JAJSFT0B November 2017 – November 2019 TAS5720A-Q1
PRODUCTION DATA.
During the PCB assembly process, a piece of metal called a stencil on top of the PCB and deposits solder paste on the PCB wherever there is an opening (called an aperture) in the stencil. The stencil determines the quantity and the location of solder paste that is applied to the PCB in the electronic manufacturing process. In most cases, the aperture for each of the component pads is almost the same size as the pad itself.
However, the thermal pad on the PCB is quite large and depositing a large, single deposition of solder paste would lead to manufacturing issues. Instead, the solder is applied to the board in multiple apertures, to allow the solder paste to outgas during the assembly process and reduce the risk of solder bridging under the device. This structure is called an aperture array, and is shown in the Layout Example section. It is important that the total area of the aperture array (the area of all of the small apertures combined) covers between 70% and 80% of the area of the thermal pad itself.