
The term “Physics of Failure” is used when referring to the underlying mechanism that has driven a failure mode. I have issue with the words “Physics” in this phrase as a “catch all.” This implies we are only working with physical or kinematic interactions when studying product wear-out. Wear-out failures are rooted in chemistry as well. Most electronic failures are chemistry based. If a failure can be tracked back to a material property change, dielectrics, brittleness, transformation (oxidation), strength loss based on property change without fatigue, we have a chemistry problem. Mechanical physics does not play a part in understanding the input and response relationship or assist with creating an accelerated life model in these cases.