run your process using only up to 70% of your available process window. In practice, anything over 70% is risky due to drift that can push your process out of spec. To eliminate this concern, run a “what if” scenario, where you define your minimum and maximum range for conveyor speed and maximum allowable PWI (in this case, set to 70%).

optimizeconveyor

The profiling software will literally search billions of possible combinations, giving you the maximum possible conveyor speed without violating your 70% PWI threshold.  Of course, you may find the conveyor speed to be too slow still.  What can you do? Bump up your allowable process window or buy a new oven. In either case, you are in control of your predictive modeling (this sure beats hundreds of hours of trial and error and possible board destruction). This process is similar to the prior section on Getting your Product Deeper in Spec and it will take as long as it takes to heat up or cool down your oven and re-profile if verification of your new predicted profile is required.  In practice, I find that it takes less than one hour.

Share

Getting your Product Deeper in Spec | Profiling Software

Q: What happens when defects occur when the thermal load on the oven increases?  Do you slow down production?  Do you change the oven set points by cranking up the heat to compensate for the increased load?

A: The answer is to establish a NEW profile that is deeper in spec., a profile that is able to better stand up to the daily variations of a reflow process.

Today, profiling software allows you to establish these new deep-in-spec profiles with relative ease.  You can precisely define your specifications and run various predictive scenarios.  For example, you know that you can’t slow down your conveyor speed, but you can change your oven set points.  The profiling software can give you a predictive result that puts you as deep in spec as possible before ever having to run a profile.

optimizepwi

In practice, how much work needs to be done to take this out-of-spec process and bring it within spec depends on a lot of factors. How far out of spec are you to start with? What inputs can be changed? How tight are your specs?

If your process is already taking up most of your process window or not far out of spec, then only minor changes will most likely be needed to bring your profile much deeper into spec.  In this case, only one additional profile is likely required to bring your profile very deep within spec.  In my experience, this profiling process takes about 30 minutes, most of which is waiting for the oven to cool. If your profile is far out-of-spec., you may need up to an hour to bring it within spec.

Each time you re-profile, it is an opportunity to further improve your profile, bringing it further into spec with each effort.   Profiling software will tell you a possible scenario for improvement each time, which takes your excellent deep-in-spec profile still deeper within spec.  Each one of these changes, on average, takes about 30 minutes.

A word of caution: having a profile in the center of the spec or at 0% PWI, is not always the optimal improvement. While “0%” PWI is statistically desirable, there are other factors to consider. For example, though 30% PWI indicates that you are only utilizing 30% of the allowable process window of your solder paste, in practice, when you find that a PWI of 65% produces a physically better connection, which is better?  Specs are just that: specs. They have a range for a reason. In this case, at the upper end of the spec (opposed to the center of the range), a joint may solder better. Advantageous about most profiling software is that you can go back and re-define your specs to see what your new profile will look like without having to rerun the profile. The allowed range can be further narrowed to a particular spec, which results in a better joint.  In essence, you are now re-defining your spec, and all future profiles will only consider this new range.

Share

Reading your Profile via Profile software

Let’s take a close look at the profiling graph and the specifications used to create the graph.

The Solder Paste Library of your profiling software provides several choices:

Maximum Slope Between Temperatures

Maximum Rising Slope (Ramp Rate)

Maximum Falling Slope (Cooling Rate)

Preheat

Soak

Time Above Liquidus (TAL)

Reflow

Peak

Maximum Exit Temperature

For some inputs, such as slope, preheat, soak and TAL you can define multiples of the same input.  For example, you might want to define more than one slope for your process.

profilemodel

Inputs and Segments of the Profile

These terms: specs, variables, segments, zones and inputs are thrown around and often used interchangeably. Unfortunately, some of these terms are used to describe completely different aspects of the reflow process, which leads to lots of confusion.  For this guide, we use two terms to describe slightly different meanings.  When I discuss setting up your profile, I use the term “input” to describe ramp, soak, slope, when I etc.  I use the term “segments” to describe these same terms in relation to the profile graph.

Inputs each have their own specifications. This section explains how they are measured and the defects associated with each of these segments of the profile. Interchangeable terms are also used across the industry to describe these inputs/segments. Here, I list them all. For instance, maximum rising slope and ramp are used interchangeably with the same meaning.

Maximum Slope Between Temperatures

Three important parameters make up this specification:

1.  First, at what point in the profile do you want to know the slope? Rather than looking at the whole profile, this specification will look at a specific temperature range, for example, what is the slope between 150°C and 200°C?

2.  Next what is the ideal slope range? From 0 to 4°C/sec?

3.  And third, how many seconds would you like to calculate the slope over? A default value is typically set to 20 seconds, more on this in a moment.

Slope is important for both component and solder paste tolerances.

Maximum Rising Slope (Ramp Rate)

The Maximum Rising Slope, or Ramp Rate, looks at the whole profile, specifically the steepest slope over the entire profile and does not just look at a specific region. At this stage of the reflow process, the temperature rise from ambient to the first heating zone is of most interest since the greatest potential for component damage and solder ball spatter from a high ramp rate exists. The parameters are measured in degrees per second as temperatures increase.

To calculate slope, you will need to input a specified “duration” of time. The typical default value is 20 seconds. The more data points you have, the more accurate the calculation since this increases your sample set, and in the end, the validity of your data.  However, not all processes will have a default value of 20 seconds. If the area in which you intend to calculate the slope over is small, your sample size will have to be measured in fewer seconds, perhaps adjusting the default value down to 10 seconds.

Maximum Falling Slope (Cooling Rate)

Properly cooling your product may be necessary for your process.  Some specs call for rapid cooling.  Depending on your profiling software, the maximum falling slope or cooling rate can be used to define the limit of the cooling rate or specify a certain decrease in degrees per second over a given time.

Soak

Preheat and Soak are typically listed as two separate inputs in most profiling software even though they call for, more or less, the same parameters. For some engineers the terms are distinguished by process type. Preheat being used for wave soldering and soak being used for reflow.  More commonly the initial ramp from ambient is called preheat and the relatively flat section from that initial ramp to the reflow spike is called soak.

Some solder paste manufacturers will request that the profile use preheat and some will call for a soak period. These are similar inputs, if not one and the same.  In some profiling software both terms are listed separately.   Based on a review of many solder paste specifications, the soak specification is normally for a longer duration and the preheat is a shorter duration with a higher ramp rate. Again, this is defined by the solder paste manufacturer, who determines the desired specification for the intended performance of their solder paste. Component manufacturers can also call for specifications of preheat or soak with respect to their components.

Time Above Liquidus (TAL)  (Reflow)

TAL and Reflow Process are both defined in terms of temperature over a period of time in seconds.  Generally, the temperatures are ~183°C  for eutectic solder and ~ 217°C for lead-free.

Of all the inputs, this is perhaps the most important since it can be the most troublesome, especially in the world of lead-free.  Look very closely at the different package types and density of a given area of the PCB since these factor into the required time to bring a given bond pad to the desired temperature specification.  Of course, we are talking about overall density, but not everything on your PCB is going to react the same to higher temperatures. While an exposure to the higher temperatures of TAL can be destructive over time, the duration necessary to achieve effective phase changes of the solder paste is, generally, not destructive.  The key is to get in and out as quickly as possible to get the job done, while limiting the exposure to these higher temperatures.  However, if the process is repeated several times, changes do occur in the PCB and destruction will begin.  Many PCB’s will undergo both top-side and bottom-side reflow. Occasionally, a third reflow will be required to attach specific components and, of course, selective, wave soldering and rework may factor into the equation for the same PCB.  This repeated combined exposure during the TAL segment can be destructive.

Peak

Why do we want to exceed the melting point of an alloy by a range of temperatures and duration of time?  Ask your QA department since cold solder joints are one of the most common defects associated with inadequate peak temperature.   The additional increase in temperature over liquidus guarantees that high density areas will have the opportunity to flow properly, ensuring a complete process. The solder paste manufacturer lists a peak spec but the component manufacturer’s specifications can be more important. The component manufacturer’s peak spec will be a “Do Not Exceed” value, in contrast to the solder paste manufacturer’s spec that calls for a peak range.  Your job in developing the spec is to find a peak value that does not violate your component manufacturer’s tolerance still completing reflow to the satisfaction of your QA department.

Maximum Exit Temperature

This parameter has little to do with the solder paste manufacturer’s specification and more to do with a requirement of your specific process.

Two values are listed: temperature and distance. Temperature is the desired exit temperature and distance is determined by the location of the product in the oven or at the exit. The product board sensor will aid in determining how this value is calculated.

Share

How to Establish the “First” Profile for a New Product

autofocus

Clever profiling software will calculate a profile based on the size of your PCB or from dummy profiles already loaded on the Reflow oven. It is part of the prediction utility of your profiling software or pre-installed on your reflow oven. This software mines prior work, including your own profiles developed from other products or, in the case of profiles that come pre-installed on the oven, known profiling outcomes based on the oven’s characteristics.  It looks at known sizes of PCBs and their respected weights (i.e. mass), and how they interact with a known process environment (i.e. your specific reflow oven).  What is exciting about this software is that it can give you a pretty good starting point when you are profiling a board for the first time. It is not foolproof, but it is quite common to get a process, in spec, after a few profiling runs while keeping your profiled PCB intact and sellable!  The alternative is to spend hundreds of hours profiling new boards, with starting points based on conjecture. In this case, many boards would be sacrificed in the process.  With products like KIC Auto-FocusTM and AUTOsetTM, your time and your PCBs are saved, saving you money!

autoset

Share

Configuration of the Graph | Reflow Process

profilegraph

The profile graph will tell you whether or not your process is within spec and that your reflow oven is creating the correct profile, nothing more. Double check your set-up again before diving into your profile. The information from the graph must be “true.”

There are dozens of software packages that mostly render the same information, with temperature on the Y axis and time across oven zones on the X axis. These software packages vary great with respect to how they manipulate this data or allow you to play around with the numbers.

Not all of your oven set points are going to match those of your profiling software. Profiling software can do this automatically but not all oven brands communicate with all profiling software brands. In the end, you might be left with a graph that appears to be in spec but, in reality, is meaningless due to differences in the set points in the oven and in the profiling software.

To be considered relevant, ALL profiles must follow these guidelines:

  • Profiles are generated by a specification from the solder paste manufacturer, component suppliers and substrate tolerances.
  • The set points of the oven heating zones are set.
  • The oven conveyor speed is set.
  • The profiler set points are the same as the oven heating zone set points.
  • The profiler oven conveyor speed is the same as the oven.
  • The reported number of heating zones are the same as the number of oven heating zones.
  • Any change in the set points of the oven MUST be changed to the profiler software.

Any violation of these guidelines will render your profile invalid and meaningless!

Share