PCB cleaner

Closed-Loop, Zero-Discharge PCB Cleaning System in Operation at Manncorp DEMO Center

Posted by Manncorp

ULTIMA STR2-L selective soldering machine
Trident XLD, a fully closed-loop, zero-discharge, aqueous cleaning system, capable of removing both water-soluble or rosin-based flux residues, in addition to other contaminants that can impact the long-term reliability of circuit board assemblies
Electronic assemblers in search of a comprehensive, environmentally-safe solution to their PCB cleaning and defluxing needs will want to visit Manncorp’s East Coast Demo Center for a live look at the Trident XLD. The XLD is a fully closed-loop, zero-discharge, aqueous cleaning system, capable of removing both water-soluble or rosin-based flux residues, in addition to other contaminants that can impact the long-term reliability of circuit board assemblies.

Compatible with a wide range of industry-standard cleaning chemistries, wash solution is automatically mixed, stored, and recovered for re-use in the XLD’s stainless steel wash chamber and plumbing system. The efficiency of the XLD’s wash solvent recovery system has resulted in a 50 to 90 percent reduction in chemical costs compared to other aqueous cleaning technologies. During the rinse cycle, de-ionized water replaces the wash solution and a built-in cleanliness monitor detects when the desired resistivity level is achieved. Twin, counter-rotating, spray bars feature asymmetrical fan-jet nozzles for maximum coverage and penetration into tight areas during both wash and rinse cycles. In the timed drying cycle, convection and radiant heat remove any residual rinse water from the assembly.

Full cleaning profiles (wash/rinse/dry) are created and stored through a Windows®8 operating system with touchscreen user interface, and a comprehensive Statistical Process Control (SPC) system records alpha/numeric recipe names, process times, temperatures, rinse resistivity levels, and other valuable data.

Trident XLD systems also include the ECO-Cycler Rinse Water Recycling System which captures, filters, and re-deionizes rinse water, eliminating the need for drains, wastewater treatment, or discharge permitting. The ECO-Cycler also reduces water use, cutting utility costs and protecting a valuable environmental resource.

To learn more about the Trident XLD or other PCB cleaning systems available from Manncorp, please go to http://www.manncorp.com/smt/cat-78-1/PCB-stencil-cleaning-defluxing-machine.html.

Why No-clean Cleaning Works Today

From Global SMT

Over the past 28 years, the electronics assembly cleaning industry has gone through three distinct periods. There was the period before 1989 when virtually all assemblies were cleaned after soldering. Then there was the period between 1989 and 2005 when cleaning was nearly exclusive realm of military, aerospace and medical (high-reliability assemblers). Now is the current period – 2005 to present – where, according to industry poles, two thirds of all assemblies and 52 percent of all no-clean solder paste application result in cleaning.

Trident LD PCB Cleaning Equipment

Anthropologists believe that the great plagues of the middle ages can be attributed, in part, to the decline in cleanliness standards including personal hygiene in that era. It seems that throughout history, the lack of cleanliness results in undesirable outcomes. Ironic, to say the least, is the fact that in our modern society cleanliness is valued greatly. There is, however, one area in which we pay little attention to cleanliness. This area affects almost every aspect of our lives. This area affects how we communicate, travel, protect ourselves, play, work, eat, and even how we access medical care. This area is electronics. It is nearly impossible to think of life without electronics. We depend on electronics assemblies in nearly every aspect of our lives. Why then do we not demand a higher level of cleanliness with electronics assemblies?

Unfortunately, the answer to that question is common. When industry-favorite solvents were banned due to environmental concerns in 1989, the industry, rather than switching to environmentally responsible alternative solvents chose instead of adopt a no-clean approach. New low-residue flux formulations were introduced, leaving only small amounts of flux residue on the assemblies. the volume of resides left on the assemblies was, at that time, considered to be acceptable. the industry weighed the cost of switching to alternative solvents and compatible equipment against accepting small amounts of residues on assemblies. Cost savings won. But not everyone abandoned cleaning. Military, medical, aerospace and other high-reliability maintained a cleaning program. Most of these industries switched to alternative cleaning technologies, most often aqueous-based cleaning methods. It seems that cleaning is required only when reliability is paramount.

This dual alternate universe, 100 percent leaning of every assembly with high-reliability assemblers vs. 100 percent not-cleaning of commercial assemblers, lived mostly happily side by side for many years. over time, however, many commercial assemblers have adopted a cleaning process. As referenced earlier, two thirds of all assemblers state that they clean between 25-100 percent of their assemblies. Of the multitude of commercial assemblers using no-clean solder pastes, 52 percent of them are cleaning after reflow. What is the driver for the rapid rise in the amount of assemblers adopting or readopting a cleaning process?

There are many factors that drive our industry back to cleaning. In fact, the primary driver is identical to the one that, 24 years ago, steered assemblers away from cleaning in the first place - economics.

One frequently overlooked factors is that when assemblers stopped removing flux from their assemblies due to the implementation of low-residue fluxes, all cleaning stopped. Contamination from the bare board fabrication, component fabrication and assembly processes were allowed to remain on the assembly along flux residues. The fact is that modern miniaturized, lead-free assemblies cannot tolerate as much contamination as assemblies of the past. Smaller assemblies, higher densities, lower component standoff heights, faster speeds, and higher reflow temperatures all combined to create the perfect storm of events that are causing electrical migration and electrical leakage failures on assemblies throughout the world. In field assembly, failure is costly in terms of both economic and reputation concerns. A measurable percentage of the electronics industry has determined that it is more cost effective to remove contamination than to reap the cost of contamination related failures.

There are many perceived challenges when one considers the adaptation of a cleaning process: What is the cost of cleaning (cost per assembly)? What is the cost to the environment (kudos to those who consider the environment)?

So, what is the cost of cleaning? Many assemblers have discovered that it is surprisingly low. There are many cleaning methods, machines and processes available from which to choose. the correct specific method is determined by several variables including desired throughput, types of contamination being removed, environmental restrictions, etc. While there is no "one size fits all" solution, there are a handful of solutions that fit almost all assemblers. We spend a lot of time talking about a "properly optimized process" (the correct machine to match the required throughput, equipment readiness, cleanliness requirement and discharge configuration). When one has a properly optimized process, one may except total cleaning costs per assembly to be under USD $0.06 per assembly for low discharge cleaning applications (environmentally beneficial) to USD $0.16 per assembly for zero-discharge (environmentally responsible).

Many assemblers have resisted cleaning processes for strictly environmental reasons. Many have been concerned that by solving one issue (assembly failures), they would exchange that issue for another (environmental regulatory issues). The fact is that recent advances in cleaning technology have allowed assemblers to clean assemblies, regardless of flux type, and operate in a completely zero-discharge configuration. By operating a cleaning process that reuses the cleaning chemical, lowering operational costs, without a connection to a drain, and bypassing environmental regulations, one can experience an optimized cleaning process that eliminates contamination-caused assembly failures while obtaining an acceptable cost per cleaned assembly, and a total avoidance of environmentally-based regulation. This is a win-win scenario.

Manncorp offers a range of batch-format PCB cleaning and defluxing equipment that are capable, cost-effective and environmentally friendly. All defluxers feature built-in cleanliness level testing and the ability to clean PCB assemblies to a user-set level of cleanliness. They also come standard with SPC data logging for traceability and process improvement.

Conformal Coating: How Important Is Cleaning Before Coating?

From Manncorp

For the best possible adhesion, manufacturers should be cleaning boards before applying conformal coating—but it’s not just about adhesion.


Conformal coating can have a huge impact on reliability, which is (ironically) one of the reasons conformal coating is applied in the first place. Many assemblers think that they are protecting the assembly when they coat it, but if residues and contamination are present on the surface, they’ve just sealed in their potential reliability problems.

Another common mistake is the thinking that if you’re using no-clean flux, there’s no need to clean. In addition to no-clean residues affecting adhesion, there will be other contaminants on the board and components—fingerprint oils, metallic salts, mold release agents, particulates, tape residue, halides and more. All of these contaminants get trapped under the coating—along with the moisture that’s inherent in the board itself. The coating then acts like a greenhouse, creating a humid environment in which susceptible residues can become reactive.


This situation leads to electro-migration, dendritic growth and corrosion under the coating as well as possible breakdown of the coating itself, all of which will have a negative impact on reliability in the long run.

Some assemblers have actually found that they’ve been able to improve reliability by washing instead of coating, compared to coating without cleaning.

If your product will have a short expected life or is not going to be exposed to harsh temperatures, corrosives or humidity, the cost of pre-washing before conformal coating may not be worth it (or may be exchanged for the cost of washing instead of coating), but the more critical the reliability and expected life are, the greater the problem coating on unwashed assemblies poses.

At the very least, cleaning the circuit assembly, whether it’s prior to coating or in lieu of coating, takes residue-created reliability issues off the table.

Manncorp offers a number of cost-effective PCB cleaning/defluxing systems, including zero-discharge systems, which require neither a drain nor costly and time-consuming permits and wastewater treatment measures.

Debunking Urban Legends about PCB Cleaning

By Mike Konrad, President and CEO, Aqueous Technologies Corporation

Trident batch cleaning system.


Within the cleaning sectors of the electronics assembly industry lays a strange mixture of science, tribal knowledge, contradictions and urban legends. As the electronics assembly industry again embraces cleaning as a mainstream process, it may be prudent to review the "conventional wisdom" as it relates to contamination removal from circuit assemblies.

First, let us begin with some basic historical facts. Cleaning is not a new process. In fact, cleaning has been a staple of the electronics assembly process from the invention of the electronic circuit board. In the cleaning industry, we divide our world into two sections; pre-1989 and post-1989.

Before 1989, virtually all circuit assemblies were cleaned after reflow. Flux and other contamination were removed from the assembly prior to use. We stuffed the board full of components, cut and clinched the leads, soldered the components to the board, then removed the flux. Much of that changed in 1989.

CFCs Banned from Cleaning
Chemicals containing CFCs were determined to be harmful to the Earth's ozone layer and, thus, were restricted or eliminated from production. The most common cleaning solvents used to clean assemblies contained CFCs that presented a problem for the electronics industry. While some manufacturers converted to environmentally responsible water-based cleaning technology, another option soon presented itself. So-called "no-clean" flux was introduced. No-clean flux was designed to not be cleaned. The majority of the electronics industry embraced no-clean technology except for military, medical and a handful of other high-reliability manufacturers. Virtually overnight, the cleaning industry shrank to a fraction of its pre-1989 size. Cleaning for the majority of manufacturers was dead.

Today, buyers of cleaning/defluxing systems fall into two groups. The first group is comprised of people who were in the industry before 1989. In many cases, their knowledge of cleaning machines and processes is obsolete. The second group is comprised of "younger" people who have had no direct experience with cleaning and who frequently lack any reference point. Those in either group may find this information helpful.

Cleanliness testing system.




So many things have changed since cleaning was considered to be a mainstream process. Today's assemblies, due in part to miniaturization, have a much lower "contamination tolerance" threshold. While some assemblies function reliably with a specific volume of contamination, others rapidly fail. Clock speeds, component densities, assembly geographies, solder alloys, environmental influences and other factors determine how much contamination an assembly can handle without failure.

Urban Legends Debunked
Water may be used to remove water-soluble (OA) flux but not rosin. False. Water, mixed with a low concentration of a water-based defluxing chemical, removes all flux types (water soluble, rosin, no-clean).

Solvents work better than water. False. While solvent technology works well, a water-based process works better — in most cases. Some in this industry may remember the pre-1989 days when an assembly that had to be "extra" clean — i.e. for conformal coating purposes — was cleaned using a solvent, then followed up with a DI water cleaning process to improve the cleanliness of the assembly's surface. Water-based cleaning and, more importantly, water-based rinsing, typically produces superior cleanliness results compared to solvent processes. This fact was reiterated in IPC's "Phase II" test results — a comparison of solvent vs. water-based cleaning.

Conveyor vs. Batch Cleaning
Inline (conveyorized) cleaning machines are better than batch cleaning machines. True and False. The fact is that both batch and inline technologies clean equally well. No one configuration cleans better or worse than the other. One should choose batch or inline based on the volume of assemblies that need to be cleaned. Batch cleaning systems are capable of cleaning volumes ranging from low to high. Inline cleaning machines normally are associated only with high volumes. When all cost centers are accounted for, the operational cost of a batch process is approximately 10-20 percent of the cost of an inline cleaning process. As the cleaning volume increases, the cost differential lowers. The cost per assembly on an inline cleaner begins to lower when the cleaning volume approaches several thousand assemblies per day. Volumes less than that generally are better suited for batch-format cleaning processes.

Dishwashers/Glassware washers work well. False. While many batch-format cleaning machines may resemble dishwashers, dishwashers typically are not compatible with the defluxing chemicals nor are they capable of acceptable under-component penetration. Dishwashers are for dishes.

We do not need a powerful machine. The defluxing chemical lowers the surface tension, allowing adequate impingement. False. While defluxing chemicals do lower the wash solution's surface tension and allow for improved under-component penetration, the real issue is the rinse cycle. Today's defluxing results fall into two categories: excellent and disastrous. The worst thing one can do is to partially clean an assembly. Wash solution allowed to remain on an assembly, due to inadequate rinsing, is far worse than flux being allowed to remain on an assembly. Rinse is the most critical part of a successful defluxing process. Rinse water, unlike chemical-enriched wash solution, has a higher surface tension. That means the rinse water must be forced into tight spaces to effectively displace the lower surface tension wash solution. This is accomplished by forcing water through multiple nozzles that diffuse the solution into smaller water particles. The smaller the water particle, the better its ability to get under tight spaces.

IPC standards state how clean is clean. True and False. While IPC TM650 does state "how clean is clean," we cannot recommend that anyone actually embrace that value. IPC allows for the use of a resistivity of solvent extract (R.O.S.E) test to determine the cleanliness of an assembly. These testers have been in production for more than 30 years. In fact, the cleanliness standard of >10µG NaCl/in.2 was developed in the 1970s. Today's assemblies contain advanced geographies not imaginable in the 1970s. There are some that suggest that we abandon the use of R.O.S.E. testers. That would be like throwing the baby out with the bath water. Instead, one should calculate the cost of failure. If an assembly fails, will that lead to property damage, loss of life, loss of reputation? If so, one should consider selecting a lower pass/fail value. In short, the more critical the reliability, the closer to 0.0 one should strive to achieve.

Manncorp Trident XLD PCB Cleaner/Defluxer Reclaims Rinse Water & Meets Local Environmental Codes

Posted by Manncorp

Manncorp Trident XLD PCB Cleaner/Defluxer Reclaims Rinse Water & Meets Local Environmental Codes



For more information, please check out the website: Manncorp Trident XLD PCB Cleaner/Defluxer

Inline PCB Cleaner With Many Innovations Added To Manncorp Product Mix

Posted by Mike Schwartz, Marketing Director of Manncorp

Manncorp has expanded its website section dedicated to PCB cleaners. Included are updates of existing models and a new INLINE BOARD CLEANING and DEFLUXING SYSTEM for water-soluble fluxes that combines higher throughput with exclusive operational and ecological benefits.

Manncorp
CEO Henry Mann claims the inline system answers market demand for increased board width by accommodating PCBs up to 24”. “It also uses less floor space, measuring just 12 ½ ft. long. Less energy and water are consumed with its 60-degree angled nozzle directing spray under the components for more thorough removal of all water-soluble (OA) flux residues,” he stated.


Along with high-performance stainless steel spray pumps that deliver increased flow and pressure, the system is powered by a turbine-powered rotating air knife, working along with fixed-position air knives to provide maximum effective drying area. The Manncorp inline cleaner is priced at $106,700, which according to the CEO is one lowest cost inline PCB cleaners available. “The quality of this cleaner and its attractive price opens the opportunity for ownership by a greater number of PCB assemblers,” he stated.

A rinse water closed loop recycler is available for zero discharge operation.

For details, access Inline PCB Cleaner, call 1.800.PIK MANN (745.6266) or e-mail sales@manncorp.com.

Manncorp Trident LD PCB Cleaning Machine

Posted by Manncorp

Manncorp Trident LD PCB Cleaning Machine (PCB Washer): Not Only Defluxes PCBs, But Tests Them for User-Selected Cleanliness Level.


For more information, please visit the website: Manncorp PCB Washer (PCB Cleaning Machine)

Manncorp PCB Defluxing & Cleaning Machines

Posted by Manncorp



For more information, please visit the website: Manncorp PCB Defluxing & Cleaning Machines

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