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Solder paste should be stored in a refrigerator and it has an expiration date. But what exactly will go wrong when it is stored at a higher temperature or past its shelf life? From what I know, solder paste is generally small tin balls mixed in flux. I guess that the tin cannot get spoiled anyhow, so will the flux stop working?

Will the solder paste become unusable (for home projects) if stored in wrong conditions, or is it just about not being guaranteed to meet specs for professional use?

Jiří Maier
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    Oxidation rate increases with temp and that impacts surface tension – Tony Stewart EE75 Jun 01 '21 at 19:14
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    The flux paste hardens and it won't flow out of the syringe/dispenser. –  Jun 01 '21 at 19:30
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    there are commercial liquids sold as solder paste reviver solutions, and they worked fine for me for 1 year old (non-refrigerated, hardened) solder paste. – Elementronics Jun 01 '21 at 19:33
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    I haven't seen people storing paste in their refrigerator in a long time, modern paste seems to keep good enough without it. Basements and other places that stay cooler than average though, absolutely. It may depend on your local temperatures and how well you can keep your house cool whether that's enough. It goes without saying to never store it in direct sunlight. – Mast Jun 02 '21 at 06:48

2 Answers2

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But what exactly will go wrong when it is stored at a higher temperature or past its shelf life?

Solder paste is composed of metal microballs and flux. The metal doesn't change over time much; the flux does. Any solvent that maintains flux viscosity can 'dry up' over time and the total mixture becomes less viscous. This is a problem in a manufacturing environment because it can lead to improper flux distribution along a footprint during the stenciling process (especially if the flux (or lack thereof) balls up or has an affinity for itself more than what it is being dispensed onto).

This is mostly a problem in large PCB assembly lines. The problems is if you have any part of the process that doesn't function well, the total production yield goes down, and you have to spend time handworking your designs (like with a tombstoned SMT part). If you were producing quantities of 10000+ this could become a problem very fast, so you try to control every aspect of the design to increase the yield, and bad paste isn't something that assemblers want to deal with). Critical processes such as medical or aerospace will also require designers to follow expiration dates on solder.

That being said:
I operate a small line with quantities in the 10's per year for prototyping. I don't want to order flux every six months or whatever the expiration date is. I bought a large tube of no clean SAC305 solder paste, and it seems to do well well past the expiration date. I've had it for a few years and it still dispenses and spreads on the stencil\PCB well. I also keep this flux in as good of environment as possible by refrigerating the paste and keeping the cap on as much as possible

At a certain point, solder paste can become too dry and it gets hard to work with, but if you're working at home or a small line, all these problems can be handworked (we probably get a few more parts that don't solder correctly and we handwork those. It is much cheaper and faster than going to an assembly house for prototyping).

I have had to rework a few parts and add flux after the fact in a small number of cases, but if you can tolerate that, then use the flux for as long as it works for you. If you're in a production environment then follow the expiration date.

Voltage Spike
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  • What is "no clean" in "no clean SAC305 solder paste"? "no" as in number (e.g., the number being a part number, "SAC305". Or a number of tubes (even if it says "a large tube")?)? Or as in "not clean"? Perhaps rephrase? – Peter Mortensen Jun 02 '21 at 09:16
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    @PeterMortensen "No clean" is a standard term for a type of flux which does not leave a residue to corrode the PCB over time and thus does not have to be cleaned off the board after soldering. – Sneftel Jun 02 '21 at 09:58
  • Technically then (and this is what @PeterMortensen is driving at), it should be hyphenated as "no-clean". Also, incidentally, backslashes are never used as normal slashes in English writing, so that should be "stencil/PCB" (from the last edit). – Cody Gray - on strike Jun 02 '21 at 16:51
  • @CodyGray feel free to edit the answer if you feel that "no clean" should be "no-clean." Occasionally people make typos or other small errors. Fixing them is one way people can contribute. – user57037 Jun 02 '21 at 17:44
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    It's typically marketed as "no clean" – Voltage Spike Jun 02 '21 at 17:53
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    Funny thing, everybody here commenting on syntax shortcomings knows _exactly_ what was said and what it means. – Maple Dec 02 '21 at 07:14
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Thermally stable solder paste is available from a few brands. It can be stored for a year or more in room temperature. Sometimes the flux may separate a bit, but stirring with a stick will restore the consistency, just like in paint.

I've used Chipquik TS391SNL50 solder paste for many years now. Officially it has shelf life of 12 months, but I had my first 50 gram jar for 4 years on my shelf (temperature varies between 20°C and 30°C). When it was running low, I bought a new jar and compared how they worked. In my home level reflow setup (mostly 0603 parts and 0.5 mm pitch ICs) I was not able to detect any difference in how they worked.

jpa
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  • I only use my solder paste occasionally so I was considering buying the SAC305 solder (SMD291SNL15T4) that is rated for 2-year shelf life, but it's like 5X the price of the paste rated for 6 months (NC191SNL50). After reading your answer I am going to save my money and buy the cheaper stuff. – user4574 Jun 07 '23 at 21:47
  • @user4574 Either of those seem quite annoying to use compared to TS391SNL50. The SMD291SNL15T4 is only specified for 2/6 months after you mix the bag. The NC191SNL50 requires refrigeration and warming up before use. Regarding price, a 50g jar at same price is not necessarily a better deal if it expires before you use it all. – jpa Jun 08 '23 at 06:49