Survey on Lead Free Solder Systems

5 Conclusion

5.1 Lead free printed circuit board assembly
5.2 Reliability of lead free solder joints
5.3 Environmental impact

5.1 Lead free printed circuit board assembly

Test boards have been realised by lead free reflow soldering at a peak temperature of 240°C and soldering time of 60 s at >217°C.
Lead free hand soldering requires much heat (pre-heat may be required) and full wetting of the plated-through-holes is problematic. Special solder iron set-up is required compared to traditional tin-lead soldering.
Integrity of realised lead free reflow soldered joints is found to be acceptable, even if some tendency of solder void formation is observed most pronounced for the OSP board finish test variants.
OSP board finish is found to result in incomplete wetting of solder lands in the case of both of the lead free solders tested due to somehow poorer wetting properties compared to tin-lead soldering.
Resistance to solder heat was found to be critical in the case of the metallised polyester film capacitor due to a specification/performance mismatch by lead free soldering condition. Robustness to solder heat is a key issue in component selection/specification in lead free soldering.

5.2 Reliability of lead free solder joints

Damp heat testing confirmed the flux from both of the lead free solder pastes to be acceptably low activated, no corrosion observed.
Component shear testing vs. high temperature ageing testing did not indicate any critical solder joint degradation up to 2000 h at 125°C.
Similar component shear testing vs. temperature cycling is found to result in gradual degradation in the solder joints, but still typical lead free solder joints are expected to pass 1000x, -40°C; +85°C without open circuit failures.
Results from component shear testing indicate OSP board finish to offer a somehow lower performance relative to gold-nickel board finish, probably due to the difference in wetting properties.
Destructive physical analysis of reliability tested parts confirmed the performance of the tested lead free solders to be very similar. In all cases of solder joint degradation the degradation is found to be in the "bulk" solder material of the joints.
In general, the results indicate the reliability of tin-silver-copper and tin-silver lead free reflow soldered joints to be somehow comparable/similar to the reliability of traditional tin-lead reflow soldered joints.

5.3 Environmental impact

Lead is very toxic to humans and may cause serious deleterious chronic effects. The other metals (tin, silver and copper) have significantly weaker toxicological effects on humans than lead.
From a human toxicological point of view it may seem justified to avoid lead in solders, as there is a risk of exposure. The use of modern technology, where the solder process takes place in full containment will reduce or eliminate the exposure of workers to solder vapors and fumes to nothing, regardless of the solders used (lead-containing or lead-free).
There will though always be a risk of occupational exposure in connection with maintenance, repair, etc., which from a human toxicological point of view may still justify avoidance of lead in solders.
There is a risk of human exposure from residues from incineration of waste containg lead solder.
From an ecotoxicological point of view substitution to lead-free solders is more uncertain as emission and environmental fate are uncertain; exposure is therefore uncertain. In a life cycle perspective, the main environmental load will not be during the production/solder process, provided the production is optimized (e.g. with minimal losses during manufacturing), but after end of use. The future general-purpose lead-free solder implies the use of silver, which is much more toxic to aquatic organisms than lead.