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EMI Shielding Cover Assembly and Rework Guide: SMT Soldering Techniques

3 月 24, 2026
技术资讯
~10 min read

EMI Shielding CoverAssembly and Rework Guide: SMT Soldering Techniques

Complete PCB assembly and rework operation guide for shielding covers. From PCB design, soldering parameters, inspection methods to rework best practices, providing reference for SMT engineers and repair technicians.

RS
Ruishuo Metal Manufacturing Department
Published March 19, 2024 · 10 minute read

PCB Design and Footprint Specifications

Shielding cover soldering quality first depends on careful planning during PCB design.

Pad (Footprint) Design Specifications

  • Frame Pads: Must cover all solder edges of the shield can frame, minimum width 0.5mm, recommended 1.0-1.5mm
  • Pad Spacing: Gap between pads ≥ 1.0mm to prevent solder bridging
  • Pad Thickness: Copper thickness ≥ 35 µm (1 oz) to ensure soldering strength
  • Via Design: Place sufficient vias around pads (spacing ≤ 2mm) to provide thermal relief paths
  • Solder Mask: Remove solder mask at pads to ensure solder paste contacts bare copper

Design Verification Checklist

  • ✓ Frame pad width ≥ 0.5mm
  • ✓ Pad area ≥ 95% of can frame solder area
  • ✓ Pad spacing without solder mask interference
  • ✓ Adequate thermal relief vias to prevent solder float

Solder Paste Selection and Application

Solder Paste Specifications

  • Composition: Recommended SAC305 (Sn96.5/Ag3/Cu0.5) or SAC387, RoHS compliant
  • Particle Size: Type 4 or Type 3, powder diameter 25-45 µm
  • Viscosity: Recommended 800-900 Pa·s @ 25°C for printability without excessive flow
  • Flux Activity: Medium activity (ROL0) to prevent over-activation and corrosion
  • Storage Conditions: Cold chain storage 2-8°C, use within 24 hours of opening

Solder Paste Printing Parameters

Parameter Specification Remarks
Stencil Thickness 125-150 µm Recommended 125 µm for precise control
Print Speed 20-50 mm/s Fast printing (40+ mm/s) ensures uniform paste
Squeegee Angle 45° Standard angle ensures complete filling
Paste Thickness 100-150 µm For shield cans recommend 120-150 µm for full solder joints
Paste Volume 90-110% of pad area Ensures complete solder, prevents voids or splashing

Reflow Soldering (Reflow) Parameter Optimization

Shielding cover soldering requires careful reflow temperature control, especially for large cans.

Standard Reflow Temperature Profile

  • Preheat Phase (Preheat): Temperature 150-200°C, duration 60-120 seconds. Purpose is to preheat solder paste and PCB to prevent splashing
  • Soak Phase (Soak): Temperature 200-250°C, duration 60-180 seconds. Solvents in solder paste evaporate, flux activates
  • Reflow Phase (Reflow): Peak temperature 245-260°C, duration 10-30 seconds. Solder paste melts and forms metal bond with PCB and can
  • Cooling Phase (Cooling): Temperature drop < 5°C/second (prevent rapid cooling causing joint cracking), cool to room temperature

Large Shielding Can Soldering Tips

For cans > 50mm, large metal mass and high thermal capacity require special attention:

  • Extend preheat time to 120 seconds
  • Peak temperature can increase to 255-260°C, not exceeding 260°C
  • Use infrared thermometer or thermal imaging to verify can bottom reaches 245°C or higher
  • Consider using dual-stage or zone reflow techniques

Post-Assembly Inspection Methods

Visual Inspection (AOI)

  • Solder Joint Integrity: Joints should be bright silvery, no black oxidation or dull appearance
  • Solder Coverage: Solder covers ≥ 95% of pad area, no visible gaps
  • Solder Splashing: No solder balls > 0.5mm around joints
  • Cold Joint Detection: Joint surfaces should have no indentations or irregular shapes

X-Ray Inspection (for High-Reliability Applications)

  • Check internal voids in solder joints (< 25% void ratio acceptable)
  • Verify complete solder paste filling, especially at can edges
  • Detect hidden cold spots or cracks

Electrical Testing

  • Ground Impedance Test: Impedance between can and PCB ground < 50 mΩ (test conditions: 25°C, DC, 1A)
  • Insulation Resistance: Between can and adjacent signal lines > 10 MΩ (DC 500V)
  • Shielding Performance: Optional Faraday cage test to verify shielding effectiveness ≥ 95% of design value

Rework and Removal Techniques

Rework Process

Step 1: Fault Diagnosis

Before removal, confirm the can actually has a defect (soldering fault, damage, etc.). Electrical testing confirms poor grounding or isolation failure.

Step 2: Heating and Desoldering

  • Heat the area around the shielding can with hot air gun (temperature 350-400°C) for 30-60 seconds
  • Gently push the can to feel solder softening signal
  • Use solder wick or vacuum solder sucker to remove solder
  • Perform multi-stage heating and desoldering to avoid PCB overheating

Step 3: Can Removal

  • Once solder is sufficiently soft, gently pry up one corner of the can with tweezers
  • Gently rock and shake (not pulling hard), gradually separating solder
  • Maintain temperature during removal to prevent cooling

Step 4: PCB Cleaning

  • After removal, use solder sucker to remove excess solder
  • Use lead-free solder wick to clean pads
  • Wash with isopropyl alcohol to remove paste residue and flux
  • Important: Inspect pads per IPC-A-610 standard to check for damage

Step 5: Re-soldering

  • Inspect pads; if copper is intact, can apply fresh solder paste
  • If pads are damaged, use conductive silver adhesive or solder wire for repair
  • Re-reflow using normal parameters

Common Defects and Solutions

Defect Symptom Root Cause Analysis Solution
Cold Joint Insufficient solder paste, low reflow temperature, poor PCB preheating Increase paste thickness to 150 µm; raise peak temperature to 255°C; extend preheat time
Solder Balls/Splashing Excessive paste thickness, fast reflow ramp, overactive flux Reduce paste thickness; lower peak ramp rate; switch to moderate-activity paste
Poor Grounding Pad oxidation, old solder paste, insufficient soldering temperature Check paste storage period; clean pad surfaces; raise reflow temperature 5-10°C
Can Warping Uneven paste volume, PCB warping, asymmetric pad design Improve paste printing; check PCB flatness; optimize pad distribution
Cold Solder Insufficient temperature, fast cooling, contamination Raise peak temperature to 255°C; reduce cooling rate; strengthen cleaning

Best Practices Checklist

Design Phase

  • ☐ Frame pad width ≥ 1.0mm
  • ☐ Via spacing ≤ 2mm
  • ☐ Solder mask clarity verification

Soldering Preparation

  • ☐ Solder paste cold-chain storage, warm to 23°C 30 minutes before opening
  • ☐ Stencil cleanliness check for residual paste or contaminants
  • ☐ Solder paste viscosity test within 800-900 Pa·s range

Soldering Process

  • ☐ Reflow oven temperature profile verification (after first use or parameter changes)
  • ☐ Solder paste thickness 120-150 µm
  • ☐ Baking pan preheat (optional but recommended)

Inspection Phase

  • ☐ AOI pass rate ≥ 99%
  • ☐ Ground impedance < 50 mΩ
  • ☐ Sampling of shielding performance or X-ray inspection (high-reliability applications)

Rework Standards

  • ☐ Rework not exceeding 2 times
  • ☐ Post-rework pad quality not lower than first-soldering standard
  • ☐ 100% electrical testing after rework

Frequently Asked Questions

Shielding can soldering failure rate is very high, what should I do?
Usually solder parameters or paste quality issue. Recommended: (1) Use infrared thermometer to verify can bottom reaches 245°C; (2) Check paste viscosity and storage period; (3) Optimize paste thickness to 120-150 µm. If problems persist, consider hand soldering with solder wire + wave soldering process.
How to repair if pad is damaged during rework?
Minor damage (copper layer still partially intact): Use solder wick and solder wire for repair. Severe damage (complete copper loss): Use conductive silver adhesive to attach can. If multiple rework attempts destroy all pads, the PCB should be scrapped and not reworked further.
How to troubleshoot poor grounding after can soldering?
Use multimeter resistance mode to test impedance between can and PCB ground, should be < 50 mΩ. If > 100 mΩ, soldering defect exists. Check: (1) Is it cold joint (X-ray or pressure test); (2) Is solder paste oxidized; (3) Is pad isolated by flux residue. Solution is rework or add solder wire reinforcement.
Why do large cans (>50mm) often warp after soldering?
Large can thermal mass is high, uneven cooling causes non-uniform shrinkage and warping. Solutions: (1) Extend preheat to 120 seconds for uniform heating; (2) Optimize pad distribution for symmetry; (3) Consider baking pan preheat; (4) Reduce cooling rate, especially 200-100°C section.
Can shielding cans be reworked multiple times?
Theoretically yes, but recommend no more than 2 times. Multiple reworks cause: (1) Copper pad wear-out, eventually unable to solder; (2) PCB substrate moisture absorption and swelling, reduced solder strength; (3) Solder joint thermal-fatigue, reliability reduced. Best practice is first-time soldering quality, minimizing rework rate.
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