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by Animats 1564 days ago
The reliability problem could be solved only by replacing soldering with another method of making electrical connections during PCB assembly, e.g. thermal/ultrasonic welding of copper on copper, metal deposition in vacuum etc.

There's been some interest in laser welding for PCB assembly. But most modern components are not designed with the pins out where you can get at them with a laser beam. Laser welding is commonly used to weld the connections in automotive battery packs, so it does work.

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If you can get the parts you need in SSOP or TSSOP packaging, with the pins visible from straight down, laser brazing might work.

Brazing is done at higher temperatures than soldering, but with a laser, you can apply the heat to just the area of interest, and hopefully not cook the ICs. Laser soldering already exists, and there are laser cutters, so adapting one for laser brazing ought to be possible.

The advantage of brazing is that you can use many more materials, most of which don't contain either tin or lead. Low-cost aluminum brazing rod or wire might work. Working temp around 700C. This is going to take careful heat management. Worth a try for aerospace applications.

Low-temp aluminum brazing rod has cadmium.