Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 31 12:37:39 EDT 2009 | rocko
Hi All, As a result of equipment damage I have a problem with a cleanliness of printed circuit assemblies. One whole production batch was polluted by ionic residues because a large amount of hard water had been penetrated in the water-supply system
Electronics Forum | Tue Oct 27 07:09:37 EDT 2015 | prameel_84
Hi Everyone, I got an approval to buy a Ionic Contamination Tester in my company, hence i require expert advise to proceed further for machine procurement At present I've fixed for Zero-Ion G3 Ionic Contamination of Aqueous Technologies and SMD V T
Electronics Forum | Fri Mar 19 21:40:37 EST 2004 | Ken
What is your typical RO memebrane rejection rate? Effluent Resistivity? Just currious.
Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 08 10:34:37 EDT 2008 | blnorman
Because of our high volume production, we use no clean flux. We have experienced leakage currents with leadless QFNs. One problem is the part isn't being utilized as it should, but another is the flux residue. There is ionic residue in no-clean fl
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 18 20:37:35 EST 2004 | davef
Water wash cleaning with a deionized water rise is used for bare boards and assemblies [and probably components also, but we're not sure]. Look here for the basics: http://www.circuitree.com/CDA/ArticleInformation/features/BNP__Features__Item/0,2133
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 15 12:37:23 EST 2006 | Gman
Got my answer. Thank you. Several postings on this forum from quite a while back!
Electronics Forum | Mon Mar 17 18:37:59 EDT 2008 | aqueous
We manufacture both bulk and localized ionic contamination testers. My answer is from the perspective of the cleanliness testing method. The issue with all bulk ionic contamination testers (Ionagraph, Omegameter, Zero-Ion), is that they test the en
Electronics Forum | Fri Jun 01 10:52:37 EDT 2012 | blnorman
Neither the Omega meter nor the IC are officially "destructive" tests, but everywhere I worked we treated them that way. The boards were scrapped after the test. The Omega meter can be tested at elevated temps, but the IC sample is extracted at ele
Electronics Forum | Sun May 09 16:25:00 EDT 2004 | gabriele
Military and most commercial standards requires > post-soldered boards to measure less than 10 > �g/in of NaCl (14 when using an Omegameter, 20 > on a Ionagraph, and 37 on a Zero-Ion). > > As Dave > stated, 6.5 �g/in of NaCl is called out in >
Electronics Forum | Fri Dec 06 12:24:03 EST 2002 | Mike Konrad
Military and most commercial standards requires post-soldered boards to measure less than 10 �g/in of NaCl (14 when using an Omegameter, 20 on a Ionagraph, and 37 on a Zero-Ion). As Dave stated, 6.5 �g/in of NaCl is called out in Mil-P-55110 for ba