Quality Challenges and Risk Mitigation for Passive Components in Harsh Environments

The paper “Quality Challenges and Risk Mitigation for Passive Components in Harsh Environments” was presented by Antonio Rodríguez Arenas, ALTER Technology, Seville, Spain at the 5th PCNS Passive Components Networking Symposium 9-12th September 2025, Seville, Spain as Keynote II. paper.

This paper was selected by the TPC Technical Program Committee as one of the six top papers for award nomination. 

Introduction

This paper addresses the challenges and solutions involved in the procurement and qualification of passive electronic components—resistors, capacitors, inductors, and connectors—for harsh environments such as aerospace, military, and industrial applications.

In these contexts, extreme temperatures, mechanical stress, and environmental factors can lead to catastrophic failures if components are not thoroughly vetted. With increasing reliance on Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) parts, ensuring reliability under mission-critical and time-constrained conditions requires rigorous inspection protocols, clear communication, and adherence to both industry standards and evolving best practices.

Key Points

Extended Summary

The study begins by situating the importance of passive components in high-reliability environments, where failure can lead to costly or life-threatening outcomes. While industry and space agencies have introduced standards like ECSS-Q-ST-70-02C, ESCC 21001, and MIL-STD-202 for inspection and environmental testing, gaps remain in addressing COTS-specific issues such as pure tin plating, enamel-coated wires, and complex assembly interactions.

The paper presents six detailed case studies:

  1. Peeling in D-Sub Crimp Contacts – Cracks and gold/nickel plating detachment were traced to excessive phosphorous content in nickel underlayers. This resulted in ECSS non-compliance and contamination risk, emphasizing the need for tight plating control and transparent manufacturer communication.
  2. Loss of Electrical Contact in SMD Inductor – Conductive epoxy assembly over gold pads failed due to trapped enamel on coil wires, highlighting that epoxy attachment is not inherently compatible with all wire-wound components.
  3. Mechanical Shock Test Fixture Failure – A single connector failure was linked to test fixture design rather than component quality, illustrating the critical role of mechanical setup validation in environmental testing.
  4. Outgassing and Solderability Test Interaction – Flux residues from solderability tests caused false outgassing failures. Sequencing of tests, sample control, and enhanced cleaning protocols were implemented to prevent contamination-driven rejection.
  5. Cracking in Chip Ceramic Capacitors – Internal cracks were a result of improper preconditioning before solderability testing, not factory defects. Applying manufacturer-specific preconditioning and using SAM for non-destructive analysis prevented repeat failures.
  6. Thin Wire Inductor and Relay Solder Joint Issues – Ultra-fine wire inductors and hermetic relays showed latent failures due to mechanical stress and solder joint cracking. Enhanced precap inspection, multidirectional visual checks, and careful handling of ultra-thin wires were critical to long-term reliability.

Across these studies, recurring themes emerge: Many failures result from the interaction between components and processes rather than inherent material defects. Inspection methods such as SEM, DPA, and SAM are indispensable in identifying hidden hazards. Communication gaps and late-stage discovery of incompatibilities remain a major risk driver, often compounded by rigid interpretation of legacy standards that lack COTS-specific guidance.

The paper emphasizes that robust qualification benefits from early supplier engagement, clear definition of process constraints, and continuous feedback loops. Corrective actions—ranging from rework validation to fixture redesign—must be grounded in thorough root cause analysis and supported by documentation to maintain confidence in flight hardware.

Conclusion

Ensuring the reliability of passive components in harsh environments requires a combination of technical rigor, process adaptability, and cross-disciplinary communication.

The case studies demonstrate that many issues can be mitigated by proactive planning, careful test sequencing, enhanced inspection methods, and adherence to both standards and manufacturer recommendations. By institutionalizing lessons learned and fostering stronger supplier partnerships, the high-reliability electronics community can reduce risk, improve qualification efficiency, and better adapt to the growing use of COTS components in mission-critical applications.

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