Defect Description
Insufficient solder that weakens a solder joint leads due to a reduction in area. The change in the solder fillet shape also leads to a change in the path of maximum shear strain in a solder joint due to differential thermal expansion, which can alter the crack propagation path to a greatly reduced cross-sectional area [1].
Defect Formation Process(s)
Insufficient solder can be a result of non-optimized soldering process and different factors such as the assembly design, assembly process, shape of solder wave, etc. [1]
| List of Tests to Precipitate this Defect | Failure Acceleration | Likelihood to Precipitate this Defect (condition) | Failure Mechanism(s) | 
| Thermal Shock | • Cyclic thermal mechanical stress accelerates crack initiation or growth of the weak solder joint • Thermal mechanical stress causes fracture of the weak solder joint | ✔ | Thermal Faitgue Thermal mechanical Oberstress | 
| Random Vibration (RS/ED) | • Random Vibration accelerates fatigue cracking of the weak solder joint • Random Vibration can cause fracture of the weak solder joint | ✔/✇ | Mechanical Fatigue Mechanical Overstress | 
| Combined Environment | • Combination of Thermal Shock and Random Vibration | ✔ | Combination of Thermal Shock and Random Vibration | 
| Bend Test | • Bending can cause fracture of the weak solder joint | ✇ | Mechanical Overstress | 
References
[1] Hillman, C., Rogers, K., Dasgupta, A., Pecht, M., Dusek, R., & Lorence, B., “Solder failure mechanisms in single-sided insertion-mount printed wiring boards.” Circuit World, pp. 28-38, 1999
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