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Letter 0010
Tarnish/Discoloration of Nickel plate after
semi-aqueous cleaning
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We've run into a bit of a problem of nickel discoloration
on some heatsinks. We build Mil-Spec high reliability
computers. In one case the modules has electroless nickel on
copper heatsinks. The heatsink looks vaguely like a ladder
and is bonded to FR-4 multilayer circuit board (printed
wiring board, or PWB). Chips straddle the rungs and are
bonded down with epoxy and are soldered into the PWB using
RMA rosin flux and a wave solder machine.
We installed a semi-aqueous PWB cleaning system and the
heatsinks are coming out with black water spots (well,
that's a bit over stated, there are water spot shaped areas
ranging from clear tan to blackish). We're desperate to find
out what's causing the discoloration and more importantly,
how to avoid it. (Discoloration of nickel plating does not
meet Mil-Spec) The cleaning process is a batch
process with 4 sumps and a drying bay. The first sump is
Axarel 46, a DuPont devised, now Petroferm sold hydrocarbon
mixture (aliphatic hydrocarbon with dibasic esters: isobutyl
glutarate, adipate, succinate and surfactant) - temperature
120 F, ~10-20 minute immersion, immersion spray agitation
The second sump is an emulsion of DI water and Axarel -
temperature 140 F, 5 minute immersion, immersion spray
agitation Third and fourth sumps are DI water, 140 F, 5
minute immersion in each, immersion spray agitation. Final
sump is hot air, 190 F, the rack is in the bay for 6
minutes, there is a slit nozzle at the top of the bay to act
as hot air knife to blow surface water off. Naturally the
problem is mainly showing up on product, not test coupons.
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We did reproduce a mild case of the discoloration after taking a
chunk of heatsink, bonding it to a PWB, putting epoxy tape on it,
fluxing it, running it through the wave solder and then cleaning it.
The discoloration appears to occur in the last spots water is
standing after coming out of the final rinse before drying. We also
tried cleaning a section of heatsink as-received, and after bonding
to a PWB. Neither had appreciable discoloration. We sent the
as-received and discolored heatsink section out for ESCA analysis of
both discolored and non-discolored areas.
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The as-received was dirtiest- ~2% Ni at the surface, 80%
C, 10% O, smattering of Cu, Pb, Sn, P. Unstained area on
stained heatsink - 20% Ni, 56% C, smattering of Cu, Pb, P.
Stained area on stained heatsink - 18% Ni, 61 %C, smattering
of Cu, Pb, P 40 Angstroms down Esca shows as-received - 20%
Ni, 60%C, smattering of Cu, Pb, P Unstained area - 70% Ni,
20%C, 7%P Stained area - 65% Ni, 25%C, 9%P Visually at 200X
the stained area has a transparent brown tint versus the
silver surface elsewhere. There are iridescent spots visible
over all the surface, perhaps tending to slightly larger
spots in the darker areas. (Possibly residual hydrocarbon? -
it does have a boiling point of 350 F)
Anyone have thoughts as to what it is, how better to
identify it, or how to prevent forming it? We got a
suggestion that electroless typically would have an
inhibitor applied to prevent discoloration, is this common?
Would the cleaning process remove this?
Steven Axdal
- Bloomington MN
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if your electroless nickel has 80% carbon on the surface
when you receive it, I believe that is the problem. I don't
think there should be any post treatment on the electroless
nickel. It is not needed, I doubt you asked for it, and that
is not MilSpec.
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