| Hi, | | Help! Could anyone help to enlighten me on this? | | Question: | | If I have a CSP/BGA package of size X by Y and the standoff gap between the component and PCB is Z, What is the maximum allowable Y/Z or X/Z that using a normal water clean washing machine that able to effective performing the cleaning on component's bumps after attachment on PCB? ( Assume that water pressure is 60 PSI) | | | Thank you in advance! | I'm sorry, you ask an impossible question. There are a hundred unspecified parameters in your hypothesis, not the least of which is defining a "normal water clean washing machine". You do not even state whether it is batch or conveyorised.
In my 30-odd years' experience of aqueous cleaning, the biggest myth I have come across is that of water pressure being an important factor in cleaning quality. Sure, it plays a role, but a very minor one. To illustrate this, imagine a machine running at 100 bars (a VERY high pressure) fed to atomising nozzles producing a droplet size of 10 �m. This would produce a quasi-mist which would float in the air and never clean a PCB in a hundred years. The important parameter is the kinetic energy imparted to the water at the moment when it hits the board. After hundreds of experiments, I have determined that a medium pressure (3 - 6 bars) and a high volume of water impinging on the boards in coherent jets at about 25� to the board surface gives the best results. The kinetic energy required is provided by about 1,5 kW of pump consumption for every linear metre of spray bar. This will give maximum cleaning efficiency under tight components. However, there are many other parameters such as shadowing. The board must be designed to be cleaned, with adequate spacing between components of different heights. The wash cycle must last at least 2 - 3 minutes -- no problem with batch machines but a big one with conveyorised ones. The temperature must be just right, depending on the flux/paste chemistry, but typically about 55 - 60�C. The surface tension of the water should be less than about 30 dynes/cm. With W/S chemistry, the surfactants in the residues should maintain this, but you may need to add a little anionic surfactant to the wash water in a freshly filled machine.
Equally important is the rinsing. Here, you can halve the pump power, but the nozzles must provide a spray such that the droplet size at the moment of impingement is less than the smallest stand-off, again at an acute angle. To understand this, the under-component spaces are filled with contaminated water, held in place by capillary forces produced by the surface tension. Flooding around the component is not going to move this: it requires the rinse water to be able to "shoot" itself under the component to replace the dirty water droplet by droplet. To get really clean results under the components requires typically 10 rinses (6 minimum) therefore you need the appropriate number of spray bars in conveyorised machines, the last 2 or 3 with uncontaminated DI water, which has the highest surface tension. With batch machines, the rinse spray bars (separate from the wash jet bars) should turn, or preferably oscillate, a minimum of ten times in the rinse period.
Not the least part of the process is drying. You will appreciate that rinsing is a series of successive dilutions to what is hoped to be a safe level of residual contamination. If you simply allow the water to dry off the assemblies, what will happen? As it evaporates, what remains will start to congregate, by surface tension, to where the capillaries are smallest, i.e. round the solder joints, which is exactly where you don't want contaminants. It is essential to remove as much excess water as possible with high-velocity air knives or by centrifuging the assemblies, before allowing evaporation to start (this is also energy-saving).
Please be warned that, in all the subsectors of electronics assemblies, there is more nonsense talked about in cleaning than any other subject (soldering included!). Very few vendors really know much about it. After all, in pre-Montreal Protocol days, it was said that "slosh it around in a bucket of Freon and it will be clean", yet a real scientific study, because of environmental pressures, shows that CFC-113 azeotrope cleaning was one of the worst from the point of view of quality. Many of us were conned by this for years upon years. Water cleaning will give excellent results (up to ten times better than CFC-113 azeotropes), but only if you apply it correctly.
For further reading, details of my book "Cleaning and Contamination of Electronics Components and Assemblies" may be found at http://www.elchempub.com/epfiles/ep06.htm . (This is not really commercial, because it is the publisher's site, not mine.)
Although it is commercial (sorry!), the reference below also gives a host of technical information about aqueous cleaning.
Hope this helps,
Brian
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