Solder paste printing and reflow can provide low cost techniques producing
the solder bumps on flip chips. Solder paste consists of a dense suspension
of solder particles in a fluid medium (vehicle) that acts as an oxide redu
cing agent (flux) during reflow, cleaning the metal surfaces of oxides. Thi
s paper reports on optical, observations of paste behaviour at the small le
ngth scales associated with flip chip solder joints, and attempts to model
the process using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). Comparison of optical
observations and CFD modelling show that the behaviour of the solder canno
t be described simply by surface tension and viscous flow effects and it is
deduced that oxides are still present on the solder surfaces during the ea
rly stages of reflow. The implications for paste heating method and solder
volume are discussed, and a preliminary CFD model (based on FIDAP) incorpor
ating the effect of the oxide layers is presented.