Apps support surface-mount-device virtual prototyping

April 18, 2016

Burlington, MA. Engineers at BE CAE & Test (Catania, Italy) have taken the simulation process beyond the typical approach of “run a test/deliver a report.” Instead, using COMSOL Multiphysics software and Application Builder, they have created a series of easy-to-use custom applications that perform state-of-the-art virtual prototyping of their customers’ surface-mount device designs. The apps hide the complexity of the underlying detailed model, yet still provide access to the powerful functionality of the simulation.

Thermal management techniques ensure the efficiency of electronic devices, improve reliability, and prevent premature failure. Numerical simulation is an important part of the process, allowing engineers to analyze and optimize temperature and air flow early in the design. BE CAE & Test is creating custom applications to give device designers interactive tools to access, analyze, and share the vast amount of information available from the mathematical models they created without needing app users to be simulation specialists themselves.

“Apps mark a revolutionary page in the history of mathematical modeling and numerical simulation,” said Giuseppe Petrone, FEA expert and co-founder of BE CAE & Test. “These specialized and user-friendly tools bring the power of numerical simulation to a larger group of users. People with no prior experience from FEA or mathematical modeling can access, exploit, and benefit from analysis. As such, simulation apps can create more business opportunities with customers. Beyond simply providing them with a technical report, you are also supplying them with an interactive tool.”

The app created by BE CAE & Test for surface-mount device designs conducts a thermal analysis that allows users to evaluate a variety of important thermal characteristics. The temperature distribution within the device, maximum temperature reached, junction-to-case thermal resistance as a function of solder thickness, and dissipated power and constitutive material of the solder and the die are among the results presented to the app user.

“Apps offer an innovative way of interacting with customers,” stated Petrone. “Rather than simply sending simulation results to them, you can provide customers with a flexible tool that they can use to investigate the problem on their own—all while ensuring accuracy in their results.”

Petrone continued, “‘What happens in my system if…?’ is a question that the team at BE CAE & Test typically hears when first meeting with customers. Traditionally, our reply was, ‘Let us build a reference model for your system and then carry out parametrical simulations. We will be able to give you useful predictions, which are an essential advantage to virtual prototyping.’ Now, with the use of simulation apps, we have a much simpler reply, ‘Let us provide you with a COMSOL software app, and you will be able to check yourself.’”

http://www.be-caetest.it/

www.comsol.com/contact

About the Author

Rick Nelson | Contributing Editor

Rick is currently Contributing Technical Editor. He was Executive Editor for EE in 2011-2018. Previously he served on several publications, including EDN and Vision Systems Design, and has received awards for signed editorials from the American Society of Business Publication Editors. He began as a design engineer at General Electric and Litton Industries and earned a BSEE degree from Penn State.

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