Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7924253 Materials Science and Engineering: B 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
After heat treatment at 400 °C the effective resistivities of typical Ni-coated Cu conductor wires increased by up to 6.9% as a result of Ni-Cu interdiffusion. Direct Ni-Cu interdiffusion experiments were performed between metal foils at temperatures of 400-600 °C for times up to 192 h. Calculated activation energies were in range 80-90 kJ mol−1, consistent with a grain boundary diffusion mechanism. Analysis of published Ni-Cu interdiffusion coefficients suggested a clear dependence on grain size and grain shape. A concentric circle model was developed to simulate changes in composition and effective resistivity in the Ni-Cu wires as a function of time. It was predicted that it would take 1.4 × 105 h at 400 °C for 10% increase in the effective resistivity of an AWG18-Class27 conductor wire. Good agreement between simulated and experimental data for effective resistivity was only achieved by employing effective diffusion coefficients corrected for microstructural effects.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
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