Hello, I did some homework on this topic already but for clarity I wanted to ask few specific questions, perhaps someone with greater experience can help me out to understand who is doing what wrong and how to remedy that.
We have batch of boards FR170, no visible issues, hand assembles two as a test hot air reflown and no issues, however when we received batch of same boards from US based assembly house, some boards have issues with moisture under ICs, to the point where it alters Voltage regulator's performance as well as main IC performance, at first I did not know what is going on until I accidentally traced issue to moisture under IC when I was reflowing it and it popped, if you apply generous amount of flux you can even see at you heat it up some bubbles seeping out from under IC for awhile. I also took one of the problem boards, soaked few ICs with denaturated alcohol then dried it slowly with FAN and it seem to perform better after that. Also assembly house did tell me that they use closed loop water washing system so apparently it is a water under there.
So my few questions are:
1. Once water accumulated under IC, how long can it stay there, will it ever evaporate on its own?
2. Will drying board with hot air for some time get water out of there, and once it out, is it necessary to seal it with conformal coating or once out it will never get under there from the air?
3. Are there any specific chemicals that can displace water from under all components, kind of similar to what WD-40 does in metalworking industry but for PCBs?
4. What is the best option to avoid washing the board at all, my assemble provider uses lead free solder paste, I am not sure how necessary it is to wash the board after that, if there are no chemicals left after baking the board that will corrode it overtime, i'd rather just let it in there without washing.
Any advice on consumer level electronics production solder paste is highly appreciated, and thank you in advance for any help in this.