Wave soldering is suitable for the welding of large area and large batch PCB, and it is widely used in the industrial production of electronic products welding. Wave soldering is to make the welding surface of the plug-in plate directly contact with the high-temperature liquid tin to achieve the purpose of welding. The high-temperature liquid tin keeps a slope, and the special device makes the liquid tin form a wave like phenomenon, so it is called "wave soldering", and its main material is solder strip Wave soldering machine is mainly composed of transport belt, flux adding area, preheating area and wave soldering furnace. The main purpose of the transport belt is to send the circuit board to the wave soldering machine, along the way through the flux adding area, preheating area, wave soldering furnace, etc. Flux adding area is mainly composed of infrared sensor and nozzle. The function of the infrared sensor is to sense whether there is a circuit board entering. If there is a sensor, the width of the circuit board will be measured. The function of flux is to form a protective film on the welding surface of circuit board. The preheating zone provides sufficient temperature to form good solder joints. The infrared heating can make the circuit board evenly heated. In the double wave peak welding system, the shock wave part of the wave prevents missing welding, which ensures the proper distribution of solder passing through the circuit board. The solder penetrates through the slit at a relatively high speed, so as to penetrate the narrow gap. The spray direction is the same as that of the circuit board. Shock wave alone can not properly weld components, it leaves uneven and excess solder on the solder joints, so a second wave is needed. The second smooth wave eliminates the burr and welding bridge caused by the first shock wave. The smooth wave is actually the same as the wave used in traditional through-hole plug-in components. Therefore, when the traditional components are welded on a machine, the shock wave can be turned off and the traditional components can be welded with smooth wave.
2. Insufficient wave soldering
A. high operation cost.
In the practical application of wave soldering, the whole plate spraying of flux and the production of tin slag have brought high operation cost; especially in lead-free soldering, because the price of lead-free solder is more than three times of that of lead solder, the increase of operation cost brought by the production of tin slag is amazing. In addition, the lead-free solder continuously melts the copper on the pad, and the composition of the solder in the tin cylinder will change over a long period of time, which needs to be solved by adding pure tin and expensive silver on a regular basis;
B. trouble in maintenance.
The residual flux in the production will stay in the wave soldering transmission system, and the generated tin slag needs to be removed regularly, which brings more complicated equipment maintenance work to users;
C. poor circuit board design brings some difficulties to production.
When some circuit boards are welded, due to the fact that the designer does not consider the actual production situation, no matter what kind of wave soldering parameters we set and various clamps are used, the welding effect is always difficult to fully satisfy people (for example, some key parts always have defects such as poor tin penetration or bridge connection). After wave soldering, repair welding has to be carried out, which reduces the long-term reliability of the product.
III. comparison between selective wave soldering and traditional wave soldering
1. To sum up, the advantages and disadvantages of selective wave soldering and traditional wave soldering are sorted out.
Selective wave soldering has high welding quality and low welding operation cost. It is suitable for small batch and multi model high-quality products. Because of its single point welding and low efficiency, it is not suitable for mass production. The equipment is relatively expensive.
The welding quality of wave soldering is relatively low, but its efficiency is high, it can be mass produced, but its operation cost is high, and some high quality requirements cannot be achieved. The equipment is relatively cheap.