[0001] This invention relates to a container for housing a large number of minute solder
balls.
[0002] Multifunctional electronic components such as BGA's, CSP's, and the like are mounted
on printed circuit boards by joining the leads to the lands of printed circuit boards
with solder. Multifunctional electronic components have a large number of leads, and
the leads are extremely small, so when solder is separately supplied at the time of
soldering, not only is a great deal of labor required, but is not possible to accurately
supply solder to minute portions to be soldered. Therefore, with multifunctional electronic
components, solder is adhered to the leads in advance to form solder bumps, and at
the time of soldering, the bumps are melted to perform soldering. Solder balls are
used to form solder bumps for such multifunctional electronic components.
[0003] In general, with solder balls used for BGA's, those having a diameter of 0.76 mm
are most common, but with CSP's, minute ones having a diameter such as 0.15 mm or
0.1 mm are used. These solder balls are placed in containers made of glass or plastic
and are transported from the manufacturer to the consumer.
[0004] A method of forming solder bumps for multifunctional electronic components comprises
coating the leads in the locations which are to soldered with a sticky flux, mounting
solder balls on the regions which have been coated with flux using a mounting device
and then performing heating with a heating device such as a reflow furnace, and then
melting the solder balls to form solder bumps.
[0005] However, when forming solder bumps on multifunctional electronic components, problems
occur such as inadequate adhesion in which the solder balls do not thoroughly adhere
to the leads, or the region in the vicinity of where solder bumps are formed becoming
dirty. As other problems, there were cases where failure of mounting took place in
which solder balls could not be mounted at all on the portions of multifunctional
electronic components where solder bumps were to be formed, or where over-mounting
occurred in which a plurality of solder balls were mounted.
[0006] The present inventors performed an intensive study of the above-described problems,
and as a result, it was found that the occurrence of inadequate adhesive strength
or of the vicinity of the region where solder bumps are formed becoming dirty is due
to the surface of solder balls becoming covered with black powder and becoming blackened,
and the failure of mounting to take place or over-mounting of solder balls in the
region where solder bumps are to be formed is due to solder balls becoming charged
with static electricity.
[0007] Namely, when the surface of solder balls becomes blackened, the black powder becomes
a hindrance to soldering at the time of soldering, and the solder balls do not completely
adhere to leads, and even if solder balls which have become blackened adhere to leads,
black powder which falls from the solder balls remains in the vicinity of the regions
where bumps are to be formed and ends up making the regions dirty. In addition, if
this black powder adheres to the regions between leads having a narrow pitch, poor
insulation can result.
[0008] Furthermore, if solder balls become charged, there are cases in which due to static
electricity, failure of mounting takes place, and they adhere to unnecessary locations.
Solder balls are not mounted on the prescribed locations of an electronic device.
In addition, if a plurality of solder balls end up adhering due to static electricity
to a prescribed portion of a solder ball mounting jig, excessive mounting occurs,
and a giant bump ends up being formed at the time of solder bump formation.
[0009] As shown in Figure 1, an existing solder ball container (referred to below as a container)
was made up of a body 1, an outer lid 2, and a middle lid 3. The body 1 was a cylindrical
member with a bottom and was made of a transparent material such as glass or plastic,
an opening 4 was formed in its upper portion, and a male thread 5 was formed on the
outside of the upper portion.
[0010] The outer lid 2 is in the shape of a cap, and a female thread 6 which engages with
the male thread 5 of the body 1 is formed on its interior.
[0011] The middle lid 3 is a cylindrical member having a shallow bottom, its outer diameter
has approximately the same diameter as the opening 4 of the body 1, and a flange 7
is formed on its upper portion. The middle lid 3 seals the opening 4 by fitting of
the flange 7 to the opening 4 of the body 1.
[0012] Next, a simple explanation will be given of the state in which solder balls are placed
into the existing container.
[0013] As shown in Figure 2, a prescribed amount of solder balls B (referred to below simply
as balls) is placed into the body 1 of the container, the opening 4 is tightly sealed
by the middle lid 3, and the opening 4 is sealed by the outer lid 2. At this time,
a large gap K develops between the balls B and the lower surface of the middle lid
3. The reason why a container on the large size in which such a large gap can develop
is used is so to be able to cope with increases or decreases in the volume of the
balls. Namely, if the container is made on the large size, even if the overall volume
of the balls is somewhat large, there is ample space and the balls can be accommodated.
For example, balls with a diameter of 0.76 mm generally have a tolerance of ± 0.02
mm. When a large number of balls of a large diameter on the + side of this tolerance
is placed into a container, the overall volume of the balls increases. The volume
of the balls themselves increases according to the cube of the increase in the diameter
of the balls, so with a container without a gap, when a prescribed amount of balls
of prescribed dimensions is placed into it, in the case in which there are a large
number of large balls, the prescribed number of balls ends up not fitting in.
[0014] However, when a large number of balls of prescribed dimensions or smaller than the
prescribed dimensions are placed into a container on the large size of this type,
a gap K such as shown in Figure 2 ends up being formed.
[0015] When a ball manufacturer places solder balls into a container in which a large gap
develops after balls are placed into it and ships it to a consumer, during shipping,
the balls are shaken or made to tumble within the container and rub against the wall
surface of the container. As a result, the surface of the balls ends up becoming black,
and the solder balls end up being charged with static electricity. Blackening or electrical
charging of the balls ends up causing soldering defects, dirtying of the vicinity
of solder bumps, and problems such as failure of mounting to take place or excessive
mounting of balls, as described above.
[0016] Due to the fact that blackening or electrical charging of balls in this manner is
caused by a large gap within a container, means for getting rid of the gap have been
conceived. One means is to fill a gap which forms in a container with a packing. As
a packing for preventing movement of balls, it has been proposed to crumple up sheets
of paper or polyethylene or the like and to cram them into the gap. However, with
a packing made from crumpled sheet material, balls ends up penetrating into gaps in
the crumpled material, and when the packing is removed, balls fly out therewith and
end up being scattered in the periphery.
[0017] As shown in Figure 3, it has been conceived of packing with a packing P made of sponge.
However, if the balls are pressed until the sponge packing gets rid of a gap, the
solder balls continuously receive the elastic reaction from the packing, and with
the passage of a prolonged period of time, soft balls made of tin or lead end up being
deformed, and at the time of solder bump formation, they cannot be accurately mounted
by a ball mounting apparatus, resulting in failure of mounting to take place.
[0018] The object of this invention is to provide a solder ball container which prevents
blackening and charging with electricity and does not produce deformation during transport
of solder balls which fill the container.
[0019] The blackening and charging with static electricity of balls is due to balls being
shaken and tumbled during transport and rubbing against the wall surface of a container
as described above. Namely, the blackening of balls is caused by the surface of the
balls being scraped when the balls rub against the wall surface of the container,
and fine solder powder falls from the surfaces of the balls. Solder powder has a large
surface area, so it is easily oxidized and blackened, and it adheres to balls, or
it adheres to the vicinity of solder bumps after soldering, and it produces an unsightly
blemish. As for charging of balls with static electricity, balls which tumble within
the container during transport rub the wall surface of the container and static electricity
is generated, so the balls end up being charged.
[0020] The present inventors perceived that if balls which are placed in a container are
not vibrated by a large amount or made to tumble during transport, blackening or electrical
charging of balls can be prevented, and thereby created the present invention.
[0021] The present invention is a solder ball container in which the opening of a cylindrical
body with a bottom is sealed by an outer lid, characterized in that a projection having
a shape which will not deform solder balls when it is inserted into a plurality of
solder balls packed into the container is installed in the opening of the container.
[0022] Figure 1 is an exploded perspective view of an existing solder ball container.
[0023] Figure 2 is a cross-sectional view showing the state in which solder balls are packed
into the existing solder ball container.
[0024] Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view showing the state in which solder balls are packed
into another existing solder ball container.
[0025] Figure 4 is an exploded perspective view of a solder ball container according to
the present invention.
[0026] Figure 5(1), Figure 5(2), and Figure 5(3) are cross-sectional views of various types
of projections used in a solder ball container according to the present invention.
[0027] Figure 6 is an exploded perspective view showing another mode of a solder ball container
according to the present invention.
[0028] Figure 7 is a cross-sectional view showing the state in which solder balls are packed
into a solder ball container according to the present invention.
[0029] As shown in the exploded perspective view of Figure 4, a solder ball container according
to the present invention is composed of a body 1 which is made from a cylindrical
member which has a bottom and which is made of a transparent material such as glass
or plastic, an outer lid 2, and a middle lid 3. An opening 4 is formed in the upper
portion, and a male thread 5 is formed on the outside of the upper portion. The outer
lid 2 is in the shape of a cap, and a female thread 6, which threadingly engages with
the male thread 5 of the body 1 is formed on the inside thereof.
[0030] According to the present invention, the middle lid 3 is formed from a cylindrical
body having a shallow bottom, a projection 8 is provided on the bottom portion, the
outer diameter has approximately the same diameter as the opening 4 of the body 1,
and a flange 7 is formed on the upper portion. The middle lid 3 is arranged so as
to seal the opening 4 when the flange 7 is fit on the opening 4 of the body 1.
[0031] A projection 8 used in a solder ball container according to the present invention
has a shape such that even if its tip is inserted into a packed layer of balls within
the container, it will not deform the balls by compressing them. For example, the
cross section of the projection 8 can have a streamlined shape as shown in Figure
4 or Figure 5(1), the cross section can have an inverted conical shape as shown in
Figure 5(2), or it can be a cylindrical member with a tip having a semi-spherical
shape as shown in Figure 5(3) or having an unillustrated inverted conical shape.
[0032] If the projection is inserted into a packed layer of balls in a container in which
balls are packed such that a gap can be formed, the projection will push balls out
of the way and the balls will rise to decrease the gap. Therefore, the movement of
balls within the container will decrease and blackening and charging with electricity
will be prevented. Furthermore, if the projection is inserted into a packed layer
of balls within the container, even if somewhat of a gap remains and the balls try
to move during transport, the projection will prevent the balls from moving.
[0033] Namely, a container according to the present invention is arranged such that the
projection 8 decreases the gap K and at the same time prevents the balls from moving,
whereby blackening and electrical charging of balls is prevented.
[0034] If a projection used in the present invention is made such that its projecting length
can be adjusted (arrow A) as shown in Figure 5(3), the projection 8 can be moved in
accordance with changes in the volume of balls in the container, and the gap K can
be made as small as possible.
[0035] In the illustrated example, the projection is mounted on the middle lid, but it may
also be directly mounted on the upper lid. In this case, the middle lid may be omitted.
[0036] Namely, a container according to the present invention can be one in which a projection
is formed on the middle lid, and the outer lid and the projection are formed separately
from each other, or it can be one in which the outer lid and the projection are completely
integral with each other, or it can be one in which the outer lid and the projection
are fitted together to form a single body.
[0037] Figure 6 is an exploded perspective view showing still another mode of the solder
ball container according to the present invention shown in Figure 5(3). In this figure,
the same symbols as in Figure 4 indicate the same components. In the illustrated example,
the middle lid 10 comprises a cylindrical body 12 having a flange, and a sliding body
14 which fits therewith and which has a projection 8 on its bottom portion. Shallow
annular grooves 16 are provided on the sliding surfaces of the cylindrical body 12
and the sliding body 14. They can slide with respect to each other and be maintained
in a desired position. Instead of being provided with annular grooves 16, the surfaces
of the sliding surfaces can be simply roughened to enable sliding and retaining.
[0038] Next, the operation and effects of the container according to the present invention
shown in Figure 4 will be described more specifically.
[0039] The embodiment shown in Figure 4 has a projection formed on the middle lid, and the
projection 8 is formed so that it projects downward from the bottom portion 9 of the
middle lid 3. The projection has a streamlined shape, and its tip is rounded. An appropriate
size for the projection is such that when it is inserted into balls in the container,
a gap of approximately 3 to 8% of the volume of the body can be formed in the upper
portion of the body. Namely, the size of the projection is such that when the projection
is inserted into balls within the container, a small gap remains within the upper
portion.
[0040] Next, the condition will be described in which balls are packed into a container
according to the present invention and the projection is inserted into the balls.
First, a prescribed quantity of balls B is placed into the body 1. The volume of the
body is a little large so that a gap will be formed in the upper portion at this time
when a prescribed amount of balls having prescribed dimensions are placed into it.
When the balls B are inserted and the middle lid 3 is fitted on the opening 4 of the
body 1 in the upper portion of which a gap is formed such that the flange 7 seals
the upper portion of the opening, the projection 8 penetrates into the balls B packed
in the body 1 as shown in Figure 7. The balls which are pushed out of the way by the
penetration of the projection 8 rise up and the gap K becomes small. Then, the outer
lid 2 is screwed onto the male thread 5 of the opening to perform sealing.
[0041] In the mode shown in Figure 5(3) and Figure 6, if the projection 8 is further penetrated
into the interior after the middle lid is fit onto the opening 4, it is possible to
make the size of the gap K at this time as small as possible.
[0042] A blackening test was carried out on balls in a container according to the present
invention and an existing container. The containers had a volume of 100cc, and 250,000
balls measuring 0.76 mm ± 0.01 mm were placed therein. The projection used in the
container according to the present invention had a streamlined shape like that shown
in Figure 4 and was formed on the middle lid, and it had a volume of approximately
7cc.
[0043] The existing container was one with a middle lid of cylindrical shape with a shallow
bottom, as shown in Figure 1.
[0044] The containers packed with balls were placed in a rotating machine and were rotated
at 150 rotations per minute. As a result, the balls in the existing container began
to blacken at 20 minutes, and at 30 minutes they ended up being completely blackened.
When the blackened balls were thereafter removed from the container, some of the balls
were seen adhering to each other.
[0045] On the other hand, blackening of the balls in the container according to the present
invention did not take place even after 30 minutes had elapsed, and there was no adhesion
of the balls to each other when they were removed from the container.
[0046] As described above, a container according to the present invention has a projection
installed in the opening of a body, and the projection will not deform balls when
it is inserted into a large number of balls, so balls which are packed within the
body can be raised without imparting any deformation at all to the balls and a gap
can be made small, whereby not only can movement of the balls be decreased, but the
movement of the balls can be further prevented by insertion of the projection into
the balls, so that even if balls packed in the container are subjected to vibration
or shaking during transport, the balls do not undergo blackening or electrical charging,
thereby providing an excellent effect not existing in the past.
1. A solder ball container in which an opening of a cylindrical body having a bottom
is sealed by an outer lid, characterized in that a projection having a shape which will not deform solder balls when it is inserted
into a packed layer of a large number of solder balls within the container is installed
in the opening of the container.
2. A solder ball container as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the projecting length of the projection into a packed layer of solder balls can be
adjusted.
3. A solder ball container as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the projection is integral with the outer lid.
4. A solder ball container as claimed in claim 1 in which the opening is sealed by a
middle lid and an outer lid, and the projection is installed on the middle lid.
5. A solder ball container as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that the projection is separate from the middle lid and its projecting length into the
packed layer of solder balls can be adjusted.
6. A solder ball container as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that the projection is integral with the middle lid.
7. A solder ball container as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the projection has a cross section with a streamlined shape.
8. A solder ball container as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the projection has a cross section with an inverted conical shape.
9. A solder ball container as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the projection is a cylinder with a tip having a semi-spherical or inverted conical
shape.