In metallurgy, flux is a substance which facilitates soldering, brazing, and welding by chemically cleaning the metals to be joined. Common fluxes are: ammonium chloride or rosin for soldering tin; hydrochloric acid and zinc chloride for soldering galvanized iron (and other zinc surfaces); and borax for brazing, and welding ferrous metals.
A number of Standards exist to define the various flux types. The principle standard is J-STD-004.
J-STD-004 characterises the flux by type (e.g. Rosin (RO), Resin (RE), Organic (OR), Inorganic (IN)), its activity (strength of fluxing) and reliability of residue from a surface insulation resistance (SIR) and electromigration standpoint, and whether or not it contains halide activators.
This replaces the old MIL QQS standard which defined fluxes as:
| R | (Rosin) |
| RMA | (Rosin Mildly Activated) |
| RA | (Rosin Activated) |
| WS | (Water soluble) |
Any of these catergories (except WS) may be no-clean, or not, depending on the chemistry selected and the standard that the manufacturer requires.
The function of flux is primarily to remove oxide, with the general formula being:
Salts are ionic in nature and can cause problems from metallic leeching or dendrite growth, with possible product failure. In some cases, particularly in high-reliabiliy applications, flux residues must be removed.
J-STD-004 includes tests for electromigration and surface insulation resistance (which must be greater than 100 MΩ after 168 hours at elevated temperature and humidity with a DC bias applied).
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"Flux (metallurgy)".
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