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State of the art of thermal characterization of electronic components using computational fluid dynamic tools

Eric Monier-Vinard (Department of Hardware, Thales Corporate Engineering, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France)
Brice Rogie (Department of Hardware, Thales Corporate Engineeering, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France and Department of Heat Transfer, Université Paris Ouest, Laboratoire Thermique Interfaces Environnement, Ville d’Avray, France)
Valentin Bissuel (Department of Hardware, Thales Corporate Engineeering, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France)
Najib Laraqi (Department of Heat Transfer, Université Paris Ouest, Laboratoire Thermique Interfaces Environnement, Ville d’Avray, France)
Olivier Daniel (Department of Hardware, Thales Corporate Engineering, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France)
Marie-Cécile Kotelon (Department of Hardware, Thales Corporate Engineeering, Vélizy-Villacoublay, France and Department of Heat Transfer, Université Paris XIII, Sorbonne Paris cité, Villenateuse, France)

International Journal of Numerical Methods for Heat & Fluid Flow

ISSN: 0961-5539

Article publication date: 6 November 2017

286

Abstract

Purpose

Latest Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFDs) tools allow modeling more finely the conjugate thermo-fluidic behavior of a single electronic component mounted on a Printed Wiring Board (PWB). A realistic three-dimensional representation of a large set of electric copper traces of its composite structure is henceforth achievable. The purpose of this study is to confront the predictions of the fully detailed numerical model of an electronic board to a set of experiment results to assess their relevance.

Design/methodology/approach

The present study focuses on the case of a Ball Grid Array (BGA) package of 208 solder balls that connect the component electronic chip to the Printed Wiring Board. Its complete geometrical definition has to be coupled with a realistic board layers layout and a fine description of their numerous copper traces to appropriately predict the way the heat is spread throughout that multi-layer composite structure. The numerical model computations were conducted on four CFD software then compare to experiment results. The component thermal metrics for single-chip packages are based on the standard promoted by the Joint Electron Device Engineering Council (JEDEC), named JESD-51. The agreement of the numerical predictions and measurements has been done for free and forced convection.

Findings

The present work shows that the numerical model error is lower than 2 per cent for various convective boundary conditions. Moreover, the establishment of realistic numerical models of electronic components permits to properly apprehend multi-physics design issues, such as joule heating effect in copper traces. Moreover, the practical modeling assumptions, such as effective thermal conductivity calculation, used since decades, for characterizing the thermal performances of an electronic component were tested and appeared to be tricky. A new approach based on an effective thermal conductivity matrix is investigated to reduce computation time. The obtained numerical results highlight a good agreement with experimental data.

Research limitations/implications

The study highlights that the board three-dimensional modeling is mandatory to properly match the set of experiment results. The conventional approach based on a single homogenous layer using effective thermal conductivity calculation has to be banned.

Practical implications

The thermal design of complex electronic components is henceforth under increasing control. For instance, the impact of gold wire-bonds can now be investigated. The three-dimensional geometry of sophisticated packages, such as in BGA family, can be imported with all its internal details as well as those of its associated test board to build a realistic numerical model. The establishment of behavioral models such as DELPHI Compact Thermal Models can be performed on a consistent three-dimensional representation with the aim to minimize computation time.

Originality/value

The study highlights that multi-layer copper trace plane discretization could be used to strongly reduce computation time while conserving a high accuracy level.

Keywords

Citation

Monier-Vinard, E., Rogie, B., Bissuel, V., Laraqi, N., Daniel, O. and Kotelon, M.-C. (2017), "State of the art of thermal characterization of electronic components using computational fluid dynamic tools", International Journal of Numerical Methods for Heat & Fluid Flow, Vol. 27 No. 11, pp. 2433-2450. https://doi.org/10.1108/HFF-10-2016-0380

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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