
Adhesives Technology for Electronic Applications
Materials, Processing, Reliability
- 1st Edition - August 30, 2005
- Imprint: William Andrew
- Authors: James J. Licari, Dale W. Swanson
- Language: English
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 9 4 7 1 6 - 7
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 8 1 5 5 - 1 6 0 0 - 2
This book is unique in its comprehensive coverage of all aspects of adhesive technology for microelectronic devices and packaging, from theory to bonding to test procedures. In… Read more

Purchase options

Institutional subscription on ScienceDirect
Request a sales quote1.1 Adhesives Types and Definitions
1.2 Summary of Packaging Technologies
1.3 History of Adhesives in Electronic Applications
1.4 Comparison of Polymer Adhesives with Metallurgical and Vitreous Attachment Materials
1.5 Specifications
1.6 The Market
2. Functions and Theory of Adhesives
2.1 Mechanical Attachment
2.2 Electrical Connections
2.3 Thermal Dissipation
2.4 Stress Dissipation
3. Chemistry, Formulation, and Properties of Adhesives
3.1 Chemistry
3.2 Formulation of Adhesives
3.3 Properties
4. Adhesive Bonding Properties
4.1 Cleaning
4.2 Surface Treatments
4.3 Adhesive Dispensing
4.4 Placement of Devices and Components
4.5 Curing
4.6 Rework
5. Applications
5.1 General Applications
5.2 Specific Applications
6. Reliability
6.1 Failure Modes and Mechanisms
6.2 Specifications
7. Test and Inspection Methods
7.1 Physical Tests
7.2 Electrical Tests
7.3 Environmental Tests
7.4 Thermal Tests
7.5 Mechanical and Thermomechanical Tests
7.6 Chemical Analysis
Appendix
Conversion Factors
Abbreviations and Acronyms
Index
- Edition: 1
- Published: August 30, 2005
- No. of pages (eBook): 475
- Imprint: William Andrew
- Language: English
- eBook ISBN: 9780080947167
- eBook ISBN: 9780815516002
JL
James J. Licari
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)
DS