Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 27 13:50:52 EDT 1999 | Mike Konrad
Aqueous Technologies manufactures the Zero-Ion ionic contamination tester. The Zero-Ion utilizes dynamic-based technology and has been assigned the highest equivalency value by the NAWC. It is among the most sensitive of all of the military-approved
Electronics Forum | Wed Jul 28 21:58:18 EDT 1999 | Dave F
| any advice on ionograph testing in the 1 microgram/cm^2 for | small devices. We have a old Alpha 500 series machine that is dead but ALpha doesn't service this vintage machine.Any other way to perform this test, or a third party vendors to servic
Electronics Forum | Thu Nov 02 17:15:48 EST 2006 | Mike Konrad
Asoe, The systems you are describing are Resistivity of Solvent Extract (ROSE) Testers. These systems are available using one of two technologies, Static or Dynamic. Both systems use a calibrated test solution comprised of IPA and DI water. The t
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 28 21:22:35 EST 2023 | emeto
I would ask follow up questions here to your customer.
Electronics Forum | Wed Dec 13 18:54:59 EST 2023 | hhudson
Good Afternoon, I was wondering if anyone knew what a calibration table is for an ionograph? I have a customer asking for one and am unsure. My first though would be a table that correlates SIR values and converts them the ug/NaCl equivalence? Can s
Electronics Forum | Thu Dec 14 20:00:03 EST 2023 | stephendo
I would think that it would be the readings you get from known calibrated samples. i.e. you get samples to test with known values and you test them and see if you get the correct values. Don't rule out your customer not knowing what they are asking
Electronics Forum | Wed May 28 14:35:47 EDT 2003 | davef
Wow, you're very correct. I guess we use silicone to calibrate our machine, as follows: XPS spectral measurements of dimethyl silicone should include O(2s) at 25 eV, Si(2p) at 102 eV, Si(2s) at 153 eV, C(1s) at 285 eV, and O(1s) at 533 eV. The C(1s
Electronics Forum | Mon Mar 17 04:31:52 EDT 2008 | d0min0
Hello, tried searching the SMTnet archives, but not yet a clear answer - maybe there is not a one yet ? ;) last discussion I found is few years old so maybe there is a fresh view on that? Q: we want to prove that our proces is "clean" we use SAC30
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 11 18:44:31 EDT 2008 | smt_guy
We have an Ionic Contamination Testing system but short of having a monitoring record for the chemical concentration. What we have is a monthly maintenance check of the concentration and annual check and calibration of the chemicals. We seldom use th
Electronics Forum | Mon Nov 01 19:50:29 EST 2004 | davef
Q1: Will the ion chromatography be able to identify and quantify the contaminant? A1: Yes, it will identify and quantify the amount of contaminant. Obviously this is very useful in troubleshooting the source of the contaminant. [The only problem fo