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For many years, numerous manufacturers world-wide
have been printing glue with an 80 mesh screen
or a stencil using conventional printing technology
typical to solder paste printing.
Principle Explanation:
In the conventional printing process the adhesive
is transferred completely from the stencil to
the board. The stencil thickness and aperture
diameter govern the volume deposited which can
be calculated using the formula for a cylinder:
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V = p
(d/2)2 h
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h
= stencil thickness (»
GDH ; GDH = glue dot height)
d = aperture diameter (»
GDD, GDD = glue dot diameter) |
Stencil Thickness
(determines the GDH)
Stencil thickness must be selected to be slightly
greater (e.g. +2 mils) than the component stand-off
(distance between the board surface under the
component and the bottom of the component after
placement). The stand-off after placement can
vary for the same component, depending on the:
- Thickness of solder resist and of the copper
tracks which may be passing between the pads
- Pad thickness - if the pads are higher than
the solder resist, than it is necessary to increase
the GDH/stencil thickness.
It is easy to select the optimal stencil thickness
when all components on the board have a similar
stand-off.
However, if on the board we have both active (SOICs,
QFPs etc.) and passive components (chips), then
the passive components become the limiting value
because their stand-off
distance is typically no more than
a 4 mils.
After the placement of the component, the excess
glue is compressed and it flows in the space between
the component and the PCB.
The information from the diagram assumes that
all of the glue is transferred from the stencil
to the PCB and that the shape of the dot after
placement of the component is a cylinder.
Stand-off
(component to board gap) indicates the distance
between the component and the PCB after placement.
If chip components are placed in a glue dot which
is too high, the following problems might occur:
- the glue spreads too much at placement and
contaminates the soldering pads or
- the gap between the chip and the PCB after
curing might be too large, which will generate
"skips" during wave soldering.
A typical stencil thickness is 6
mils for designs with only passive (chip) components
and 10 mils for designs with both passive and
active (leaded) components .
Generally, the glue will be transferred completely
from the stencil, if the stencil aperture diameter
to stencil thickness is »
4:1 or more.
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