A novel inspection technique for electronic components using thermography (NITECT)

Date

2020-09-03

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

1424-8220

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Liu H, Tinsley L, Lam W, et al., (2020) A novel inspection technique for electronic components using thermography (NITECT). Sensors, Volume 20, Issue 17, September 2020, Article number 5013

Abstract

Unverified or counterfeited electronic components pose a big threat globally because they could lead to malfunction of safety-critical systems and reduced reliability of high-hazard assets. The current inspection techniques are either expensive or slow, which becomes the bottleneck of large volume inspection. As a complement of the existing inspection capabilities, a pulsed thermography-based screening technique is proposed in this paper using a digital twin methodology. A FEM-based simulation unit is initially developed to simulate the internal structure of electronic components with deviations of multiple physical properties, informed by X-ray data, along with its thermal behaviour under exposure to instantaneous heat. A dedicated physical inspection unit is then integrated to verify the simulation unit and further improve the simulation by taking account of various uncertainties caused by equipment and samples. Principle component analysis is used for feature extraction, and then a set of machine learning-based classifiers are employed for quantitative classification. Evaluation results of 17 chips from different sources successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed technique

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

quantitative classification, feature selection, numerical simulation, pulsed thermography, unverified electronic components

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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