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Surface Contamination and Cleaning PDF
Surface Contamination and Cleaning PDF
and Cleaning,
Volume 1
K.L. Mittal,
Editor
VSP
SURFACE
CONTAMINATION
AND CLEANING
VOLUME 1
Editor:
K.L. Mittal
VSP BV
P.O. Box 346
3700 AH Zeist
The Netherlands
VSP BV 2003
First published in 2003
ISBN 90-6764-376-9
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval
system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner.
Contents
Preface
Mapping of surface contaminants by tunable infrared-laser imaging
D. Ottesen, S. Sickafoose, H. Johnsen, T. Kulp, K. Armstrong,
S. Allendorf and T. Hoffard
vii
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43
49
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151
159
vi
Contents
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345
Preface
This volume chronicles the proceedings of the International Symposium on Surfase Contamination and Cleaning held under the aegis of MST Conferences in
Newark, New Jersey, May 2325, 2001.
Even a cursory look at the literature will evince that there has been tremendous
interest and R&D activity in the arena of surface contamination and cleaning, so
we decided to organize this symposium. Because of the importance of this topic
in many technological areas, tremendous efforts have been devoted to devise
novel and more efficient ways to monitor, analyse and characterize contamination
on surfaces as well as ways to remove such contamination from a wide variety of
surfaces.
The ubiquitous nature of surface contamination causes concern to everyone
dealing with surfaces, and the world of surfaces is wide and open-ended. A contaminant is defined as unwanted matter or energy or material or energy in the
wrong place. Also contaminants can by broadly classified as: film-type, particulates; ionic, and biological or microbial. The technological areas where surface
contamination has always been a bete noire and thus surface cleaning is of cardinal importance are too many and range from aerospace to microelectronics to
biomedical. Here a few eclectic examples will suffice to underscore the importance of surface contamination and cleaning. In the world of ever-shrinking device dimensions in the microelectronics, the need to remove ever smaller particles
(of nanosize dimension) is quite patent. On the other hand, film-type (organic)
contamination is of crucial importance in the area of adhesive bonding, as even a
very thin layer of contamination can be very detrimental in attaining good bond
strength. In operation theaters, the concern about microbial contamination is all
too obvious. So in light of the great concern about surface contamination, people
dealing with surfaces are rightfully afflicted with molysmophobia.*
The technical program for this symposium comprised 45 papers dealing with
all kinds of contaminations on a host of surfaces, and many ramifications of surface contamination and cleaning were addressed. There were brisk and illuminating (not exothermic) discussions, both formally and informally, throughout the
symposium. Also if comments from the participants are a barometer for the success of a symposium then this event was quite successful.
Now coming to this volume, it contains a total of 24 papers (others are not included for a variety of reasons). It must be recorded that all manuscripts were rigorously peer reviewed and suitably revised (some twice or thrice) before inclusion
in this volume. So this volume is not a mere collection of unreviewed papers
viii
Preface
which is generally the case with many symposia proceedings rather it reflects
information which has passed peer scrutiny. The topics covered include: mapping
of surface contaminants; various techniques for cleaning surfaces; various techniques for monitoring level of cleanliness; acceptable cleanliness levels, ionic
contamination; pharmaceutical cleaning validations; cleaning of glass surfaces;
decontamination of sensitive equipment; no-chemistry process cleaning; waterjet
cleaning; cleaning with solid carbon dioxide pellet blasting; cleanroom wipers;
dust removal from solar panels and spacecraft on Mars; laser cleaning of silicon
surfaces; particle removal; implications of surface contamination and cleaning;
and future of industrial cleaning and related public policy-making.
I sincerely hope that this volume addressing many aspects and recent developments in the domain of surface contamination and cleaning will be of interest to a
wide range of people working in many different industries.
Acknowledgements
It is always a pleasure to write this particular segment of a book as it offers the
opportunity to thank those who helped in many ways. First, my sincere thanks are
extended to my colleague and friend, Dr. Robert H. Lacombe, for taking care of
the organizational aspects of this symposium. The comments from the peers are a
sine qua non to maintain the highest standard of a publication, so I am most appreciative of the time and efforts of the unsung heroes (reviewers) in providing
many valuable comments. I am profusely thankful to the authors for their interest,
enthusiasm and contribution without which this book would not have seen the
light of day. In closing, my thanks go to the staff of VSP (publisher) for giving
this book a body form.
K.L. Mittal
P.O. Box 1280
Hopewell Jct., NY 12533
*Molysmophobia means fear of dirt or contamination, from Mrs. Byrnes Dictionary of Unusual,
Obscure, and Preposterous Words, University Books, Secaucus, NJ (1974).
AbstractWe report the development of a new, real-time non-contacting monitor for cleanliness
verification based on tunable infrared-laser methods. New analytical capabilities are required to
maximize the efficiency of cleaning operations at a variety of federal (Department of Defense
[DoD] and Department of Energy [DOE]) and industrial facilities. These methods will lead to a reduction in the generation of waste streams while improving the quality of subsequent processes and
the long-term reliability of manufactured, repaired or refurbished parts.
We have demonstrated the feasibility of tunable infrared-laser imaging for the detection of contaminant residues common to DoD and DOE components. The approach relies on the technique of
infrared reflection spectroscopy for the detection of residues.
An optical interface for the laser-imaging method was constructed, and a series of test surfaces
was prepared with known amounts of contaminants. Independent calibration of the laser reflectance
images was performed with Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The performance of
both optical techniques was evaluated as a function of several variables, including the amount of
contaminant, surface roughness of the panel, and the presence of possible interfering species (such
as water). FTIR spectra demonstrated that a water film up to 7 m thick would not interfere with the
effectiveness of the laser-imaging instrument. The instrumental detection limit for the laser reflectance imager was determined to be on the order of a 10-20 nm thick film of a general hydrocarbon
contaminant.
Keywords: Infrared; tunable-laser; imaging; cleaning; surface contamination.
1. INTRODUCTION
D. Ottesen et al.
ability of a convenient analysis technology for on-site, post-cleaning determination of surface contamination will allow more rapid and accurate assessments of
the efficiency of chosen cleaning techniques. By developing an on-line technique,
processed parts or extracted samples will not have to be sent to a separate laboratory for analysis, thereby eliminating processing delays. The information provided
by the optical method will assist the process operator in distinguishing between
specific contaminants and determining subsequent actions to be taken.
In this paper we report the development of an infrared laser-based imaging approach that will reduce the use, emission, and handling of waste-stream materials
in cleaning operations. This work is supported by the separate development of a
hardened, portable Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) reflectance instrument at the
Naval Facilities Engineering Service Center (NFESC), Port Hueneme, CA in cooperation with the Surface Optics Corporation. Simultaneous development of an
FTIR instrument is complementary in nature to the laser-imaging technique and is
described in detail elsewhere [1]. Both instruments will be used primarily for the
real-time on-line or nearly on-line detection of contaminant residues on reflective
surfaces. In each case, surface contamination is detected by its absorption of a
grazing-incidence infrared beam reflected from the surface.
The instruments differ in the nature of the information they provide. The laserbased instrument produces images that directly indicate the spatial extent and location of infrared-absorbing surface hydrocarbon contaminants. In contrast, FTIR
instrumentation provides a wide-band spectral measurement of the surface reflectance averaged over a small area for nearly all organic materials, and many inorganic components. Thus, the laser-imaging system allows the rapid determination
of surface cleanliness for organic residues over a large area, while the spectrallyresolved FTIR method is useful in identifying the specific molecular composition
of a surface contaminant at a particular location.
The imaging system under development employs a widely tunable infraredlaser illumination source in conjunction with an infrared camera. This approach
provides an on-line technique for surveying contamination levels over large surface areas in a real-time imaging mode. The laser is broadly-tunable over the 1.34.5 m wavelength range, thus allowing the detection of many hydrocarbon contaminants via absorption bands associated with CH-, OH-, and NH-stretching vibrations.
Currently, the detection and identification of surface contaminants on reflective
surfaces is conveniently and rapidly done by FTIR reflectance methods. These
non-destructive, non-contacting optical techniques identify the chemical constituents of the contaminants, and can yield quantitative measurements with appropriate calibration. Infrared optical methods are particularly useful for cleanliness
verification since the surface is probed under ambient conditions. More sensitive
high-vacuum electron and ion spectroscopic techniques (X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy, Auger electron spectroscopy, and secondary-ion mass spectrometry) are not suited for on-line application.
The laser-based instrument described in this report offers the capability to rapidly
survey large surface areas and to determine the location and extent of residual hydrocarbon contaminants following cleaning operations. In contrast, a spectroscopic analysis by an FTIR-based infrared reflectance instrument is able to characterize a very broad range of organic constituents and many inorganic species.
However, a surface-probing FTIR instrument measures a spectrum at only a single small area on a sample, thus requiring broad area surveys to be done by sequentially probing many points. Even at a rate of ~ 10 seconds per measurement
point, this can be a time-consuming process. The rate of measurement by FTIR
spectroscopy is constrained by the relatively low spectral brightness (compared to
a laser) of the incandescent illumination sources. This makes it necessary to use
relatively long integration times to achieve an acceptable signal-to-noise ratio.
The tunable-laser-based instrument overcomes these limitations by illuminating
a broad surface area with a high-brightness infrared laser. This approach allows a
D. Ottesen et al.
single-wavelength reflectance measurement over an area of several square centimeters to be made on a timescale of less than a second. In order to acquire measurements at multiple wavelengths, the laser is tuned and an image is collected at
each of the desired wavelengths. While a detailed spectral map of a surface can be
generated over the laser tuning range, the primary use of the system is to provide
rapid areal surveys at a few key wavelengths that are indicative of hydrocarbon
contaminants. The detection sensitivity for several hydrocarbon species at various
illumination wavelengths was evaluated in this work, as well as a method to suppress image noise due to laser speckle while maintaining high illumination intensity.
2.1. Quasi-phasematching tunable infrared laser
The broadly-tunable infrared laser illuminator is based on a technology called
quasi-phasematching (QPM) [10]. This approach has been exploited to increase
the tuning range and power of the infrared light source while reducing its size. For
example, continuous-wave (cw) optical parametric oscillators (OPOs) that employ
the QPM material, periodically-poled lithium niobate (PPLN), are capable of tuning over the 1.3-4.5 m spectral region while emitting more than 0.5 W of power.
This technique has been used to generate tunable infrared laser light for imaging
natural gas emissions, and developing laser-based spectroscopic gas sensors [10].
In this work we are extending it to the analysis of hydrocarbon residues on material surfaces.
The limit of the current tuning range of the PPLN-based laser at long wavelengths is about 4.5 m (2222 cm-1) due to the transmission characteristics of lithium niobate. This property restricts the sensitivity of the chemical imaging system
to functional groups containing hydrogen atoms (C-H, N-H, O-H). Extension of
the laser tuning wavelength range beyond 5 m (2000 cm-1) is desirable to provide specific identification of hydrocarbon and some inorganic molecular species.
The light source assembled for the IR imaging sensor is an OPO pumped by a
continuous-wave (cw) Nd:YAG laser, as shown in Figure 1 [10]. An electric field
is induced in the OPOs PPLN crystal by the electric field of the pump laser; these
fields interact to form two new laser beams whose frequencies sum to the frequency of the pump laser. The reflectivities of the mirrors in the optical cavity are
selected to resonate one of the generated waves, while the other wave is simply
generated and released from the cavity. The resonated wave is called the signal;
the non-resonated wave is called the idler. The exact frequencies of the signal and
the idler are determined by the phasematching properties of the crystal (described
below), the reflectivity of the cavity, and by any spectrally-selective optics that
may be added to the laser cavity (e.g. an talon). While either the signal or the
idler beam can be used for measurements, only the idler is used in the experiments reported here.
As shown in Figure 1, the OPO used in the imaging sensor is of the bowtiering design. A diode-pumped, cw, multimode Nd:YAG laser (Lightwave Elec-
D. Ottesen et al.
achieved by careful selection and/or control of the crystal birefringence, temperature, and beam propagation angles.
In a QPM medium, phasematching is designed into the medium during the
crystal growth process. Phasematching is achieved by causing the crystal to have
a periodically inverting optical axis. The engineering process used to create these
crystals increases conversion efficiency by allowing the use of much stronger
nonlinear coefficients of the crystal, and frees the system from reliance on birefringence thereby increasing tunability. As the light beams cross the crystal-axisinverting boundaries, any relative dephasing of the waves is corrected. For a crystal of a given periodicity, the rephasing is effective for a particular set of pump,
signal, and idler frequencies. Some degree of tuning of these waves can be
achieved within the crystal phasematching bandwidth (typically 10-20 cm-1).
Broader tuning is achieved by accessing a portion of the same crystal having a
different periodicity, or by changing the temperature of the crystal.
In the present system, two 50-mm-long PPLN crystals (Crystal Technology,
Palo Alto, CA) with an aperture of 11.5 mm 0.5 mm are used as the active medium. Each crystal contains eight poled regions with different periodicities. One
crystals periodicities range from 28.5 to 29.9 m, and of the other crystal from
30.0 to 31.2 m. When operating at a crystal temperature of 148C, these periods
collectively allow tuning of the idler from 2720 to 3702 cm-1. The crystals are
mounted in a stacked fashion within a temperature-stabilized copper oven that is
attached to a vertical translation stage. Each crystal is tuned by selecting a period
using the vertical motion of the stage; horizontal motion of the oven is used to select between the two crystals.
The raw output of the OPO contains the idler beam as well as portions of the
signal and pump beams and some higher-order (red, green) beams created spuriously in the PPLN crystal. Spectral filtering is used to dump all but the idler
beam. Prior to illumination of the sample, the idler is passed through a set of projection optics, also shown in Figure 1. The first of these is a ZnSe diffuser (mean
roughness of ~ 3-4 m) that is mounted on a motor-driven spindle. The diffuser
serves to reduce the phase coherence of the idler in order to minimize laser
speckle noise in the transmitted beam and viewed by the IR camera in the light reflected from the sample surface. The cone of radiation leaving the diffuser is collected by a ZnSe faceted lens (Laser Power Optics, Murrieta, CA). The faceted
lens is formed to contain the equivalent of 16 6.4 mm facets and 16 partial facets
around the edge of the lens on a 3.8 cm diameter with an effective f-number of
1.7. It operates as a prism array the expanded beam is segmented into 32 different square beamlets that are subsequently overlapped at a distance of 5 cm from
the surface of the lens. A ZnSe wire grid polarizer (not shown in Figure 1) is located at the overlap point, and serves to produce a p-polarized beam for the infrared reflectance measurement. The square-shaped overlap region is then imaged
onto the target using an f/1.7, 8.4 cm focal-length ZnSe lens. As a unit, the system
converts the Gaussian profile of the idler beam into a uniform square illumination
on the sample surface.
D. Ottesen et al.
Table 1.
Contaminant materials used for preparation of test coupon for calibration
Material
Description
Usage
Drawing Agent
Lubricant
Silicone
Mold Release 1
Mold Release 2
Silicone
Green liquid ethanol homopolymer
Clear liquid proprietary polymeric
resins
Yellow liquid abietic acid or
anhydride
Blue liquid castor oil base
Solder Flux
Hydraulic Oil
MIL-H-5606A AM2
from the mean surface level, in millionths of an inch; therefore, a Ra value of 1.5
= 0.00000015 inches (3.8 m). Due to the nature of metal-shop finishing processes, surface roughness values vary considerably across a given surface area.
Finishing operations also result in a directional grain parallel to the sample
coupons longitudinal direction. Surface roughness measurements, therefore, exhibit large variations between measurements taken along an orientation longitudinal or transverse to the polishing axis. Two surface roughness levels, 600 and 220
grit, were obtained for the other metal alloys.
Prior to contaminant application, the aluminum alloy coupons were cleaned
with acetone and underwent sonication with a clean-rinsing aqueous cleaner.
They were then thoroughly rinsed in distilled water and dried in an oven at 50C.
Once cooled, they were weighed on a microbalance with a precision of 0.01 mg.
Two or three weighings were averaged.
Both drawing agent and lubricant contaminated Al-7075 coupons were produced by two primary deposition methods airbrushing and manual brushing.
Several other techniques were attempted, including wire-cator drawing, coupon
spinning, and manual drop and spread. These techniques were not used to produce test samples for calibration for these particular contaminants due to the superior results obtained from airbrushing and manual brushing. Three levels of drawing agent were applied by airbrushing to three Al test coupons for each of the six
surface finishes, creating a suite of 18 panels. Varying concentrations of drawing
agent in water were prepared for the airbrush solutions. Similarly, four levels of
lubricant were applied to four Al test coupons for each of six surface finishes,
creating a suite of 24 panels. Manual brushing was used for all but the least contaminated samples, which were airbrushed. Lubricant solutions for both tech-
niques were prepared using pentane as the solvent. Similar methods were used in
preparing calibration samples with the mold release, solder flux, and hydraulic oil
samples.
All contaminated coupons were gently heated in an oven at 50C for several
days to remove both semi-volatile and volatile components. This served to stabilize the contaminants, allowing for quantification by weighing. Once the weights
became stable, the coupons were cooled and weighed to determine the amount of
contaminant present on the surface. When not being weighed or examined, the
coupons were kept in a desiccator.
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
10
D. Ottesen et al.
Optical constants (n and k) were derived for the contaminant C-H stretching
vibrations using the Sandia reflectance code and a dispersion model to calculate a
fit to the experimental data for one of the test coupons [7]. Reflectance-absorption
spectra for the 2800-3000 cm-1 range were calculated for 1-m thick films of a
specific hydrocarbon contaminant on an aluminum surface at either 60 or 75 angle of incidence. This function was then used as a linear variable in conjunction
with a second-order polynomial to produce a least-squares fit of the experimental
reflectance data for the test coupons. An example is shown in Figure 2 for the
longitudinal measurements of three thicknesses of drawing-agent contaminant at
Figure 2. Linear least-squares fit of experimental reflectance data for drawing-agent contaminant on
600 grit polished aluminum surfaces. Average film thickness: (Top) 0.9 m, (Middle) 0.4 m, (Bottom) 0.1 m.
11
12
D. Ottesen et al.
13
14
D. Ottesen et al.
Figure 5. Integrated reflection-absorption intensities of C-H stretching bands for lubricant films deposited on aluminum test coupons with varying degree of surface roughness for longitudinal illumination.
15
Figure 6. Potential interference effects of water on C-H stretching bands of hydrocarbon lubricant
film (0.7 m) on aluminum. Three thicknesses of water film were examined (1 m, top; 3 m, middle; and 7 m, bottom).
broad H-OH stretching bands centered near 3400 cm-1, however, do not obscure
the C-H stretching bands near 2900 cm-1. This is particularly important for the effective and accurate use of the tunable infrared-laser imaging instrument, since
images are acquired for only a small number of frequencies near 3000 cm-1, in
contrast to the broad-band spectral data collected by the FTIR instrument.
3.2. Tunable infrared-laser imaging
Initial images of test panel surfaces were acquired at two frequencies (2915 and
3000 cm-1) that correspond to highly absorbing and non-absorbing portions, respectively, of the hydrocarbon infrared spectrum (see above, Figures 2 and 6). We
used an acquisition time of 0.5 ms per frame, and averaged a minimum of 20
frames for each frequency in order to reduce noise (shot noise and laser speckle
noise). Although the InSb FPA camera is square (256 x 256 pixels), the aspect ratio of the surface area scanned by the spectrometer and the resulting images in
this work are elongated by a factor of two due to the trigonometric effects of the
60 angle of incidence and reflectance.
Images were acquired for illumination transverse to the polishing direction.
They have been corrected for thermal background emission and normalized for
system spectral response at the measurement frequencies. The normalization fac-
16
D. Ottesen et al.
Figure 7. Gray-scale on-resonance (2915 cm-1, top) and off-resonance (3000 cm-1, bottom) images
for an aluminum test panel contaminated with hydrocarbon drawing agent of 0.9-m thickness.
tor was determined by the average intensity ratio of a clean surface (the uncontaminated back surface of the test panel) for the two measurement frequencies.
The ratios of successive images using the PPLN-based laser system showed a
noise level of 0.44% for the entire 65,536-pixel image under our current operating
conditions. This noise level corresponds to a hydrocarbon film thickness of approximately 10-20 nm for the species examined in this report, and is the primary
factor in determining the present instrumental detection limit.
Gray-scale images at these two frequencies for the hydrocarbon drawing-agent
(thickness of 0.9 m on aluminum) are shown in Figure 7. Structure in the images
is primarily in the form of vertical lines that represent ridges in the aluminum
substrate formed during surface polishing operations. A darker vertical band near
the center of the image manifests the presence of an absorbing hydrocarbon in the
17
Figure 8. Reflectance images and line-intensity profiles for an aluminum test panel contaminated
with a hydrocarbon drawing-agent of 0.9-m thickness. Laser coherence noise (A) and results of
Gaussian smoothing (C) are illustrated with corresponding intensity profiles (B and D, respectively)
sampled along the horizontal lines superimposed on the images.
18
D. Ottesen et al.
Examples of reflectance ratio images for several test surfaces are shown in Figures 9 and 11 in false color. A calibrated color-table (Rainbow) for these falsecolor images is shown in Figure 10. Images for a series of 600-grit polished aluminum substrates contaminated with drawing agent are presented in Figure 9.
These are the same specimens whose FTIR spectra are shown in Figure 2. Average film thicknesses for the three samples are 0.9 m (top, left), 0.4 m (middle,
left), and 0.1 m (bottom, left).
The images are presented in false color format with identical dynamic range to
help visualize the location of contaminants. Hydrocarbon material was manually
deposited along the orientation of the surface polishing grooves, which is oriented
vertically in these images. Heavy deposits of the hydrocarbon residue are easily
Figure 9. False-color reflectance images and thickness profiles for three aluminum test panels contaminated with a hydrocarbon drawing agent (thicknesses are: 0.9 m, top-left; 0.4 m, middle-left;
0.1 m, bottom-left). Corresponding line thickness profiles are shown to the right of each false-color
image.
19
Figure 10. Color bar for false-color images presented in Figures 9 and 11. Film thickness was calibrated by weight-gain measurements during sample preparation and by comparison with FTIR reflectance data.
visible in the top reflectance image (red and yellow indicating the lowest reflectance, hence the thickest deposit, locations), with a particularly thick vertical band
near the center. Very few areas in this image possess high reflectance values (dark
blue) characteristic of low contamination. A horizontal line across the center of
the image indicates the thickness profile, shown in Figure 9 (top, right) for this
sample. Reflectance values have been converted to thickness of the drawing-agent
hydrocarbon contaminant using the FTIR data analysis discussed above. The data
shown here indicate the thickness averaging about 0.7 m along the profile line,
with heavier deposits up to 2 m.
False color images of the test surfaces contaminated with lower amounts of hydrocarbon (Fig. 9, middle and bottom) show much less spatial variation in the distribution of hydrocarbon residue. Hydrocarbon residues are thinner and appear as
predominantly green and light blue in the false-color images while the line profiles show quantitatively the thickness of lubricant in these images. The average
thickness values of the three profiles presented here are consistent with the weight
change and thickness values determined by FTIR.
The potential value of the infrared-laser imaging method for cleanliness verification is clearly demonstrated for these test panels. For these samples distribution
of the residual hydrocarbon contaminant is quite variable. In the case of the
heaviest contaminated sample, a localized cleaning to effect substantial removal
can be profitably applied to the most heavily contaminated areas.
20
D. Ottesen et al.
Figure 11. False-color reflectance images and thickness profiles for three aluminum test panels with
a hydrocarbon drawing-agent contaminant (surface polishes are: 600-grit, top-left; 220-grit, middleleft; 80-grit, bottom-left). Corresponding line thickness profiles are shown to the right of each falsecolor image.
We also acquired reflectance ratio images for test surfaces with rougher finishes for average hydrocarbon thicknesses of 0.9 m, again using transverse illumination. False-color images and corresponding thickness profiles for these two
samples are compared to the 0.9-m thick hydrocarbon residue deposited on the
smoothest, 600-grit polished surface in Figure 11. Average thickness values from
the three profiles are in reasonable agreement for all three test panels, demonstrating that large changes in surface roughness (0.5, 2.1, and 6.1 m) do not substantially affect the measured thickness of hydrocarbon residue.
We observe a qualitative change in the false-color images in Figure 11. Increasingly rough test surfaces (middle and bottom) exhibit a grainier image qual-
21
ity due to the large diversity of surface orientations relative to the infrared laser illumination beam. Distribution of the hydrocarbon residue on the 220-grit surface,
however, is much more even (Fig. 11, middle, left) than for the smoothest surface
(Fig. 11, top, left). The drawing-agent material shows a strong thickness gradient
toward the right-hand side of the image for the roughest, 80-grit, surface (Fig. 11,
bottom, left) that is clearly visible despite the grainy image appearance.
4. CONCLUSIONS
The work presented in this report has shown tunable infrared-laser imaging to be
an extremely attractive method for on-line detection of hydrocarbon contaminants
and determination of their spatial distribution for efficient cleaning operations.
Calibrated test panels of hydrocarbon contaminants on metallic substrates were
prepared and characterized with FTIR grazing-angle reflectance spectroscopy.
Measurements were made over a range of film thicknesses and surface roughness,
and the derived instrument sensitivity was quite robust with respect to the degree
of surface roughness and the orientation of the reflectance unit to the direction of
polishing grooves.
Tunable infrared-laser images were acquired at both absorbing and nonabsorbing frequencies for hydrocarbon contaminants on aluminum test panels.
The thickness of the contaminant layers calculated from the laser images showed
good agreement with the measured film thickness determined by spatially averaged FTIR spectroscopic results. The laser images clearly reveal the heterogeneous distribution of the contaminant species on the component surfaces for a variety of film thicknesses and degree of surface roughness.
Primarily, the effects of laser-coherence noise determine the current detection
limits of the laser-imaging method. The noise is introduced when an image ratio
is formed from images taken at absorbing and non-absorbing wavelengths. For
typical hydrocarbon species, the detection limit appears to be on the order of 1020 nm for film thickness. Improvements in the system despeckling and projection
optics may substantially decrease this noise level with an attendant increase in
sensitivity.
The configuration of a future prototype imaging system instrument will be
strongly determined by system formats that employ either a pulsed or continuouswave laser, and staring focal-plane array (FPA) cameras or raster-scanned imagers. The design of an imaging system will include a consideration of the ultimate
instrument cost. At the present time, it appears that a continuous-wave system
with a scanned imager offers the system with the lowest cost. However, the performance of some newly developed inexpensive infrared microbolometer arrays
will also be evaluated as a possible component of a low-cost pulsed imager. Future work will enlarge both the laser illumination area and image field of view in
order to develop a prototype instrument capable of rapid large-area surveys during
cleaning verification.
D. Ottesen et al.
22
Acknowledgments
We gratefully acknowledge the financial support for these investigations by the
Department of Defense through the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program.
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NFESC technical reports may be ordered from the web at www.dtic.mil. Reports from Sandia
National Laboratories may be ordered by contacting Sandia National Laboratories Technical Libraries at (505) 845-8287 or the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) at www.ntis.gov.
AbstractDefining and maintaining a proper level of surface cleanliness is, at best, subjective.
Often the failure of surface preparation processes is not discovered until problems, such as poor adhesion, occur down stream. Surface cleanliness is critical for good surface finish or success of subsequent operations that depend on surface cleanliness. To assure consistent quality of surface
cleanliness, it is important to: understand the types of contaminants that need to be monitored, most
common cleanliness monitoring methods and their strengths and limitations, factors to be considered in choosing appropriate cleanliness monitoring method(s), and cost impact of various cleanliness levels.
The selection of a cleanliness monitoring method should take into account several factors, such
as the type of substrate and the types of contaminants to be monitored, etc.
In order to define Acceptable level of cleanliness, a total cost approach is needed. Total cost is
defined as the cost of cleaning added to the cost of non-conformance related to a particular level of
surface cleanliness. An acceptable level of cleanliness is the one that minimizes or optimizes this
total cost.
Keywords: Acceptable cleanliness levels; optimum cleanliness level; total cost of cleaning; cleanliness
monitoring methods.
1. INTRODUCTION
Defining and maintaining the surface preparation at proper levels is the key to
good surface finish. However defining a proper level of surface cleanliness is,
at best, subjective. For consistent results, it is important to define how clean is
clean. Often the inadequacy of surface preparation processes is not discovered
until problems, such as poor adhesion, occur downstream resulting in nonconformance due to poor surface cleanliness. To assure consistent quality of surface cleanliness, it is important to: understand the types of contaminants to be
monitored; most common cleanliness monitoring techniques and their strengths
and limitations; factors that affect the choice of cleanliness monitoring technique(s); select an appropriate cleanliness monitoring method; specify a desirable
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M.K. Chawla
25
Cleanliness monitoring methods can also be generally classified into three different categories: 1) Indirect Methods, 2) Direct Methods, and 3) Analytical Methods. All of these methods have certain strengths and limitations, which will be
discussed later; hence, it is important to select the method that will be most appropriate for a particular application. Most of these methods are appropriate for
thin film or molecular contamination.
(1) Indirect methods Any technique that does not take a measurement on the
actual surface or area of interest would be classified as an indirect method.
See Table 1 for some of the most common indirect methods along with their
features.
(2) Direct methods Any technique that takes a measurement directly from the
actual surface or area of interest but does not directly identify the species of
contamination present would be classified as a direct method. Some of the
most common direct methods along with their features are listed in Table 1.
(3) Analytical methods Any technique that identifies the species of, and measures the amount of contamination would be classified as an analytical technique. Analytical techniques can be direct or indirect; however all of them
usually determine the amount of and the species of contamination. Some of
the most common analytical methods along with their features are listed in
Table 2.
4. MOST COMMON VERIFICATION / MEASUREMENT METHODS
Some of the most common indirect, direct and analytical methods, with a brief
discussion of their principles of operation, are presented below.
4.1. Indirect methods
4.1.1. Determination of non-volatile residue (NVR) [1]
Also known as gravimetric measurement. This method requires a highly sensitive
scale that can weigh parts to an accuracy of plus or minus one milligram, or better. A container is weighed before collecting fluid that flushes the part of interest.
After the collected fluid has evaporated, the container is weighed again. The difference in the weight of the container before and after flushing and evaporation is
the weight of the contamination removed by flushing.
4.1.2. Ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy
It involves the use of a spectrometer to analyze solvent extract from the parts of
interest. Only contaminants that have an absorption wavelength in the UV region
can be detected and analyzed. Calibration curves, utilizing samples with known
concentration of contamination, can be developed and used to determine actual
amount of contamination.
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M.K. Chawla
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M.K. Chawla
31
ments have been broadly accepted for material surface analysis related to wetting,
adhesion, and absorption.
4.2.5. Optically stimulated electron emission (OSEE) [4]
A probe illuminates the surface to be tested with ultraviolet light of a particular
wavelength. This illumination stimulates the emission of electrons from the metal
surface. The emitted electrons are collected and measured as current by the instrument. Contamination reduces the electron emission and, therefore, the current
measured. The equipment may be connected to a computerized scanning system
that can scan a flat or cylindrical surface for cleanliness. The results can be presented as a color map or 3-D map. The user can define the level of cleanliness
each color represents in the graphic presentation of the results. This feature makes
it easy to compare before and after effect of a cleaning process or side-byside comparison of two pieces cleaned in alternative cleaners. OSEE is simple to
operate, fast, and relatively inexpensive. In addition, it is quantitative, nondestructive, and non-contact. This technique detects both organic and inorganic
contamination, such as oxides, and can be used on any shape of parts as long as
the geometry of the part is presented to the sensor in a consistent manner. This
system lends itself to scan small parts or large surface areas very quickly. This
test can be used in the production line as well as for on-line real time measurement of surface cleanliness. The surface of interest must emit electrons for the
technique to work. Nearly all materials of engineering importance emit electrons
when exposed to UV light.
4.2.6. MESERAN surface analyzer (measurement and evaluation of surfaces by
evaporative rate analysis) [5]
A measurement begins by depositing onto the test surface a small volume of test
solution. A thin- end-window Geiger Mller detector is positioned above the
droplet and a metered flow of gaseous nitrogen is passed between the detector and
the test surface. To sense the volatile compound, organic compounds are used in
which one or more of the carbon atoms are Carbon-14. The -particles given off
by the C-14 molecules at the surface are counted. Specifically measurements are
made of how many molecules there are, how many are evaporating away, how
fast they are evaporating away and, how many remain retained on the surface.
Measuring molecules provides a high degree of sensitivity and the opportunity to
analyze surfaces on a molecular scale with observations and results available in
only a few minutes. The choice of volatile chemical compounds determines
whether they react with the surface material, evaporate, or are retained by the
various physical/chemical molecular forces acting at the surface.
Chemical compounds can be found which tend to both volatilize (evaporate)
and yet tend to be retained by the surface upon which they are placed. The balance of these tendencies determines just how long the volatile compound remains
on the surface, or just how much remains. In fact, it is possible to choose a compound that reacts with specific properties of the surface, or a compound where the
evaporation and/or retention are affected by certain characteristics of the surface
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M.K. Chawla
material. By using only a monolayer equivalent of the radiochemical, the observed rate of evaporation becomes a function of the residual concentration of the
non-evaporated molecules of radiochemical compound.
4.2.7. Total organic carbon (TOC) analysis [6]
This method uses oxygen gas in a combustion chamber at a set temperature to
combust carbon-based contaminants into carbon dioxide which is then detected
by CO2 coulometer. Coulometer detection uses electricity to electrochemically
measure the weight of carbon combusted in the combustion chamber. The method
is very sensitive and can detect as little as one microgram of carbon. The TOC
method works on a variety of materials and is surface-geometry independent. The
method works only on small parts or pieces of larger parts. Due to the high temperature in the combustion chamber (more than 400C) the method is not suitable
to parts sensitive to high temperature. In addition, the TOC method detects only
carbon-based contaminants, although this is generally not an issue since the majority of contaminants encountered in a manufacturing environment are carbon
based. The TOC method can be used in a laboratory but is adaptable to production
environment. It is a technique that works by oxidizing the sample to convert the
carbon into carbon dioxide, and detecting and measuring carbon dioxide. The detection of carbon implies that there was some contamination that had carbon as its
constituent. The level of TOC detected determines the level of cleanliness of a
part. Since a TOC Analyzer detects only carbon, the compound of interest must
contain some carbon in a detectable quantity, in order for the analysis to be carried out.
4.3. Analytical methods
Any technique that identifies the species of, and measures the amount of contamination would be classified as an analytical technique. Analytical techniques can
be direct or indirect; however all of them usually determine the amount of and the
species of contamination. All of the analytical techniques involve Probing the
surface, near-surface region, or interior of a material with electrons, ions, or photons produced radiation that has been altered depending on the number, energy, or
type of particles emitted. Changes can also occur in the frequency or absorbance
of the radiation transmitted through or reflected from the material. Each type of
analytical instrument looks at these emissions in a different way to provide information about certain aspects of the sample, such as structure, composition, or
chemistry, and electronic or optical properties [9]. Most of the analytical techniques test the specimen in vacuum, are expensive and require high skill level to
operate and interpret the results. Testing takes time and rarely provides real-time
information. Because of the cost of analytical testing, it is recommended that its
use be limited to applications where identification of the species of contamination
is required to enhance or improve the process.
Analytical techniques can be divided into two groups; 1) Chemical/elemental
surface analysis, and 2) bulk analysis techniques. There are many techniques that
33
are capable of performing these analyses, some of the most common analytical
techniques are summarized below. For a more complete list of most common analytical techniques, visit www.cea.com/table/htm, website of Charles Evans & Associates. For a more comprehensive list of analytical techniques visit the website
of ESCA users group in England www.ukesca.org/tech/list/html.
4.3.1. Chemical/elemental surface analysis techniques
4.3.1.1. Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) / scanning Auger microscopy (SAM)
[79]
They are used to obtain elemental composition information (and some chemical
information) from the top two to five atomic layers of a material; identify the
composition of very small features and particulates on surfaces; and provide depth
composition profiles of thin films, metals, and alloys. Micro-beam AES is also
used to study grain boundaries in high temperature alloys, and to examine fracture
surfaces to determine composition and extent of damage. The Auger electrons,
named after the discoverer of the process, are produced (among other emissions)
with discrete energies, which are specific to each element, when the surface is irradiated by a finely focused electron beam. Auger electrons are collected and
measured. Auger electrons have discrete kinetic energies that are characteristic of
the emitting atoms, making this technique particularly useful for identifying elemental composition. The energy level of Auger electrons is specific to a species
of contamination. The escape depth of Auger electrons (15 nm) makes this technique very surface sensitive.
4.3.1.2. Electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis (ESCA) [79]
Also known as X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, or XPS, is a surface analysis
technique that provides information on both elemental identity and chemical
bonding. This information can be used to identify functional groups and molecular types. This method uses special equipment to bombard the surface of interest
with X-rays under vacuum conditions, causing electrons to be ejected from the
surface. The actual elemental composition can be quantified by measuring the energy level of ejected electrons, since each element ejects electrons at a unique energy. Its application is limited to mostly research and development, but it can be
used to calibrate and evaluate other, less sophisticated measurement methods.
4.3.1.3. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS static) [79]
A surface analysis technique used for identifying molecules on a surface, as well
as for depth profiling for tracking very low concentrations of contaminants or ionimplanted species. SIMS technique includes static SIMS (SSIMS), dynamic
SIMS, and time-of flight SIMS (TOF SIMS). SSIMS can identify organic and inorganic species. TOF SIMS is an ultra-precise and accurate technique for measuring the mass of molecules in the near-surface layers of material. A pulsed primary
ion beam is used to sputter material from the surface of the sample. Secondary
ions are collected and focused into a reflection time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer, where they are mass analyzed. Analysis involves measuring the length
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M.K. Chawla
of time it takes the secondary ions to reach the detector. The lighter the ion, the
less time it takes to reach the detector. From the arrival time the masses of the
species can be identified. High sensitivity depth profiling is a key feature.
4.3.1.4. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS dynamic) [79]
It uses a much higher intensity bombarding beam than Static SIMS, and is a particularly sensitive (less than part-per-billion level) method for depth profiling of
dopants and trace elements in semiconductors. It can also map the X-Y distribution of atomic species with sub-micrometer spatial resolution. An energetic primary ion beam is used to sputter atoms from the sample surface. Secondary ions
emitted are mass analyzed. It is inherently a profiling technique. It uses O2 or Cs
ions to bombard a surface in high vacuum. High sensitivity depth profiling is a
key feature.
4.3.1.5. Variable-angle spectroscopic ellipsometry (VASE) [7, 8]
It is a noninvasive technique that offers information about surface composition,
layer thickness, and optical properties. Its applications include examining optical
surfaces and crystals, and measuring and analyzing band gaps in semiconductors,
optical devices, thin films, and carbon coatings on computer hard disks.
4.3.1.6. Energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) and wavelength dispersive X-ray (WDX)
analyses [7, 8]
They are often combined with a scanning electron microscope or electron microprobe. EDX provides simultaneous multi-element analysis and elemental mapping
capabilities for a region up to a few micrometers deep. WDX analyzes trace
amounts of one element at a time and is more quantitative than EDX. An example
of EDX application is identifying silicon nitride and titanium carbide inclusions in
stainless steel.
4.3.2. Bulk analysis techniques
The following are several analytical techniques that typically are used for chemical or elemental analysis of bulk materials, but these can also be adapted for the
characterization of surfaces and thin films. Many times these techniques are used
in industry for characterizing surfaces, sometimes without full knowledge of the
strengths and limitations of these techniques. It is hoped that information about
how these techniques work, their strengths and limitations would help the reader
in determining their usefulness and limitations for their applications.
4.3.2.1. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy [7, 8]
It provides information about the chemical bonding and molecular structure of organics and some inorganic solids, liquids, gases and films. This technique is especially good for identifying unknowns when reference IR spectra are available.
When an infrared beam impinges on a surface, the molecular constituents vibrate
in the infrared regime. The identities, surrounding environments, and concentrations of these oscillating chemical bonds can be determined. FTIR is a powerful
analytical tool for characterizing and identifying organic molecules. The IR spectrum of an organic compound serves as its fingerprint and provides information
35
about chemical bonding and molecular structure. This information can be used to
detect the types of organic materials present on the surface.
4.3.2.2. Raman spectroscopy (RS) [7, 8]
It is used to examine the energy levels of molecules that cannot be well characterized via infrared spectroscopy. The two techniques, however, are complimentary.
In the RS, a sample is irradiated with a strong monochromatic light source (usually a laser). Most of the radiation will scatter or reflect off the sample at the
same energy as the incoming laser radiation. However, a small amount will scatter from the sample at a wavelength slightly shifted from the original wavelength.
It is possible to study the molecular structure or determine the chemical identity
of the sample. It is quite straightforward to identify compounds by spectral library
search. Due to extensive library spectral information, the unique spectral fingerprint of every compound, and the ease with which such analyses can be performed, the RS is a very useful technique for various applications. An important
application of the RS is the rapid, nondestructive characterization of diamond,
diamond-like, and amorphous-carbon films.
4.3.2.3. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) / energy dispersive X-ray analysis
(EDX) [7, 8]
The SEM produces detailed photographs that provide important information about
the surface structure and morphology of almost any kind of sample. Image analysis is often the first and most important step in problem solving and failure analysis. With SEM, a focused beam of high-energy electrons is scanned over the surface of a material, causing a variety of signals, secondary electrons, X-rays,
photons, etc. each of which may be used to characterize the material with respect to specific properties. The signals are used to modulate the brightness on a
CRT display, thereby providing a high-resolution map of the selected material
property. It is a surface imaging technique, but with Energy Dispersive X-ray
(EDX) it can identify elements in the near-surface region. This technique is most
useful for imaging particles.
4.3.2.4. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) [7, 8]
Incident X-rays are used to excite surface atoms. The atoms relax through the
emission of an X-ray with energy characteristic of the parent atoms and the intensity proportional to the amount of the element present. It is a bulk or total materials characterization technique for rapid, simultaneous, and nondestructive
analysis of elements having an atomic number higher than that of boron. Traditional bulk analysis applications include identifying metals and alloys, detecting
trace elements in liquids, and identifying residues and deposits.
4.3.2.5. Total-reflection X-ray fluorescence (TXRF) [7, 8]
It is a special XRF technique that provides extremely sensitive measures of the
elements present in a materials outer surface. Applications include searching for
metal contamination in thin films on silicon wafers and detecting picogram-levels
of arsenic, lead, mercury and cadmium on hazardous, chemical fume hoods.
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M.K. Chawla
There are several factors that should be considered in selecting a method for
monitoring surface cleanliness. The factors discussed here are the ones that are
most important but by no means represent a complete list of factors that should be
considered. There may be other factors that are pertinent to a particular application that should be considered.
(1) Type of contaminant One of the first factors that should be considered in selecting a cleanliness monitoring method is the type of contaminant that need
to be monitored. Is the contaminant particulate or thin film type? If thin film
contamination, is it organic or inorganic or both? Does the technique under
consideration monitor the type of contaminants that need to be monitored?
(2) Types of substrates What type of substrate is going to be monitored? Are
the techniques under consideration capable of monitoring this type of substrates? Are the techniques likely to damage the substrate to be monitored?
(3) Level of cleanliness to be monitored It is important that the level of contamination that is expected or tolerable can be monitored by the technique under
consideration. It is recommended that samples with different levels of contamination be monitored with the technique(s) under consideration. In evaluating
the technique for suitability, prepared samples should have levels of contamination spanning a range from 0% (i.e. clean surfaces) to maybe 200% of the expected level of contamination on the surface. The technique(s) should not have
any problem in distinguishing between different levels of contamination.
(4) Features of monitoring method It is important to consider various features
of the method under consideration. For example, is the technique non-contact
and/or non-destructive? Does the technique require deposit of some medium
on the surface? For example, the contact angle measurement requires that a
droplet of water be placed on the surface of interest. How large an area can
the technique measure? Is it sensitive to surface roughness? Can the technique
check parts of different geometries? Can the technique be used on-line? Is the
technique suitable for the environment it is going to be used in? Does the
technique cause any permanent changes to the surface? All of these questions
should be considered to determine the most appropriate monitoring technique
for a particular application.
(5) Measurement speed Is the measurement speed critical for the application
under consideration? If so, how fast can the technique make a measurement?
Is the speed sufficient to keep up with the production flow?
(6) Acquisition and operating cost How does the acquisition cost compare
among the techniques that meet other requirements for the application? Are
there any expendable items that would have to be purchased for continued use
of the equipment? How much does that add to the operating cost? What are
the maintenance and calibration requirements and how much these require-
37
ments will add to the operating cost? All these questions should be answered
to truly compare the total cost of any cleanliness monitoring system.
(7) Skill level required The operator skill level can be a key factor in the use of
some techniques, particularly the analytical techniques. Some techniques may
involve interpretation of the data to determine the quality of surface cleanliness.
These factors should also be considered in the selection of a cleanliness measuring technique. A high operator skill level will result in higher operating cost. In
the event of personnel turnover, higher training costs may also be incurred.
6. COST OF CLEANLING [10]
For every level of cleanliness, there is a cost to achieve that level of cleanliness.
There is corresponding level of failure/non-conformance for each cleanliness
level, hence cost of failures/non-conformance. Total Cost of achieving a certain
level of cleanliness is the sum of these two costs.
As the achieved level of surface cleanliness increases, the cost of cleaning also
increases. Eventually the incremental cost of cleaning rises exponentially. Hence
the cost of surface cleaning is directly proportional to the surface cleanliness level.
Intuitively, we know that the higher the cleanliness level the lower the failure/non-conformance rate, hence cost, due to surface cleanliness. The incremental
drop in costs due to lower failure/non-conformance also exhibits exponential relationship. Hence the cost of failures/non-conformance is inversely proportional to
the surface cleanliness level. If both of these costs were plotted on a graph, the
typical result would be like the one shown in Figure 1.
38
M.K. Chawla
An optimum level of cleanliness is the one that minimizes the total cost. Eventually one can arrive at a cleanliness level where the savings in the failure/nonconformance costs will not be offset by incremental cost of achieving cleanliness
beyond the optimum level. A small range around the optimum level of cleanliness
can be established as the Acceptable Level of cleanliness.
7. DEFINING ACCEPTABLE (OPTIMUM) LEVEL OF CLEANLINESS
39
results. These parts then must be followed through the process to measure the
level of success for each part at the subsequent operation. The level of cleanliness
that results in the desired minimum level of success is the minimum level of
cleanliness that must be achieved in production. This approach has its limitations.
For example, the results depend on what level of cleanliness is being achieved in
production. If the surface is too clean there may not be enough variation in the
cleanliness level to identify the point where minimum success is achieved. On the
other hand, if the surface is not clean enough the desirable success may not occur.
A more proactive approach is to prepare parts with different levels of surface
cleanliness, measure and record the cleanliness level and follow through with the
subsequent operation to correlate the success level with cleanliness level. It is
recommended that the range of cleanliness should be as wide as possible to help
identify the minimum level of cleanliness. Once again it is important that a statistically significant sample be used. It is also recommended that, if possible, several
cleanliness measurements should be taken from each part and the mean cleanliness level be correlated to the mean success level. Figure 2 [10] graphically depicts the typical result of correlating the success level to surface cleanliness level.
A minimum level of cleanliness is the one that corresponds to the target minimum
level of success.
7.2. Benchmark testing
Once a cleanliness monitoring method has been selected, it can be used to establish the cleanliness level achieved by current cleaning process (Benchmark).
The production can then be monitored to assure that benchmark cleanliness level
is being achieved. In addition, the product can be followed through the manufacturing process to assure that no problems occur downstream as a result of inadequate surface cleanliness. The level of non-conformance related to the level of
40
M.K. Chawla
cleanliness achieved should be monitored. The cost associated with a given level
of cleanliness and the cost of non-conformance associated with that given level of
surface cleanliness should be combined to determine the total cost. Changes
should be made to the cleaning process to minimize the total cost, i.e. optimize
the total cost. The level of cleanliness associated with the optimum total cost
should be considered the optimum or acceptable level of cleanliness.
8. ON-GOING, IN-PROCESS SURFACE CLEANLINESS MONITORING
Surface cleanliness monitoring system must be used to monitor the process and
assure that the desired cleanliness level is being achieved on an on-going basis.
Surface cleanliness monitoring system can be very useful in assessing how the
surface cleanliness level is affected by making changes to the cleaning process or
for evaluating alternative cleaning processes for their ability to achieve the desired cleanliness level.
The required level of cleaning agent concentration in the cleaning solution can
also be objectively determined and maintained by using a surface cleanliness
monitoring system. Measuring the effect of varying the concentration level of the
cleaning agent on surface cleanliness can help determine the optimum concentration level.
In most industries, the chemical or cleaning agent replenishment schedule is
usually time-dependent. The success of this approach relies on the level of contamination on each part and the number of parts processed in a given time interval
being relatively constant. In real life, the amount of contamination can vary considerably from part to part. In addition, the number of parts cleaned during a
given time frame can also vary considerably. A time-dependent replenishment
schedule is not the ideal way of assuring product quality. On-going, in-process
monitoring of surface cleanliness helps in replenishment of chemicals or cleaning
agents only when needed, and not based on a pre-determined, somewhat arbitrary
schedule.
9. SUMMARY
41
required to operate the system. Surface cleanliness monitoring method may be direct, indirect or analytical. A monitoring method can be used to optimize the
cleaning process by varying different parameters of the cleaning process while
monitoring surface cleanliness to see how it is affected by the change. It can also
help in ongoing monitoring of the cleaning process to assure that the desirable
level of cleanliness is being achieved.
REFERENCES
1. B. Kanegsberg and M. Chawla, Non Volatile Residue, A2C2 Magazine, 5, No. 3, 41 (2002)
and 5, No. 4, 45 (2002).
2. R.L. Gause, A Noncontacting Scanning Non Contact Photoelectron Emission Technique for
Bonding Surface Cleanliness Inspection, Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL, presented at Fifth Annual NASA Workshop, Cocoa Beach, Florida (1987).
3. B. Kanegsberg and M. Chawla, Contact Angle, A2C2 Magazine, 4, No. 8, 41 (2001).
4. Surface Quality Monitors Brochure, Photo Emission Tech., Inc.
5. B. Kanegsberg and M. Chawla, MESERAN, A2C2 Magazine, 4, No. 9, 49 (2001).
6. B. Kanegsberg and M. Chawla, Total Organic Carbon, A2C2 Magazine, 4, No. 10, 37 (2001).
7. Charles Evans Associates Website www.cea.com
8. R.D. Cormia, Problem-Solving SURFACE ANALYSIS Techniques, Surface Sciences Laboratories, Mountain View, CA: Advanced Materials & Processes, 16-23 (Dec. 1992).
9. Measurement and Characterization Website www.nrel.gov/measurements/surface/html
10. M. Chawla, How Clean is Clean? Measuring Surface Cleanliness and Defining Acceptable
Level of Cleanliness, in Handbook for Critical Cleaning, B. Kanegsberg and E. Kanegsberg
(Eds.), pp. 415-430, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL (2001).
AbstractSurface ionic contamination can cause device failures. In order to find the source of the
contamination many questions must be answered first. Are the failures due to incoming materials
that are not clean? Has there been a change in the process that is introducing contamination? What is
the exact nature of the contaminant, ionic, particulate, metallic, etc? Is there a training issue that
needs to be addressed. Can the failure be tested for or is it a long term reliability problem? These are
just a few of the questions that must be answered as part of the troubleshooting process. This paper
addresses how ion chromatography can be used to troubleshoot a manufacturing or cleaning process
and to assure the quality and reliability of electronic devices. Topics covered include:
1. What is ion chromatography.
2. How does it differ from other cleanliness testing methods.
3. How can ion chromatography be used to troubleshoot a cleaning process.
4. Real life examples showing how the use of ion chromatography has improved cleaning processes.
Keywords: Ionic contamination; ion chromatography; electronic devices.
1. INTRODUCTION
As electronic devices and assemblies become smaller and more complex, the requirements for improved quality control of product cleanliness have begun to escalate. Surface contamination from ions such as chloride, bromide, sodium, and
organic acids has been shown to cause failures in electronic devices [1]. Ionic
residues can cause corrosion, metal migration and electrical leakage. The failures
cased by these residues may be hard or soft failures and may occur several
months after the product has been manufactured and shipped to customers. Upon
re-testing the returned product, the failures can be intermittent or no trouble
found making troubleshooting the device for a root cause of the failure difficult.
These residues may be on the exposed surface of an electronic device, they may
be encapsulated in flux or resin deposits, they may be trapped under surface
mounted devices or they may be encapsulated in polymer finishes (Figure 1).
44
B. Newton
Figure 2. Analysis of a cassette used to transport disk drive components during manufacture.
45
Ionic contamination can also be found on materials that come in contact with
electrical devices during manufacture, e.g. gloves, cassettes, etc. (Figure 2). These
manufacturing consumables can transfer contamination to the manufactured
products and need to be examined for contamination in the same way that the final product is evaluated.
2. TYPES OF IONIC CONTAMINATION
Potentially corrosive ions found on printed circuit boards and electronic devices
include:
Sulfate - comes from a variety of materials such as oils and release agents
In the past, electronic component manufacturers, board manufacturers and electronic assemblers have relied on resistivity of solvent extract (ROSE) type test
methods to assure ionic cleanliness. Several studies reported by Contamination
Studies Laboratory (CSL, Kokomo, IN) have shown that the ROSE method is inadequate for true quantification of ionic contamination. Recently, a modified
ROSE method has been proposed as an IPC (Association Connecting Electronics
Industries) Standard Method IPC-TM-650 2.3.25.1. Although this new technique
is an improvement for reporting overall ionic contamination, it too provides insufficient information to troubleshoot the root cause of electronic failures caused by
ionic contamination.
The technique of ion chromatography is uniquely qualified for troubleshooting
the root cause of failures due to ionic contamination on electronic devices and
printed circuit boards. Ion chromatography can provide information on the chemical nature of the residue causing the failure. The output of the ion chromatograph
is called a chromatogram and gives the identity and quantity of each ion found
in a sample of a rinse extract of the device of interest.
Ion chromatography is a form of liquid chromatography. The technique is
based on the use of specialized column packings for analytical separation of ions
found in a chemical mixture. The main advantages of ion chromatography for
residue analysis are:
Method versatility
46
B. Newton
47
There has been a growing interest in the analysis of ionic contamination on electronic components. Absolute contamination level requirements and guidelines
have not been determined; however, Contamination Studies Laboratory (CSL,
Kokomo, IN) recommends maximum levels of chloride ion in the range 1.0 g/sq.
in for assembled boards with sensitive components such as microBGAs. The level
recommended for bare boards is less than 2.0 g/sq. in [3].
Ion chromatography provides the unique capability of identifying the individual ions for a given contamination issue. Since the source for chloride contamination can be much different than the source for organic acid contamination it is important to know which ions the manufacturer is dealing with in order to
understand and correct the root cause of the problem. This is not possible with resistivity of solvent extract (ROSE) measurements. The capability to identify and
quantify individual ions makes ion chromatography a valuable troubleshooting
tool for process contamination issues and process monitoring programs. In addition to being the most economical analytical technique for monitoring multiple
ions, ion chromatography also provides the ability to distinguish between noncorrosive and corrosive ions, something that ROSE testing is unable to do.
A number of studies have been published to show the use of ion chromatography to troubleshoot reliability issues with electronic products. One of the best
sources of case study information can be found on the web site for Contamination
Studies Laboratory (CSL) at www.residues.com. CSL regularly publishes case
studies showing the hazards of ionic contamination to electronic device reliability
on their web site and in each issue of Circuits Assembly magazine.
A good explanation of how ion chromatography has been used to identify
sources of CAF (conductive anodic filament) failures can be found in a study
completed by Ready et al. [4].
Several studies [5-7] have been completed on the analysis of ionic contamination on failed disk drive components.
As mentioned earlier, manufacturing materials and packaging can be an important source of ionic contamination. Two recent studies by Lin and Graves [8] and
Bahten and McMullen [9] provide information on the use of ion chromatography
for the analysis of ionic contamination on materials such as pink poly film (a
common packaging material) and cleaning brushes.
5. STANDARD TEST METHODS FOR TRACKING IONIC CONTAMINATION
48
B. Newton
IPC-TM-650, TM 2.3.25.1 Ionic Cleanliness Testing of Bare PWBs (modified ROSE Test Method).
6. CONCLUSION
The ion chromatography, ROSE and modified ROSE test methods have been developed to allow electronics manufacturers to identify and control ionic contamination before it evolves into a failed component or board. Tracking ionic contamination requires systematic troubleshooting and improved cleanliness of the
product as it is manufactured. This means cleaner raw materials and processes
which are controlled by systematic analysis using standard methods such as those
documented by IPC, IDEMA, IEST (Institute of Environmental Sciences and
Technology), and SEMI (Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International).
REFERENCES
1. D. Yang, C. Lee, Y. Yang, E. Kaiser, S. Heberling and B. Newton, Precision Cleaning, 17-23
(May 1998).
2. B. Newton, Precision Cleaning, 38-39 (March 2000).
3. D. Pauls and T. Munson, Circuits Assembly, 110-112 (September 1998).
4. W.J. Ready, B.A. Smith, L.J. Turbini and S.R. Stock, Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 515, 45-54
(1998).
5. A. Toxen, A2C2, 13-16 (September 1998).
6. P. Mee, M. Smallen and D. Vickers, IDEMA Insight, 1 (March/April 1997).
7. J. Thompson, T. Prommanuwat, A. Siriraks and S. Heberling, IDEMA Insight, 24-29 (May/June
1999).
8. S. Lin and S. Graves, Micro, 95-106 (October 1998).
9. K. Bahten and D. McMullen, Proc. Semiconductor Pure Water and Chemicals Conference, 355364 (March 1999).
DEFINITIONS
In this paper a number of abbreviations, special terms, and trademarks are employed:
(1) Ci means microCurie, a unit of radiation which corresponds to 3.7 E 4
(37,000) disintegrations per second.
(2) Carbon-14 (C-14) refers to the radioactive isotope of the element Carbon, an
isotope which emits only soft or low energy beta particles; most C-14 beta
particles are stopped by a sheet of paper.
(3) USNRC EXEMPT means the very low level of Carbon-14 that is not regulated by the U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission. No license is required for
Operated for the United States Department of Energy under prime contract
DE-AC04-01AL66850. Copyright Honeywell LLC, 2002.
50
possession or use. Only USNRC licensed companies are permitted to distribute EXEMPT quantities not to exceed ten 100 Ci of C-14 (or combinations
of smaller quantities that added up to 100 Ci of C-14) at one time. Multiple
quantities may be stored by the user. Shipments may be made to anyone in the
US. Foreign shipments under IATA regulations must conform to the regulations of the country of final destination.
(4) ng means nanogram (1 E - 9 grams or 0.000000001 grams); g means microgram (1 E - 6 grams or 0.000001 grams), mg means milligram (1 E - 3 grams
or 0.001 grams).
(5) L means microliter (1 E - 6 liter or 0.000001 liter).
(6) GM detector refers to a thin end-window Geiger Mller detector tube which
detects the C-14 beta emissions which penetrate through the 1.42.0 mg/cm2
mica window.
(7) One nanomole (nmole) is 1 E - 9 moles which equals approximately. 6 E 14
molecules (from Avogadros ~ 6 E 23 molecules per gram mole).
(8) 1 square centimeter (sq cm) with a roughness factor of 3 is equal to 3 E 16
square Angstroms.
(9) Monolayer refers to the number of molecules of a material which covers 1 sq
cm in a conventional non-close-packed configuration. For example, on a
smooth, flat surface with a roughness factor of 3, each molecule of ntridecane occupies about 50 sq. Angstroms which equates to ~ 6 E 14 molecules per sq. cm i.e. one nanomole.
(10) NVR means non-volatile residue; NVOR means non-volatile organic residue.
(11) MESERAN is an acronym for Measurement and Evaluation of Surfaces by
Evaporative Rate ANalysis.
(12) MESERAN, MicroSolventEvaporator (MSE), MicroOrganicResidue, and
MOR are trademarks licensed to ERA Systems, Inc.
(13) Ln or ln is the natural logarithm.
(14) 1 mg/ft2 is equivalent to 1.0764 g/cm2 or 1 g/cm2 is equivalent to 0.929
mg/ft2.
1. INTRODUCTION
51
contamination on surfaces and the crosslink density (or degree of cure) in polymers. In addition, the MESERAN technique can be used for quantifying chemically active sites on surfaces [1-3].
Honeywell FM&T, KCP (henceforth KCP) has been using MESERAN Analyzers for approximately 30 years to detect and quantify organic contamination on
parts and evaluate various cleaning processes for removing organic contamination. KCP has used MESERAN Analyzers extensively to evaluate the ability of
alternate solvents and processes for removing specific organic contaminants to
eliminate the use of chlorinated and fluorinated solvents [4-10]. In recent years,
KCP has been working on several projects with The MESERAN Company to improve data analysis and develop new methods for using the MESERAN technology [11-14].
2. PRINCIPLE OF MESERAN TECHNIQUE [15]
52
Each test takes less than 3 minutes and the amount of radiochemical employed
is EXEMPT from U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission and/or Agreement State
licensing regulations due to the very low level of C-14 involved.
For the measurement of microorganic residues, the MESERAN method may be
used:
(1) Directly on a flat or concave surface and any microorganic residue thereon
which is chemically compatible with the particular radiochemical employed, or
(2) Indirectly using an extracting solvent followed by depositing and evaporating
an aliquot amount onto a clean reference surface. Subsequent deposition
and evaporation of the radiochemical solution permits measurement of the
amount of deposited residue by comparing the results with previously obtained standards similarly deposited from volumetric dilutions.
For non-polar and/or hydrocarbon type residues, tridecane-C14 in cyclopentane
(designated BK) is employed. For more polar residues, tetrabromoethane-C14 in
cyclopentane (designated AK) is used. In order to provide a high number of detected emissions for the minimal amount of radiochemical deposited, the
tridecane-C14 has a specific activity of approximately 57 Ci/mole (one carbon
atom of tridecane is essentially pure C14 isotope) while the tetrabromoethane has
both carbon atoms labeled (approximately 114 Ci/mole). Approximately 200
ng of radiochemical are deposited in each test with similar levels of radioactivity.
The MESERAN method assumes that the particular radiochemical employed is
chemically compatible with the residue, that the test solution droplet covers all of
the residue, and that the test solution solvent substantially dissolves the residue
within the time period of the solvent evaporation. Attention to the avoidance of
inadvertent contamination and the maintenance of reasonably constant temperature and pressure are required for optimal reproducibility from test to test.
2.1. Mechanism of the MESERAN technique for quantifying organic residues
[1-3, 11-14]
When a homogeneous chemical is permitted to evaporate, the classical mechanism of the process (normally measured by monitoring the already evaporated
portion) follows first order kinetics, i.e., the plot of log concentration vs. time is a
straight line. This mechanism applies to pure materials as well as to solutions of
chemicals in which the components are chemically compatible and in which the
second component is non-volatile under the conditions of the process. In the presence of the second component, the rate of evaporation is slowed.
In the MESERAN technology, however, the amount of radiochemical retained
by the surface as a function of time is measured by counting the emissions arising
from the radiochemical molecules remaining on the surface. In this discussion, the
temperature and pressure are assumed constant and the concentration of already
evaporated molecules in the adjacent gaseous phase approaches zero due to the
flowing air or nitrogen referred to above. The molecular weight of each evaporating molecule and the intermolecular forces among the near-neighbor molecules
53
are thus the primary factors in determining the tendency of each molecule to remain in solution or conversely to escape from the liquid portion of the air/liquid
(or semisolid) interface. In the MESERAN technology, which employs only a
monolayer equivalent of the radiochemical, the observed rate of evaporation is
thus a function of the residual concentration of the non-evaporated molecules of
the Carbon-14 radiochemical. Figure 3 illustrates the typical evaporation of the
radiochemical solution from a clean surface. The A-B line represents the evaporation of the low boiling solvent (e.g., cyclopentane). The rationale for the initial increase in counts/second is that the C-14 soft beta emissions are partially absorbed
by the solvent molecules. B represents the point at which substantially all of the
low boiling solvent has evaporated and the maximal amount of residual radiation
reaches the GM detector. The B-C line represents the evaporation of the radiochemical from the surface under the conditions of the test. C represents a level
where the GM detector can no longer adequately differentiate the residual radiation from background.
A solution of the high-boiling-but-volatile tridecane-C14 in higher boiling hydrocarbons (i.e., contamination) follows a similar but slower path than does the
evaporation of the labeled tridecane itself since the non-volatile residue molecules occupy increasing portions of the liquid (or semi-solid) interface. The rate at
which the solvent evaporates is slowed somewhat and the rate at which the radiochemical evaporates is slowed considerably with the observed rate of evaporation
being a function of the amount of residue on the surface. The observed rate of
evaporation of the radiochemical (the slope expressed as a positive integer) thus
is an inverse measure of the amount of non-evaporating residue. The lower the
slope, the more the residue and vice versa. Figure 4 illustrates typical evaporations of the radiochemical solution with increasing amounts of residue. ABC is
repeated from Figure 3 and illustrates a typical evaporation of the radiochemical
solution with no interactions from residue (i.e., a clean substrate). A*B*C* illus-
54
trates a typical evaporation of the radiochemical solution with some contamination present. A**B**C** illustrates a typical evaporation of the radiochemical solution with a larger amount of contamination present.
2.2. Methods of analyzing MESERAN data [1-14]
There are two general methods for analyzing the MESERAN data: (1) Total
Counts (total area under each curve based on counts minus background) and (2)
Slope of the evaporation of radiochemical (the post-peak portion of the curve).
Based upon raw data minus background, Figure 5 illustrates three typical experimentally derived curves of natural logarithm (Ln or ln) counts per second minus
background vs. time in seconds. Figure 5 is similar to Figure 4 except raw data
from actual tests are shown.
In Figure 5, the upper curve represents a high level of organic residue, the middle curve represents a medium level of organic residue, and the lower curve represents a low level of organic residue. The scatter, particularly at the lower values,
is due to the inherent randomness of radiation (the Poisson distribution in which
the square root of each count total is the best estimate of one standard deviation).
Figure 5. Plot of raw data showing low, medium, and high levels of organic contamination.
55
In an effort to reduce the effect of the randomness of radiation, the data (ln
(counts background)) are smoothed from six seconds through 115 seconds
(for 120 second length tests) and replotted. The smoothing is accomplished by
summing the ln (counts background) at the sixth second with the previous five
seconds and the subsequent five seconds and dividing this number by 10. A divisor of 10 is used instead of 11 because it is statistically sound to take the number
of items being smoothed and subtract one from it because a degree of freedom is
lost. This process is carried out through the 115th second and the subsequent data
are replotted as smoothed (ln (counts background)) versus time. Figure 6 represents the same data as in Figure 5 except that the data in Figure 6 are logarithmically smoothed to increase the reliability of the individual points. The plotted
smoothed curve is then analyzed via linear regression to determine the slope of
the post-peak line (down to near background) which best fits the data representing
the evaporative process. The determined slope is multiplied by 10,000 to convert
it to a positive integer; this becomes the reported MESERAN slope value with
units of smoothed (ln (counts background))/sec x (10,0000).
Figure 6. Logarithmic plot of smoothed data showing low, medium, and high levels of organic contamination.
56
57
58
Figure 8. Calibration curve for DOP on aluminum panels using MESERAN total counts.
Figure 9. Calibration curve for DOP on aluminum panels using MESERAN low variance slopes.
59
Whenever possible it is advantageous to develop calibration curves for the contaminants of interest. KCP has developed calibration curves for numerous contaminants typically encountered in KCP operations such as oils, greases, mold releases, solder fluxes, resins, etc. However, since one does not always know all of
the contaminants that may be present on a part, KCP developed a general calibration curve to use for unknown samples based upon hydrocarbon residues. Thus
far, most hydrocarbon residues tested have similar calibration curves for the various amounts of residue.
3. EXPERIMENTAL
3.1. Purpose
KCP conducted a cleanliness evaluation to determine the NVOR amounts on
aluminum and stainless steel panels which were machined using KCP machining
fluids and cleaning processes chosen for production of hardware for a particular
customer. This section of the paper describes how KCP used recent advances in
MESERAN technology to determine the NVOR amounts on four stainless steel
panels and four aluminum panels (31 in2 each, excluding edges) by extracting the
panels with methylene chloride and quantifying the extracted residues in mg/ft2.
The virgin methylene chloride solvent was also evaluated so that its contribution
could be subtracted from the solvent extracts. The customer specifically requested
that the results be reported in mg/ft2 as opposed to g/cm2, therefore that is how
the results are reported in this paper. It is common practice in the Aerospace industry (as well as other industries) to report contamination amounts on large surfaces in mg/ft2. The conversion factors for these units are 1 mg/ft2 is equivalent to
1.0764 g/cm2 or 1 g/cm2 is equivalent to 0.929 mg/ft2.
3.2. Sample details
For the NVOR evaluations, four samples each of the aluminum and stainless steel
(10 cm x 10 cm x 0.7 cm) were machined at KCP using particular machining fluids and associated machining methods. The four KCP machining fluids evaluated
were a hydrocarbon blend (mixture of 70% Pennex N 47 and 30% Hangsterfers
Hard Cut # 511) and three aqueous-based coolants (Cimtech 200, Trimsol, and
Cimstar 3700). The suppliers for these materials are: Pennex N 47 Exxon Company, Houston, TX; Hangsterfers Hard Cut #511 Hangsterfers Laboratories,
Mantua, NJ; Cimtech 200 Cincinnati Milacron Marketing, Cincinnati, OH; Trim
Sol Master Chemical Corporation, Perrysburg, OH; and Cimstar 3700 Cincinnati Milacron Marketing, Cincinnati, OH. Two of the stainless steel samples were
improperly labeled; therefore, the contaminant for these two panels is not known
for sure. They were either contaminated with the hydrocarbon blend or Cimtech
200 and are described as such in subsequent portions of this paper (including several tables). All of the stainless steel samples were passivated by the KCP plating
60
group. This evaluation was conducted on these eight small samples to allow
cleanliness verifications to be performed at KCP prior to cleaning large samples
(25.4 cm x 25.4 cm x 1.3 cm) that would be sent to the customer for cleanliness
verification.
3.3. Cleaning process
The aluminum and stainless steel panels tested in this evaluation were cleaned using the following steps: (1) ultrasonic cleaned in Dirl-Lum 603 (30 g per liter concentration) for 5 minutes at 140F (60C), (2) rinsed in flowing DI water for 15
30 seconds, (3) DI water rinsed in ultrasonic cascade rinse station with 3 tanks (30
seconds in each tank) at 110115F (43.346.1C), (4) blown dry with filtered
nitrogen, and (5) baked for 30 minutes minimum at 220F (104.4C )in a HEPA
filtered convection oven with nitrogen flowing into the oven. The panels were
then packaged in nylon bags and heat sealed.
Dirl-Lum 603, supplied by Blue Wave Ultrasonics, Davenport IA, is a powdered alkaline cleaner. It contains sodium metasilicate, sodium carbonate, sodium
tripolyphosphate, dodecyl benzene sulfonate, polyethoxyolated phenol, and nonyl
phenol.
3.4. Customer cleanliness requirements and associated problems
The customer has cleanliness level requirements for this hardware which can be extremely difficult to measure. The desired cleanliness of the hardware is <0.1 mg/ft2.
Cleanliness measurements performed by the customer for these parts are typically
carried out using a gravimetric NVR procedure. This procedure requires that the
part being measured is rinsed with a known volume of a clean solvent (methylene
chloride) to extract contamination from the part. The solvent and extracted residues
are caught in a clean receptacle and evaporated in a precleaned and preweighed
dish. After all of the solvent extract has evaporated, the dish is reweighed to obtain
a weight of the dish plus the residue. The dish weight is subtracted from the dish
plus residue weight to determine the level of the contamination extracted from the
part. Similar evaluations are performed on the virgin solvent to determine the residue in the solvent itself. This residue amount is then subtracted from the extracted
residue amount to give a final result for the residue extracted.
Gravimetric analysis can be a difficult technique to use consistently when
measuring low levels of contamination (<1 mg) because many factors can affect
these small weight measurements. Customer cleanliness criterion of <0.1 mg/ft2
further complicates matters because error is prone to being introduced during
sample collection and sample processing which can be significant when trying to
accurately measure to <0.1 mg/ft2. Every piece of laboratory equipment (such as
glassware, weighing trays, funnels, etc.) that comes in contact with the solvent
will contribute a small but variable amount of NVR to the solvent. The magnitude
of this contribution is not constant due to fluctuations in contact time, surface
temperature, and other variables. Although these variables are controlled as well
61
as possible, they still will contribute some level of error to the reported results,
and at the low levels of contamination being discussed, this error may be significant. In addition, gravimetric analysis is typically performed after rinsing a 1 ft2
(144 in2) sample area while the samples used in this evaluation were significantly
smaller (31 in2).
3.5. KCP proposed method of evaluating NVR levels
Due to the problems discussed above, KCP proposed the following: (1) Extract
the contamination from the panels with methylene chloride just as would be done
in the gravimetric procedure, (2) use the newly developed MicroSolventEvaporator to evaporate 250-L aliquots of the methylene chloride extract onto clean reference substrates, (3) test the evaporated residues using the MESERAN Analyzer
to quantify the NVOR levels extracted from the samples, and (4) perform gravimetric analysis on the remaining extract to determine if there was enough residue to
be weighed on a balance.
It should be noted that gravimetric NVR methods will weigh all contamination
(organic, inorganic, and particles such as metals) whereas the MESERAN method
detects only NVOR (inorganic contamination and metal particles are not detected). The real thrust of these evaluations is to quantify the organic contamination and it is estimated that the majority of the contamination being extracted
from the parts is organic residue. Whereas, the contribution of inorganic and
metal particles is thought to be small.
3.6. KCP machining fluid information
The ingredients for the machining fluids (as obtained from their Material Safety
Data Sheets) are as follows:
Hydrocarbon Blend
Pennex N 47 petroleum distillates (~ 78%) and proprietary additives (~ 22%).
Hangsterfers Hard Cut #511 petroleum oil, chlorinated paraffin, and triglycerides.
Cimtech 200
Ethanolamine (10% max), caprylic acid (10% max), triethanolamine (10% max),
isononanoic acid (10% max), and balance water.
Trim Sol
Petroleum oil (3040%), petroleum sulfonate (2030%), chlorinated alkene
polymer (2030%), nonionic surfactant (110%), aromatic alcohol (110%), propylene glycol ether (110%), propylene glycol (<1%), substituted indole (<1%),
blue-green dye (<1%), silicone defoamer (<1%), and balance water.
Cimstar 3700
Mineral Oil (10% max), diethanolamine (10% max), triethanolamine, (10% max),
aminomethylpropanol (10% max), and balance water.
62
63
20 minutes per 250 L sample when performed at 30C. The evaporated residue
was then tested with the MESERAN Analyzer. A minimum of 5 replicates were
run for each condition tested. The data were compared to calibrations performed
using the KCP hydrocarbon blend cutting oil (mixture of 70% Pennex N 47 and
30% Hangsterfers Hard Cut # 511) deposited on the same stainless steel substrates. Interpolations between the calibration points were performed to determine
how much residue was in the extract. This amount was then multiplied by the appropriate factor to determine the quantity of residue in the entire amount of extract that was obtained from each panel. The amount of extract obtained from
each sample was measured so this calculation could be performed. Recovery of
7080% of the 100-mL of methylene chloride solvent was typical. The NVR of
the methylene chloride was analyzed in a similar fashion to generate a baseline
value for the solvent. Ultimately, the NVR of the methylene chloride was subtracted to determine the amount of residue actually extracted from the sample
panels. This result was then converted to an amount per square foot for comparison with the customers specification.
3.9. KCP gravimetric analysis
Only a small portion of the solvent extracts (generally about 45 mL out of the
approximate 80 mL obtained after the extraction) was used in the evaluation conducted with the MicroSolventEvaporator and MESERAN Analyzer. Therefore,
the remainder of each solvent extract (generally 7080 mL) was sent to KCPs
Analytical Sciences Laboratory for complete evaporation in an attempt to quantify the resulting residue gravimetrically. A Mettler AE163 balance was used to
make the weight measurements. The calibration label on the balance indicates the
performance specification is +/ 0.005% of reading + 0.1 mg. The weights were
measured to the nearest 0.01 mg. There is definitely greater error associated with
weighing these small amounts. KCP Analytical Sciences personnel indicated that
the residue values determined gravimetrically were at best good only to approximately +/ 0.03 mg.
The virgin methylene chloride and the methylene chloride extracts were processed as follows:
1. Weighing trays were baked in an oven for 1 hour @ 105C.
2. The weighing trays were taken from the oven and placed in a desiccator and
allowed to cool.
3. The weighing trays were placed on an analytical balance and massed to the
nearest 0.01 mg.
4. The methylene chloride and methylene chloride extracts were poured into individual weighing trays and allowed to evaporate. This process continued until all of the solvent evaporated for each sample.
5. The weighing trays were placed in an oven for 1 hour @ 105C.
64
6. The weighing trays were removed from the oven and placed in a desiccator to
cool.
7. The weighing trays were placed on an analytical balance and massed to the
nearest 0.01 mg.
8. The NVR of the methylene chloride was calculated by subtracting the result
of step 3 from the result of step 7.
Two samples of virgin methylene chloride were evaluated using this procedure.
One sample was 100 mL of methylene chloride taken straight from the original
bottle, measured in a clean graduated cylinder, poured into a precleaned glass bottle, and then sealed with caps containing Teflon inserts. The second methylene
chloride NVR sample was obtained using the following procedure: (1) 100 mL of
methylene chloride from the original bottle was measured in a clean graduated
cylinder, (2) the methylene chloride was poured into a precleaned Teflon squeeze
bottle, (3) the precleaned stainless steel funnel used to hold the samples that were
extracted was rinsed with 100 mL of methylene chloride, (4) the methylene chloride drained through the funnel and was captured in a precleaned glass bottle, and
(5) the glass bottle was sealed with caps containing Teflon inserts. This process
captured 89 mL of methylene chloride for analysis.
After aliquots from the extracts were analyzed using the MicroSolventEvaporator and MESERAN Analyzer, the remainder of each of the extracts was poured
into clean graduated cylinders to measure the amount of solvent left for gravimetric analysis. The extracts were then poured back into their respective bottles and
sent to be evaporated and measured gravimetrically.
3.10. Gravimetric NVR evaluations of large panels by the customer
Based upon the MESERAN results obtained for the small panels (31 in2), KCP
was convinced that they could clean the large panels to acceptable levels for the
customer. Therefore, large panels were manufactured with the same machining fluids, cleaned, and sent to the customer for evaluation. The customer evaluated the
samples using their extraction and gravimetric NVR procedure described below.
The analytical procedure involves three steps: 1) rinsing the surface to be tested
with solvent and collecting the rinse solvent; 2) concentrating the solvent to near
dryness by evaporation with a clean gas; and 3) weighing the dry residue to determine the NVR. In the first step, the organic material is rinsed from the metal
surface with methylene chloride, which must be completely captured in the sample container. The concentration stage consists of evaporating the solvent first by
bubbling with clean gas (helium or nitrogen) and then by blow-down after transferring the residual solvent with the NVR into progressively smaller containers to
minimize the container surface area and potential loss of NVR. All transfer steps
must be quantitative and will require small aliquots of methylene chloride to rinse
the containers. The final step is to transfer the remaining solvent containing the
NVR into a tared weighing boat and weigh to a constant weight after all of the
solvent has evaporated.
65
Table 1.
Volatility of KCP machining fluids
Cutting Oil
Weight After 20
Hour Air Drying (g)
% Volatile
Hydrocarbon Blend
Cimtech 200
Trim Sol
Cimstar 3700
0.11322
0.10790
0.17500
0.11665
0.11292
0.00290
0.01100
0.00400
0.26
97.31
93.71
96.57
66
Figure 10. Plot of various amounts of hydrocarbon blend (70% Pennex N 47 and Hangsterfers
Hard Cut # 511) on stainless steel disks using smoothed Ln (counts background). (MESERAN
tests carried out using radiochemical BK).
Figure 11. MESERAN low variance slope calibration of hydrocarbon blend (70% Pennex N 47 &
30% Hangsterfers Hard Cut # 511) on stainless steel disks with 0.015 inch/RPM spiral grooves.
67
same area until a large volume of solvent has been evaporated). In addition, these
stainless steel disks have grooves machined in them which act as a self-centering
mechanism so that the solvent evaporates in a confined space and does not migrate elsewhere.
After the methylene chloride was evaporated onto the stainless steel disks with
the MicroSolventEvaporator, the disks were tested with the MESERAN Analyzer
using radiochemical BK (best suited for detecting nonpolar residues). Table 2
shows the average low variance MESERAN slope results for the 250-L depositions from the methylene chloride extracts.
The results were compared to those obtained previously from the calibration
using known amounts of the KCP hydrocarbon blend machining fluid (mixture of
70% Pennex N 47 and 30% Hangsterfers Hard Cut # 511) on these same substrates, which were shown previously in Figure 11. The average low variance
slope obtained for the methylene chloride blanks was 2412. The MESERAN
slope value has units of smoothed (ln (counts background))/sec x (10,0000);
however, the units are generally not given when the data are shown. A linear-log
Table 2.
MESERAN low variance slope results for 250-L depositions from methylene chloride extractions
Description of
Sample Tested
Methylene Chloride
(Straight from Bottle)
Hydrocarbon Blend
on Aluminum
Hydrocarbon Blend
or Cimtech 200
on Stainless Steel
Hydrocarbon Blend
or Cimtech 200
on Stainless Steel
Cimtech 200
on Aluminum
Trim Sol
on Aluminum
Trim Sol
on Stainless Steel
Cimstar 3700
on Stainless Steel
Cimstar 3700
on Aluminum
Average MESERAN
Low Variance Slope
(smoothed (ln (counts
background))/sec x (10,0000))
Standard
Deviation
2412
111.71
4.63
2392
186.34
7.79
2319
196.57
8.48
2324
176.14
7.58
2049
45.35
2.21
2205
351.69
15.95
2399
55.25
2.30
2208
46.33
2.10
2385
141.25
5.92
Coefficient of
Variation
(%)
68
interpolation using the values from the calibration in Figure 11 was performed to
calculate the contamination level. The slope of 2412 corresponds to a contamination level of 3 ng (or 0.000003 mg) for the 250 L of methylene chloride evaporated on the stainless steel disks. Therefore, the NVR of the 100-mL methylene
chloride blanks would be 1.2 g (or 0.0012 mg) as calculated below:
(3 ng/250 L) x (1000 L/1 mL) x (100 mL) x (1 g/1000 ng) = 1.2 g (or 0.0012 mg)
The contamination results obtained from the MESERAN Analysis for the methylene chloride extracts from the panels tested are shown in Table 3. The average
low variance slopes obtained for the samples were converted into equivalent contamination amounts (in nanograms) for the 250 L of extract evaporated by performing a linear-log interpolation using the values from the calibration curve in
Figure 11. Then the amount of contamination in all of the extract collected for
each sample was calculated (shown in micrograms) using similar equations as
shown previously for the methylene chloride blanks. Next, the methylene chloride
NVR was subtracted from the contamination amount in all of the extract collected
to determine the NVR amount extracted from each sample (this result is shown as
g/31 in2). Finally, this contamination was converted to an amount per square
foot to compare to the customer requirement of <0.1 mg/ft2. The results of all
samples tested passed the requirement of <0.1 mg/ft2 and most of them were significantly lower.
4.4. KCP gravimetric analysis results
The results obtained in the gravimetric analysis on the methylene chloride blanks
and the methylene chloride extracts are shown in Table 4. Since the extract
amount analyzed gravimetrically was less than the original extract amount (due to
aliquots being taken for MESERAN Analysis), the gravimetrically determined
NVRs were factored up to account for the lost contamination. In all cases except
two, the contamination determined gravimetrically was less than the gravimetrically determined methylene chloride NVR, which by definition makes the extracted residue less than the customer limit of <0.1 mg/ft2. One of the hydrocarbon blend or Cimtech 200 samples on stainless steel had a positive result after the
methylene chloride NVR was subtracted. After converting the contamination
from mg/31 in2 to mg/ft2, the contamination determined is higher than the customer limit of <0.1 mg/ft2. The Cimstar 3700 on stainless steel sample also had a
positive result after the methylene chloride NVR was subtracted; however, the resulting contamination was still less than the customer limit of <0.1 mg/ft2. The error associated with measuring these small amounts of contamination makes all of
these gravimetric results doubtful and it is recommended that they be dismissed.
4.5. Results of gravimetric NVR evaluations of large panels by the customer
The gravimetric NVR results obtained by the customer on the large aluminum and
stainless steel panels (100 in2) machined, cleaned, and packaged at KCP are
70
71
NVR Level
(mg/ft2)
0.03
0.04
0.07
0.04
0.04
0.02
0.02
0.06
5. CONCLUSIONS
72
and different methods were used for determining the NVR levels, the results obtained were remarkably consistent.
The NVR data determined by KCP with the MicroSolventEvaporator and MESERAN technique and the NVR data determined gravimetrically by the customer
follow a similar pattern. Tables 3 and 5 indicate that the results of both test methods exhibited the same cleanliness level relationship between the aluminum and
stainless steel panels for each specific contaminant evaluated. Hydrocarbon
blend-contaminated samples had more contamination after cleaning on the
stainless steel panels than on the aluminum panels. Cimtech 200-contaminated
samples had more contamination after cleaning on the aluminum panels than on
the stainless steel panels. Trimsol-contaminated samples had more contamination
after cleaning on the aluminum panels than on the stainless steel panels. Cimstar
3700-contaminated samples had more contamination after cleaning on the
stainless steel panels than on the aluminum panels.
Acknowledgements
The work of Garth Christoff, Tom Hand, and Ed Fuller was instrumental in the
performance of these evaluations.
REFERENCES
1. J.L. Anderson, Quantitative Detection of Surface Contaminants, Journal of the American Association of Contamination Control, II (6),9 (1963).
2. J.L. Anderson et al., Measurement and Evaluation of Surfaces and Surface Phenomena by
Evaporative Rate Analyses, Journal of Paint Technology, 40, No. 523, 320-327 (August 1968).
3. J.L. Anderson, Evaporative Rate Analysis: Its First Decade, in: Characterization of Metal and
Polymer Surfaces, L.H. Lee (Ed.), Vol 2, pp. 409-427, Academic Press, New York (1977). This
paper summarizes all known references prior to 1975.
4. L.C. Jackson, Solubility Parameters and Evaporative Rate Analyses in Organic Residue Characterization (Topical Report), UNCLASSIFIED, Bendix-Kansas City Division: BDX-6131099, March 1974. (Available from NTIS)
5. L.C. Jackson, Contaminant Removal Based on Solubility Parameter and Evaporative Rate
Analysis Technologies (Topical Report), UNCLASSIFIED, Bendix-Kansas City Division:
BDX-613-1128, August 1974. (Available from NTIS)
6. L.C. Jackson, How to Select a Substrate Cleaning Solvent, Adhesives Age, 22-31 (December
1974).
7. L.C. Jackson, Solvent Cleaning Process Efficiency, Adhesives Age, 31-34 (July 1976).
8. L.C. Jackson, Removal of Silicone Grease and Oil Contaminants, Adhesives Age, 29-32
(April 1977).
9. L.C. Jackson, Contaminant Cleaning for Critical Electrical Assembly Areas (Final Report),
UNCLASSIFIED, Bendix-Kansas City Division: BDX-613-1695, February 1978. (Available
from NTIS)
10. M.G. Benkovich, Solvent Substitution for Electronic Products, International Journal of Environmentally Conscious Manufacturing, 1, No. 1, 27-32 (1992).
11. M.G. Benkovich and J.L. Anderson, Measurement of Organic Residues on Surfaces to a Low
Fraction of a Monolayer, Precision Cleaning, 16-28 (May 1996). This paper includes many of
the more current references to MESERAN technology.
73
12. M.G. Benkovich and J.L. Anderson, Quantification of MicroOrganic Residues to Low
Nanogram Levels, Precision Cleaning 96 Proceedings, 115-122 (1996).
13. J.L. Anderson, R.F. Russell and M.G. Benkovich, Quantitative Measurement of Extremely
Low Levels of Non-Volatile Residues (NVR) on Surfaces and in Liquids, Precision Cleaning
97 Proceedings, 96-108 (1997).
14. J.L. Anderson, R.F. Russell and M.G. Benkovich, Solvent NVR: A Problem and a Solution,
CleanTech 98 Proceedings, 331-340 (1998).
15. MESERAN Analyzer Literature, ERA Systems Inc., The MESERAN Company, Chattanooga,
TN.
AbstractCleaning validations are very difficult to perform. They can be made easier if an appropriate method for analyzing the samples is used. The method used should be based on the previously
established residue limits of both the active and cleaning agent. There are many choices of analytical techniques that can potentially be used. This article describes various analytical techniques that
are available for use, particularly for cleaning agent residues.
Keywords: Pharmaceutical cleaning; cleaning validation; total organic carbon; high performance
liquid chromatography; Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy; ultraviolet detection; evaporative
light scattering detection; mass spectrometry; photoelectron emission; residue; method validation.
1. INTRODUCTION
In the pharmaceutical industry cleaning is an important component of the manufacturing process. Regulatory agencies both in Europe and North America require
that the cleaning process be validated [1]. It must be clearly shown that product
residues are removed to an acceptable level. In addition, not only do the manufacturers have to show that they have cleaned their product to an acceptable level but
they have to demonstrate that they have removed the cleaning agent also to an acceptable level. Cleaning validations require tools to measure the residue levels left
on surfaces. These tools are required to be validated. This poses a challenge to
analytical chemists in that they must first choose the appropriate method to measure the residues and then they must validate that method. If the method cannot be
validated it cannot be used to measure residue levels. There are many types of
analytical techniques that can be used for these analyses. The methods can be
specific or non-specific. The chemist can also utilize complementary techniques
such as total organic carbon (TOC) determination or high performance liquid
chromatography (HPLC). The analytical chemist must examine the pros and cons
of each technique in order to choose the appropriate technique. Again, whichever
method or methods are chosen they must be validatable.
76
H.J. Kaiser
The analytical chemist must determine what is being measured. Is the residue a
drug active, formulation component, or the cleaning agent? Is the residue organic
or inorganic? Is the residue water soluble or water insoluble? Is the residue particulate, microbial or is it an endotoxin? The answers to these questions will narrow the choice of analytical techniques available. For example, if the residue is a
drug active, HPLC or gas chromatography (GC) could be utilized. If the residue is
a formulation component or a cleaning agent, TOC determination may be the
method of choice.
An important piece of information that the analytical chemist will require is the
target residue limit. The target residue limit should always be established prior to
the selection of the analytical technique. Once the residue limit has been established the analytical technique can be chosen and a method developed that can determine residue levels below the acceptance limit [2, 3].
3. SPECIFIC VERSUS NON-SPECIFIC TECHNIQUES
Once the type of residue has been established the analytical chemist can chose between either specific or non-specific techniques. A specific technique detects a
unique compound. A non-specific technique detects any compound that produces
a certain response. Examples of specific techniques include HPLC, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), ion chromatography (IC), atomic absorption
(AA), inductively coupled plasma atomic emission (ICP), capillary electrophoresis (CE) and various protein methods. Examples of non-specific techniques include TOC determination, pH determination, acid/base titrations and conductivity.
4. TECHNIQUES FOR SAMPLING
77
technique where, after the manufacture of a normal drug product, the product, less
the drug active, is manufactured again. A sample is then taken of this material and
analyzed for the drug active in the previous batch. This is a questionable sampling
technique because it assumes that the residue is distributed uniformly throughout
the placebo. Another problem with placebo sampling is that the residue may be so
dilute in the placebo that the analytical technique may not be able to detect it.
This is an acceptable technique only if it is used along with swab or rinse water
data. Therefore, since swabbing or rinse water analysis must be done in conjunction with placebo sampling, this technique is rarely utilized. Placebo sampling is
important when validating the cleaning of filling equipment or small pieces of
equipment where direct rinse water measurements are not practical.
5. ANALYZING THE SAMPLE
5.1. Interferences
If the detection technique is non-specific a good strategy is to first identify possible sources of interference. These interferences could be either positive or negative. For example, in TOC determinations, if the person performing the sample
collection accidentally coughs onto the surface being analyzed this would cause a
positive interference. Since TOC measures a non-specific property, the residue
amount would be calculated as if all of the measured property were due to that
residue. For example, if the target residue was aspirin and the technique utilized
was TOC determination, the TOC measured would be calculated as if all of the
TOC came from the aspirin even though there may be excipients and/or detergents present. This provides an upper limit value and is a worst-case situation.
The identification of possible interferences is important to both specific and
non-specific methods. In the case of specific methods there should not be any
interferences if the method was properly developed. It is important that the
method is able to detect the analyte after exposure to the cleaning environment.
Studies should be conducted to demonstrate that the analyte does not change after
exposure to alkaline or acidic cleaners. This can be simply done by exposing the
drug active to a dilution of the cleaning agent at the temperature that will be
utilized during the cleaning process. This sample can then be analyzed to
determine if the analyte can still be detected and quantitated. If this is not done
the analyte may not be detected even though it is present in the sample. If the
cleaning environment does change the nature of the analyte a new method would
be required or modifications would have to be made to the existing method. When
utilizing a non-specific method to measure a non-specific property, any
compound that displays that property and is introduced into the sample will
interfere. Possible sources of interferences could be from the environment,
sampling technique, and/or people.
78
H.J. Kaiser
79
80
H.J. Kaiser
advantage is that the ELSD requires special care and cleaning of the nebulizer.
The nebulizer must produce consistent particle sizes so that an accurate detection
can occur. Therefore, careful cleaning and maintenance must be performed.
5.3. Capillary electrophoresis
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) is a very good method to use for cleaning validations. CE can be used in different modes. These modes include capillary zone
electrophoresis, micellar electrokinetic chromatography, and isoelectric focusing.
CE can be used for both drug actives and detergent residues. The ability of CE to
pre-concentrate samples makes it very useful in the detection and quantitation of
surfactants. UV detection is the most common detection technique used in CE.
Inverse detection can be readily used with CE. Inverse detection is a procedure
where a strongly absorbing compound is utilized in the buffer solutions and produces a strong signal in the detector. When the analyte, which may not be
strongly absorbing, passes through the detection window a negative peak is
produced. Software accompanying CE units can typically invert this negative
peak producing a normal looking chromatogram.
5.4. Ion chromatography
Ion chromatography (IC) is another useful technique that can be utilized in residue analyses. This is because IC can be used to quantitate both organics and inorganics. The inorganics may include sulfates, phosphates, chlorides, sodium, potassium and other inorganics that may be present in a cleaning agent. IC can also
be used to determine organic acids such as citric or glycolic acids and even surfactants. There are several modes of detection that can be used in IC but the most
common are UV and conductivity. IC can analyze multiple analytes in the same
sample in many cases. Figure 2 is a typical chromatogram showing sodium and
potassium ions that are present in a cleaning agent. Low levels of detection can be
achieved especially with the conductivity detector.
5.5. Total organic carbon determination
TOC determination is the most commonly used analytical technique in cleaning
validations. Instrument manufacturers use several different ways to determine the
TOC in a sample. In general, the sample is oxidized and the carbon dioxide produced is measured. The TOC detection can occur in a variety of ways including
infrared and conductivity. There are several advantages to using TOC determination as the analytical technique for cleaning validations. TOC is a non-specific
measurement technique for carbon. Therefore, it can be used to quantitate any
residue that contains carbon. Low limits of quantitation/detection can be achieved
with TOC. Manufacturers of TOC units claim a detection limit of <1 ppb. However, quantitation and detection limits are primarily based on the quality of the
water used in the analysis. There is typically a high recovery from samples in
81
Figure 2. Chromatogram showing sodium and potassium ions in a cleaning agent using conductivity detection.
TOC analyses. There are also minimal chemical interferences. TOC determination
is easy to carry out and involves a minimal amount of method development.
Typically, samples are simply diluted and analyzed. No separation procedures
need to be developed unlike HPLC. As with other instrumentations, there are
automated sampling accessories that can be used. These accessories include online monitors. On-line monitoring should only be used for monitoring water quality. On-line monitoring should not be used for monitoring a cleaning validation
study. The instrumentation for TOC determination is also very cost effective.
There are two major disadvantages to TOC determination. The first is that the
sample must be water-soluble. TOC determination cannot be used as the analytical technique if the residue cannot be dissolved in water. It should be noted that
solubility in the TOC determination sense means in the part per billion range
rather than in the part per million range. If a compound is reported to be water insoluble it does not automatically mean that it is not soluble enough to be analyzed
by TOC determination. The second disadvantage is that samples cannot be prepared in organic solvents. If the samples were prepared in organic solvents the
TOC of the solvents and not of the residue would be determined.
TOC determination is an excellent complimentary technique to HPLC. TOC
can be used to monitor water-soluble ingredients in a formulation and HPLC can
be used to monitor the water insoluble ingredients. An example of this is a formulated ibuprofen. The ibuprofen itself is not soluble even at TOC determination
levels, but HPLC can be utilized to monitor the ibuprofen. The formulation components are soluble in water and TOC determination can be used to monitor their
contribution to the residue.
82
H.J. Kaiser
It is time now to validate the methods once the residues have been identified, limits set and method(s) chosen. Worldwide regulatory agencies require that these
methods be validated [6]. In order to be validated the method(s) must be shown to
have linearity, precision, accuracy and robustness. Ideally, there would be at least
two different analysts performing analyses on two different instruments using two
83
Figure 3. Example of one method for swabbing a surface to recover residues for subsequent analysis.
84
H.J. Kaiser
Applying a known amount of the test residue directly onto a swab can be used to
perform swab recoveries. The swab is then extracted and the extract analyzed using the appropriate method. The extraction solvent spiked with the same amount
should be used as the control. If the swab is retaining the residue, an alternate
swab material should be sought. The recovery factor obtained should either be included in the analytical calculations or the acceptance limit calculations but not in
both. If the recovery factor is included in both, too tight a limit will have been set.
7. SUMMARY
In summary, when choosing an analytical technique to determine residues, residue limits should be established first. This limit would then be used to calculate
the limit in the analyzed sample. The next step would be to select, develop and
validate a method to determine residue levels at and below the acceptance limit.
Interferences should also be investigated and addressed. Developing and validating a sampling procedure should be the next step. The validation of the sampling
procedure should include recovery studies. There are many different techniques
that can be used to analyze residues. In practice, the simplest technique that can
quantitate at the residue limit and below should be utilized. Less complicated
techniques normally have less potential problems associated with them.
REFERENCES
1. Points to Consider for Cleaning Validation, Technical Report No. 29, Parenteral Drug Association (1998).
2. H.J. Kaiser and M. Minowitz, J. Validation Technol., 7(3), 226-236 (2001).
3. H.J. Kaiser, J.F. Tirey and D.A. LeBlanc, J. Validation Technol., 6(1), 424-436 (1999).
4. M.K. Chawla, Precision Cleaning, 8(6), 36, 38 (2000).
5. M. Meltzer, C. Koester and C. Steffani, Criteria Evaluation for Cleanliness Phase 0, Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, UCRL-CR-133199 (1999).
6. USP 23, United States Pharmacopeial Convention, Rockville, MD, 1982-1984 (1995).
AbstractBoth wet and dry cleaning processes impact the chemical composition of glass surfaces.
The alteration of glass surface chemistry is probed by wettability measurements as a function of pH.
Wettability measurements are performed using the two-liquid method. This method consists of depositing sessile water drops on a substrate immersed in liquid octane. The measured contact angle
allows an estimation of the number of hydroxyl groups exposed at the glass/water interface. Measurements with varying pH of the water drops probe the surface charge at the glass surface and indicate the isoelectric points of predominant functional groups. Variations in glass surface composition
correlate with sensitivity to organic contaminant adsorption. Three typical species of glass were
probed: a silica surface, the surface of sodalime glass, and the surface of a Corning aluminoborosilicate glass. The three glass species show different contamination behavior, depending on wet or dry
cleaning of the glass. The surface compositions, as probed by wettability measurements, correlate to
grazing incidence XPS data, indicating the alteration of surface chemical sites by leaching during
the wet cleaning process. It appears that sensitivity to organic contamination is controlled by the
surface chemistry and the hydration of the exposed substrate.
Keywords: Glass; cleaning; contamination; surface composition; wettability; surface charge;
hydroxyl group density; self-assembled monolayers; isoelectric point.
1. INTRODUCTION
The cleaning of glass surfaces [1] precedes a variety of coating processes, ranging
from silane-based sol-gel coatings, to adhesion promoting films, to conductive
coatings such as ITO (indium tin oxide). These cleaning processes are generally
designed to remove particles from the glass surface and to render it uniformly
wetting. For most applications, it is desirable that this wettability be associated
with the exposure of silanol groups at the glass surface. These exposed chemical
functions form part of the glass substrate and they may be used to covalently graft
silane-based coatings to the glass substrate [2].
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W. Birch et al.
Rendering a glass surface hydrophilic may be achieved by a variety of techniques [1]. These may be broadly classed into two categories: solution cleaning
and dry cleaning. Solution cleaning is generally easy to set up for a small number
of samples. It often has the disadvantage of using toxic products and generating
hazardous waste, while being effective for removing particles from the glass surface [1]. Dry cleaning requires a larger initial investment. It is efficient for cleaning large numbers of samples while generating a minor amount of waste products.
An advantage of dry cleaning techniques is that they generate a clean, dry surface.
This should be compared to the blow-drying that follows solution cleaning, where
streaks and surface inhomogeneities are almost unavoidable.
This article will focus on the impact on glass surfaces of both solution cleaning
and dry cleaning. Glass surfaces are not inert and their exposure to aqueous solutions generally causes a modification of their surface chemical composition. Dry
cleaning processes have little or no impact on the chemical composition of the
glass surface. Solution cleaning uses chromic acid, while dry cleaning uses pyrolysis.
Three types of glass were analyzed. They were chosen to span a representative
range of silica-based glasses, from sodalime glass to aluminoborosilicate glass, to
silica. Sodalime glass is the most common and cheaply available glass substrate.
It is the material used for almost all microscope slides, as well as being the standard window glass. Corning code 1737 aluminoborosilicate glass provides a
substrate with increased chemical durability, improved optical properties, and
higher thermal resistance. It is primarily used in flat panel display applications
and has been used to make microscope slide substrates. Silica provides the reference substrate, bearing a surface composed of silicon oxide chemical sites. These
three glass species are of increasing cost and are commercialized for different applications. Sodalime glass is a low cost substrate with a low melting point and
minimal chemical durability in aqueous solution. Aluminoborosilicate glass is a
more expensive glass, providing an increased thermal resistance and improved
chemical durability. Its high melting point and the absence of sodium in its composition make it suitable for use in making flat panel displays. Finally, silica provides a substrate with good chemical resistance and a very high melting point. Its
high cost limits its use to critical applications, where it is uniquely suited to meet
the required specifications.
The surface properties of glass substrates were directly probed by wettability
measurements. Since clean glass surfaces are completely wetted by water, water
drops deposited in air spread to give a contact angle of less than five degrees,
which is below the measuring threshold of our contact angle goniometer. Thus,
the glass surface wettability was measured under octane, where sessile water
drops give a finite contact angle value. The wettability as a function of pH reveals
features arising from the chemical functions exposed at the glass surface.
87
2. EXPERIMENTAL
88
W. Birch et al.
Table 1.
Composition of glass substrates. Principal components of the glass composition are given in weight
percentage. For the silica substrate, this is the composition of the native oxide layer at the surface.
The bulk glass composition is given for the other two glasses. The first column recalls the process
used to make the glass
Substrate
Silica substrate:
1-2 nm thick silica layer
polished silicon wafer with native oxide
100% silica
70% SiO2
10% Al2O3
10% B2O3
70% SiO2
13% Na2O
10% CaO
The water used in these experiments was purified using an Elga UHP unit. It
filters deionized (18 M.cm resistivity) water through an activated carbon filter
and a UV lamp. This water was used to rinse samples, as well as in the preparation of acidic or basic solutions to measure surface wettability.
The dry cleaning process used was pyrolysis (PYR). The glass substrates were
heated to 500C, according to the following cycle: a rise in temperature from
room temperature to 500C over four hours, followed by five hours at 500C and
a return to room temperature over five hours. The samples were placed in a glass
rack and the rack was enclosed in a glass container, closed with a folded aluminum foil sheet. The containers were removed from the oven after cooling to room
temperature. Provided the lid was not opened, the glass samples remained clean
for about one week. The samples were used within 5 minutes after removing the
aluminum foil lid.
The glass samples showed no visible organic contamination on their surfaces
before cleaning by CHR or PYR. Neither technique is suitable for cleaning a glass
surface bearing macroscopic contamination. At most, the samples had ambient
contamination, in the form of a monolayer or sub-monolayer coverage of organic
contaminants, expected to have a thickness of order 1 nm or less.
Following cleaning, one glass sample per cleaning batch was verified as being
wettable by water. To achieve this, a one-microliter drop of pure water was placed
on the sample. This drop was expected to spread. When the sample was tilted, its
receding edge was not expected to dewet the glass surface. The glass substrates
were used if the sample passed these criteria of glass surface wettability. The
sample tested was not used for further experiments.
89
For surface composition analyses by XPS and monolayer adsorption and deposition experiments, PYR was replaced by UV/ozone dry-cleaning (details are presented in Sections 2.3 and 2.4). Since the cleaning of silicon wafers with pyrolysis
led to rapid subsequent contamination on exposure to air and the XPS equipment
was far from the site where the samples were cleaned, UV/ozone cleaning was
used to improve sample cleanliness during transport. The two dry cleaning techniques were expected to have a similar impact on the glass surfaces composition,
which is measured by XPS to a depth of about 5 nm.
2.2. Contact angle measurements, SiOH group density and dissociation
The wettability of the cleaned glass surfaces was measured under liquid octane.
Octane was chosen due to its dispersive interactions with glass being almost equal
to those between glass and water. This results in the measured wettability giving
information on the dispersive interactions between glass and water, as described
below. The clean glass substrate was immersed in liquid octane and its wettability
measured with a water drop deposited on the glass surface under octane. The water drop displaces the liquid octane that was in contact with the clean glass. When
the drop ceases to spread, the measured contact angle, , may be interpreted as
shown in Figure 1.
The force balance between the solid and liquid 1 (glass/octane), liquid 2 and
liquid 1 (water/octane), and solid and liquid 2 (glass/water) interfacial tensions
can be expressed in the form of Youngs equation:
(1)
cos =
glass/octane glass/water .
water/octane
(2)
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of a sessile water drop under liquid octane. The interfacial tensions
used in equation (1) are indicated and the definition of the contact angle, , is illustrated.
W. Birch et al.
90
Octane is a non-polar liquid. Its interaction with the glass substrate is purely
dispersive giving rise to the octane/water interfacial tension. Water is a polar liquid. Its interactions with the glass substrate may be broken down into two components: dispersive and non-dispersive. The dispersive (London) interactions are
those generated by instantaneous (non-permanent) dipole interactions. The nondispersive interactions include the permanent dipole interactions (Keesom and
Debye interactions), hydrogen bonding and acid-base interactions. The latter two
generate a surface charge on the glass substrate. The dissociation of silanol
(SiOH) groups at the glass surface may be represented by the following reaction:
SiO +H 3O + SiOH + H 2O.
(3)
(4)
D
ND
glass/water = glass + water I glass/wate
r I glass/water
(5)
and
(6)
(7)
(8)
91
The non-dispersive (dipolar, hydrogen bond, and acid-base) interactions between a clean glass surface and water can give a simple estimate of the hydroxyl
group density at the glass surface, providing a measure of the density of SiOH reactive sites at the glass surface. If we assume the non-dispersive interaction between glass and water to be dominated by hydrogen bonding and acid-base interactions, we may consider that at the point of zero charge of the glass substrate the
non-dispersive interaction energy to be dominated by hydrogen bonding. At this
point, the surface energy per unit area can be divided by the energy per hydrogen
bond to obtain the number of hydrogen bonds per unit area. Taking the -OH bond
energy between water and the glass surface as 24 kJ/mol [8] gives the following
expression for the -OH group density, expressed as the number of hydroxyl bonds
per square nanometer:
-OH/nm 1.3 (1+cos )
(9)
where is the contact angle of sessile water drop under octane at the point of zero
charge. The above equations relating wettability measurements to the nondispersive interaction between the glass surface and water are valid if organic
contamination is absent from the glass surface.
The wettability measurements of water drops under liquid octane were performed in a cube-shaped glass cell (from Hellma, in Mllheim, Germany). This
glass cell was first cleaned with a 2% solution of Hellmanex detergent (Hellma)
in pure water for 20 minutes. It was then rinsed with pure water and blow-dried
under a flow of pure nitrogen. During rinsing, the cell was verified to be uniformly wetting. Immediately after cleaning, octane liquid was poured into the cell
to a depth of about two centimeters. The cleaned glass substrate was then immersed in octane. Following a waiting period, as given below, three twomicroliter sessile water drops were deposited on the sample. The contact angles
on both sides of the drops were measured using a Ram-Hart contact angle goniometer (Mountain Lakes, NJ, USA). These contact angle values were then averaged.
The first measurements were made using unpurified octane. The immersion of
the substrate in octane was noted and the sessile water drop contact angles were
plotted as a function of the elapsed time between substrate immersion in octane
and deposition of the water drop. The second set of experiments was performed
using purified octane, cleaned by passing over silica and alumina chromatographic columns. Octane (purissimum grade from Fluka, Ref. 74821) was
passed through a chromatography column filled with silica (silica gel, 60, Ref.
1.09385.1000, from Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), followed by passage through a
chromatography column filled with alumina (basic alumina, 60, activity stage I,
Ref. 1067.2000, from Merck). The silica and alumina were used as received. The
chromatography columns were cleaned with Hellmanex surfactant, as described
above for the glass cell. They were rinsed with pure water and dried in a clean
oven with aluminum foil covering their ends. The first few milliliters of octane
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W. Birch et al.
passed through the columns were used to rinse the original octane bottle and then
discarded. The purified octane was then stored in this rinsed bottle. The reasoning
behind this purification of the liquid octane is that the high active surface area of
the silica and alumina particles will adsorb polar impurities in the octane. Given
the similarity of the surface sites on silica and alumina particles to those found on
clean glass surfaces, we expect the impurities adsorbed in the columns to be those
that would have adsorbed onto a clean glass surface.
To vary the pH of the water, aqueous solutions of hydrochloric acid or sodium
hydroxide were used. These solutions were made using calculated volumes and
verified with a pH sensitive paper. In the preliminary experiments, cleaned and
dried glass substrates were immersed into octane and the wettability of water
drops at different pH values was measured. These experiments showed trends in
the wettability as a function of pH. To reduce the error bars on the measured contact angle values, the cleaned substrates were first immersed for twenty minutes in
an aqueous solution of the same pH as that of the water drops to be measured.
This was found to give the same trends in wettability as a function of pH, while
decreasing the error bar on the measured contact angle values. The increased accuracy of the measurement may be due to the fact that the deposited water drop
has insufficient time for it to interact with the cleaned glass surface before settling
at the measured contact angle. Further, contact angle hysteresis may prevent the
contact angle value from changing if the surface charge of the cleaned glass
changes with its exposure the water drop.
The wettability of the cleaned glass substrates was measured after their immersion in the same acidic or basic solution as used in the measuring water drops. After cleaning, each glass substrate was cut into five pieces and each piece placed in
a solution of different pH. Following the 20-30 minute soaking time, the glass
substrates were rinsed with water and blow-dried with pure nitrogen. Sessile drop
contact angles were measured for water drops deposited five minutes after immersion. The deposited water drops came from the same solution as the one in which
the substrates were immersed. For each glass species, three samples were measured at each pH and three sessile water drops were measured for each sample. The
data points used for the graphs in Figures 4 and 5 represent an average of these 18
contact angle values.
2.3. Surface composition
The glass surfaces were examined by normal angle x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). This technique provides quantitative information on the atomic composition of the first 5 nm of the glass surface. The measured percentage of inorganic elements in this region provides information on changes in the glass surface
composition following CHR or UV/ozone cleaning. UV/ozone cleaning was used
to replace pyrolysis due to rapid adsorption of organic contaminants on the pyrolyzed silicon wafers. Placing the samples 1 cm away from the surface of a 4 x 4
low-pressure mercury lamp (BHK Inc., Claremont, CA, USA) for 30 minutes
93
achieved the UV/ozone cleaning. The UV lamp emits radiation at the 184.9 and
253.7 nm wavelengths, where the first generates ozone from oxygen while the
second combines with ozone to oxidize hydrocarbons [10, 11].
2.4. Monolayer adsorption and deposition
Practical applications for bare glass surfaces may utilize their surface charge or
surface silanol sites to adsorb or graft a layer of molecules for a thin film coating.
Charge-adsorbed surfactant monolayers were deposited to probe the glass surface
charge. The deposition of a grafted self-assembled monolayer of octadecylsilane
was used to probe the quality of coatings grafted to the silanol groups on the glass
surface.
Monolayers of anionic and cationic surfactants were deposited on the cleaned
glass substrates from aqueous solutions. For the anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS, purissimum grade, from Fluka Chemie AG, Buchs, Switzerland)
was used. The deposition was made by pulling the clean glass out of a solution at
one half of the critical micellar concentration (cmc) for SDS, corresponding to a 4
mM solution of SDS. No deposition occurs on a negatively charged surface in solution. A monolayer of surfactant is deposited onto the glass surface from the
thinning film of SDS solution as the sample is slowly pulled vertically from the
surfactant solution [3]. The cationic surfactant used was hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB, purum grade, from Fluka). Its deposition on the negatively charged surface occurred in solution, resulting in a substrate that was pulled
out dry (with no liquid film on its surface) from solution. The solution concentration was 0.4 cmc, corresponding to 0.4 mM of CTAB. The glass substrate was
left in the surfactant solutions for at least thirty seconds and pulled out vertically
at a speed of about one millimeter per second.
The quality of coatings grafted to the glass via their surface silanol groups was
tested by depositing a self-assembled monolayer of octadecyltriethoxysilane
(OTES). For this experiment, the glass slides were cleaned using the CHR and
UV/ozone cleaning processes. UV/ozone cleaning replaced the PYR dry cleaning
to avoid rapid contamination of the silicon wafers following PYR cleaning. The
OTES molecules were hydrolyzed before deposition for two purposes. By converting the ethoxy groups surrounding the silicon atom to hydroxyl groups, hydrolysis reduces the size of the silicon functional group at the end of the aliphatic
hydrocarbon chain. This allows a dense packing of the aliphatic hydrocarbon
chains into a structure perpendicular to the substrate, somewhat reminiscent of the
hair on a carpet. The second purpose is an increased reactivity of the SiOH
groups, as compared with the unhydrolyzed Si-ethoxy groups. This reactivity allows for cross-linking of the silanol groups and grafting of the aliphatic molecules
to the silanol surface sites on the glass, resulting in a durable grafted coating on
the glass surface. To form a densely-packed structure, the grafting reaction should
take place after the self-assembly of the aliphatic hydrocarbon chains [12]. This
results in a high quality monolayer structure with only a few defects, resulting in
94
W. Birch et al.
95
Figure 2. Water sessile drop contact angles measured after exposure of cleaned glass substrates to
unpurified octane. The legend is the same as for Table 2. The quoted contact angles are averages of
six values for three sessile drops at times of 1, 3, and 5 minutes. The contact angle values quoted for
silica PYR at less than one minute are for one drop at each data point.
contact angle of the sessile water drops did not change after their deposition. The
observed increase in contact angle suggests an evolution of the cleaned surface
with time over the first five minutes after drop deposition. The increasing contact
angle values also suggest a contamination of the substrate. Other possibilities,
such as a hydration or dehydration of the cleaned surface were considered. Hydration of the cleaned surface is expected to lead to a decrease in the measured contact angle value. To check for dehydration, a drop of water was placed in the octane and the cleaned substrates immersed after 48 hours. The contact angle
evolution was identical to that in Figure 2, suggesting that dehydration of the
glass surface in octane is not what causes the observed increase in contact angle
with immersion time. To verify contamination by exposure to octane, the substrates were blow-dried with pure nitrogen after immersion for at least five minutes in the liquid octane. The wettability of sessile water drops was then measured
in air. The measured contact angles are given in Table 2. They range from 32 to
46 degrees, indicating a significant level of organic contamination adsorbed on
the glass surfaces. Further, the large error bar of about 8 degrees indicates a nonuniform surface wettability. This behavior is typically found for random contamination deposited on a clean surface. The contact angle values measured after exposure to octane, when compared with the complete spreading of water drops on
the freshly cleaned glass substrates, suggest that the liquid octane contaminates
the cleaned glass substrates.
The sessile drops deposited following longer immersion time of the cleaned
substrate in octane showed a higher contact angle than those on a freshly immersed substrate. In fact, a water drop deposited immediately after immersion of
the cleaned glass into octane spread to form a low contact angle, generally of 5
W. Birch et al.
96
Table 2.
Water sessile drop contact angles (in degrees) measured on glass substrates exposed to unpurified
octane for more than five minutes. The substrates were removed from the octane and blow-dried
with pure nitrogen before wettability measurements. The error bar over several sessile drops and
several substrates is nominally 8. The superscript number indicates the number of substrates over
which the quoted wettability was measured. Each substrate was measured using between three and
eight sessile drops. In the legend, silica refers to the native oxide layer on a silicon wafer, ABS refers to Corning code 1737 aluminoborosilicate glass, and SDL refers to sodalime glass. CHR and
PYR refer to chromic acid and pyrolysis cleaning, respectively
Cleaning
process
silica
ABS
CHR
PYR
46 1
46 5
43
35
1
7
SDL
40
32
1
2
or less. The drops, once deposited, did not change their shape, indicating that the
contact angles of the sessile drops did not evolve. Young s equation invokes the
notion of a force equilibrium at the three-phase line, where the two fluid phases,
namely octane and water, meet the solid surface. The absence of any increase in
the contact angle of the deposited drops, when compared to the increase in contact
angle for freshly deposited drops, suggests that an equilibrium contact angle value
is not reached for the sessile water drops under octane. The notion of a force balance at the three-phase line is valid. A force balance can be considered as a minimum in the energy of a system with respect to a small displacement of the system
from this minimum. This concept is valid for systems that are free to move, where
the influence of frictional forces is negligible. For contact angles, the concept of a
contact angle hysteresis is analogous to a frictional force, preventing the contact
angle from reaching a value corresponding to the overall minimum in the free energy of the system. This is the case for water drops deposited under octane, where
the observed contact angle is not reached by the drop retracting to form a contact
angle equal to that of sessile drops deposited at later times.
Following a five minute exposure to octane, the contact angles of three or more
freshly deposited sessile water drops were measured on each of the glass substrates. At least three substrates were investigated for each glass species and
cleaning procedure. Table 3 gives the averaged contact angle values for each type
of glass using CHR or PYR cleaning. For the silica surface, we find a slightly
higher contact angle following PYR cleaning than for the CHR cleaned substrate.
This is compatible with a loss of about 10% of the surface hydroxyl groups during
glass pyrolysis [14]. However, for the sodalime glass, the wettability of the surface following PYR cleaning remains high, even when immersed in the liquid octane that has contaminated the other glass substrates. To obtain more information
on this behavior, the advancing and receding contact angles were measured for
the substrates exposed to liquid octane for more than five minutes. The measured
values are shown in Table 4. If these contact angle values are interpreted in terms
of surface contamination of the cleaned glass substrates by immersion in the liq-
97
Table 3.
Water sessile drop contact angles (in degrees) measured on cleaned glass substrates under octane,
following a five minute exposure to the octane. The error bar over several sessile drops and several
substrates is nominally 4. The legend is the same as for Table 2
Cleaning
process
silica
ABS
SDL
CHR
PYR
29
59
44
29
26
3
Table 4.
Advancing and receding contact angles (in degrees) of water drops under unpurified octane. The
substrates were immersed in the unpurified octane for at least five minutes before measuring the
contact angle hysteresis of one water drop per substrate. The superscript number indicates the number of substrates over which the quoted wettability was measured. The legend is the same as for Table 2
Cleaning
process
CHR
PYR
silica
5
ABS
1
SDL
1
38
10
68
37
spreading
45
50
15
13
35
13
uid octane, they suggest that the pyrolysed silica is more susceptible to adsorbing
contamination than the chromic acid cleaned silica. Further, the pyrolysed sodalime glass does not strongly adsorb organic contaminants from the octane,
given that the water drop spreads easily. The pyrolysed aluminoborosilicate glass
shows a behavior intermediate between the silica surface and the sodalime glass,
showing a finite advancing contact angle and zero receding contact angle. The absence of a finite receding contact angle value suggests that few or no organic contaminants remain adsorbed on the glass surface after passage of the water drop.
On the other hand, following chromic acid cleaning, the three glass species show
similar wettability, suggesting that they have almost the same affinities for adsorbing organic contaminants in liquid octane. This suggests that the sensitivity to
adsorbing contaminants depends on the composition of the glass surface and the
procedure used to clean the glass surface. Considering that PYR cleaned silica
surface is more dehydrated than CHR cleaned silica surface, we may attribute the
reduction in the affinity for adsorbing organic contaminants to the presence of a
layer of water on the glass. PYR cleaned sodalime glass shows the lowest level of
adsorbed contaminants. Both the soluble alkaline oxide film and the ambient
moisture it adsorbs may enhance the durability of this clean glass surface. It is interesting to note that the surface behavior of the glass species is similar to that of
the silica following cleaning with chromic acid.
98
W. Birch et al.
Figure 3. Schematic side-view of a drop on an inclined surface, indicating the advancing contact
angle, a, and the receding contact angle, r.
99
The kinetics of water drop spreading described for water drops on glass under
purified octane remains unexplained. The increase in contact angle observed for
glass surfaces cleaned with chromic acid is not attributable to contamination,
given the high wettability of the cleaned glass following exposure to the octane.
The unusual spreading behavior of water drops on acid cleaned Corning code
1737F glass also remains unexplained. Finally, the complete wetting of pyrolyzed
glass substrates by water drops under octane suggests a high affinity of these glass
surfaces for water. Further, the presence of some components of the glass composition that are soluble in water, such as sodium oxide and calcium oxide (see Table 1), appears to enhance the spreading of the water drops under octane.
3.3. Surface wettability as a function of pH, surface charge and SiOH group
density
While the contact angle values for sessile water drops at neutral pH provide a first
information on the surface energy of the cleaned glass substrates, further information can be provided by measuring the surface wettability as a function of the pH.
These experiments were conducted using purified octane to avoid the substrate
contamination described in Section 3.1. The absence of contamination of the
cleaned glass substrates and the behavior under octane of sessile water drops at
neutral pH is described in Section 3.2.
The pH of water drops deposited on the cleaned glass surfaces was varied in
the range from 0 to 13, in order to probe the surface charge variations from acidic
and basic surface groups. The surface wettability was measured at pH intervals of
1 unit for acidic pH and two units for alkaline pH values. The standard deviation
of the measurements was generally 1 to 2. About 10% of the data points showed
standard deviations ranging from 3 to 5.
Figure 4 shows the non-dispersive interaction energy of glass substrates
cleaned with chromic acid as a function of pH, in the range from 0 to 13. The interval of one pH unit for acidic solutions and two units for alkaline solutions was
chosen arbitrarily. The contact angle values, ranging from 0 to 21, have been
converted into the interaction energy, INDglass/water, using equation (8). Figure 5
shows data from the same measurements on glass surfaces cleaned by pyrolysis.
The two graphs in Figure 5 show the same data. The upper graph was plotted to
show differences in the behavior of Corning code 1737 glass and sodalime glass,
while the lower graph shows data for all three glasses, with silica showing a significantly lower non-dispersive interaction energy with water than the other two
glass species.
The hydroxyl (SiOH) surface groups on the clean glass may be positively or
negatively charged, depending on the solution pH in contact with the surface. The
isoelectric point, also known as the point of zero charge, or p.z.c., defines the pH
at which the surface densities of positive and negative charges are equal, associated with an equal surface density of negatively charged SiOH groups (SiO) and
positively charged SiOH (SiOH2+) [9]. The isoelectric point of silica has been
100
W. Birch et al.
Figure 4. Non-dispersive interaction energy between sessile water drops and Chromerge cleaned
glass substrates as a function of pH. The water drops were at the pH indicated and each point represents an average of 18 contact angle measurements. The standard deviation of the data points is
typically 1-2, with about 10% of the data points giving a standard deviation of 3-5.
measured to be in the range of pH 2 to 3 [9]. Figure 4 shows a minimum in the interaction energy near the quoted isoelectric point of silica. While the quoted value
for the isoelectric point of silica is close to pH 2, the minimum in Figure 4 is close
to pH 3.
At the p.z.c., we may consider the glass surface as being uncharged. If we assume the non-dispersive interactions between glass and water to be dominated by
hydrogen bonding, the contact angles measured at the p.z.c. provide an estimate
of the number of hydroxyl groups per unit area on the cleaned glass. Table 5 gives
the measured contact angle values at pH 3 for the cleaned glass surfaces. Table 6
shows the corresponding calculated hydroxyl group densities, converted from the
contact angles in Table 5 using equation (9). The values in Table 6 compare favorably to Ilers quoted value of 2-5 -OH/nm2 (between 2 and 5 hydroxyl groups
per square nanometer) for silica surfaces [14]. The measured contact angles range
from 10 to 39, while the corresponding hydroxyl group densities vary only by
about 10%, indicating similar density of hydroxyl groups on the glass surfaces for
all glass species and cleaning procedures. For comparison, sessile water drops
measured under octane on polypropylene or polyethylene, which are not expected
to show any hydrogen bonding, give contact angles of 171 [15], yielding a calculated -OH density of 0.003 (or less) per nm2.
101
Figure 5. Non-dispersive interaction energy between sessile water drops and pyrolysis cleaned glass
substrates as a function of pH. The upper graph shows the data from sodalime and Corning code
1737 glass, comparable to that from Figure 4. The lower graph shows the full data for the silica surface, which shows an extremely different behavior, resulting in far lower interaction energy and
higher measured contact angles. Data points are averaged over 18 values with standard deviations as
described in the legend for Figure 4.
Table 5.
Water sessile drop contact angles (in degrees) measured on cleaned glass substrates under octane.
The measured water drops are aqueous hydrochloric acid at pH 3, corresponding to the point of zero
charge of the data in Figures 4 and 5. The legend is the same as for Table 2
Cleaning
process
silica
ABS
SDL
CHR
PYR
15
38.5
21
19.5
16.2
10.2
W. Birch et al.
102
Table 6.
Hydroxyl group density (-OH/nm2) for glass surfaces, calculated from the contact angles given in
Table 5. These contact angles were measured on the cleaned glass surfaces, for sessile water drops
under octane at the point of zero charge. The legend is the same as for Table 2
Cleaning
process
silica
ABS
SDL
CHR
PYR
2.56
2.32
2.51
2.53
2.55
2.58
In terms of estimated hydroxyl group density on the cleaned glass surfaces, pyrolyzed silica shows a lower hydroxyl group density than chromic acid cleaned
silica. This is compatible with a minor amount of dehydroxylation during the pyrolysis cycle [14]. Unexpectedly, pyrolyzed sodalime glass appears to have a
higher surface SiOH concentration than silica. This may be an artifact caused by
the soluble alkali salts (see Table 1) present on the surface of the pyrolyzed sodalime glass. These salts may increase the wettability to water when compared to
the same glass cleaned by chromic acid, where alkaline oxides are leached during
the cleaning procedure.
Returning to the graphs in Figures 4 and 5, the data show two minima in the
non-dispersive interaction energy between glass and water. The first and more
prominent minimum, found at pH 3, may be associated with the isoelectric point
of the SiOH groups. Recalling the acid-base reaction responsible for generating
the surface charge from the SiOH groups:
SiO +H 3O + SiOH + H 2O,
the hydrogen ion (H3O+) concentration at this pH is sufficient to drive the equation towards the right. At higher pH values, corresponding to a lower hydrogen
ion concentration, the glass surface is negatively charged from its surface SiOH
groups. At lower pH values, the surface hydroxyl groups become positively
charged, according to the following equation:
SiOH+H 3O + SiOH +2 + H 2O.
Thus, only at the isoelectric point does the glass surface bear no overall charge
from its SiOH groups. A second, shallower, minimum in the interaction energy
may be seen at pH 9. This may correspond to the sodium ions (Na+), from the sodium hydroxide used to increase the pH, being present in sufficient quantity to
neutralize the SiO ions from the surface hydroxyl groups.
For all the glass samples, the measured contact angles fall sharply above pH 10
and are zero above pH 12. This is probably due to the glass surface being degraded by dissolving in the alkaline solution, leading to its being fully wettable by
water.
103
W. Birch et al.
104
Silica
UV/O3
Silica
CHR
1737 ABS
UV/O3
1737 ABS
CHR
SDL
UV/O3
SDL
CHR
Si
O
Al
Na
13
34
0
0
12
30
0
0
27
59
5
1
29
59
6
0
26
47
1
8
29
59
0
3
105
The presence of surfactant monolayers coating the glass surfaces was confirmed by measuring the wettability of non-polar tricresyl phosphate sessile drops
in air. The contact angles on the SDS monolayers were in the range 61-66 degrees; those on CTAB monolayers were in the range 40-41 degrees. This wettability is compatible with a lower packing density for the CTAB surfactant
monolayer, where a larger head group prevents close packing of the aliphatic hydrocarbon chains [3, 4].
Further information on the surface silanol sites can be obtained by depositing a
self-assembled OTES monolayer. This monolayer was deposited on glass substrates cleaned by chromic acid or UV/ozone. A monolayer of grafted octadecylsilane molecules generates high contact angles for water, indicating a hydrophobic surface of densely-packed aliphatic hydrocarbon chains. Contact angle
hysteresis probes the defect density in the self-assembled monolayers. The receding contact angle is primarily influenced by the presence of hydrophilic defects in
the hydrophobic monolayer. Measured wetting properties for water drops are
given in Table 8.
For the UV/ozone cleaned surfaces, the data show a higher quality hydrophobic
monolayer on the silica surface. A densely packed octadecylsilane monolayer
gives rise to high contact angles for water. This dense packing is a result of a high
degree of ordering of the octadecylsilane molecules and their grafting to each
other and to the glass substrate. The aluminoborosilicate glass shows a coating
quality intermediate between that on the silica and sodalime glass surface, which
shows the lowest coating quality. The chromic acid cleaned glass surfaces show
similar coating quality, slightly higher than that seen for the UV/ozone cleaned
surfaces. This improved coating quality may be, in part, due to hydration of the
chromic acid cleaned glass. The trends in coating quality for all UV/ozone
cleaned glass surfaces and all chromic acid cleaned glass surfaces correlate with
those seen for contamination of the glass surfaces, as described in Section 3.1.
Table 8.
Wettability towards water of self-assembled monolayers of OTES deposited on the cleaned glass
surfaces. The sessile drop, advancing, and receding contact angles (in degrees) are given, with the
sessile drop value above the advancing and receding values. The wettability measurements were
made in air. For the sodalime glass (SDL), the slides used were float glass. The wettability of the
deposited monolayer coatings was measured separately on the air side and the on the float side of
this glass
silica
UV/O3 cleaned
ABS
106
108
101
97
109
108
CHR cleaned
112
SDL (air)
100
88
107
107
99
112
SDL (float)
99
90
107
107
99
112
87
108
99
112
99
106
W. Birch et al.
4. CONCLUSION
While cleaned silica-based glass surfaces have similar surface compositions, their
susceptibility to strongly adsorbing organic contaminants depends strongly on the
glass composition and the cleaning procedure. For the three glass species examined: silica, aluminoborosilicate, and sodalime glass, the glass surfaces behave
similarly after chromic acid cleaning. They show significant differences in their
properties following a dry cleaning procedure, such as pyrolysis or UV/ozone
cleaning. The cleaned silica surfaces show a high susceptibility to adsorbing organic contamination following pyrolysis cleaning, while the pyrolyzed sodalime
glass appears to be virtually immune to strongly adsorbing organic molecules. Pyrolyzed aluminoborosilicate glass shows an intermediate susceptibility to adsorbing organic contaminants. The chromic acid cleaned glass surfaces all show an intermediate susceptibility to contamination by adsorbed organic molecules. Thus,
it may be an oversimplification to consider a clean glass surface as a high energy
substrate that is bound to attract ambient organic contamination.
The wettability behavior of the cleaned glass surfaces showed features associated with their exposed chemical functions. The non-dispersive interaction energy
between glass and water as a function of pH showed evidence of charging of the
surface silanol groups. The point of zero charge for these surface chemical functions was observed at pH 3. An estimate of the non-dispersive interaction energy
between glass and water at the point of zero charge enables a reasonable estimation of the density of surface silanol groups on the cleaned glass. The trends observed for the surface charge as a function of pH correlate with the observed susceptibility for adsorbing organic contamination to the cleaned glass surfaces.
Charge-adsorbed surfactant monolayers indicated a negative surface charge on
the cleaned glass, as expected for silica-based glass surfaces at neutral pH. The
wettability of grafted self-assembled octadecylsilane monolayers indicated high
quality coatings on the cleaned glass surfaces. The coating quality was identical
for all three glass species following chromic acid cleaning. The UV/ozone
cleaned glass surfaces showed the highest coating quality on the silica surface,
followed by the aluminoborosilicate surface and the sodalime glass surface. The
trends in coating quality for all chromic acid cleaned surfaces and UV/ozone
cleaned surfaces correlate with those seen for susceptibility to organic contamination of the cleaned glass surfaces exposed to unpurified liquid octane.
REFERENCES
1. W.R. Birch, in: Sol Gel Handbook, M. Aegerter (Ed.), Kluwer Academic Publishers, New York
(to be published) and references therein.
2. K.L. Mittal (Ed.), Silanes and Other Coupling Agents, Vol. 2, VSP, Utrecht (2000).
3. W.R. Birch, S. Garoff, M. Knewtson, R.M. Suter and S. Satija, Colloids Surfaces 89, 145
(1994).
4. W.R. Birch, S. Garoff, M. Knewtson, R.M. Suter and S. Satija, Langmuir 11, 48 (1995).
107
5. R.J. Good and M.K. Chaudhury, in: Fundamentals of Adhesion, L.-H. Lee (Ed.), pp. 137-151.
Plenum Press, New York (1991).
6. J.J. Jasper, J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 1, 841 (1972).
7. F.M. Fowkes, Ind. Eng. Chem. 56 (12), 40 (1964).
8. J.N. Murrell and A.D. Jenkins, Properties of Liquids and Solutions, p. 168, John Wiley and
Sons, Chichester (1994).
9. A. Carr, F. Roger and C. Varinot, J. Colloid Interface Sci. 154, 174 (1992).
10. J.R. Vig, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 3, 1027 (1985).
11. J.R. Vig, in: Treatise on Clean Surface Technology, Vol. 1, K.L. Mittal (Ed.), pp. 1-26, Plenum
Press, New York (1987).
12. J. Davidovits, PhD Thesis, Dtermination des conditions dobtention de films monomolculaires
organiss : application aux silanes auto-assembls sur silice, Universit Paris 6, Chapter 5
(1998).
13. J. Peanasky, H.M. Schneider and S. Granick, Langmuir 11, 953 (1995).
14. R.K. Iler, The Chemistry of Silica, John Wiley & Sons, New York (1979).
15. A. Carr, S. Moll, J. Schultz and M.E.R. Shanahan, in: Adhesion 11, K.W. Allen (Ed.), pp. 8687, Elsevier Applied Science, New York (1987).
AbstractMost of the electronic and electro-optic equipment fielded by the military is incompatible with the standard aqueous based decontamination solutions, such as 5% sodium hypochlorite solution, ESI has developed a nondestructive decontamination process for such sensitive equipment.
In this process, the components to be decontaminated are immersed in an ultrasonic bath filled with
an organic solvent, if they are contaminated with chemical warfare agents (CWA), or in a solution
of a surfactant in this solvent, followed by a pure solvent rinse, if they are contaminated with biological agents or radioactive particles.
In both cases, the contaminants are dissolved or suspended in the decontamination liquid in the
bath. The contaminants are removed from the decontamination liquid by circulating it through a filtration train. In the case of CWA, the filtration train consists of an activated carbon filter, a particulate pre-filter, and a membrane filter. In the case of biological or nuclear contaminants, the circulating liquid bypasses the activated carbon beds.
A prototype decontamination system has been built and operated to demonstrate the process. In
this program, a wide range of sensitive equipment was contaminated with a CWA simulant. The
contaminated equipment was immersed and sonicated in a flowing solvent, which recirculated
around a purification loop, until the simulant could no longer be detected, and dried. The decontaminated equipment was then functionally tested. In all cases:
a. no traces of simulant were found on the processed pieces, and
b. the processed items were fully functional.
Keywords: Decontamination; sensitive equipment; chemical warfare agents; biological warfare
agents; ultrasonic cleaning; hydrofluoroethers.
1. INTRODUCTION
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: 781-938-7588, x 22, Fax: 781-9387589, E-mail: rkaiser@entropicsystems.com
110
eliminated from all DOD activities by the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1993.
Thus, alternate methods and equipment for nondestructively decontaminating
water sensitive military equipment, such as avionics, electronic, electrical and environmental systems equipment are needed. These methods need to:
a. Be effective against a wide variety of threat agents,
b. Be nontoxic to personnel,
c. Not degrade the equipment being decontaminated, and
d. Be field deployable.
Decontamination system equipment should be highly mobile and selfsustaining. These methods should also be able to treat equipment that is besmirched with battlefield soils, including dirt (particulates), dried mud, oil, etc. In
a broader context, the methods and equipment should also be capable of performing maintenance cleaning operations in a depot environment. These methods and
equipment should also comply with environmental regulations.
In terms of performance, an effective decontamination method has to be able to
remove or deactivate the contaminant without affecting the part being cleaned.
Because the type of equipment that would likely be decontaminated is both geometrically complex in shape and thermally sensitive, the most effective technique
will likely use a flowing or agitated liquid, at ambient or modest temperatures, as
a means of removing the range of threat agents from the equipment.
Numerous alternate potential decontamination options have been examined, but
have been determined to be of limited effectiveness [1]. Heating an article above a
modest temperature may not be an option for decontaminating thermally sensitive
items, which leads to problems in terms of effectively removing relatively nonvolatile contaminants. Decontamination by particle blasting methods, such as carbon dioxide snow or plastic pellets, are limited to surfaces that are in direct line of
sight with the ejection nozzle. Such methods are not effective in terms of cleaning
blind holes, crevices, and obstructed surfaces. These types of methods can be
abrasive and destructive to the equipment being decontaminated. Capture and
processing of nonvolatile contaminant-laden particles may be a problem as well.
2. APPROACH
111
Table 1.
Properties of fluorinated solvents of interest
Solvent
Vertrel-XF
[HFC-43-10]
HFE-7100
HFE-7200
Freon TF
[CFC-113]
Chemical Formula
Supplier
Molecular Weight
Boiling Point, C
Freezing Point, C
Heat of Vaporization, cal/g @ bp
Specific Heat, cal/g @ 25C
Specific Gravity (H2O = 1)
Viscosity, Ns/m2 @ 25C
Surface Tension, mN/m @ 25C
Vapor Pressure, mm Hg @ 25C
Solubility of
Water in Solvent, ppm
Solvent in Water, ppm
Hildebrand Solubility Parameter,
MPa 0.5
C5F10H2
DuPont
252
54
80
31
0.27
1.58
0.067
14.1
226
C5F9H3O
3M Co.
250
61
135
30
0.28
1.52
0.061
13.6
202
C6F9H5O
3M Co.
264
76
138
30
0.29
1.43
0.061
13.6
109
C2Cl3F3
NA
163
48
3.5
35
0.21
1.57
0.068
17.3
334
490
140
13.8
95
<12
13.1
92
20
13.5
170
110
14.7
0
1700
0
320
0
55
0.8
5000
17.1
None
None
200
4.1
None
None
750
0.8
None
2.4-12.4%
200
110
None
None
1000
VOC, kg/kg
Ozone Depletion Potential
(CFC-11 = 1)
Global Warming Potential
[100 yr ITH (1)]
Atmospheric Lifetime, yrs
Flashpoint, C
Flammability Range in Air, %
Exposure Guidelines, 8 hr TWA,
ppm
112
113
nants remaining on the treated parts by visually examining the parts for residual
fluorescent marker before the parts are removed from the cleaning chamber.
The principal objectives of ESIs development program were to:
a. Identify and/or develop safe and environmentally compatible cleaning agents
and processes that will effectively remove biological and chemical threat
agents from sensitive equipment that may be contaminated with other soils,
without damaging this equipment.
b. Identify and/or develop means by which the threat agents suspended in the
process liquids can be subsequently deactivated, and/or safely removed from
these liquids.
c. Identify and/or develop methods of monitoring the presence of threat agents
and/or other contaminants in the recovered process liquids.
d. Demonstrate the technology developed in the above objectives on a pilot
plant scale.
These objectives were all met, and the major findings of this program are discussed next.
3. MAJOR FINDINGS
3.1. Identify and/or develop safe and environmentally compatible cleaning agents
Ultrasonic solvent cleaning processes can effectively decontaminate sensitive
equipment. Methoxyperfluorobutane (3Ms HFE-7100) is the decontamination
liquid of choice because it meets the following criteria:
1. It is compatible with a wide range of sensitive equipment the performance
of electronic and optical equipment is not affected by immersion in HFE7100. In particular, it does not attack components made of poly (methyl
methacrylate) or polycarbonate, as does DuPonts Vertrel-XF.
2. The principal chemical warfare agents (CWAs) of concern are sufficiently
soluble in HFE-7100, as indicated in Table 2.
3. HFE-7100 is effective in ultrasonic cleaning baths because it has very low
surface tension, which allows it to penetrate small features of the surface, and
because it has a low heat of evaporation, which allows the ultrasonic agitation
to produce strong shear forces in order to disrupt the boundary layer and entrain the contaminants.
4. The principal CWAs of concern are quantitatively removed from solution in
HFE-7100 by activated carbon.
5. When agent-contaminated HFE-7100 is passed through a bed of activated
carbon, the agent adsorbs onto the activated carbon, resulting in agent-free
HFE-7100 that can be recycled and reused. In comparison, there was poor adsorption of chemical agents from Vertrel MCA+ in which mustard agent (HD)
114
exhibited a higher solubility. Vertrel MCA+ thus was not considered for two
reasons it was too aggressive a solvent to meet material compatibility requirements, and could not be reclaimed for recycling by adsorption of chemical agents.
6. It is nonflammable, nontoxic, and environmentally acceptable.
Table 2.
Solubility of chemical agents in solvents of interest [2]
Vertrel MCA+
Vertrel XP-10
Vertrel-XF
HFE-7100
HFE-7200
CHP
GB
GD
HD
VX
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
17% (RT)
8% (40C)
8% (40C)
8% (40C)
8% (40C)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
M (RT)
115
Figure 2. Circuit boards in culture medium. Circuit boards with environmental contamination were
processed in the Cadet and then cultured in trypticase soy broth to assess effectiveness of removal of
microorganisms. The circuit board in jar A is an unprocessed control. After incubation, the culture
broth is turbid, indicating multiplication of microbial contaminants (bacteria, fungi) present on the
circuit board as a result of exposure to the environment. The circuit board in jar B was decontaminated using the Cadet as described in the text. The lack of turbidity in the culture indicates that the
circuit board was rendered sterile as a result of processing.
116
Pilot scale continuous flow adsorption tests were performed in order to establish the effect of process parameters on the rate and extent of removal of CWA
simulants from a hydrofluorocarbon solution as it flowed through an activated
carbon column, and on the adsorption capacity of the activated carbon in the column. Providing sufficient residence time is critical to obtaining a reasonable column loading before breakthrough of the contaminant occurs. A CWA simulant
loading of 3 wt-% on granular activated carbon (Norits 1240 GAC) was achieved
with a residence time of five minutes. The length to diameter ratio of the columns
should be larger than 3 so as to minimize liquid bypassing. Activated carbon beds
and filters that come into contact with contaminated liquid can be contained in
commercially available housings that shield the system operator from any contained toxic contents. These sealed containers, and their contents, can be destroyed by standard methods, such as chemical deactivation or incineration.
3.3. Identify and/or develop methods of monitoring the presence of threat agents
Spectrographic fluorimetry is an extremely sensitive method of detecting fluorescent materials. With this method, the detection limit of fluorescent dyes dissolved
in HFE-7100 was found to be of the order of 10 parts per trillion (ppt). CWA
simulants which contained small amounts (0.05 wt-% to 5 wt-%) of a fluorescent
dye (Try-33 made by Day-Glo Corp., Dayton, OH) were used as contaminants in
the pilot decontamination studies described in the next section. The presence of
the fluorescent dye in the contaminant allowed the decontamination process to be
easily monitored, in terms of being able to both:
1. Measure and detect low levels of contaminant in the process liquid leaving
the ultrasonic bath and the activated carbon columns.
2. Detect traces of residual contaminant on the parts being processed by illuminating these parts with an ultraviolet lamp.
3.4. Demonstrate the technology developed in the above objectives on a pilot
plant scale
One of the major objectives of the program was to design and build a breadboard
decontamination system in order to demonstrate:
1. The functionality of representative pieces of sensitive equipment is not affected by a process consisting of immersion and sonication in a bath of HFE7100, followed by drying in super-heated HFE-7100.
2. The chemical agent simulant is effectively removed from such pieces of sensitive equipment.
3. The chemical agent simulant dissolved in HFE-7100 is quantitatively removed in real time from solution by passing the contaminated solution
through a bed of activated carbon.
4. The internal recovery of the contaminated liquid, to allow recycling of the purified process liquid.
117
5. The capture and removal of waste products (agent simulant, other soluble
contaminants, and particulates) from the contaminated solution in fully enclosed, disposable activated carbon and filter cartridges, that are easy to install, remove, and would minimize operator exposure to the contents of the
cartridges.
6. The ability to immerse parts in both pure HFE-7100 and in fluorinated surfactant or coupling agent solutions in HFE-7100.
Additional objectives were to obtain operating data on specific unit operations,
such as the effect of liquid circulation rate on the removal kinetics of simulant
from contaminated test parts, the effects of liquid flow rate and contaminant concentration on the efficiency, and capacity of activated carbon columns.
The breadboard decontamination system consisted of three modules:
1. A Poly-KleenTM Vapor Degreaser
2. An activated carbon column train
3. A circulating water chiller
The Poly-KleenTM Vapor Degreaser is a manually operated vapor degreasing
system designed to be used with low boiling fluorinated solvents, such as perfluorocarbons, hydrofluorocarbons and hydrofluoroethers. Figure 3 is a photograph of the inside chambers of the system. Overall dimensions are 1956 mm H x
736 mm D x 904 mm H (77" L x 29" D x 36" H). The height includes the handles
on the sliding door which are 76 mm (3") high. The Poly-KleenTM Vapor Degreaser takes full advantage of the ease of fabrication of polypropylene and its
compatibility with fluorinated liquids to allow a high performance system to be
manufactured at a lower cost than an equivalent stainless steel system.
The basic Poly-KleenTM Vapor Degreaser is a three-sump unit that requires 140
liters (38 gallons) of fluid to operate. The principal components of the system and
their effective dimensions are:
An immersion sump
A boil sump
A drying sump
A vapor zone
A freeboard zone
A water separator
A sliding cover
118
The activated carbon module is shown in Figure 4. The modules and the chiller
are interconnected as shown in the process flow diagram presented as Figure 5.
Referring to this process flow diagram, the in-line process components from BV6 to CV-3 were mounted on an angle iron frame, 1829 mm L x 736 mm W x 762
mm H (72" L x 29" W x 30" H).
119
Cleaning trials were performed with the following pieces of sensitive equipment
a. Auto-Ranging LCD Digital Multimeters, Model No. 22-179A, Radio Shack,
A Div. of Tandy Corp., Fort Worth, TX
b. Electronic Calculator, Model No. EC-441, Radio Shack, A Div. Of Tandy
Corp., Fort Worth, TX
c. Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver, Model No. GlobalNav 212, Serial
No.005263360, Lowrance Electronics, Inc., Tulsa, OK.
d. Night Vision Binoculars, Model RO 38, 4 x 48 Nighthawk, Serial No.
982331, with Model RO45, Zoom IR Illuminator, LAN Optics International,
Burlington, MA.
e. 7.65 mm semi-automatic pistol, Model PP, Carl Walther GmbH Sportswaffen, Ansberg, Germany
f. Inverter Circuit Boards, 38 mm (1.5 in) square, designed by Entropic Systems, Inc.
Numerous tests were performed with digital multimeters, which were considered to be good prototypes for sensitive equipment. These items performed a
number of electrical functions, they had a liquid crystal display covered by a clear
plastic window, they contained a variety of materials that would be damaged by
120
many solvents, and were inexpensive enough (about $12.00 each) to be considered disposable test items.
In addition, some tests were performed with other items to test the effects of
part geometry. These items included standard 25 mm x 75 mm microscope slides
(standard flat surfaces), brass pipe nipples (easily accessible interior surfaces),
and magnet assemblies (difficult to access interior surfaces). A magnet assembly
consists of a circular piece of stainless screen (typically 100 mesh) that is sandwiched between two cylindrical Alnico magnets of equal diameter. The magnets
were 13 mm (") in diameter by 6.5 mm (" ) in height. The soil is deposited on
the screen before forming a magnet assembly. This sandwich was then subjected
to a cleaning trial. The changes in weight of the assembly and in the appearance
of the screen were measures of the effect of the cleaning trial.
The test pieces were contaminated with a variety of neat and thickened CWA
simulants and other soils. CWA simulants used in these tests were diethyl phthalate (DEP), tributyl citrate (TBC), and Krytox 157 (L) and (H) fluorosurfactants.
These materials are all water insoluble oils that have a low vapor pressure at ambient room temperature. They also all are miscible with HFE-7100. The CWA
simulants were all doped with a fluorescent dye, Try-33, that greatly facilitated
their detection on the test pieces and in the decontamination liquid.
In some of the tests, a thickener was added to the simulant to mimic the behavior of thickened CWA agents. Two different types of thickeners were used: fumed
silica (Cabosil LM-130, Cabot Corp.), and an acrylic polymer (Paraloid K-125,
Rohm & Haas Corp.). Paraloid K-125 has been used to thicken military CWA.
The consistency of the simulant depends on the amount of thickener used. At 1-2
wt-% thickener loading, the simulants flow like honey, while they become semisolid gels at thickener loading greater than 5 wt-%. One key difference between
colloidal silica and an acrylic polymer is that colloidal silica is not soluble in any
organic solvent, but the acrylic polymer can dissolve in a polar organic solvent.
In addition to the above simulants, test pieces were also contaminated with representative soils that could be found on fielded equipment: mineral oil, SAE 30
motor oil (NAPA) thickened with Arizona road dust (Duke Scientific Co, Palo
Alto, CA), multi-purpose lithium grease (Lubrimatic), and dried, 50 grit SiC water based lapping compound (Clover).
The contaminant removal tests were performed in the Poly-KleenTM system according to the following general procedure:
a. The equipment to be processed was weighed and photographed under visible
and UV light.
b. One or more tared pieces of equipment were coated with contaminant(s) or
soil(s), photographed under visible and UV light, and re-weighed.
c. The test piece(s) were placed into the transfer basket of the Poly-Kleen system, which was then covered with a tight fitting screen.
d. The immersion sump of the Poly-Kleen system contained enough HFE-7100
to cover the part in the basket. Sonication for 30 minutes degassed this liquid.
121
e. The transfer basket containing the items to be cleaned was lowered into the
immersion sump, and statically (i.e. no liquid flow) sonicated for a finite period of time, usually 15 minutes.
f. After static sonication, the rinse pump was turned on and the liquid in the
immersion bath was circulated through the activated carbon columns at a rate
of 1,700 ml/minute for a finite period of time. The circulation time ranged
from 15 minutes to 2 hours, depending on the purpose of the test.
g. The rate of decontamination was monitored by following the concentration of
the contaminant in the decontamination liquid (HFE-7100).
h. Steps e and f were repeated until the presence of contaminant in the circulating liquid could no longer be detected.
i. When the immersion sump liquid was free of contaminant, the transfer basket
was moved from the immersion sump to the superheat sump and dried for 30
minutes to remove liquid drag out.
j. The transfer basket was removed from the Poly-Kleen system. The test
pieces were removed from the basket, visually examined, photographed under
visible and UV light, reweighed, and archived.
In order to maximize ultrasonic power density, the minimum amount of liquid
needed to cover the parts being cleaned was used. Typically, the sump contained
from 130 to 180 mm (5 to 7 inches) of liquid, which corresponds to a liquid volume of approximately 15 liters to 30 liters (4 to 8 gallons) and a corresponding ultrasonic power density of 26 to 18 watts/liter (100 to 70 watts/gallon). In preliminary tests, it was noted that immersing and sonicating the test samples when the
immersion sump was filled to the brim (about 53 liters (14 gallons)) did not result
in effective cleaning. At that volume, the ultrasonic power density had dropped to
a value of 8 watts/liter (30 watts/gallon). While this value would be considered
marginal in a stainless steel ultrasonic bath, where the ultrasonic waves can be reflected from the walls back into the liquid, in a polypropylene bath in which the
walls absorb rather than reflect the ultrasonic waves, this power density level is
too low.
If parts were also contaminated with biological agents, after Step h, they would
be sonicated in a fluorinated surfactant/HFE-7100 solution that would be circulated through microfilters to remove suspended materials. The parts would then
be rinsed in fresh HFE-7100 to remove fluorocarbon surfactant residues, and then
dried as described above.
Table 3 lists the sensitive equipment decontamination experiments that were
carried out in the Poly-Kleen system during the course of the program. The
combination of equipment processed, contaminants used, and monitoring
method(s) examined are listed in this table. The results of the various cleaning results are summarized in Table 4. This table records the weights of the items listed
in Table 3, before and after contamination, as well as the post-cleaning weight
and visual appearance of these items.
122
Table 3.
List of sensitive equipment decontamination experiments performed
Experiment Sensitive equipment
No.
processed
Contaminant(s)
Monitoring method
1
2
Diethyl Phthalate
Tributyl Citrate
Visual
Visual, UV
Tributyl Citrate
Krytox FS
Tributyl Citrate
Krytox FS + Mineral Oil
Visual, UV
Visual, UV
Visual, UV
Visual
Tributyl Citrate
Krytox FS + Tributyl Citrate
Krytox FS
Visual, UV
Visual
Visual
Visual
Visual
Krytox FS
Krytox FS
Krytox FS
Krytox FS
Tributyl Citrate
Fluorescence
Fluorescence
Fluorescence
Fluorescence
Fluorescence
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10A-10E
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Multimeter
2 Microscope Slides &
2 circuit boards
2 Multimeters
Multimeter
Multimeter
GPS Receiver & Radio
Shack Calculator
Multimeter & Night Vision
Goggles
Multimeter & Circuit Board
Walter PP Pistol
Multimeter & Pipe
Nipple (10 D only)
Multimeter
2 Magnet Assemblies &
2 Brass nipples
Multimeter - Face Down
Multimeter - Face Down
Multimeter - Face Down
Multimeter - Face Up
Multimeter - Face Down
Except for the runs where there was visible attack of the substrate by the simulant (as in run 1 in Table 3), there was an increase of less than a 0.1 gram in the
weight of the object after contamination and cleaning and the original (i.e. before
contamination) weight of this object. In some cases, there was a weight loss of the
order of 0.1 gram (as in the calculator in run 6 and the pistol in run 9). This was
attributed to the removal of other soils that were previously present on these test
items.
If the ratio of (weight change/contaminant weight) is used as a cleaning criterion, this value is less than 10%, except for run 1 (for the reasons cited above),
and for runs 13 to 17. For these last five runs, the relatively high values of this ratio is attributable to the precision of the weight measurement. The weight measurements were performed on a balance that had an accuracy of 0.02 gram,
which would account for most of the observed weight differences.
Table 4.
Sensitive equipment cleaning results
124
While not a quantitative measurement, visual examination under ultraviolet illumination was considered to be the most sensitive and accurate means available
to ESI of assessing whether traces of fluorescent contamination remained on the
processed objects. Fluorescent contamination was observed only for run 1, and
runs 3 and 5, where there was no noticeable weight increase.
125
126
Photographs of various test objects were taken under both normal and UV illuminations,
a. Before the application of contaminant(s),
b. After the application of contaminant(s), and
c. After cleaning or decontamination.
The presence or absence of contaminant on the items is clearly evident by simple examination of the photographs taken under UV illumination of the night vision goggles presented in Figure 6 and the pistol in Figure 7.
Process kinetics was examined by monitoring the concentration of contaminant
in the liquid in the immersion bath as a function of time. Removing the contaminant from the surfaces of the object being cleaned and transferring it into the bulk
liquid took approximately 15 minutes. Once the circulation pump to the activated
carbon columns was turned on, approximately three bath turnovers were required
to purge the immersion sump of contaminant. In this test program, turnover time
was of the order of 12 to 15 minutes.
4. POTENTIAL BENEFITS OF THE TECHNOLOGY
Demonstrated ability of HFE-7100/Krytox 157FS surfactant solutions, in conjunction with multi-frequency ultrasonic agitation to remove/neutralize a
range of biological agents from solid substrates, including circuit boards.
127
REFERENCES
1. Joint Service Sensitive Equipment Decontamination (JSSED), Block I Systems Technology
Overview, Report PAO-01-432, October 2000 (available from DTIC, Fort Belvoir, VA).
2. R. Kaiser, Decontamination of Aircraft Electronic Equipment, Final Technical Report, SBIR
Project AF97-014, Contract No. F41624-98-C-5061, November 2000.
3. R. Kaiser, C.S. Yam and O.K. Harling, Enhanced Removal of Radioactive Particles by Fluorocarbon Surfactant Solutions Process Development, Interim Report, Prepared for US Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC, Contract No. NRC-04-93-106, March 1995.
4. R. Kaiser, C.S. Yam, S.R. Landahl, P.A. Droof and P.H. Jones, Jr., Enhanced Removal of Radioactive Particles by Fluorocarbon Surfactant Solutions Process Demonstration, Final Report, Prepared for US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC, Contract No. NRC04-93-106, September 1997.
5. R. Kaiser, C.Y. Yam and A.E. Desrosiers, Decontamination of Electromechanical Parts by the
Sonatol Process: II Results, Proc. Waste Management (WM) 98 Conference, Tucson, AZ,
March 1998.
6. A.E. Desrosiers and R. Kaiser, Decontamination of HEPA Filters for Reuse, Proc. EPRI International Low-Level Waste Conference, McAfee, NJ, July 1999.
7. A.E. Desrosiers, R. Kaiser and C.B. Voth, TRU Waste Minimization During Hot Cell Decommissioning, Proc. American Nuclear Society Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, June 1999.
Note: Copies of Refs. 2, 3, 4, can be obtained from the sponsoring agencies or the author of this paper.
AbstractThis paper describes a new method for cleaning of parts. The method converts soils to
water-organic emulsions via pressure waves generated by ultrasonic transducers. Underwater photographs and symbolic representations show that the process consists of: (1) contact with ultrasonicgenerated pressure waves produces an emulsion of soil in water, and (2) rinsing the emulsion from
the parts.
Keywords: No-chemistry; cleaning; emulsion; ultrasonics.
1. INTRODUCTION
Cleaning without chemistry is not new; however, the information in this paper is
new. This paper is not about flushing with pure water to displace particles in critical cleaning situations nor is it about slowly dissolving non-volatile residue
(NVR) [1] without rinsing residues in precision cleaning situations.
This paper is about cleaning large or small quantities of oils, greases, or soaps
from metal (chiefly) parts using only water [2]. This paper describes a new
method of solving practical cleaning problems at all levels of cleaning quality [3].
This new method is used most often in continuous processes, though it can be
used easily in batch processes.
In this paper, the new method is described and compared to normal aqueous
cleaning technology. Photographic evidence of its use is shown. Limitations are
defined. Areas for future research are discussed.
2. EXPERIMENTAL
Four photographs, Figures 1a to 1d, were taken at 32C (90F) in un-degassed tap
water. They illustrate the experiments carried out here to describe the two-step
process. In the first process step, the parts to be cleaned are bombarded with ultra
130
J.B. Durkee
sonic waves from a transducer. This produces an emulsion of water and soil on
the parts. In the second step, the emulsion (which contains the soil) is rinsed from
the parts using any combination of water jets.
The circular-shaped ultrasonic transducer produced 2000 watts over about a
30.48 cm (12 inch) length. The part was an easily recognizable form a bullet
formed of carbon steel. The part was held on a thin copper wire about 1.27 cm
(0.5 inch) away from the circular transducer. The soil was 10W30 motor oil applied liberally with a paintbrush before the part was immersed in water. The four
photographs in Figure 1 were taken over a period of about five seconds.
The emulsion was analyzed for oil, and part cleanliness was measured.
131
3. RESULTS
Todays aqueous and solvent processes both involve the same three factors: solvency, temperature (heat), and mechanical force. This is shown in Figure 2a.
Naturally, solvency dominates solvent cleaning. Mechanical force dominates
aqueous cleaning.
The No-chemistry technology presented in this paper involves a different paradigm. This is shown simply in Figure 2b. There is no chemistry so there is no direct concern about solvency. The process is practiced from room temperature (or
below) up to about 51.6C (125F). Consequently, the addition of heat is not a
significant factor.
4.1. Another kind of mechanical force
Mechanical force is the remaining of the three factors. The force is generated by
ultrasonic pressure transducers which normally produce cavitation bubbles.
132
J.B. Durkee
Figure 3a
Pressure Waves Impact
Contaminated Surface
Figure 3b
Pressure Waves
Produce Emulsion
Figure 3c
Emulsion Collects
into a Gel
Figure 3d
Rinse Dislodges
Gel from Surface
Figure 3e
Rinsed Cleaned
Surface
133
Table 1.
Comparison of no-chemistry cleaning to cleaning via cavitation
Item
Conventional cavitation
No-chemistry cleaning
Water degassing
Optimum temperature
Hydraulic conditions
Standing waves
Bubbles
Cavitation
Essential
~ 71C (160F)
Static flow conditions
Avoided via frequency sweep
Observed
YES
Not done
Any temperature
Moving flow conditions
No frequency sweep
Not Observed
NA
Hence, one might assume that the nature of the force is cavitation-induced implosion of tiny bubbles. This assumption is incorrect. Cavitation plays no role in this
No-chemistry cleaning process. In fact, conditions are deliberately controlled to
be opposite of those which normally produce cavitation bubbles. These conditions
are given in Table 1, and will be later shown in Figure 3a to Figure 3d.
4.2. The no-chemistry cleaning process
The No-chemistry cleaning process is simple. As stated in Section 2, only two
steps are involved. Both must be performed completely, or the cleaning will not
be effective. The steps are to:
(1) Produce an emulsion via ultrasonic pressure waves
(2) Rinse the emulsion off the parts
The pair of steps are shown photographically in Figures 1a to1d, and symbolically as Figures 3a to 3e. They may be repeated as necessary to produce the desired level of cleaning in the time or space allowed.
The separation in time of Figures 1a to1d and Figures 3a to 3d/3e is about five
seconds. In other words, the cleaning process involving these two steps can easily
be completed in twenty seconds, or less.
The process is self-limiting. It is complete when there is no soil left to emulsify.
4.3. Conditions necessary to form and remove emulsion
There are three necessary conditions [2]:
1. The transducers must be located close to the parts. The distance of 1.27 cm to
7.62 cm (0.5 to 3 inches) is recommended.
2. The volumetric power intensity must be high, vs applications involving ultrasonic-produced cavitation, (>26.4 watts / liter (100 watts / gal)).
3. There must be motion in the fluid (to complete the rinsing step). Both continuous flow and batch processes have been built and operated successfully.
A single transducer can be located above or below the parts. A pair of transducers may be located above and below the parts. Line of sight access is not required, as with megasonic transducers.
134
J.B. Durkee
If multiple transducers above and below the parts are used, the same frequency
is used for each, vs the referenced patent [4], which requires a difference in frequency. The purpose of the multiple transducers is to expose the surface which
would not ordinarily be exposed to ultrasonic waves. Flat parts, which have two
sides, are a common example.
The rinsing nozzles can be located under water with the transducers or the parts
can be raised above the water and rinsed there. Obviously, a different design of
the rinse nozzle would be used in each case.
The rinsing step is absolutely crucial, as is shown by the following experience.
A scaled-up machine was constructed. It had two steps of emulsion production via
sonication, and no intermediate step of rinsing. It was worthless as a cleaning machine, despite 2,000 watts of ultrasonic power aimed at a few non-moving parts.
After a great deal of trial and error, an intermediate rinsing zone was added. It
was this inadvertent experiment which showed that No-chemistry cleaning was a
two-step process.
Water quality is not relevant. Excellent cleaning has been obtained in deionized
water, tap water, water produced by reverse osmosis, water containing tramp insoluble soil, and water containing ~ 1% emulsion.
There is no practical limit to operating temperature. Issues which determine
temperature [2] are soil and substrate. Lower temperatures make emulsion formation and removal more difficult because the emulsion is more viscous. Higher
temperatures cause steel surfaces to rust. Typical values of operating temperature
are between 26.6C (80F) and 51.6C (125F).
Excellent cleaning of molybdenum-based grease from 304 stainless steel has
been done at 90.6C (195F) [5]. This temperature was chosen to reduce the viscosity of the grease in order to increase indirectly the rate of formation and removal of emulsion. 10W50 motor oil has been removed from carbon steel at
15.6C (60F).
4.4. Process operation
No-chemistry cleaning is not a mere curiosity, like the vortex tube. More than a
dozen machines have been constructed. Each machine transports parts through
zones where the parts can be sonicated to produce an emulsion and then another
zone where the emulsion can be rinsed away. Some machines have operated for
thousands of hours. Some machines have cleaned millions of parts. Nearly all
machines have cleaned hundreds of pounds of parts per hour. No chemicals have
been added to any machine.
These machines differ chiefly in transport of parts, and that is the fundamental
limit on the use of No-chemistry cleaning technology. Large parts are most difficult to transport and expose to ultrasonic transducers mounted close to the parts
surface. Tractor axles are the largest part successfully cleaned. Each weighs about
18.8 kilograms (forty pounds) and are about the size of a 13" television set. Two
machines continuously clean oils from these parts.
135
Holdup time under sonication should be at least fifteen seconds. Holdup time
is a tradeoff between cleaning quality and productivity [6].
Too few steps of sonication (formation of emulsion) and rinsing. The number
of steps of sonication is a tradeoff between cleaning quality and machine size
or cost.
Operating temperature can be too low (between 26.6C [80EF] and 51.6C
[125F]). This can limit cleaning quality, as a more viscous emulsion is rinsed
less efficiently.
Intrusion of free or tramp soil. This situation is worse than having to clean
parts which are more dirty, because the soil content can be unanticipated and
variable. Free soil can be fatal to any proposed application.
4.5.3. Waste management
This is a problem where the soil can be removed from parts, but cannot be removed from the cleaning machine. The problem is unique to No-chemistry cleaning technology. This is because there is no chemistry to surround the soil, and
escort it from the cleaning machine.
Thus soil elements agglomerate or attach themselves to the cleaning machine.
When No-chemistry cleaning removes the soil from the parts and allows it to be
deposited on the machine, the application is a total failure. Fortunately, this happens only with some soils which do not form a stable emulsion with water. Two
such soils are molybdenum disulfide and lithium-based greases.
5. FUTURE RESEARCH
136
J.B. Durkee
Cleaning of oil and grease soils without chemistry is technically feasible. Photographs show how these soils are emulsified in water. Cleaning data show how the
emulsions are rinsed to produce clean parts. This two-step cleaning process has
been implemented in continuous or batch machines.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Walter Johnson, Flo-Matic Corporation, Rockford, Illinois,
USA, for his sponsorship of this work and for the freedom to experiment without
regard to commercial need. I would also like to thank my colleagues Gary
Kauffman and Vasilly Pekun of Flo-Matic.
REFERENCES
1. Guide to Inspections Validation of Cleaning Processes, http;//ww.fda.gov/ora/inspect_ref/igs
/valid.html
2. W.J. Johnson, US Patent 6,368,414 (2002).
3. J.Y. Baker and J.B. Durkee, A2C2 Magazine, 4-9 (October 1999), 4-6 (November 1999); and 3940 (January 2000).
4. H.B. Swainbank et al., US Patent 4,788,992 (1988).
5. W.J. Johnson, paper presented at the International Fastener Exposition, Chicago, May 27, 1999.
6. J.B. Durkee, W.J. Johnson, G. Kauffman and V. Pekun, US Patent Applications 340769/
900016, 340769/90008, and 340769/900032 (2000).
AbstractThe mission of this project was to develop a practical technology for formation of ice
particles. Our previous works demonstrated the effectiveness of the use of ice-air mixture as a cleaning medium. However, a practical technology for fabrication of ice particles of a desired size and at
a desired temperature is still under development. The physical properties of ice (tendency to agglomerate, melting, etc.) make the formation and transportation of ice particles extremely difficult.
We developed a process for controllable generation of ice particles using a rotational crusher embedded into a heat exchanger. Water was supplied at the bottom of the heat exchanger and as it
moved along the rotating auger ice was formed and crushed. A refrigerant or liquid nitrogen were
used as cooling media. At the exit of the heat exchanger the air stream entrained the generated particles. In the course of operation the cooling conditions and the auger rotation were maintained constant while the water flow rate varied. The rate of production and the shape and size of the generated
particles were monitored. We also investigated the temperature distribution along the heat exchanger and the corresponding distribution of particle sizes. As the result of this study, process phenomenology was developed and a design of the system for formation of ice particles was suggested.
Keywords: Ice; particles; solidification; solid decomposition; brittle fracturing; thermal stresses.
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volved the use of ultra-clean ice particles, having a uniform grain size, for cleaning the surface and grooves of ferrite block (Tomoji [4]). An ice blasting device
utilizing stored particles was suggested by Harima [5]. Vissisouk [6] proposed to
use ice particles near melting temperature for surface decoating. Mesher [7] developed a nozzle for enhancement of the surface cleaning by ice blasting. Shinichi
[8] suggested an inexpensive cleaning of various surfaces by mixing ice particles,
cold water and air. Niechial [9] proposed an ice blasting cleaning system containing an ice crusher, a separator and a blasting gun. Settles [10] suggested producing ice particles of a size range below 100 m within the apparatus just prior to
the nozzle.
Although the potential use of ice blasting has been suggested by a number of
inventors, the practical use is much more limited. Herb and Vissisouk [11] reported precision cleaning of zirconium alloys in the course of production of bimetallic tubing by ice pellets. It was shown that ice blasting improved the quality
of bimetal. The use of air-ice blasting for steel derusting was reported by Liu [12].
The following operational conditions were maintained: air pressure: 0.2-0.76
MPa; grain diameter: below 2.5 mm; ice temperature 50C; traverse rate 90
mm/min; and standoff distance 50 mm. At these conditions the rate of derusting
ranged from 290 mm2/min at the air pressure of 0.2 MPa to 1110 mm2/min at the
air pressure of 0.76 MPa. The quality of the treated surfaces complied with ISO
8501-1 Sa 2.
In the final analysis, the adoption of the ice-jet technology is determined by the
effectiveness of the generation and handling of ice particles. Regular abrasives are
stable at practically feasible operational conditions, while ice particles can exist
only at subzero temperature. Maintaining such a temperature prior, within and
outside of the nozzle is an extremely difficult task. The adhesion between the particles increases dramatically as the temperature approaches 0C. At this condition
ice tends to pack and clog the supply lines. Thus these lines must be maintained at
a low temperature. This and other similar problems prevent adoption of icewaterjet (IWJ) by the industry. In order to assure the acceptance of IWJ, it is necessary to develop a practical technology for formation, transportation and acceleration of ice particles.
2. PROPERTIES OF WATER ICE
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stresses in the ice are below a certain level and are applied for a short period of
time. The dynamic elastic properties of ice at 5C are: Youngs modulus (E) =
8.9-9.9 GPa; Rigidity modulus (G) = 3.4-3.8 GPa; Bulk modulus (K) = 8.3-11.3
GPa; Poissons ratio () = 0.31-0.36 according to Hobbs [13]. For comparison,
for an aluminum alloy 1100-H14, E = 70 GPa and G = 26 GPa. For silica glass E
= 70 GPa. If the columnar ice is stressed perpendicular to the long direction of the
column, the static Youngs modulus in bars is determined by the following equation:
E = (5.69-0.64T)*104
(1)
where, temperature T is given in C. The dynamic Youngs modulus of ice increases almost linearly from 7.2 GPa at 10C to 8.5 GPa at 180C, and is independent of the direction of loading. The data above show that the ice powder can
be considered as a soft blasting material and used accordingly.
One of the main issues in the use of the ice powder is sintering of the particles
and their adhesion to the surface of the enclosure. The strength of adhesion depends on ice temperature. This dependence is shown in Figure 1 (a). It follows
from this figure that it is necessary to maintain ice temperature below 30C to
prevent sintering of the particles. Sintering also depends on the duration of particles contact. The radius of the neck, which forms between two ice spheres,
Figure 1. (a) Strength of adhesion of ice particles, and (b) schematic of the sintering of ice particles
[13].
140
brought into contact for time t at temperature T (Figure 1 (b)) is determined by the
equation
n
x A(T )
= m t
r
r
(2)
where x is the radius of the neck, r is the radius of sphere, A(T) is a function of
the temperature, n and m are constants. A(T), m and n depend on the mechanism
of sintering. It follows from equation (2) that it is necessary to prevent the contact
between particles in order to avoid particles sintering.
The moisture contained in the atmosphere in the course of ice transportation
enhances the adhesion of the ice to the walls as well as sintering of ice particles.
Both phenomena result in the plug formation and clogging of the conduits.
3. EXPERIMENTAL SET UP FOR FABRICATION OF ICE PARTICLES
In our previous experiments several systems for ice powder formation were
tested. One of such systems as depicted in Figure 2 was selected for further experiments. The system consists of the following functionally separated blocks:
ice making block which includes the evaporator, auger, auger driver, sealing
and liquid nitrogen cooling apparatus;
ice unloading mechanism
nozzle block which includes parallel nozzles and focusing device.
In our experiments water entered the heat exchanger via a special port. As it
moved along the rotating nozzle it solidified and an ice plug was formed. Decomposition of this plug led to formation of ice particles. At the outlet of the heat exchanger the powder entered into the nozzle block 5 and was driven to the air gun 6.
The heat exchanger and the auger of the icemaker constituted a modified commercial icemaker of the Hoshizaki Co. of America, Peachtree, GA. The design of
these parts will be changed in the next generation of the device. The cooling was
carried out by the refrigerant Galden HT-55 supplied by the cooling TurboJet apparatus or by liquid nitrogen stored in a tank. In both cases the supply of the cooling medium was determined by the characteristics of the source, the refrigeration
system or the nitrogen tank. We replaced Hoshizaki auger driver by a more powerful device in order to prevent jamming of the ice. The rotation momentum of the
auger 4 was provided via a gearbox with gear-ratio 1:100. However, the selected
driver operated at a constant angular velocity of 100 rpm. At these conditions, the
size and temperature of particles were determined by the rate of the water supply
to the port 8, which changed gradually from 0 to 200 ml/min. Water flow rate was
precisely controlled by a special valve (Figure 2 (a)). In the final analysis, we were
able to generate the desired kind of particles at given cooling conditions by the
proper selection of the water flow rate. The attempts to improve ice production by
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Figure 2. (a) Schematic of auger type IJ system where: 1 evaporator, 2 refrigerant coils, 3 insulation, 4 auger, 5 ice reloading device, 6 air gun, 7 air supply port, 8 water supply port,
9 cooling medium port, 10 gauges, A air flow rate valve, B water flow rate valve, C cooling medium valve, D data acquisition card, and (b) schematic of gauges placement inside the
evaporator with their distances measured from water inlet port (water zero level).
an increase of the water pressure or a control of the supply of the cooling medium
were unsuccessful. Solidified ice plug moved forward along the auger helical
ways. It was determined, however, that it was absolutely necessary to eliminate
any obstructions to ice flow in order to prevent jamming of the heat exchanger. It
is quite obvious that the conditions of the ice production (specific cost and energy
consumption, process stability, uniformity of the generated particles, output per
cm2 of the outlet cross-sectional area, etc.) will be dramatically improved by the
process optimization.
An unloading mechanism delivered ice particles to the abrasive port of the air
gun. The nozzle block consisted of two nozzles and a special focusing device.
Three different sizes of the nozzles were used, however, in all cases the nozzle to
focusing tube ratio was 1:2. Ice was delivered to the nozzles abrasive port through
insulated flexible plastic tubes.
The ice crystallization was monitored through a set of thermocouples and resistance gauges (10) imbedded into the evaporator (Figure 2(b)). Data acquisition
card processed the signals generated by the gauges.
The large number of control variables (rate of supply of water and coolant, rate
of auger rotation, diameter and length of the heat exchanger, distribution of temperature and heat flow along the refrigerator, geometry of the auger) practically
excluded empirical process optimization. At the same time, the complexity of the
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Figure 3. Solid ice block decomposition at the two distinct stages of ice powder formation: a) initial
stage of block formation, and b) the intermediate stage of block decomposition.
phenomena that occur in the course of the powder formation (water freezing and
simultaneous decomposition in the turbulent layer) made it impossible to construct a physical model of the process. Thus the only practical approach to the
process design entailed experimental study of the distribution of water properties
within the icemaker, construction of the process phenomenology using the acquired information and then the use of commercial packages (Pro/ENGINEER,
FIDAP, etc) to evaluate the design parameters of the icemaker as well as the correlation between input variables and the ice properties.
Special experiments were carried out in order to examine the state of the solid
ice in the course of solidification and particles formation. In order to attain this
goal the auger was stopped during a normal operation and then removed from the
heat exchanger. The solid phase was visually examined. The state of the ice is depicted in Figure 3. The anatomy of the ice in the course of freezing and particles
formation was investigated using the set of pictures developed. This information
was supplemented by the ice temperature and electrical resistance monitored prior
to the auger removal. Extensive database acquired in the course of these experiments was used to develop a hypothetical mechanism of ice particles formation
The suggested hypothetical process phenomenology is described below.
4. PHENOMENOLOGY OF ICE BLOCK DECOMPOSITION
Powder formation is a complex process involving solidification, stress development in the solid phase, supercooling of the solid with cracks propagation inside
the block, concentration of the structural and thermal stresses within the solid and
finally decomposition of ice blocks. According to our hypothesis ice block solidification occurs in the bottom evaporator zone. The formation of a solid block and
its initial decomposition are depicted in Figure 3. At this stage the formation of
143
the ice structure is complete and further cooling brings about only reduction of ice
temperature. Thus particles size can be controlled only at the initial stages of the
process.
The following phenomenology of particles formation has been suggested. Ice
nucleation inside the evaporator obeys the rules of granular ice formation (Ice
type I). It originates as water flow reaches the evaporator wall with a temperature
of 196C. Ice nucleation and crystal growth depend on the conditions of cooling
and the auger spiral movement. The ice plug forms and propagates along the auger stem. The generated ice acquires a multilayer pattern. A supercooled ice layer
directly adjacent to the evaporator and a moderately cooled layer in the vicinity of
auger can be identified. An explosive character of water freezing near the evaporator wall leads to thermal ice expansion inside the volume constrained by the
evaporator and the auger and formation of the ice plug. This results in the compression of the solid and nucleation of cracks. The nucleation of cracks under a
compressive stress is generally due to dislocation pile-up at the grain boundaries
and relief of stress concentration along the grain boundaries. The phenomenon of
crack nucleation has been discussed for low to moderate loading conditions by
Sanderson [14]. His studies indicate that crack nucleation is determined by the delayed elastic strain. The generated cracks as well as the cracks initially developed
in the solid ice propagate within the ice body and eventually fracture the solid
block. Block decomposition occurs almost instantaneously and can be considered
as an explosive destruction. The ice temperature in this region ranges from 15C
to 150C (distance from water inlet level D = 10-24 mm).
The following hypothetical mechanism of ice formation and decomposition
(Figure 4) was suggested. Liquid water freezes and forms ice plug in the bottom
zone of the evaporator. Thermal expansion essentially stops ice advance, and develops intensive stresses within the plug. This brings about formation and development of cracks and eventually fracturing the solid ice plug into particles. The
density of cracks developed in the course of freezing determines the size of particles. This density, in turn, depends on the rate of water cooling.
This explains the effect of the rate of water supply on the size of particles. At a
low rate of water supply, i.e. at a high rate of freezing the fine particles are generated. The periodic mode of formation and decomposition of ice blocks determines
the periodical character of driver current oscillations. Indeed, the ice powder exits
the icemaker periodically and the periods of ice exit exactly coincide with those
of the driver operation shown in Figure 5. Before plug formation water and ice
flow freely along the auger and thus loading of the driver is minimal. As long as
the plug stops the ice motion, the torque of the driver increases dramatically, but
drops almost instantaneously when the plug is decomposed (Figure 5). After the
plug decomposition, the geometry of particles does not change and the heat exchange results in ice cooling only.
144
Figure 4. Hypothetical schematic of ice plug formation and decomposition in an auger spiral movement: (a) bottom or solidification zone of the evaporator, (b) middle or supercooling zone of the
evaporator, (c) ice plug decomposition zone, and (d) ice particles cooling zone.
Figure 5. The correlation between the driver current with time for different water flow rates. Notice
distinct frequencies of maximum current value for different water flow rates.
145
Our previous work showed the possibility of using ice particles for a wide variety of
surface processing operations. However, it was found that each specific technology
required a narrow range of particle sizes and temperature. Derusting of steel, for example, requires particles ranging from 3 to 7 mm, while the biomedical applications
require highly homogeneous ice powder in the range 0.25 mm-0.3 mm.
Figure 6. Size distribution of ice particles for two different cooling media: (a) the average diameter
of ice particles as a function of a temperature at the evaporator outlet, and (b) the average diameter
of ice granules as a function of water flow rate.
146
Figure 7. Pictures show the high and low density ice-airjet streams (air pressure is 0.544 MPa) and
ice particles flow rate: (a) 20 g/min, and (b) 60 g/min.
The proposed mechanism of particles formation enables us to design a technology providing a desired kind of particles. In our experiments the control strategy
was developed by properly selecting the cooling medium and water flow rate. The
effects of the cooling medium (refrigerant Galden HT-55 vs. liquid nitrogen) on
the particles size are shown in Figure 6 (a), while Figure 6 (b) shows the effect of
water flow rate on this parameter. It must be pointed out that the exit particle
temperature is also an important operational parameter, because it determines the
stability and hardness of particles.
The actual entrainment of stable low temperature particles is shown in Figure
7. The streams containing low and high concentrations of ice particles are depicted in this figure.
6. SELECTED APPLICATIONS OF ICE PARTICLES
A series of the experiments were carried out in order to demonstrate the potential
application of the ice-air jet for various surface-processing operations.
6.1. Biomedical applications of ice-airjet (IAJ) technology
The experiments were conducted on two distinct types of skin, the chicken skin
and the pigskin. The paint was deposited on the skin (Figs. 8 a, b left) in question
by a waterproof marker. Then the IAJ was used to remove this paint. The feasibility of the paint removal without damaging the underlying layers as well as a
selective removal of the epidermis layer of the skin without damaging the underneath layers was demonstrated (Figs. 8 a, b right). The removal was performed
without disturbing the skin structure as well as without creating a temperature
gradient in the impingement zone.
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Figure 8. (a) Waterproof marker was partially removed from the epidermis layer of pork skin. Then
the epidermis layer was removed too. No damage to the underneath layers was detected, and (b) waterproof marker was removed from the highly sensitive surface of chicken skin. No damage to the
epidermis was observed in course of the cleaning procedure. The pictures were taken with a Sony
MVC-FD71 digital camera. Note: the marker (a) was removed without damaging the skin epidermis
layer (b).
148
Figure 9. (a) Decontamination of a heavily contaminated machine part, and (b) removal of highly
adhesive glue layer from a plastic surface. The pictures were taken with a Sony MVC-FD71 digital
camera. Note: the highly adherent layer of grease (Fig. 9 (a)) was removed without damaging the
painted surface of the machine part (right hand side picture). The residue of glue (Fig. 9 (b)) was
removed in course of IAJ cleaning. No damage to the plastic surface was observed (right hand side
picture).
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Figure 10. (a) Rusted carbon steel surface. Notice that newly formed rust layer is highly adherent,
and (b) carbon steel plate was partially derusted using IAJ (middle part of the plate). The pictures
were taken with a Sony MVC-FD71 digital camera.
150
7. CONCLUSION
The suggested mechanism for the formation of ice powder enables us to design an
effective industrial scale device for ice jet formation. The procedure for ice particles formation was developed and a device readily available for industrial deployment was constructed. An extensive use of this device is envisioned.
Acknowledgement
The study was supported by NSF grant number DDM9312980.
REFERENCES
1. C. Schlosser, L. Muelle and G. McDougal, US Patent 5,752,39 (1950).
2. S. Hitoshi, Japanese Patent 10137707 A (1996).
3. J. Szijcs, European Patent 0509132B1 (1991).
4. M. Tomoji, Japanese Patent 04078477 (1990).
5. I. Harima, Japanese Patent 04360766 A (1992).
6. S. Vissisouk, US Patent 5,367,838 (1994).
7. T. Mesher, US Patent 5,607,478 (1997).
8. H. Shinichi, Japanese Patent 09225830 A (1997).
9. R. Niechial, US Patent 5,820,447 (1998).
10. G. Settles, US Patent 5,785,581 (1990).
11. B. Herb and S. Vissisouk, Proc. Precision Cleaning 1996 held in Anaheim CA, pp. 172-179
(1996).
12. B. Liu, in Jetting Technology, H. Louis (Ed.), pp. 203-211, Professional Engineering Publishing
Ltd., London, UK (1998).
13. P. Hobbs, Ice Physics, Clarendon Press, Oxford (1974).
14. B. Sanderson, Ice Mechanics: Risks to Offshore Structures, Graham & Trotman, London, UK
(1988).
AbstractBlasting with solid carbon dioxide (dry ice) pellets is a technology that is gaining wide
acceptance in industry and the military for removing coatings and contaminants from surfaces. Dry
ice pellet blasting is also being used to prepare surfaces prior to applying coatings. This paper explains the principles of dry ice pellet blasting, and includes a brief history of the development of the
technology. A discussion follows to explain how dry ice pellet blasting works by combining kinetic
energy with thermal shock. The two kinds of dry ice pellet blast systems that are commercially
available, the induction (venturi) and direct acceleration types, are also discussed. The operating
principles and performance characteristics of both types are explained and compared in detail. Blasting system control parameters, such as dry ice pellet flow rate, compressed air propellant flow rate,
and dry ice pellet density, are defined and their effects on cleaning performance are presented. To
conclude, the author provides a review of actual applications for dry ice pellet blasting technology
as it is currently used in the semiconductor manufacturing industry.
Keywords: Dry ice; carbon dioxide pellets; blasting; cleaning.
Dry ice is made from liquid carbon dioxide, a recycled byproduct of several
manufacturing processes. During the blasting process the dry ice sublimates to
carbon dioxide gas, just like that exhaled by humans and found naturally in our
atmosphere. Using dry ice is safe for employees and the environment. Dry Ice
blasting uses extruded dry ice pellets, roughly the size of a grain of rice. The pellets are made on a dry ice extrusion machine called a pelletizer or nuggetizer.
The pellets can be produced, stored in sealed insulated containers, shipped, and
used for blasting several days after they are produced.
Dry ice blasting accelerates solid carbon dioxide pellets with compressed air in a
subsonic or supersonic blast stream to remove unwanted surface contaminants.
Upon impact with the surface the dry ice sublimates (turns from a solid to gas
without passing through a liquid phase) into carbon dioxide. The process is dry and
non-conductive, non-abrasive and non-toxic, leaving no residue on the part or
equipment being cleaned. All that remains to be collected (by vacuuming and/or
152
F.C. Young
filtration) is the surface contaminant being removed. Dry ice blasting leaves no
secondary waste as from sand, bead or water blasting. This allows equipment surfaces to be cleaned in-place during the manufacturing process. The absence of a
secondary waste stream makes dry ice blasting a perfect non-polluting technology.
2. THE PRINCIPLES BEHIND DRY ICE PARTICLE BLAST SURFACE
CLEANING
With a low temperature of 79C, dry ice (solid carbon dioxiode) has an inherent
thermal energy ready to be tapped. In addition to the kinetic energy associated
with any accelerated medium blasting, dry ice blasting uses the inherent low temperature to increase shear stress in the surface coating or contaminant, enabling
the particle impact to break-up the coating. Further, the thermal gradient between
two dissimilar materials (the contaminant and the substrate) with different thermal
expansion coefficients can serve to break the bond between the two materials. The
ability of these surface mechanisms to remove the coating or contaminant varies
depending on coating or contaminant. Thermal shock is most evident when blasting a thin, non-metallic coating or contaminant bonded to a metallic substrate.
Thermal shock, a key element that makes dry ice blasting an effective cleaning
method, does not cause thermal stress in the substrate being cleaned. The temperature decrease caused by dry ice blasting is localized at the surface where the
contaminant is bonded to the substrate. (See references [1, 2].)
3. A BRIEF HISTORY OF DRY ICE PARTICLE BLASTING TECHNOLOGY
DEVELPOPMENT
In the early 1930s, the manufacture of solid phase carbon dioxide (dry ice) became possible. During this time, the creation of dry ice was nothing more than a
laboratory experiment. As the procedure for making dry ice became readily available, applications for this innovative substance grew. Obviously, the first use was
in refrigeration. Today, dry ice is widely used in the food industry for packaging
and protecting perishable foods.
In 1945, stories exist of the U.S. Navy experimenting with dry ice as a blast
medium for various degreasing applications. In May 1963, Reginald Lindall received a patent for a method of removing meat from bone using jetted carbon
dioxide particles. In November 1972, Edwin Rice received a patent for a method
for the removal of unwanted portions of an article by spraying with high velocity
dry ice particles. Similarly, in August 1977, Calvin Fong (then working for the
Lockheed Corp.) received a patent for sandblasting with pellets of material capable of sublimation. The work and success of these early pioneers led to the
formation of several companies in the early 1980s that pursued the development
of dry ice blasting technology. (See reference [3].)
153
In recent years, dry ice pellet blasting has found its most commercially successful market niche for in-line (in-process) cleaning of molds (rubber, plastics,
aluminum foundry, food baking). Other emerging areas of successful commercial
application are with specialized contract cleaning services, the wood and paper
industries, the semiconductor manufacturing industry, the printing industry, and
the aerospace industry.
4. HOW CARBON DIOXIDE PARTICLE BLASTING WORKS
(SEE REFERENCES [47])
4.1. Overview
Carbon dioxide pellet blasting uses compressed air to accelerate frozen carbon dioxide dry ice pellets to a high velocity. A compressed air supply between 415
kPa and 620 kPa pressure is required. Dry ice pellets can be made on-site or supplied. The pellets are made from liquid carbon dioxide, which is a naturally occurring compound that is non-toxic, non-flammable and chemically inert. Carbon dioxide is inexpensive and easily stored at work sites.
4.2. The principal factors contributing to cleaning performance
Carbon dioxide pellet blasting works because of two factors: pellet kinetic energy
(velocity) and thermal shock (temperature). The performance of solid carbon dioxide blasting for surface cleaning is optimized by combining these factors and
tuning the parameters of the system specifically for the application. These parameters are compressed air pressure, type of blast nozzle, pellet size and density,
and the pellet flow rate.
4.2.1. Kinetic energy
High pellet kinetic energy is achieved by using high velocity supersonic nozzles
that are shaped properly to aim directly at the surface of the mold or other article
being cleaned. The single-hose direct acceleration type of carbon dioxide pellet- blasting system provides the very high kinetic energy required to remove the
most tenacious contaminants from most surfaces.
Solid carbon dioxide (dry ice) possesses virtually no hardness when compared
to sand, glass beads, or even plastic beads. It is estimated that dry ice possesses a
hardness between 1.0 and 1.5 on the Mohs scale. Lack of true hardness deprives
dry ice of the chiseling effect which is the prevailing mechanism in all other
forms of particle blasting. This also explains why dry ice blasting is considered
NON-ABRASIVE to most substrates. Since dry ice cannot chisel and erode away
the surface contaminant or coating, it must rely on extremely high initial kinetic
impact energy to create very high instantaneous shear stresses in the coating layer.
Dry ice particles are like tiny snowballs traveling at extremely high velocity, yet
possessing no coefficient of restitution, so that ALL of each individual particles
impact energy is completely absorbed by the coating layer. Excessive shear in the
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F.C. Young
coating layer itself, and at the interface between the coating and the substrate,
causes instant fracturing and separation of coating material from the surface.
In general, if a coating or contaminant is CHEMICALLY bonded to a surface,
dry ice particle blasting will NOT effectively remove the coating. If the bond is
PHYSICAL or MECHANICAL in nature, such as a coating of rubber residue
which is anchored into the porous surface of an aluminum casting, then there is a
good chance that dry ice blasting will work. Contaminants which are etched, or
stained into the surfaces of metals, ceramics, plastics, or other materials typically
cannot be removed with dry ice blasting. If the surface of the substrate is extremely
porous or rough, providing strong mechanical anchoring for the contaminant or
coating, dry ice blasting may not be able to remove all of the coating, or the rate of
removal may be too slow to allow dry ice blasting to be cost effective.
The classic example of a contaminant that does NOT respond to dry ice blasting is RUST. Rust is both chemically and strongly mechanically bonded to steel
substrate. Advanced stages of rust must be chiseled away with abrasive sand
blasting. Only the thin film of powderized flash rust on a fresh steel surface can
be effectively removed with dry ice blasting.
4.2.1.1. Induction (venturi) and direct acceleration blast systems the effect of
the type of system on available kinetic energy
In a two-hose induction (venturi) carbon dioxide blasting system, the medium
particles are moved from the hopper to the gun chamber by suction, where they
drop to a very low velocity before being induced into the outflow of the nozzle by
a large flow volume of compressed air. Some more advanced two-hose systems
employ a small positive pressure to the pellet delivery hose. In any type of twohose system, since the blast medium particles have only a short distance in which
to gain momentum and accelerate to the nozzle exit (usually only 200 to 300
mm), the final particle average velocity is limited to between 60 and 120 meters
per second. So, in general, two-hose systems, although not so costly, are limited
in their ability to deliver contaminant removal kinetic energy to the surface to be
cleaned. When more blasting energy is required, these systems must be boosted
at the expense of much more air volume required, and higher blast pressure is required as well, with much more nozzle back thrust, and very much more blast
noise generated at the nozzle exit plane.
The other type of solid carbon dioxide medium blasting system is like the
pressurized pot abrasive blasting system common in the sand blasting and Plastic Media Blasting industries. These systems use a single delivery hose from the
hopper to the nozzle applicator in which both the medium particles and the
compressed air travel. These systems are more complex and a little more costly
than the inductive two-hose systems, but the advantages gained greatly outweigh
the extra initial expense. In a single-hose solid carbon dioxide particle blasting
system, sometimes referred to as a direct acceleration system, the medium is
introduced from the hopper into a single, pre-pressurized blast hose through a
sealed airlock feeder. The particles begin their acceleration and velocity increase
155
immediately, and continue to gain momentum as they travel the length of the
hose. At the end of the hose, the spray nozzle gun actually consists of a convergent-divergent nozzle, which exchanges pressure differential across the nozzle for
a huge increase in air and particle velocity. Carbon dioxide particle velocities
have been measured and substantiated in excess of 215 meters per second, and up
to as high as 270 meters per second at the nozzle exit plane. This is accomplished
at less than one third of the flow volume (only 3000 L/min compared to 10,000 or
more L/min) required by the most aggressive two-hose systems. In addition to the
lighter weight and less cumbersome hand held applicator and hose of a two-hose
system, the contaminant removal energy delivered to the surface is considerably
higher than that provided by a two-hose inductive system. Even with solid carbon
dioxide particle blasting, a significant component of the contaminant removal energy is the kinetic energy per unit of area delivered to the surface. Since kinetic
energy is a function of mass and velocity of the particles, i.e., Ke=1/2 mv2, it can
be seen that a two-fold increase in particle velocity, with equal particle mass and
equal nozzle spray area, effectively increases the impact energy delivered to the
surface by a factor of four. A three-fold particle velocity increase, from 90 to 270
meters per second, increases the blast impact energy nine times that of a two-hose
system.
4.2.2. Thermal shock
Unlike other blast media, the carbon dioxide particles have a very low temperature of 78C. This inherent low temperature imparts the dry ice blasting process
with unique thermodynamically induced surface mechanisms that affect the coating or contaminant to a greater or lesser degree, depending on coating type. Because of the temperature differential between the dry ice particles and the surface
being cleaned, a phenomenon known as thermal stress fracturing (fracking) or
THERMAL SHOCK can occur. As the temperature differential between the coating and the substrate increases, the thermal shear stresses in the coating increase
and couple with the impact induced stresses to increase the coating removal rate.
A good example is the fouling which occurs on rubber, plastic, and tire curing
molds. This contaminant is a chemical compound created by the interaction of
mold release products and the base polymer under high pressure and temperature.
The contaminant or fouling resembles a very thin glass-like material which responds very readily to the thermal shock effect of dry ice pellet blasting. In fact,
hot molds, at or near the cure temperature of 160C, can be cleaned three to four
times faster than the same dirty molds at room temperature.
4.3. Cleaning performance control parameters
Similar to abrasive grit blasting technology, dry ice pellet blasting performance, or
cleaning power, can be adjusted to meet the needs of the application. The changeable performance control parameters allow the user to increase cleaning aggression,
as for rubber mold cleaning, or decrease the level of aggression for more delicate
applications, such as cleaning soldering flux from printed circuit boards.
156
F.C. Young
Dry Ice particle blasting is emerging as a method of choice for critical cleaning
requirements in the semiconductor industry. The areas in the semiconductor
manufacturing process where dry ice particle blasting is currently being applied
are:
(1) Silicon wafers are polished to a high degree of surface flatness in the early
stages of the diffusion process. The polishing compound is deposited randomly on
the internal surfaces of the polishing machines, then dries as a hard abrasive coating. Flecks of this abrasive contaminant can fall back onto the surface of newly
inserted wafers, causing deep scratches that cannot be polished out, resulting in
costly scrapping of silicon wafers. Dry ice particle blast has been found to be the
best method to remove the abrasive, dried-on polishing slurry from the polishing
equipment, without damaging the expensive polishing equipment components.
157
(2) Integrated circuits (ICs, or Chips) are produced in molds where the finished
silicon based integrated circuit is encased in a material called EMC (Epoxy Mold
Compound). The EMC eventually builds up a light deposit on the mold surface
which can cause sticking of the finished ICs in the molds, and in other forms of
IC surface defects. The traditional method used to remove EMC deposition is to
coat the molds with melamine, let it cure, then pull the melamine off the surface.
The melamine adhesively bonds to the EMC deposit. The EMC deposit is pulled
off the mold surface together with the melamine as the melamine is removed. The
major drawback is that the melamine tends to also pull the chromium plating off
the mold surfaces, rendering the molds useless. Carbon dioxide particle blast has
been demonstrated to be very effective in cleaning the IC mold surfaces without
removing the chromium plating or otherwise damaging the mold surfaces.
(3) Silicon wafers are photo-etched as part of the process to cut the wafers into
the individual rectangular or square ICs, and as part of the process to produce the
final surface transistor circuits. A compound called photoresist is deposited on
silicon wafers to mask them in areas where the photo-etching action is not desired. After the photo-etching processes, the photoresist must be removed from
the wafer surface. Carbon dioxide particle blast has shown very promising results
in this area, and a great deal of developmental effort is now underway to bring
this process into widespread use in the semiconductor industry.
(4) A contamination problem arising from the etching process is the outgassing
of compounds that redeposit on the surfaces of the etching equipment (e.g., fixtures, insides of chambers). This polymer-like deposit can re-contaminate subsequent wafers being etched in this high temperature process. Also, the deposit can
build up so thick that the wafer holding fixtures become unusable. Some of the
etching process fixtures are made of very expensive and delicate materials, like
quartz. Traditional deposit removal methods include soaking in chemical baths
with toxic solutions. Carbon dioxide particle blasting has been found to be very
effective for removing the etching contaminants on quartz and some other substrates.
6. CONCLUSION
Dry ice pellet blasting is a surface cleaning and preparation technology that is
gaining increasing popularity and acceptance each year, primarily as an industrial
mold cleaning process. Industrys acceptance of dry ice blasting is based on random trial-and-error testing by a few companies, for the purpose of verifying acceptability for their own cleaning applications, and the great willingness of the
general industry to assume that the mechanics and physics behind dry ice blasting were well understood, documented, and as easy to apply to any given application (like a simple cookbook recipe). In fact, there is very little scientific basis
(through investigation, testing, evaluation, and reporting) to support the assumptions behind the theories of how and why dry ice blasting works. Industry has ac-
158
F.C. Young
cepted dry ice blasting for mold cleaning because it has been proven to increase
profitability and improve product quality. In the harsh environment of a typical
foundry or rubber parts molding shop, dry ice blasting is a relatively benign mold
cleaning method compared to sandblasting and other crude forms of abrasive grit
blasting.
More recently, other industries, such as semiconductor manufacturing, radioactive waste decontamination, and aerospace, are beginning to view dry ice blasting
as an improvement over current methods of cleaning and surface preparation, or
even as a potential breakthrough technology for use in developing completely
new manufacturing or processing methods. Many of these new potential applications require the cleaning or preparation of very delicate surfaces, such as thin
metal alloys, silicon wafers, composite materials, and even populated printed circuit boards. It is for these types of applications that a much better understanding
of the dry ice blast contaminant removal phenomenon is required, so that much
more precise control over the process, and predictability of the outcome of using
the process, can be achieved.
REFERENCES
1. L.C. Archibald, Cold Jet Thermal and Surface Cleaning Characteristics (June 1988, The Production Engineering Research Association of Great Britain, business name PERA). PERA is located in Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, UK. Telephone 44-664-501501.
The information in this report is restricted to Cold Jet, Inc., 455 Wards Corner Road, Loveland
45140, USA. Please contact Cold Jet, Inc. at 513-831-3211 to obtain a copy of this report.
2. K. Lay, An Analysis of Mold Integrity After Carbon Dioxide Blast Cleaning, published in the
proceedings of the International Tire Exhibition and Conference (ITEC), 1996, Akron, Ohio, USA.
(Available by contacting Crain Communications, Inc. 1725 Merriman Road, Akron, Ohio
44313-5251. Telephone 330-836-9180. Fax 330-836-1005)
3. J.A. Snide, Carbon Dioxide Pellet Cleaning - A Preliminary Evaluation, Materials & Process
Associates, Inc., October 12, 1992.
4. D.R. Linger, Fundamentals of Dry Ice Blast Cleaning Technology, published in the proceedings of the International Tire Exhibition and Conference (ITEC), 1996, Akron, Ohio, USA.
(Available by contacting Crain Communications, Inc. 1725 Merriman Road, Akron, Ohio
44313-5251. Telephone 330-836-9180. Fax 330-836-1005)
5. C. Cundiff, Evaluation of the Cold Jet, Inc. Carbon dioxide Blast System for Paint Stripping,
Battelle, 505 King Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43201, USA, October 18, 1989.
6. F. Young, Blast Off article published in Tire Technology International Magazine, December,
2000. Pages 5458.
(Available by contacting UK & International Press, Abinger House, Church Street, Dorking,
Surrey RH4 1DF, UK. Telephone +44 (0) 1306 743744. Fax +44 (0) 1306 742525. E-mail
tire@ukintpress.com)
7. F. Young, Tire Mold Maintenance with Solid Carbon Dioxide Pellet Blasting, published in the
proceedings of the International Tire Exhibition and Conference (ITEC), 1998, Akron, Ohio, USA.
(Available by contacting Crain Communications, Inc. 1725 Merriman Road, Akron, Ohio
44313-5251. Telephone 330-836-9180. Fax 330-836-1005)
AbstractA practical procedure for utilization of available information, both numerical and linguistic and identification of the operational conditions of the waterjet cleaning is presented. Neural
Networks based prediction models were constructed using previously available information. The
constructed models constituted knowledge base for the procedure. Then a single parameter, the erosion strength for cleaning, was determined experimentally. The fuzzy logic technique enabled us to
determine a weighted contribution of each preliminary constructed model for the process in question. Thus, the first approximations of the operational conditions are determined. In the course of the
further operation the developed model is improved. The developed procedure will assist a practitioner in the selection of a decontamination technology for an unknown surface.
Keywords: Waterjet; cleaning; soft computing; process prediction; process modeling.
1. INTRODUCTION
An effective material decontamination is one of the major industrial concerns today. It is difficult to imagine a single manufacturing process where material decontamination is not involved at some level. The field of material decontamination includes such vital applications as disinfecting and wound cleaning in
hospitals and extends to road deicing, maintenance of building and bridges, paint
stripping from aircrafts, and so on.
Currently, the most usable approach for material decontamination involves
chemical cleansers. Chemical cleansers are comparatively inexpensive, and in
many cases they are readily available and are extremely effective.
The problem with chemical cleansers is that they are potentially hazardous to
workers health and are environmentally unfriendly. These and other problems
with chemical cleansers (such as disposal of used agents, separation of debris
160
from cleaning agents, etc.) require alternative methods for effective material decontamination based on physical coating removal techniques.
Physical coating removal techniques take advantage of differences in physical
properties between the coating and the substrate to destroy the bonding and/or
abrade the coating from the underlying substrate. Physical coating removal techniques use one or more of four general types of physical mechanisms [1].
Impact techniques rely on particle impact to crack the coating to remove it.
Cryogenic techniques use extreme cold conditions to make the coating more
friable and induce differential contraction to debond the coating.
Thermal techniques use heat input to oxidize, pyrolyze, and/or vaporize the
coating.
These techniques include but are not limited to: plastic media blasting, wheat
starch blasting, sodium bicarbonate wet blasting, high pressure water blasting and
cryogenic blasting. It is clear that the water blasting constitutes the most effective
technique. Water is readily available, comparatively inexpensive, and induces no
damage to the environment. A complete separation of water and debris facilitates
material recovery. Therefore, complete pollution prevention is feasible.
Although numerous extensive studies of waterjet-based material cleaning have
been implemented [2-4], and this topic is currently of interest to many researchers, there is no one universal technique that will allow practitioners to bridge the
gap between the available information about the process and the current need of a
practitioner to remove a specific contaminant. This difficulty renders the process
unusable for most practical applications. Therefore, a goal of this research was to
develop a modeling tool that would assist in practical implementation of such a
technology.
2. DEVELOPMENT OF A GENERIC MODELING TOOL
161
available in the literature we define an area cleaning efficiency, Ea, as the ratio of
area cleaned per unit time and power delivered by the nozzle:
Ea =
(1)
P = p Q
(2)
&A = I
Sc
or
Ea =
I
P Sc
(3)
(4)
Ea S c 1
(5)
The relation (5) is the basic relation, used to derive the curves, representing the
dependence of the area cleaning efficiency Ea and erosion strength for cleaning Sc
(Figure 1).
2.2. Determination of the erosion strength based on the available cleaning examples
The available experimental database reflecting material decontamination with
pure waterjet was compiled, and the area cleaning efficiencies were calculated for
deposit types given in Table 1. The data in Table 1 were used to derive the relationships between area cleaning efficiency Ea and erosion strength for cleaning Sc
162
(Figure 1). The point of departure for the line 276-310 MPa in Figure 1 was the
data for Item 1 from Table 1. The calculated cleaning efficiency for removal of
Epoxy #1 deposit was assigned an Erosion Strength Sc=103, relative units. This
line, per relation (5) was plotted on a log-log chart. The location of the rest of the
data points was based on calculated area cleaning efficiencies and working water
pressure.
To derive line for 138 MPa (Figure 1) items 1 and 2 were compared. Since the
Erosion Strength for the deposit type Epoxy #1 is known (Sc=1000 relative units)
and is constant, the first point for line 138 MPa thus could be located. Similarly to
derive the line for 70-100 mPa, item #6 was located at the 138 mPa line and compared with item #7.
The main result that could be inferred from the graphical relationship between
the area cleaning efficiency Ea and erosion strength Sc shows that there is a definite relationship between Ea and Sc and that Erosion Strength for cleaning of similar materials is closely spaced together, and consequently the Sc parameter can
used to characterize an unknown deposit-substrate combination. On the other
163
Table 1.
Cleaning examples
Item
#
Deposit
type
Water
pressure
(MPa)
Nozzle
diameter
(mm)
Flow
rate
m3/s
Area
cleaning
rate
(m2/hour)
Power
delivered
by nozzle
kW-h
Area
cleaning
efficiencing
m2/kW-h
Hard
Epoxy
Hard
Epoxy
Hard
Epoxy
Rust
Weaker1
Rust
Oil Based
Oil Based
Weaker
Epoxy1
Auto Paint1
276
0.305
4.610E-05
0.52
12.71
0.0408
138
0.305
3.260E-05
0.04
4.50
0.0085
103
0.3556
3.837E-05
0.02
3.97
0.0048
310
310
0.254
0.1778
3.391E-05
1.662E-05
0.99
0.52
10.52
5.16
0.0938
0.1040
138
69
276
0.254
0.254
0.3554
2.262E-05
1.599E-05
6.259E-05
0.69
0.17
1.04
3.12
1.10
17.26
0.2201
0.1541
0.0603
138
0.254
2.262E-05
0.14
3.12
0.0434
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1
The problem that most of the waterjet practitioners face when dealing with an unknown surface is the lack of information about the process or, in other words, the
unavailability of a generic technique that could be used as a first approximation of
the process. This section is concerned with the development of such an approach.
The idea behind such an approach is to combine the previous knowledge about
the process in question and based on that make an informed decision as to which
waterjet parameters to apply, as a first approximation.
3.1. Modeling approach
In data / information processing the objective is to gain the understanding of a
complex phenomenon through modeling of the system either experimentally or
analytically. Then after a model of the system has been obtained, various procedures (e.g. sensitivity analysis, statistical regression, etc.) can be used to gain a
better understanding of the system.
164
There are, however, situations in which the phenomena involved are very complex and not well understood and for which the first principle models are not effective. Even quite often, experimental measurements are difficult and/or expensive. These difficulties led us to explore the application of Soft Computing
(Artificial Intelligence) techniques as a way of obtaining models based on experimental measurements. The field of Soft Computing is comparatively new, and
it includes fuzzy logic, neural networks, expert system, cellular automata, chaotic
systems, wavelets, complexity theory, anticipatory systems, among others. But
only fuzzy logic, neural networks and genetic algorithms have reached the stage
of development where they are used for real world problems.
Fuzzy logic systems address the imprecision of the input and output variables
directly by defining them with fuzzy sets (fuzzy numbers) that are generally expressed in linguistic terms. Moreover, they allow for very complex and nonlinear
systems to be described in very simple terms, thus making them easier to understand. Another important feature of fuzzy systems is their ability to accommodate
the existing expert knowledge of a process into a model by expressing it in terms
of fuzzy rules.
Neural Networks, on the other hand, model a system by using sets of inputoutput data to train some generic model of the system. Neural Networks are very
good at modeling very complex nonlinear relationships with large numbers of input and output variables. Models based on neural networks are also easy to optimize, since although the model itself is not given in terms of an explicitly defined
function, the gradient of this function can be found numerically.
The combination of the above two techniques often results in greater flexibility
and/or clearer representation of the model than when they are used separately.
This combination is often referred to as neuro-fuzzy model of the system. NeuroFuzzy Reasoning approach also allows overcoming some traditional problems in
using fuzzy logic or neural networks, such as the problem of defining a membership function, extracting fuzzy rules, etc.
We are using the notion of Erosion Strength (Sc) developed in the previous section to classify an unknown surface together with Neural Networks Fuzzy Reasoning technique, suggested by Takagi and Hayashi [8], for information processing.
The prediction technique construction begins with the development of fuzzy
universe for erosion strength, Sc. The experimental database allows us to construct
three fuzzy sets, based on the number of experimental situations available. The
hard epoxy deposit with erosion strength of 1000 represents fuzzy Class I in Figure 2. Using the notation of the Fuzzy Logic theory we state that the hard epoxy
deposit has the degree of membership of one in the fuzzy set Class I, or, in simple
terms, this deposit is the most representative of all deposits that might be classified as belonging to Class I. Similarly, the rust deposit, with erosion strength of
400 is assigned the degree of membership of one in the fuzzy set Class II, and, finally, the oil based paint deposit is assigned the degree of membership of one in
the fuzzy set Class III. To explain the idea of degree of membership we refer
165
the reader to Figure 2. Carefully inspecting this figure we notice that the classes
III and II, and II and I overlap to some degree. This means that some random deposit, with erosion strength of say 100, will belong to both class III and class II.
The extent to which this random deposit type is represented by either of the
classes is expressed in terms of the degree of membership. Thus, from Figure 2
we notice that a deposit with erosion strength of 100 belongs to Class III with a
degree of membership of 0.8 and at the same time belongs to Class II with a degree of membership 0.2. The higher the degree of membership in a class, the more
representative this class is for a given deposit type. Clearly, if a deposit has a degree of membership of 1.0 in some class, it belongs only to that particular class,
and to no other class.
Thus each of the classes in Figure 2 is represented (with a degree of membership 1) by a specific deposit type available in our experimental database. In other
words, these three fuzzy sets cover the ranges of all possible values for the materials with erosion strength for cleaning from 1 to 10000 relative units. Similarly, if
we identify a deposit-substrate combination with some value of erosion strength,
Sc, and this value happens to be inside the range [1,10000], then we can identify
the degree of membership of such a deposit-substrate combination in the three
fuzzy sets (Figure 2). This procedure alone can be very useful when trying to
classify some unknown deposit-substrate combination.
166
It should be emphasized that for each of the three basic deposits (hard epoxy
paint, rust, and oil based paint) an extensive experimental study was performed.
From this point on we will refer to these deposits as base deposits and equivalently we will refer to the three fuzzy sets (classes) they represent as base
classes. Since we possess a required empirical knowledge for these processes,
the appropriate numerical representation of each process can now be made using
artificial neural networks. The procedure for the application of a neural network
for process modeling and optimization was described in [9]. Thus, after each network has been created, properly trained and tested we have obtained reliable numerical models for the three base deposits, or equivalently, three fuzzy base
classes of erosion strength (Sc). Therefore, it can now be stated that the process of
cleaning a material with erosion strength in the range [1,10000] can now be approximated as some combination of the numerical models of the three base
classes. The computational procedure is as follows. For an unknown deposit, the
practitioner makes a simple experiment that allows him/her to calculate area
cleaning efficiency. Then using the computed Ea we can determine the corresponding erosion strength (Sc) for this surface from Figure 1, for the given water
pressure. Once a corresponding Sc coefficient has been found, the fuzzy membership in the three classes in Figure 2 can be determined. Separate experiments were
conducted for the auto paint deposit removal with plain waterjet. The computed
area cleaning efficiency was calculated as Ea auto paint = 0.04 m2/kW-h. From Figure
1 the corresponding coefficient Sc was found to be Sc=180 relative units. And
from Figure 2, the degree of membership () in the three basic classes can be calculated as (class I) =0, (class II) =0.4, (class III) =0.59. These degrees of membership
can be interpreted as follows. The erosion strength of the auto paint deposit is approximately midway between that of the hard epoxy paint and rust deposit. Now
that the surface was identified we could use the numerical models available for
the three base deposits (hard epoxy, rust, and oil based paint) to obtain a first approximation to the process. We supply a set of input parameters (Water Pressure,
Nozzle Traverse Rate, Nozzle Diameter, and Standoff Distance) as an input into
the numerical models represented by the neural networks. The corresponding output in terms of the single strip width is obtained by each of the network. The final
result is obtained by defuzzifing the output according to Equation (6).
r
*
i
y =
s =1
AS
(x i ) u S (x i )
s =1
AS
, i = 1,2 ... n
(6)
(x i )
In equation (6), is the membership value of the deposit with erosion strength
Sc in the three base classes, Us is the output of the sth neural network, and y* is the
final defuzzified output.
167
Figure 3. Generic modeling approach. NN1, NN2, NN3 Artificial Neural Network models for the
three basic classes. X1, X2, , Xn Process input variables.
The output of the model is the single clean width of the strip produced on the
surface by the combination of the input parameters, which then can easily be converted into area cleaning rate. This procedure is sketched in Figure 3.
4. EXPERIMENTAL VERIFICATION OF PERFORMANCE
168
Table 2.
Cleaning samples
Degree of membership
Sample
number
Deposit
Area
cleaning
efficiency
(m2/kW-h)
1
2
0.04
0.06
3
4
5
6
Erosion
strength
(relative
units)
1000
665
Class I
Class II
Class III
1
0.41
0
0.58
0
0
0.0975
0.105
400
360
0
0
1
0.89
0
0.1
0.04
0.21
180
30
0
0
0.4
0
0.59
1
The model performance was tested on each of the test deposits by providing the
model with a set of waterjet input parameters within the working space, obtaining
the corresponding output in terms of the width of a clean strip and comparing the
results with experiments.
5. DISCUSSION
The model for prediction of the results of waterjet cleaning described in the previous sections was tested on several additional test deposits. Figures 4-9 present
the results of prediction. Analyzing the results, it is clear that the model prediction
results are acceptable at both relative error of prediction (~ 20%), and at following
the trend of the process, which is also important for any cleaning study. Nevertheless, as a first estimation of a cleaning efficiency for a given type of deposit, these
results constitute a reasonable approximation.
However, it should be noted that at the current stage the prediction technique
was tested only in the middle of the problem space. At the outskirts of the problem space, veritable results could not be obtained. The reason for this lies in the
limitations in the development of the three numerical models that represent the
cleaning of the base deposits (hard epoxy, rust, and oil based paint). Since the
ranges of experimental parameters used for the construction of models were different in each case, and there was no coordinated experimental setup, but rather
the data were compiled at later stages, there are inconsistencies in choosing the
levels of process parameters in case of a test cleaning space. For example, if for a
base model development the nozzle traverse rate was in the range from 1000
mm/min to 2500 mm/min, and a test case was run at 1500~4000 mm/min, the reliable model performance will be at the intersection of these ranges. The way to
169
cure the above problem is to cover all the parameter space (limited by equipment
capabilities) for each process variable in all the base models. Of course, this results in quite extensive experimentation, but on the good side it needs to be done
only once, when developing the base models. Also the current model does not
cover the full range of all possible erosion strengths of different materials, but by
extending the procedure with additional base models for lower or higher degrees
of erosion strength for cleaning (Sc), this limitation can be reduced or eliminated.
Figure 4. Auto paint removal, standoff distance 13.9 cm. WP water pressure, ND nozzle diameter, standoff stand off distance.
Figure 5. Auto paint removal, width of strip vs. traverse rate. Experimental vs. predicted.
170
Figure 6. Removal of weaker rust. Experimental vs. predicted width of clean strip. Water pressure
241 MPa, nozzle diameter 0.1778 mm.
Figure 7. Experimental vs. predicted width of clean strip. Water pressure 172 MPa, nozzle diameter
0.1778 mm.
6. CONCLUDING REMARKS
The approach presented here for modeling of waterjet cleaning process allows a
user to obtain a reliable process approximation given no or limited information
about process condition. For an unknown surface a practitioner needs to determine a single coefficient, the erosion strength for cleaning (Sc), based on a simple
experiment(s). The proposed approach utilizes this coefficient and approximates
171
Figure 8. Removal of weaker epoxy paint. Nozzle diameter 0.356 mm, water pressure 207 MPa.
Figure 9. Removal of weaker epoxy paint. Nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm, water pressure 276 MPa.
the cleaning results in terms of area cleaning rate. It is believed that the current
work will assist in practical implementation of waterjet cleaning technology,
where the information deficiency on process conditions is the main reason for ineffective application of this technology.
172
REFERENCES
1. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development. Guide to
Cleaner Technologies, EPA/625/R-93/015,Washington D.C. (1994).
2. A.F. Conn and G. Chahine, Proc. Third American Waterjet Conference, Pittsburgh, PA, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1985).
3. F. Erdman-Jesnitzer, A.M. Hassan and H. Louis, Proc. Third International Symposium on Jet
Cutting Technology, Chicago, IL, British Hydraulic Research Association, Cranfield, UK
(1976).
4. S.T. Johnson, Proc. 7th American Water Jet Conference, Seattle, Washington, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1993).
5. A. Thiruvengadam, in Erosion by Cavitation or Impingement, STP No. 408, 22-36, ASTM,
Philadelphia, PA (1966).
6. F. Heymann, in Characterization and Determination of Erosion Resistance, STP No. 474, 212244, ASTM, Philadelphia, PA (1969).
7. A. Conn, Proc. Fourth American Waterjet Conference, Berkeley, CA, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1987).
8. H. Takagi and I. Hayashi, Intl. J. Approximate Reasoning, 5, No. 3, 191-212 (1991).
9. K. Babets, E.S. Geskin and B. Chaudhuri, Proc. 10th American Waterjet Conference, Houston,
TX, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1999).
10. K. Babets, E.S. Geskin, Intl. J. Machining Sci. Technol., 4, No. 1, 81-101 (2000).
AbstractThe study is concerned with the development of effective technology for derusting of a
steel surface. We have investigated the surface derusting by high-speed waterjet and determined the
optimal operational conditions. This investigation involved topographical and metallographical
studies of the substrate surfaces and subsequent classification of the substrates with respect to the
degree of rust development. Then the rust was removed by a moving waterjet at various impact conditions and the generated surfaces were examined. Soft computing techniques were used to select
the optimal conditions for rust removal. Due to the extremely chaotic and fuzzy nature of input information the advanced numerical procedure based on the Neural Network Driven Fuzzy Reasoning
was employed. As the result, the realistic procedure for steel derusting was found and a practical
technique for process design was suggested.
Keywords: Derusting; fuzzy reasoning; neural network; soft computing; waterjet.
1. INTRODUCTION
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: (973) 596 3338, Fax: (973) 642 4282,
E-mail: geskin@njit.edu
174
K. Babets et al.
ventional way of rust prevention is to coat the metal surface. But prior to the coating, a complete cleanliness of the surface must be assured to ensure that a surface
is free of any rust.
The conventional methods of rust removal involve acid cleaning or sandblasting. These techniques, though proven to be effective, can be environmentally hazardous. Some new derusting techniques, such as use of rust neutralizers converts
rust into a chemically neutral surface, leaving the surface ready for coating application. However, the use of these neutralizers is limited to oil-based types only,
and the chemicals contained in these products can be detrimental to the workers
health.
Waterjet surface derusting constitutes rather an efficient way to clean steel surfaces. The following experimental study was concerned with optimization, or at
least improvement, of jet based derusting technology.
2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
175
a similar degree of rusting. As a result, a rather low reproducibility of the experiment is obtained. In order to at least partially overcome this problem we used the
ISO developed standard for classification of the rusted steel surfaces. This standard specifies four rust grades, designated A, B, C and D [2]. The rust grades are
defined by written descriptions together with representative photographic examples. The selected steel samples were sorted according to visual similarity and
compared to the representative photographs. Those identified as the class C were
used as experimental samples. In the above-mentioned ISO publication, C is defined as the steel surface on which the mill scale has rusted away or from which
it can be scraped, but with slight pitting visible under normal vision. Still it
should be stressed that the existent rust grades classification based on visual comparison does not provide a reliable procedure for rust identification and thus
makes it quite difficult to collect uniform experimental samples.
In our experiments the effects of water pressure, traverse rate and nozzle diameter on cleaning effectiveness and surface quality were investigated. The tests
were run at water pressures of 310, 241, 172, 69 MPa (i.e. 45,000, 35,000, 25,000
and 10,000 psi). The water nozzles with diameters 0.127, 0.1778, 0.254, 0.3556
mm were used. In these experiments the effect of the standoff distance (the distance between the nozzle exit and the sample) as an independent process parameter was not investigated. Instead, the ratio of nozzle diameter to the nozzle standoff distance was kept constant. Thus a number of standoff distances were tested to
find a near optimum value for a selected nozzle diameter. Then the obtained ratio
was kept constant for the other nozzle diameters. The study was carried out at the
traverse rates of 635, 2540, 7620 and 12700 mm/min. The upper bound of the
nozzle traverse rate (12700 mm/min) was imposed by the equipment limitations.
In order to study the effect of the waterjet parameters on the surface, a full factorial experimental design was employed. In such a design one process variable is
tested at its different levels, while the other variables are held fixed at some level.
The experimental procedure involved the following steps. For each cleaning situation (i.e. the combination of water pressure, nozzle traverse rate and nozzle diameter / standoff) the width of clean strip was measured with Mitutoyo Toolmakers Microscope and recorded. These values of strip width (STW) were then used
to calculate process effectiveness (Rate of Area Cleaned) and specific water consumption according to the following expressions:
Rate of Area Cleaned (m2 min1) = Traverse Rate * Width of Cleaned Strip
C D D 2 2 P
w
Water Consumption m 3 / m 2 =
4 Rate of Area Cleaned
(1)
(2)
where w is the water density, CD is the discharge coefficient of the waterjet orifice, whose diameter is D. In present work CD is taken to be 0.7 [3], P waterjet
pressure.
176
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Then several nozzle passes with 25% overlapping were made at the same operational conditions. The resulting derusted area was evaluated visually and photographed with Olympus photomicroscope with 12 x magnification in order to determine the degree of cleaning.
2.2. Surface examination
In current study, the X-ray diffraction was used to evaluate the presence of oxides
(rust) on the metal surface after rust removal with waterjet. The Siemens D5000
diffractometer with -2 diffractometer geometry at the Stevense Institute of
Technology was used for this investigation. The experimental samples consisted
of rusted-cleaned pairs. The following procedure was used for sample preparation. First the metal samples were machined to a block 10.16 x 10.16 x 6.350 mm.
Then the samples with similar rust were grouped in pairs. From each pair one
sample was left as it was, and the other one was cleaned of rust using waterjet.
The following waterjet parameters were employed: Water Pressure 200 MPa,
Nozzle Diameter 0.254 mm. Two cleaning runs were made. At first the rust was
removed from the metal surface at a low nozzle traverse rate, and in the second
run the flash rust was removed at the high traverse rate of 3175 mm/min. Then the
sample was dried in hot air. Each pair was evaluated for the presence of oxides by
the diffractometer. The resulted diffraction patterns enabled us to compare the oxides content on the samples before and after the waterjet treatment.
3. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
177
Figure 3 shows a typical poorly cleaned surface. Such a surface is free from
lightly adherent mill scale, rust and other contamination, but some firmly adherent
rust remains on the surface. Thus the most representative surface samples were
classified as either belonging to one of these classes, or, not. The fuzzy memberships in the two fuzzy classes for the remaining surfaces were determined using the artificial neural network assisted fuzzy classification method described in
the following section.
178
K. Babets et al.
179
Figure 6. Chemical composition of metal surface prior to waterjet rust removal. Oxygen content is
at 900 count.
Figure 7. Chemical composition of metal surface after waterjet rust removal. Oxygen content is at
320 count.
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K. Babets et al.
was significantly reduced after the water jet treatment. In order to evaluate the degree of derusting, the chemical analysis was supplemented by the x-ray diffraction. The corresponding diffraction patterns of the metal surfaces before and after
waterjet cleaning are presented in Figs. 8 and 9, respectively. Roughly speaking
each peak in these figures corresponds to a chemical compound. The intensity of
Figure 8. X-ray diffraction analysis. Diffraction pattern of rusted metal surface prior to waterjet
treatment.
Figure 9. X-ray diffraction analysis. Diffraction pattern of metal surface after waterjet rust removal.
181
Table 1.
Results of the metal surface chemical analysis
Experimental
atomic planes
spacing values
0
Standard tables of
atomic planes
spacing values
0
d ( A)
d ( A)
3.281
3.009
2.795
2.546
2.174
2.106
2.027
1.723
1.624
1.49
1.437
1.289
1.211
1.168
3.24
2.967
2.728
2.532
2.176
2.099
2.03
1.715
1.616
1.485
1.43
1.281
1.212
1.17
Chemical compound
Fe
Fe2O3
Fe3O4
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
a peak represents the relative amount of this chemical compound. The atomic
spacing values shown just above these peaks allow us to determine the type of the
chemical compound present on the surface. From Fig. 8 and Table 1 it is clear that
a rusted surface in addition to Fe contains significant amounts of Fe2O3, and
Fe3O4. After waterjet cleaning (Fig. 9) the three still remaining peaks represent
Fe, with significantly increased intensity levels. Most of the oxides are no longer
present in the figure, and intensity level of those still present is much lower than
that of Fe content. Moreover, due to low intensity levels these peaks most probably should be attributed to the noise. The wide base peak at angles 10-25 degrees
in Figs 8 and 9 is due to the presence of the holder clay used to attach the sample
in the holder. Thus, Fig. 9 constitutes a compelling proof of the efficiency of the
waterjet rust removal.
3.3. Effect of water pressure
For each set of operational conditions there is a minimal threshold pressure below
which decoating does not occur. This pressure level depends on the adhesion
strength between the coating and the substrate [8]. The maximum working water
pressure is defined from damage-free cleaning considerations, i.e., where the
cleaning does not result in the damage to the material. In our experiments these
upper and lower pressure bounds were dictated primarily by the equipment capa-
182
K. Babets et al.
bilities, since at the chosen levels of the nozzle traverse rate and nozzle diameter
the removal of rust could still be performed. Between these two threshold values
of water pressure the clean strip width obtained in a single nozzle pass does not
vary linearly with increasing water pressure (Figure 10). The effectiveness of the
process increases with increasing water pressure (Figure 11).
Figure 10. Experimental clean strip width vs. water pressure for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm at different nozzle traverse rates.
Figure 11. Effectiveness (rate of area cleaned) vs. water pressure for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm at
different nozzle traverse rates.
183
Figure 12. Water consumption vs. water pressure for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm at different nozzle
traverse rates.
Still the relationship between the effectiveness and water pressure can be approximated as linear at lower values of the traverse rate. At high nozzle traverse
rates and high nozzle diameters the relationship between the process effectiveness
and water pressure can no longer be considered as linear, but rather as a polynomial. Figure 12 shows that for a large nozzle diameter there exists an extremum of
the water consumption as the pressure increases. This can be attributed to the fact
that the process effectiveness is not a linear function of water pressure (at least in
the considered range of process variables). At small nozzle diameters and for the
pressure range used in these experiments no extremum is seen, although it is reasonable to expect that the extremum will appear at higher values of water pressure.
3.4. Effect of traverse rate
The effect of the traverse rate on rust removal appears to be the most significant.
Figure 13 shows that, as expected, the process effectiveness increases with increasing nozzle traverse rate, while the strip width decreases (Fig. 14). The specific water consumption (Fig. 15) can be approximated as a power function of
traverse rate. This actually means that there is a range of traverse rates when the
increase in traverse rate results in significant drop in the specific water consumption, while the larger increase in the traverse rate insignificantly reduces water
consumption.
3.5. Effect of nozzle diameter
As expected the increase in nozzle diameter resulted in a higher process effectiveness (Fig. 16), but also in a higher specific water consumption (Fig. 17). It is interesting to follow the relationship between these important quantities. Let us
184
K. Babets et al.
Figure 13. Rate of area cleaned vs. traverse rate for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm and for different
water pressures.
Figure 14. Clean strip width vs. traverse rate for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm and different water
pressures (69E 69 MPa, 172E 172 MPa, 241E 241 MPa, 310E 310 MPa).
consider the experimental results for water pressure 69 MPa, traverse rate 12700
mm/min and nozzle diameters 0.1778 mm (0.007 in) and 0.254 mm (0.01 in).
Here we notice that the area of the second nozzle is almost twice the area of the
first nozzle. The calculated process effectiveness is 0.39 m2/hour and 0.52
m2/hour, respectively, with specific water consumption 0.064 m3/m2 and 0.094
m3/m2. If we now take two small nozzles then the total effectiveness will be 0.78
m2/hour while the water consumption will stay at 0.064 m3/m2. Thus it appears
that it would be beneficial to use several small nozzles rather than a big one. This
result is important from practical point of view.
185
Figure 15. Water consumption vs. traverse rate for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm and for different
water pressures.
Figure 16. Rate of area cleaned vs. nozzle diameter for water pressure 241 MPa at different nozzle
traverse rates.
Figure 17. Water consumption vs. nozzle diameter for water pressure 69 MPa and at different nozzle traverse rates.
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K. Babets et al.
187
188
K. Babets et al.
Figure 18. Computational approach. (I1, I2, and I3 are the input parameters (water pressure, traverse
rate, and nozzle diameter). NNmem is the neural network that decides the membership values (w1,
w2) in each class, of the above input parameters. NN1 and NN2 determine the outputs (rate of area
cleaned) y for each class.)
Figure 19. Model prediction results for water pressure 310 MPa at different nozzle traverse rates.
189
Figure 20. Model prediction results for water pressure 241 MPa at different nozzle diameters.
Figure 21. Model prediction results for nozzle diameter 0.3556 mm at different nozzle traverse
rates.
190
K. Babets et al.
Figure 22. Model prediction results for nozzle diameter 0.127 mm at different nozzle traverse rates.
5. CONCLUDINGS REMARKS
191
3. M. Hashish, Proc. 7th American Water Jet Conference, Seattle, Washington, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1993).
4. Z. Michalewicz, Genetic Algorithms + Data Structures = Evolution Programs, Third Edition,
Springer (1996).
5. H. Takagi and I. Hayashi, Intl. J. Approximate Reasoning, 5, No. 3, 191212 (1991).
6. T. Ross, Fuzzy Logic With Engineering Applications, McGraw-Hill (1995).
7. B.D. Cullity, Elements of X-ray Diffraction, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company (1978).
8. H. Jun, Proc. 7th American Water Jet Conference, Seattle, Washington, Waterjet Technology
Association, St. Louis, MO (1993).
9. P. Singh, J. Munoz and W. Chen, Proc. of 11th International Symposium on Jet Cutting Technology, British Hydraulic Research Group, Dordrecht, The Netherlands (1992).
10. X. Shegxiong, H. Wangping and Z. Sheng, Proc. 7th American Water Jet Conference, Seattle,
Washington, Waterjet Technology Association, St. Louis, MO (1993).
11. C. Suryanarayana and M. Norton: X-ray Diffraction, a Practical Approach, Plenum Press, New
York (1998).
AbstractThe objective of this work was to acquire knowledge needed for the development and
deployment of manufacturing processes utilizing the enormous technological potential of water ice.
Material removal by blasting with ice media such as particles, pellets and slugs was investigated.
The ice media were accelerated by entertainment in an air stream. The ice-airjet (IAJ) can replace
sand blasting and the ice-waterjet (IWJ) can replace the abrasive waterjet (AWJ). The obvious advantage of the ice media is complete pollution prevention in course of materials treatment. With this
technique it is possible to eliminate both contamination of the substrate as well as generation of contaminated waste streams. In addition to the obvious environmental benefits, the use of ice media will
improve a number of key operational techniques, such as cleaning, decoating, polishing, deburring,
drilling, cutting, etc. The just-in-time production of ice media at minimal environmental cost constitutes another advantage of ice-based technologies. Our previous studies have shown that the potential applications of ice abrasives range from cutting of metals to etching of photo films and precision cleaning of electronic parts. However, the rate of the cleaning and machining operations
performed was insufficient. A key objective of this research was to improve ice blasting so that it
was not only feasible, but also technologically and economically efficient.
Keywords: Surface processing; cleaning; precision; abrasive; particle; ice.
1. INTRODUCTION
There are a number of suggested air-ice based technologies. One of the firsts of
such technologies was a car washing machine, utilizing ice particles [1]. The
stream of the charged frozen particles controlled by a set of coils was directed at
surfaces to be cleaned [2]. Szijcs [3] proposed cleaning of sensitive surfaces by
the impact of a fine grade blast material and air. The atomization of the liquid in
the air stream and subsequent freezing of the generated fine droplets form the
blast material. The freezing is achieved by the addition of a refrigerant (N2, CO2,
Freon) into the stream in the mixing chamber or by the addition of the refrigerant
194
into the jet after the mixing chamber. The use of ice particles, which have a uniform grain size, for cleaning the surface and grooves of ferrite block, was reported
by Tomoji [4]. An ice blasting device using stored particles was suggested by Harima [5]. Vissisouk [6] proposed to use ice particles near melting temperature in
order to effectively remove the coating from the substrate. Mesher [7] suggested a
nozzle for enhancement of surface cleaning by ice blasting. Shinichi [8] suggested
cleaning inexpensively various surfaces by mixing ice particles, cold water and
air. Niechial [9] proposed an ice blasting cleaning system containing an ice
crusher, a separator and a blasting gun. Settles [10] suggested producing ice particles of a size range below 100 m within the apparatus just prior to the nozzle.
Although the use of ice blasting is suggested by a number of inventors, the
practical application is much more limited. Herb and Vissisouk [11] report the use
of ice pellets for precision cleaning of zirconium alloys in the course of production of bimetallic tubings. It was reported that ice blasting improved the quality of
the bimetal. The use of air-ice blasting for steel derusting was reported by Liu
[12]. The following operational conditions were maintained during blasting: air
pressure: 02-0.76 MPa, grain diameter: below 2.5 mm, ice temperature 50C,
traverse rate 90 mm/min, and standoff distance 50 mm. Under these conditions
the rate of derusting ranged from 290 mm2/min at the air pressure of 0.2 MPa to
1110 mm2/min at the air pressure of 0.76 MPa. The quality of the cleaned surface
complied with ISO 8501-1 Sa 2.
The most important problem which actually impedes adoption of the ice-jet (IJ)
technology arises from the difficulties in the generation and handling of ice abrasives. Regular abrasives are stable at all practical ranges of operational conditions,
while ice particles can exist only at subzero temperature. Maintaining such a temperature both within the nozzle and the jet is an extremely difficult task. Ice particles tend to pack and clog the supply lines. The adhesion between the particles increases dramatically as the temperature approaches 0C. Thus prior to entrance in
the nozzle, ice particles should be maintained at a low temperature. These and
some other problems prevent adoption of IWJ. In order to assure the acceptance
of IWJ by the industry, it is necessary to develop a practical technology for formation of ice-water slurry.
2. SET UP FOR ICE-AIRJET EXPERIMENTAL PROTOTYPE
The experimental prototype depicted in Figure 1 was selected for further experiments. The system consisted of the following functionally separated blocks:
ice making block which includes the evaporator, auger, auger driver, sealing
and liquid nitrogen cooling apparatus;
ice unloading mechanism
nozzle block which includes parallel nozzles and focusing device.
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Figure 1. (a) Schematic of auger type IJ system where: 1 evaporator, 2 refrigerant coils, 3 insulation, 4 auger, 5 ice reloading device, 6 air gun, 7 air supply port, 8 water supply port, 9
cooling medium port, 10 gauges, A air flow rate valve, B water flow rate valve, C cooling
medium valve, D data acquisition card, and (b) picture of the ice reloading device with nozzle
block.
In our experiments, water entered the heat exchanger via a special port. As it
moved along the rotating auger water solidified and an ice plug was formed. Solidified ice plug moved forward along the auger helical ways. Decomposition of
this plug formed ice powder. The heat exchanger and the auger of the icemaker
constituted a modified commercial icemaker of Hoshizaki America Inc., Peachtree City, GA. The design of these parts will be changed in the next generation of
the device. The cooling was carried out by the refrigerant Galden HT-55 supplied
by the TurboJet refrigeration apparatus or by liquid nitrogen stored in a tank. We
replaced Hoshizaki auger driver by a more powerful device in order to prevent
jamming of the ice. The rotation momentum of the auger 4 was provided via a
gearbox with gear-ratio 1:100. However, the selected driver operated at a constant
speed of 100 rpm. Water flow rate was precisely controlled by a special valve
(Figure 1 (a)).
At the outlet of the heat exchanger the powder was entrained by the unloading
mechanism which directed it to the nozzle block (5). The nozzle block consisted
of two air guns (6) and a special focusing device. Three different sizes of the nozzles were used; however, in all cases the nozzle-to-focusing tube ratio was 1:2.
An unloading mechanism delivered ice particles via flexible plastic tubes to the
abrasive port of the air gun. In the gun the air supplied into the insulated nozzle
block at the room temperature accelerated the particles. The IAJ was formed and
directed to the substrate surface 3.
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3. EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
In the course of IJ cleaning, the air pressure was maintained at 0.544 MPa (80
psi), the nozzle diameter was 2.5 mm, and the nozzle focusing tube diameter was
5 mm. The properties of ice abrasive medium were the following: ice temperature
was in the range from 20C to 70C, granulometric composition of ice powder
ranged from 0.3 mm to 7 mm, and ice flow rate was 20 g/min to 150 g/min. Iceairjet (IAJ) was used for cleaning various sensitive surfaces covered by moderately adhering deposits. The sensitive elements of the electronic boards were covered by a conductive copper paste and cleaned by the IAJ. When assembled, these
components performed normally and the normal operational modes of the devices
were demonstrated. The feasibility of using IAJ technology as a blasting medium
for cleaning highly sensitive surfaces was shown. Another experiment involved
depainting of various substrates, including mirror-like surfaces and the surfaces of
soft substrates. A complete removal of the paint and the absence of surface damage were demonstrated. The generated surfaces were inspected visually.
A number of experiments involved the use of the ice abrasive in waterjet (WJ)
cutting applications. The experimental procedure was carried out with the following parameters: the water pressure was 306.1 MPa, the diameter of the sapphire
nozzle was 0.178 mm, average standoff distance was maintained in range 7 mm
10 mm and the traverse rate was 1.06 mm/s. Various metals and composite materials were cleaned by IWJ. The depth and cutting rate were substantially lower
than in the case with conventional abrasive media. However, the IWJ produced a
very narrow cutting kerf compared with AWJ and had a superior cutting ability
over pure WJ. The main obstacle during ice particles entrainment in the nozzle
abrasive port was their agglomeration at the port entrance and their disintegration
in the mixing chamber due to intensive melting. This technology is still under development and requires further investigation.
4. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
A series of experiments were carried out in order to evaluate the potential of the
application of IAJ for surface processing. The description of these experiments is
given below.
4.1. Cleaning of electronic boards
A disabled TV set was disassembled (Fig. 2a). The electronic boards were covered by a heavy dust. Then the boards were decontaminated by IAJ and reassembled. The TV set performed normally (Fig. 2b). The architecture of the boards in
question was extremely complex and contained a number of very sensitive sites,
like electrical contacts and conduits. Any damage to the board components would
result in the TV set malfunction. It is obvious that the ice-air stream induced no
damage. More difficult task, however, was a complete grease removal. Even
197
Figure 2. (a) photograph of the electronics board of a TV set. Notice the heavy layers of dust and
dirt on the electric and electronic components of board, (b) photograph of an assembled TV set. The
contaminated board of TV set is shown (a). After cleaning TV set worked normally.
198
small amount of the grease remaining at hidden pockets will disrupt the TV set
performance. It is clear that the jet was able to remove soil from all the difficultto-reach pockets.
Another experiment involved decontamination of computer boards. Various
devices (PC, electronic watches, computer games, etc) were disassembled. The
boards were covered by a mixture of lithium grease and then decontaminated by
IAJ. Clean boards were reassembled and tested. All devices worked perfectly.
Some of the devices above were used for several tests. No deviation in the computer operation was noticed. The boards above were populated by a large number
of rather fragile components such as chips, connectors, etc. Any damage to any of
these components, as well as any presence of grease on the board will disable the
device. In all performed experiments the deposit was removed completely and no
damage was induced to the board components. The examples of the boards decontaminated in the course of these experiments are shown in Figs. 3 (a) and 3 (b).
4.2. Decoating of sensitive surfaces
The experiments involved depainting of a compact disc (CD). This involved removal of the paint as well as two layers of the coating originally deposited on the
disk (Figs. 4 (a) and 4 (b)). The paint and then the emulsion layers were removed
separately with no damage to the underlining surface. Another experiment involved painting and subsequent depainting of the mirror-like surface of stainless
steel (Fig. 5 (a)). No change in the surface topography was noticed. Further experiments involved depainting of china (Fig. 5 (b)), egg (Fig. 6 (a)), and glass lining of a pharmaceutical reactor (Fig. 6 (b)). The most representative experiments,
however, involved depainting of a LC display (Fig. 7 (a)) and degreasing of an
optical glass (Fig. 7 (b)).
4.3. Decoating of soft substrates
These experiments involved depainting of a soft plastic (Fig. 8 (a)) and fabric
(Fig. 8 (b)). Decoating of a substrate having mechanical strength lower than that
of the coating constitutes a challenging task, but IAJ was able to perform this
task.
4.4. Restoration of electromechanical devices
A solenoid valve (Fig. 9 (a)) and a DC motor (Fig. 9 (b)) were completely disabled by painting of all contacts. After IAJ cleaning the devices performed normally.
4.5. Removal of highly adherent surface layers
An aluminum plate was covered by a thick layer of tar. Then the tar was removed
mechanically from a part of the plate. However, a highly adherent thin tar layer
199
Figure 3. (a) photograph of the board of an electronic game containing electric conduits, microchip
and electronic matrix. The board was covered by a mixture of lithium grease and copper powder.
Notice the cross contamination of electric conduits of the board, (b) photograph of the assembled
electronic game after IAJ cleaning. The electronic game performed normally.
200
Figure 4. (a) photograph of the CD-ROM covered by Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. The
paint was partially removed from the CD ROM surface. No surface damage was observed in the
course of IAJ cleaning, and (b) photograph of the CD-ROM partially cleaned using IAJ technique.
Notice that layers of both paint and emulsion were removed. No surface damage was observed in
the course of IAJ processing.
201
Figure 5. (a) photograph of the polished steel surface. The polished steel surface was contaminated
by Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. The paint was partially removed from the polished surface.
No surface damage was observed in the course of IAJ cleaning, so the feasibility of the precision
cleaning of polished surfaces was demonstrated. (b) photograph of the hand-painted china plate. The
plate was covered by Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. Part of the deposited paint was removed
by ice etching. No modification of the original surface was noticed, and thus the feasibility of IAJ
etching of sensitive surfaces was demonstrated.
202
Figure 6. (a) photograph of an egg. The egg surface was painted by Rust-Oleum gloss protective
enamel. After this the egg was partially decontaminated by IAJ technique. No damage to the egg
surface or penetration of the ice particles through the eggshell was noticed, so the feasibility of decontamination of highly unstable and brittle surfaces was demonstrated. (b) photograph of the cover
of a pharmaceutical reactor contaminated by the lithium grease. Then the grease was partially removed from the surface of the cover by IAJ technique. No damage to the glass in the course of IAJ
cleaning was noticed.
203
Figure 7. (a) photograph of the LC display of a calculator containing electronic matrix and LCD
conduits. The display was contaminated by Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. Then all elements
of the LC display were decontaminated by IAJ technique. On assembly of the calculator the LC display performed normally. (b) photograph of a magnification lens. The lens was contaminated by
lithium grease. The grease was partially removed from the lens surface, and no damage to the lens
surface was observed.
204
Figure 8. (a) photograph of a PVC tube contaminated by Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. The
tube was partially decontaminated by IAJ technique. No damage to the tube surface in the course of
IAJ cleaning was noticed, and (b) photograph of a cotton fabric. The fabric was contaminated by
Rust-Oleum gloss protective enamel. Then the paint was partially removed from fabric surface, and
thus the feasibility of the use of ice particles for decontamination of fabrics was demonstrated.
205
Figure 9. (a) photograph of an electrical solenoid valve with connectors contaminated by RustOleum gloss protective enamel. The contacts of solenoid valve were cleaned by IAJ technique. After cleaning the solenoid valve was connected to an electrical supply source and performed normally. This experiment demonstrated the feasibility of using IAJ technique for decontamination and
restoration of contacts of different electronic devices. (b) photograph of a DC motor. DC motor was
disassembled and all elements were covered by a mixture of lithium grease and copper powder. DC
motor was cleaned using IJ technique and the assembled DC motor performed normally.
206
remained on the surface. It was not possible to remove it using mechanical means.
The layer was removed completely by the IAJ (Fig. 10 (a)). A metal wall was
covered by an oil paint and then was subjected to abrasive-airjet (AAJ) (the carrier medium was sodium bicarbonate). Then the same procedure was carried out
using IAJ. The initial state of the graffiti covered metal surface is shown in Fig.
10 (b). The graffiti removal by conventional and ice based technologies are shown
in Figs. 11 (a) and 11 (b). Another experiment involved removal of the residual
highly adhesive Weldbond glue from plastic and rubber jointed surfaces (Fig. 12
(a) and 12 (b)). Average process duration in all these experiments was around two
minutes. The heavily contaminated machine part with grease and dust was decontaminated by IAJ too (Fig. 13 (a) and 13 (b)). No damage to the underlying
painted surface was noticed.
4.6. Etching applications
The emulsion of a photo film was removed with no damage to the substrate (Fig.
14 (a)). This demonstrates the feasibility of the use of IAJ as an etching agent.
4.7. Ice-waterjet (IWJ) applications
Various metals and plastic materials were subjected to IWJ cutting. The superior
cutting ability of IWJ over pure WJ was seen. The cutting ability of IWJ was limited by ice abrasive disintegration in the nozzle mixing chamber. This task required further investigation. However, it was shown that the IWJ cutting kerf was
thinner (Figure 14 (b) and Figure 15) and showed the potential of IWJ as an alternative cutting medium for waterjet industry.
5. CONCLUDING REMARKS
Although the ice-water jet constitutes an effective material removal tool, it is necessary to improve conditions of the jet formation in order to assure its adoption in
practice. However, the ice-air jet is suitable for immediate application. It can be
used for decontamination of very demanding and complex surfaces as well for
such manufacturing applications as etching. Simplicity and complete absence of
environmental damage constitute the main advantages of this process. A further
development of IAJ surface cleaning technology will involve improvement of the
control of ice particle properties and enhancement of the methods for the delivery
of ice particles to the substrate. This enhancement will enable us to modify material polishing, surface cleaning, and, perhaps, grinding.
207
Figure 10. (a) photograph of the aluminum surface contaminated by a thick layer of tar. The bulk of
the tar was removed by WJ and knife scrubbing. The highly adherent thin layer was removed by ice
etching. No damage to the metal surface was noticed and (b) graffiti covered painted metal surface.
The oil paint is highly adherent.
208
Figure 11. (a) Graffiti was removed with conventional AAJ. Notice discoloration occurred in the
treated region and (b) surface was decontaminated by the IAJ. No damage to the underlying paint
layer occurred.
209
Figure 12. (a) The Weldbond glue was used to create a joint between plastic and rubber surfaces.
Notice the highly adhesive character of the glue, and (b) the glue residue was removed by IAJ cleaning. No surface damage was noticed.
210
Figure 13. (a) picture of the highly contaminated machine part with grease and dust, and (b) part
was decontaminated by IAJ cleaning. No damage was seen on the underlying painted surface.
211
Figure 14. (a) photograph of a strip of a photo film. The photo emulsion was partially removed
from the film surface. No surface damage was observed in the course of IAJ cleaning and thus the
feasibility of complete and selective emulsion removal from thin photo film was demonstrated, and
(b) photographs of cutting of aluminum strip of thickness 3.1 mm (X65). Notice the reduced width
of the kerf generated by IWJ cutting. Also note substrate surface erosion in the vicinity of IWJ generated kerf.
212
Figure 15. Photographs of cutting of titanium sample of thickness 0.7 mm (X65). Notice the reduced width of kerf in the course of IWJ cutting. Also note the intensive erosion of the substrate surface in the vicinity of IWJ generated kerf.
REFERENCES
1. C. Schlosser, L. Mueller and G. McDougal, US Patent 5,752,39 (1950).
2. G. Kanno, US Patent 5,074,083 (1991).
3. J. Szijcs, European Patent 0509132B1 (1991).
4. M. Tomoji, Japanese Patent 04078477 (1990).
5. I. Harima, Japanese Patent 04360766 A (1992).
6. S. Vissisouk, European Patent 05076607 (1995).
7. T. Mesher, US Patent 5,607,478 (1997).
8. H. Shinichi, Japanese Patent 09225830 A (1997).
9. R. Niechial, US Patent 5,820,447 (1998).
10. G. Settles, US Patent 5,785,581 (1998).
11. B. Herb and S. Vissisouk, Proc. Precision Cleaning 1996 held in Anaheim, CA, pp. 172-179
(1996).
12. B. Liu, in Jetting Technology, H. Louis (Ed.), pp. 203-211, Professional Engineering Publishing
Ltd., London, UK (1998).
AbstractThis paper explores the correlation between the cleanliness levels on electronic assemblies and their electrical performance. It documents an experiment conducted to explore this correlation. Cleanliness was measured using Ion Chromatography (IC), and electrical performance was
measured using Surface Insulation Resistance (SIR) testing under elevated humidity and temperature conditions. Furthermore, this paper discusses electronic assembly cleanliness issues, and a new
cleanliness assessment approach for determining cleanliness levels required for the typical flux
technology of today. We conclude from the samples examined, and based on our past 10-years of
experience analyzing similar experiments that circuit board field performance (good or poor) is
strongly correlated to the specific amount and type of invisible and visible residues between pads
and holes in all areas of active circuitry.
Keywords: Ionic contaminants; residues; electrochemical metal migration; ion chromatography; surface insulation resistance; electrical performance testing; cleanliness levels.
1. INTRODUCTION
Since the 1987 Clean Air Act, when Government legislation forced the electronics industry to stop using the ozone depleting chemical Freon as a cleaner, the
industry has been required to find new chemicals and processes. The industry believed at the time that Freon solvent cleaning techniques effectively removed all
surface contaminants. Subsequent research has shown that the old rosin based
fluxes used in the manufacturing processes actually sealed in contaminants,
whereas the new fluxes left contaminants exposed to react with humidity in the
end-user environments. These inherent process residues must be removed to
achieve product reliability.
The change from Freon cleaning initiated many changes in the manufacturing
processes. There was no direct substitute cleaning chemistry. The new solvents
could not be used for cleaning using many of the old processing chemistries. The
change was an opportunity for many manufacturers to change their overall processes. As the changes were made to new processing materials and cleaning sol
214
T. Munson
215
4. New flux chemistry residues on the newest metal composition result in new
interaction issues that have effects that are inadequately understood.
1.4. Why is determining cleanliness a problem?
Determining if an electronic assembly is adequately clean is difficult for the following reasons:
1. Cleanliness is not easily assessed with todays production floor tools. Current
industry-standard process cleanliness tools and test methods are not adequate
gauges of product cleanliness when testing todays low solids and watersoluble fluxes. Due to poor extraction conditions, these tools give false low
levels. Also, they do not identify residues as corrosive or insulative.
2. Cleanliness is not visually assessable.
3. Adequate cleanliness depends on the circuit design, the processing materials,
the process, and other factors.
4. Cleanliness is not uniform across the assembly surface, but has concentrations
of residues in the critical areas such as between the component leads and the
board and component interface.
5. Cleanliness is not defined in Industry Specifications as it relates to todays
field performance.
6. Cleanliness is not necessarily the same in a process from day-to-day, due to
different suppliers of bare boards, operator experience, and vendor variations.
1.5. Residues sources
Circuit board cleanliness is a measure of the cumulative process residues. These
residues are the result of the manufacturing process steps and materials used in
each step. Everything used in the manufacturing process has an impact on the
types of residues that will be created. To complicate things further, boards and
components that look visibly clean and dry can actually be absorbing moisture
and reacting with the bare board HASL flux, creating a leakage path. These residues can come from:
1. Materials
Bare Board Fabrication (Etching chemicals, HASL fluxes, Rinse water (tap))
Component Packaging (Fluxes, Mold releases)
Component Plating or Tinning (Plating, Bath, Rinse water, Fluxes)
Flux, Solder Paste, Cored Solder, Water Quality, Epoxies and Soaps
2. Processes
Fluxing and Soldering (Flux amounts, Thermal effects)
Paste and Reflow (Flux spread, and outgassing effects)
Water Soluble Cleaning or No-Clean Processing (pressure, water, and
saponifier)
T. Munson
216
Production
Figure 1. Dendrite Growth at (a) 5 seconds, (b) 10 seconds, (c) 15 seconds, (d) 20 seconds.
217
2. EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
218
T. Munson
batch until they reached the final cleaning process. Cleanliness Level 1 (L1) used
a saponifier in the cleaning solution, known to be the cleanest method. Level 2
(L2) used deionized water cleaning, known to be a marginal cleaner. Level 3 (L3)
used tap water cleaning, known to be the dirtiest cleaning method (standard rinse
water process at most fabricators).
These two tests were performed on each sample: 1) Ion Chromatography and 2)
Surface Insulation Resistance with visual inspection performed per IPC 610 protocol.
2.3. Cleanliness testing using ion chromatography
Ion Chromatography is used to assess cleanliness levels of electronic equipment.
Ion Chromatography is a process of separating ionic and organic residues suspended in a liquid. This separation is achieved through a finely balanced system
of liquid phase eluent and resin columns. The resin has a charge opposite to the
ions, causing different ions to travel through the column at different rates. As each
species leaves the column (illustrated in Figure 3), a conductivity cell measures its
concentration in microSiemens (S). The IC system records this information on a
chart for the duration of the analysis, and quantifies the area under the curve of
each species detected. Typical species detected include: Fluoride, Chloride, Bromide, Phosphate, Sulfate, Formate, Acetate, Methane Sulfonic Acid, Weak Or-
219
ganic Acid, Sodium, Calcium, Potassium, and NH4. Before testing, the IC system
is calibrated to NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) traceable
standards. The level of sensitivity is 0.01 part per million.
CSL is able to test specific areas of boards by combining IC with an effective
extraction procedure that conforms to IPC protocol TM 650 2.3.28. Each sample
was IC tested in four location areas: 1) a top-side surface mount technology
(SMT) area, 2) a bottom-side wave solder area, 3) a rework area, and 4) a peelable
solder mask area.
2.4. Surface insulation resistance (SIR) testing
SIR testing with the Umpire board allowed CSL to subject the processed samples
to accelerated environmental conditions under applied power, which allowed
evaluation of the electrical effects of trapped process residues. Additionally, the
Umpire board allowed CSL to analyze each of the four location areas separately.
Figure 4 diagrams the SIR system used.
According to the IPC J-Std SIR pass-fail criterion, the patterns must maintain
resistance values above 1.0e8 ohms measured at 96 and 168 hours.
3. RESULTS
The experimental results are grouped into the four test area groups: 1) top-side SMT
area, 2) bottom side wave solder area, 3) rework area, and 4) solder-mask area.
3.1. Top-side SMT area results
The data in Table 1 show the ionic and electrical performance mean values from
each group (5 boards per condition) of samples relative to the effects of the factors on the SMT top-side.
T. Munson
220
Table 1.
Top-side SMT area results for all three levels of cleanliness (L1-L3)
Ionic Test using Ion Chromatography (all values are in g/cm2)
Sample #
Description
Sodium Potassium
L1
L2
L3
0.18
1.29
2.50
0.33
0.20
0.26
0.34
0.38
0.38
0.00
0.00
0.00
7.03
5.86
6.14
0.03
0.05
0.03
Measurement BGA
(in Ohms)
at 168 hours
(85C/85%RH)
LCC
LCC
QFP
(comb)
QFP
Head1
(comb) (control)
L1
L2
L3
4.3e10
6.7e7
1.0e6
Passed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
1.3e11
1.4e10
2.2e10
Passed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
221
Table 2.
Bottom side wave solder area results for all three levels of cleanliness (L1-L3)
Ionic Test using Ion Chromatography (all values are in g/cm2)
Sample # Description
L1
L2
L3
Chloride
Bromide
Sulfate
WOA
Sodium
Potassium
0.36
0.00
50.57
0.26
0.08
0.43
0.00
65.60
0.17
0.05
0.36
0.00
60.08
0.20
0.09
Measurement
B-241
(in Ohms)
at 168 hours
(85C/85%RH)
PGA
DIP1
DIP2
Head1
(control)
L1
L2
L3
3.3e8
6.7e9
1.0e6
Passed
Passed
Failed
Passed
Passed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
1.2e11
1.3e10
2.6e10
Failed
Failed
Failed
1 = Dip pattern
2 = Dip pattern
2. L2 boards failed electrically due to the high amount of bare board contamination (chloride HASL flux) with the exception of the PGA and DIP area. The
failure was due to the insulative flux effects creating a barrier between the
moisture and the leads.
3. L3 boards failed electrically due to the high amount of bare board contamination (chloride HASL flux).
3.3. Rework area results
The data in Table 3 show the ionic and electrical performance of the samples relative to the effects of factors on the rework areas.
Based on the data in Table 3, we concluded that;
L1, L2 and L3 boards failed due to the un-reacted flux and the distribution of
this flux residue during the cleaning process. This failure occurred because extra flux was applied by an operator during a reworking process and not all of it
was complexed (heated correctly). It then spread around leaving a conductive
moisture-absorbing path, resulting in high levels of current leakage, and test
failure.
T. Munson
222
Table 3.
Rework area results for all three levels of cleanliness (L1-L3)
Ionic Test using Ion Chromatography (all values are in g/cm2)
Sample # Description
Chloride
Bromide
Sulfate
WOA Sodium
Potassium
L1
L2
L3
0.50
1.69
3.43
0.44
0.44
0.41
0.00
0.00
0.00
59.15 0.20
65.60 0.22
60.03 0.19
0.06
0.08
0.08
Measurement
B-243
(in Ohms)
at 168 hours
(85C/85%RH)
Head2
Head1
(control)
L1
L2
L3
3.3e8
6.7e9
1.0e6
Failed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
1.2e11
1.3e10
2.6e10
Failed
Failed
Failed
Table 4.
Temporary Soldermask area results for all three levels of cleanliness (L1-L3)
Ionic Test using Ion Chromatography (all values are in g/cm2)
Sample # Description
WOA
Sodium
Potassium
L1
0.64
0.42
0.00
0.75
0.50
0.17
1.60
0.43
0.00
0.82
0.53
0.20
3.35
0.42
0.00
0.80
0.47
0.17
L2
L3
Temporary Masked
areas only
Temporary Masked
areas only
Temporary Masked
areas only
Head3
Head1
(control)
L1
L2
L3
Failed
Failed
Failed
Passed
Failed
Failed
8.e10
4.2e10
3.9e10
1.7e7
6.9e6
1.0e6
223
This case study shows that the low-residue assembly process used works well in
the areas of SMT and Wave Solder with clean (level 1) bare boards. However, the
secondary processing (rework and temporary soldermask) areas, even with clean
bare boards, showed high levels of electrical failure due to excess partially or unreacted flux.
The data presented here are only a small snapshot of the information gathered
through this testing. This assessment is not intended to replace actual product
validation or environmental testing. This case study is intended to assess the process effects as a baseline and to determine if process changes are good or bad in
regards to the electrical effect. As an assessment tool, this will help establish the
actual level of cleanliness required in building reliable hardware.
A cleanliness assessment approach such as this will allow electronic assemblers
the opportunity to document the effects of the process and materials as a baseline
from which to make improvements. This case study and others we have performed over the last ten years have shown us that the residues from fabrication do
have a large effect on electrical performance. In addition, the residues from secondary assembly processes have just as much effect on the field performance of
the product.
Although ionic and organic IC analyses of component areas on electronic assemblies detect a specific amount of flux and processing residues, determining
whether the levels are good or bad is based on results from an electrical SIR
evaluation of the same areas. Over the last 10 years, CSL has developed a large
cleanliness level database, and has used this data to determine general levels of
cleanliness, but we are constantly adjusting acceptability levels because of changing component packages, increasing operating frequency designs, lower voltage
designs, and changing processing materials. The result of all the changes in the
industry is electronic equipment that is more sensitive to process residues, and has
less long-term reliability, especially in harsh environments, unless detrimental
process residues are identified, measured, and reduced.
224
T. Munson
5. CONCLUSION
AbstractCleaning critical and high reliability printed wiring assemblies (PWAs) continues to be
important to ensure high reliability performance and to prevent premature failure. The necessary
steps to qualifying both a cleaning system and an appropriate chemistry for cleaning such PWAs are
set forth. This paper addresses a centrifugal cleaning system used in conjunction with a water-based
cleaning medium to achieve optimally low levels of contaminants on PWAs. Ionograph data, ion
chromatography profiling, residual rosin determination, and outgassing data are presented demonstrating the effectiveness of the centrifugal cleaning system and the aqueous cleaning agent for
space flight printed wiring assemblies. It is concluded that a centrifugal cleaning system coupled
with a suitable aqueous chemistry can be successfully employed to clean high reliability PWAs.
Keywords: Aqueous cleaning (AC); conformal coating; ionic contamination testing (ICT); greenhouse warming potential (GWP); multilayer board (MLB); ozone depletion potential (ODP); printed
wiring assembly (PWA); printed wiring board (PWB); rosin mildly activated (RMA); semi-aqueous
cleaning (SAC); surface mount technology (SMT); volatile organic compound (VOC).
1. INTRODUCTION
During the last decade, the challenges of cleaning printed wiring assemblies
(PWAs) have grown. Today printed wiring boards have grown more complex to
meet the continuing challenges posed by the increasing uses of microdevices, fine
pitch packages, and array devices, such as ball grid arrays, microball grid arrays,
and flip chips. Multilayer boards with a large layer count and narrow trace widths
and spaces are commonplace. The ball grid arrays, microball grid arrays, and
other small devices generally have a large number of inputs/outputs (I/Os), small
standoffs, and small pitches. The small standoff and small pitch, coupled with the
complex circuitry needed to route such components, makes cleaning an ever more
critical operation. High reliability PWAs cannot tolerate contaminants since their
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: (818) 354-1320, Fax: (818) 3935456, E-mail: john.k.bonner@jpl.nasa.gov
226
presence can potentially degrade the board, thus compromising the intended mission.
Cleaning for high performance PWAs is normally performed as a minimum at
the following stages:
(1) At the bare printed wiring board (PWB) stage prior to the application of solder mask;
(2) Immediately after the PWB + components are soldered to form the PWA;
(3) Immediately prior to the application of conformal coating.
If the PWAs are properly stored, the second and third operations are sometimes
combined. A number of contaminants are potentially introduced on the PWB surface. These contaminants can be classified into three broad categories:
(1) Particulates;
(2) Ionic residues;
(3) Non-ionic residues, chiefly organic in nature [1-4].
To ensure the reliability of a PWA, cleaning is mandatory to remove these contaminants after the soldering operation and also directly prior to the application of
a conformal coating. In addition to cleaning, some sort of cleanliness verification
method, such as ionic contamination testing (ICT), is normally employed. ICT
can be used to ascertain that a certain level of cleanliness has been achieved. Industry-recognized devices, such as an Ionograph or Omega-Meter, have commonly been used for this purpose. In addition, determining the amount of residual
rosin (assuming that a rosin-based flux or paste was used) is often done. Another
useful technique is to remove some of the components and examine for flux residues both visually and by use of a microscope.
The last decade has also seen the dramatic decrease and continuing disuse of
ozone-depleting solvents. The common chlorofluorocarbon solvents, such as
Freon TMS, have been discontinued, and many PWA assemblers have switched
to more environmentally-friendly cleaning agents, such as a wide variety of semiaqueous and aqueous-based materials. To enhance the performance of such materials, the proper equipment selection plays a critical role.
2. BACKGROUND
Ten years ago the Electronic Packaging and Fabrication section at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) established a dedicated facility for producing very low volume but high performance surface mount technology (SMT) assemblies known as
the SMT Laboratory. This laboratory has successfully assembled SMT PWAs for
such important JPL programs as these:
Cassini;
ChuG Microgyro;
Caltech-ACE;
227
MISER;
SEAWINDS;
Pathfinder.
and many others. Since the assemblies produced in this laboratory always fall in
the high performance, high reliability category, cleaning is mandatory, not optional. With the demise of the ozone-depleting solvents that were the mainstay of
the electronics industry for twenty years, it was necessary to turn to alternative
chemistries and cleaning systems to ensure cleanliness and high reliability of the
surface mount assemblies (SMAs).
The initial cleaning system chosen for the SMT Laboratory was a two-stage
batch semi-aqueous (SA) cleaning system. Although this system worked satisfactorily for a number of years, the decision was reached recently to replace it. Part
of the reason was the increasing complexity of the SMT PWAs. Equipment to ensure that the cleaning solution would successfully penetrate under the small
standoffs and tight spacings found under the newer components now being increasing employed was considered mandatory. Another factor in the decision was
that the initial equipment manufacturer sold off this portion of the business and no
longer supported the equipment. It proved increasingly more difficult to maintain
it in good working condition. In addition, isopropyl alcohol (IPA), used in the
original equipment, came under increasing scrutiny by the South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD). Because IPA is a volatile organic compound (VOC), its emission into the atmosphere is tightly controlled. The decision
was made to investigate a new cleaning system and a chemistry that would support JPLs need for clean PWAs to meet the newer challenges.
Rosin-based fluxes and pastes are used to produce all electronic hardware.
Using the terminology of Mil-F-14256, the classification of these products is
rosin mildly activated (RMA).
The solder paste is applied using a semi-automated screen printer ensuring that
the paste is deposited in a uniform and consistent manner. Only stainless steel
stencils are used in conjunction with a stainless steel squeegee. All boards are
visually inspected for proper paste deposition after the stencil operation.
A laser-based solder paste height and width measurement system is used with
a resolution of 0.0001 inch (2.5 m). This system provides real time information on the uniformity of solder paste deposition. All boards are subjected to
this measurement prior to the reflow operation.
A batch reflow operation is used to create the solder joints of the SMT PWAs.
The SMT PWAs are thermally profiled using a M.O.L.E. a thermocouple
228
is attached to the PWB and to the M.O.L.E. The latter is a microprocessorbased data logger attached to a computer. Thermal profiling is done to eliminate thermal shock during preheat and reflow. This operation consists of a vapor phase reflow machine using a constant boiling perfluorocarbon material
(3M Perfluorocompound FC-5312) (b.p. 216C) for soldering the SMT
PWAs. The SMT PWAs are preheated to remove paste volatiles and to initiate the activation stage of the paste. The reflow liquid, since it boils at a constant temperature, minimizes the possibility of overheating the SMT PWAs
during reflow and ensures that the vapor blanket performs a uniform and consistent soldering operation.
4. CRITERIA FOR CHOOSING A NEW CLEANING SYSTEM
Performance;
Cost.
Since JPLs need is low throughput, a batch cleaning system was acceptable.
After various preliminary trials, a centrifugal cleaning system was chosen based
both on performance and versatility. In addition, several new aqueous cleaning
chemistries seemed very promising.
One of these is based on an aqueous chemistry containing a mixture of some
alkoxypropanols with one to three alkoxy units (ether linkages). The molecules
are not particularly large (C2 to C4), so the hydrophobic portion is not too large.
The hydrophilic part of the molecule is due to one alcohol group (-OH) and several ether groups (-O-). Overall the organic molecules exhibit excellent solubility
in water. Thus, the cleaning agent in water is herein referred to as an aqueous
cleaning solution. The material itself is easily biodegradable. It has zero ozone
depletion potential (ODP), virtually no greenhouse warming potential (GWP), and
is classified as non-flammable. The following information is supplied by the
manufacturer of the aqueous solution. Although the concentrate is 91% by weight
volatile organic compound (VOC), the material as used in the cleaning system is
only 13.6% by weight VOC.
A broader description of aqueous cleaning systems is provided in the references [5-7].
5. NEW CLEANING SYSTEM
The new cleaning system consists of the following equipment and materials. A
brief description of its operation is also given below.
229
5.1. Equipment
The following equipment is required:
Vacuum oven;
Refractometer.
5.1.1. Equipment description
The equipment consists of an enclosed stainless steel cylindrical process chamber
with a series of spray nozzles located vertically. A robotic arm containing a fixture holds the PWA and moves it in and out of the chamber vertically. During the
cleaning cycle, the PWA is lowered into the process chamber until it is completely sealed from ambient. (See Figure 1).
5.2. Materials
The following materials are used in the centrifugal cleaning system:
230
In order to investigate the new cleaning system, a comparison was made between
it and the initial cleaning system. The following objectivcs were pertinent to this
investigation.
6.1. Objectives
The two chief objectives were:
Investigate the new centrifugal cleaner using the aqueous cleaning solution
for flight PWAs;
231
To be able to recommend the new centrifugal cleaner using the aqueous cleaning solution, the procedure used was to compare the cleaning data of the older
cleaning process using the semi-aqueous (SA) solution with the centrifugal
cleaner using the aqueous cleaning solution.
6.2. Test procedure
The test procedure consisted of assemblying a test PWA that would prove challenging to clean. Several alternative cleaning runs using the new centrifugal
cleaning equipment were made. The data so obtained were compared with (1) the
test PWA used in the semi-aqueous (SA) cleaning system using the standard SA
cleaning cycle, and (2) a control PWA not cleaned at all.
6.2.1. Test PWA
The test PWA was populated with ball grid arrays (BGAs), a chip scale package,
quad flat packs (QFPs) (20-mil pitch and 25 mil pitch the nearest metric sizes
are 0.5 mm and 0.625 mm), a plastic leaded chip carrier (PLCC), a flat pack, a
small outline integrated circuit (SOIC) and several discrete chip capacitors and resistors. Both sides of the PWA were populated. The test PWA was assembled using Sn 63 paste with rosin mildly activated (RMA) flux and soldered in a vapor
phase reflow system operating at constant temperature of 216C. (See Figures 2
and 3).
6.2.2. Test parameters
The following test parameters were employed:
The only parameters that were varied were the cycle times:
1. Wash cycle time;
2. Rinse cycle time.
6.2.3. Cleanliness determination methods
The following methods were used to assess the achieved cleanliness levels:
Residual chloride analysis (Cl) using ion chromatography (IC) was employed. For one run, residual fluoride (F) and bromide analyses (Br) were
also performed.
232
233
Outgassing per ASTM E595, Standard Test Method for Total Mass Loss and
Collected Volatile Condensable Materials from Outgassing in a Vacuum Environment.
Either ionic contamination testing was performed using the Ionograph 500 or
total LVR was determined for a given sample, but not both, i.e., the tests are mutually exclusive of each other. This is because in the process of conducting the
ionic contamination test, the PWA is cleaned, thus rendering it unfit for further
cleanliness testing. This is indicated in the results (Tables 1-3) using the symbol
N/A (not applicable) in one or the other column.
However, the total low volatile residue (LVR) analysis and the residual chloride analysis (Cl) are not mutually exclusive, and both examinations can be performed on the same sample. They are not mutually exclusive because first an extract is made using D.I. water to remove the very soluble anions present (Cl, F,
Br), and then an extract is made using the Freon TF/IPA to remove the rosin
residue which is insoluble in water.
The results for the new centrifugal cleaning system using the aqueous chemistry are reported in Tables 1-3. Table 4 gives ionic contamination levels using the
older SA cleaning system.
The outgassing test method per ASTM E595 determines the volatile content of
materials when exposed to a vacuum environment. Two parameters must be
measured: Total mass loss (TML) and collected volatile condensable material
(CVCM). In addition, since polyimide printed wiring board material can absorb
moisture, an additional parameter was determined, namely, the amount of water
vapor regained (WVR). The results for the TML, CVCM and TML-WVR values
are reported in Table 5.
234
Batch No.
Ionograph Low
results
volatile
g/in2*
residue
g/in2*
16
14
1
1
0.40
0.23
N/A
N/A
18
19
2
2
0.00
0.17
N/A
N/A
8
24
9
25
3
3
3
3
0.60
0.40
0.04
0.02
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
26
10
Components
removed
7
4
4
4
N/A
N/A
N/A
3.2
6.5
0.5
Uncleaned
PWA
152.2
N/A
Remarks
* In the U.S., process engineering results are typically given in g/in2. 1 g/in2 = 0.155 g/cm2.
235
Batch
No.
Ionograph
results
g/in2
Low
volatile
residue
g/in2
15
17
1
1
1.35
1.47
N/A
N/A
27
28
1
2
N/A
0.36
6.5
N/A
29
N/A
0.5
Remarks
236
Table 3.
Cleanliness data from test run #3 (new cleaning system)
Test PWA Batch
Serial No. No.
Ionograph Low
results
volatile
g/in2
residue
g/in2
Remarks
(Residue results are given in g/in2)
N/A
8.4
5
11
12
102
1
1
1
2
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
1.9
1.6
2.3
5.8
103
N/A
0.7
104
N/A
0.7
108
N/A
1.4
124
N/A
2.6
Al plate
#1
Al plate
#2
Solvent
(Control)
105
106
107
N/A
0.7
N/A
0.4
N/A
0.0
3
3
3
3.19
1.12
1.60
N/A
N/A
N/A
122
Uncleaned N/A
PWB
Uncleaned N/A
PWB
123
2462
33
237
The SA cleaning system (old cleaning system) parameters were: Wash time = 5.0
min. (with saponifier); rinse time = 10.0 min. (D.I. H2O); 5.0 min. (D.I. H2O/IPA
mixture); dry time = 5.0 min. The results are presented in Table 4.
Table 4.
Cleanliness data from test run #4 (old cleaning system)
Test PWA
Serial No.
Batch
No.
Ionograph
results
g/in2
Low
volatile
residue g/in2
21
22
23
1
1
1
8.05
3.32
2.76
Not performed
Not performed
Not performed
Remarks
TML
%
CVCM TML%
WVR
%
Remarks
121
0.260
0.002
0.187
101
0.253
0.000
0.184
7. SUMMARY OF RESULTS
PWAs cleaned with 5.0 minutes wash and 2.5 minutes rinse had average ionic
cleanliness level of 0.27 micrograms per square inch, far below the JPL
maximum acceptable ionic cleanliness level of 10 micrograms per square
inch. This result is much lower than that obtained by the older cleaner. (See
Tables 1 and 4).
PWAs cleaned with 5.0 minutes wash and 2.5 minutes rinse had average low
volatile residue (LVR) cleanliness level of 4.84 micrograms per square inch.
Although no standard exists for LVR, it is less than 6.45 micrograms per
238
square inch, which is the lowest level of the flight hardware determination
standard MIL-STD-1246C Level A.
PWAs cleaned with 3.0 minutes wash and 2.0 minutes rinse had average ionic
cleanliness level of 0.93 micrograms per square inch, far below the JPL
maximum acceptable ionic cleanliness level of 10 micrograms per square
inch. This result is much lower than that obtained by the older cleaning system. (See Tables 2 and 4). The results, however, are not optimal.
PWAs cleaned with 6.0 minutes wash and 6.0 minutes rinse had average ionic
cleanliness level of 1.97 micrograms per square inch, still far below the JPL
maximum acceptable ionic cleanliness level of 10 micrograms per square
inch. These somewhat higher results may be due to the inadvertant contamination by handling of some of the boards. Since the ionic cleanliness level is
still significantly lower than 10 micrograms per square inch, this result does
not vitiate the overall performance of the new cleaning system.
The anion profile analysis performed with ion chromatography showed exceedingly low levels of anion species, thus indicating very low levels of remaining contamination.
One PWA after cleaning had its components removed to examine for flux
residues. Both visual and 10x magnification were used to detect residues.
Nothing was noted.
The outgassing data for the boards cleaned using the new centrifugal cleaning
system/aqueous chemistry indicates that the total mass loss (TML) is much
less than 1.00% and the collected volatile condensable material (CVCM) is
much less than 0.10%.
The optimal cleaning cycle suggested by the data is:
Wash solution temperature 50C
Rinse solution temperature 50C
Dry air temperature 200C
Wash cycle rotational speed 150 RPM
Wash time 5 min.
Rinse time 2.5 min.
Dry time 2.5 min.
Note on ESD
There was some concern that during the hot air drying stage there might be an
ESD (electrostatic discharge) problem. A medical device manufacturer that purchased a Speedline Technologies ACCEL MicrocelTM Centrifugal Cleaning System was concerned about this and performed a thorough investigation. They
found no ESD problem. In addition, at JPL a normal cleaning cycle was run and
an ESD meter was used to see if there was any ESD build-up. No ESD was de-
239
The centrifugal cleaner using the new aqueous cleaning solution based on longchain alcohols shows a marked improvement in cleanliness of PWAs over the
previous two-stage batch semi-aqueous (SA) cleaning system using a terpenebased SA material and water in machine #1 for cleaning and saponifier, isopropyl
alcohol (IPA), and D.I. water in machine #2 for rinsing. The centrifugal cleaner
using the new aqueous cleaning solution not only cleans at a higher degree of
cleanliness level compared to the older SA cleaning system, but also it is cost effective to use. The total cycle time is about 50% less than the older SA cleaning
system. Also, it uses single chemical (the long-chain alcohol/aqueous solution)
with very small amount of additives compared to three chemicals used by the
older SA cleaning system. The use of hazardous isopropyl alcohol is also eliminated.
Acknowledgements
The research to qualify this new cleaning system was performed at the Surface
Mount Technology Laboratory at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration. The authors wish especially to thank Mr. Charles J. Bodie and
Mr. Amin Mottiwala for their support and encouragement.
REFERENCES
1. J.K. Bonner, in Cleaning Printed Wiring Assemblies in Todays Environment, L. Hymes (Ed.),
pp. 65-119, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York (1991).
2. L. Hymes (Ed.), Cleaning Printed Wiring Assemblies in Todays Environment. Van Nostrand
Reinhold, New York (1991).
3. C.J. Tautscher, Contamination Effects on Electronic Products. Marcel Dekker, New York
(1991).
4. C.J. Tautscher, The Contamination of Printed Wiring Boards and Assemblies. Omega Scientific
Services, Bothell, WA (1976).
5. F. Cala and A.E. Winston, Handbook of Aqueous Cleaning Technology for Electronic Assemblies. Electrochemical Publications, Isle of Man (British Isles) (1996).
6. J.B. Durkee, The Parts Cleaning Handbook without CFCs: How to Manage The Change. Hanser-Gardner, Cincinnati, OH (1994).
7. M.C. McLaughlin and A.S. Zisman, The Aqueous Cleaning Handbook: A Guide to CriticalCleaning Procedures, Techniques and Validation. The Morris-Lee Publishing Group, Rosemont, NJ (1998).
AbstractThe RCA clean is widely used in the semiconductor industry for many wet-chemical
cleaning processes. The RCA clean consists of a particle removal step, the Standard Clean 1 or SC-1
and metallic impurity removal step, the Standard Clean 2 or SC-2 step. In this work we have investigated the addition of chelating agents in SC-1 solutions to prevent metallic deposition during the
SC-1 step as well as to remove metallic contamination. We also have studied the effect of surfactants in such solutions on sub-micrometer particle removal. This leads to the development of a very
fast and efficient single step RCA replacement clean. The use of a single step cleaning strategy in a
single wafer mode dramatically reduces the cycle time of cleaning.
Keywords: RCA clean; silicon wafer cleaning; chelating agent; modified SC-1.
1. INTRODUCTION
SC-1 cleaning is widely used in the semiconductor industry during various wetchemical cleaning processes due to its outstanding particle removal efficiency.
Although SC-1, a mixture of NH4OH/H2O2/H2O, is an efficient particle removal
solution, it inherently allows some metallic impurities in solution to deposit on the
wafer surface [1]. For this reason a conventional SC-1 is typically followed by
SC-2, a mixture of HCl/H2O2/H2O, which exhibits excellent metallic impurity removal efficiency [2]. This sequence of SC-1 and SC-2 is known as the RCA clean
and has been in use for over 30 years.
The most obvious advantage of adding an appropriate chelating agent to SC-1 is
to prevent the deposition of metallic impurities during the particle removal step and
thus to eliminate the need for a follow-up metallic impurity removal step. Not only
does this reduce the number of chemical cleaning steps required, saving money and
time, it also avoids the adverse effect of particle re-deposition during typical metallic impurity removal steps, such as SC-2 or an HF dip. Furthermore, an appropriately chelate enhanced SC-1 solution can potentially remove metallic contamination
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: (408) 584-0957, Fax: (408) 584-1132,
E-mail: christopher_beaudry@amat.com
242
even more efficiently than SC-2, and its ability to bind free metal ions in solution
will potentially isolate process excursions from affecting process yield.
To understand the effect of adding a chelating agent to an SC-1 solution, it is
important to study the interaction of metallic impurities in solution and the substrate in that solution. In this case, the substrate of interest is silicon. In aqueous
solutions, such as SC-1, a silicon wafer surface is hydroxyl terminated (silanol
groups: -Si-OH). The interaction between the metal ions in solution and the silanol surface groups can be described by the following equation:
-Si-O-H + Mx+ -Si-O-M(x-1)+ + H+
x+
(1)
where M is the metallic ion. From equation (1), one can see that there are two
ways to reduce metallic ions from depositing on the wafer surface. The first way
is to increase the concentration of H+, shifting the reaction to the left. Unfortunately, acidifying SC-1 will degrade particle removal effectiveness of the solution
(the high pH provides electrostatic repulsive forces while lowering the pH may
result in attractive forces between particles and the substrate). The second way to
prevent or reduce metallic ion deposition is to decrease the free metal ion concentration in solution. For many years, suppliers have supported such an approach by
the development and use of ultrapure materials, chemicals, and de-ionized water.
Due to the increasingly stringent requirements of wafer surface cleanliness, this
approach alone cannot reach todays required level of surface metals. In order to
reduce metal deposition in SC-1 solutions to meet and even exceed the current
surface metal specifications, it is necessary to not only use ultrapure components,
but to also add chelating agents to bind the free metal ions present forming complexes which will remain soluble in solution. Typical chelating agents can reduce
the free metal ions in solution by 6 orders of magnitude [3].
In addition to enhancing the metallic cleaning ability of SC-1 solutions, we
have also investigated the use of a surfactant in our modified SC-1 solution. Although SC-1 inherently removes particles quite effectively, megasonic energy is
often applied which dramatically increases particle removal efficiency. This is increasingly important as the dimensional size of semiconductor devices continues
to decrease to even smaller sizes. With this mind, the addition of surfactants to
SC-1 will become an important component to prevent particles removed from the
wafer surface from re-deposition, thus increasing the particle removal efficiency
for small particles.
In liquids, the attraction or repulsion of particles to the wafer surface is dependent on the van der Waals interaction (always attractive) and the electrostatic
double layer forces (usually repulsive). The combination of these interactions will
determine the potential energy of interaction and thus the barrier to adhesion [4,
5]. The barrier to adhesion is related to the particle size, pH of the solution, and
the respective charges on the wafer surface and particle. Cleaning down to submicrometer and smaller sizes becomes increasingly difficult as the barrier to adhesion decreases with decreasing particle size. Thus the tendency to re-deposit on
the wafer surface increases as the particle size decreases. Surfactants may prevent
243
Figure 1. Particle Removal - Example of Si3N4 particle wafer maps before (left) and after (right)
modified SC-1 clean (particles 0.12 m, measured on Tencor SP-1).
244
were deposited on prime 300 mm wafers. The particle measurements were performed on a Tencor SP-1 instrument. Surface metal measurements were obtained
with the vapor phase decomposition-ion coupled plasma mass spectroscopy
(VPD-ICPMS) technique. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOFSIMS) was used to assess if any residual chelating agent or surfactant remained
on the wafer surface (after the rinsing and drying).
3. RESULTS
Figure 2 shows the particle removal efficiency for an optimized modified SC-1
solution. For one lot, consisting of 13 wafers, the average particle removal efficiency was 99.5% (1 = 0.28; measured at 0.12 m). Typical wafer maps illustrating the combination of full and spot Si3N4 particle deposition pattern before
and after processing are shown in Figure 1. In order to determine the effectiveness
of the surfactant studied, Valtron SP2200, we compared final particle counts with
and without surfactant present (Figure 3). In this example we see an average of 50
less particles per 300 mm wafer. The particle cleaning performance for the modified SC-1 solution was excellent and the selected surfactant reduced the average
final particle count after SC-1 cleaning.
Figure 4 illustrates the effectiveness of the studied chelating agent for reducing
metallic deposition. In particular, it is interesting to look at the level for Al, Fe,
and Zn. These are some of the metals that readily deposit from conventional SC-1
Figure 2. Particle Removal - Average Si3N4 particle removal after modified SC-1 clean (particles
0.12 m, measured on Tencor SP-1).
245
Figure 3. Particle Removal - Final particle counts after modified SC-1 clean with and without surfactant (particles = 0.1-0.14 m, measured on Tencor SP-1).
Figure 4. Metal Deposition - Surface trace metals levels after modified SC-1 clean as determined by
VPD-ICPMS (1 sigma error bars are generally within data points).
246
solutions [1]. The average surface metals levels after the modified SC-1 clean was
equal to or below todays VPD-ICPMS detection limits. For reference, typical
levels for a conventional SC-1 last clean are: Al ~ 1x1011, Fe ~ 2x1010, and Zn ~
1x1011 (atoms/cm2). The chelating agent under investigation is efficiently binding
the free metal ions in solution reducing their deposition onto the wafer surface
and thus can eliminate the need for an additional metal removal step. Although
the modified SC-1 solution did not deposit metals from the solution we also characterized the metal removal efficiency of this solution (Figures 5 and 6). The concentration of chelating agent and exposure time were varied while the
NH4OH:H2O2:H2O volume ratio and temperature were held constant at 1:2:80 and
80C. Figure 5 shows the results for a 30 s processing time. The final concentration of all metals investigated was typically greater than 1E+10 atoms/cm2. Fe
removal was found to be a function of chelating agent concentration while other
Figure 5. Metal Removal - Surface trace metals levels after a 30 s modified SC-1 clean using different chelating agent concentrations as determined by VPD-ICPMS.
Figure 6. Metal Removal - Surface trace metals levels after a 10 minute modified SC-1 clean using
different chelating agent concentrations as determined by VPD-ICPMS.
247
metals did not exhibit any dependence. Figure 6 shows the final concentrations of
metal after 10 minutes of exposure. All metals were reduced by 2-3 orders of
magnitude to close to or below 1E+10 atoms/cm2. Exposure time is obviously an
important consideration for metal removal. Methods to increase the metal removal
rate are now under investigation.
One of the concerns with the use of chelating agents and/or surfactants in SC-1
last clean is the potential for organic contamination remaining on the surface of
the wafer. However, in a typical spin cleaning equipment, the rinse process can be
optimized to eliminate such concerns. The use of heated DI water rinse and high
spin rates during rinsing can effectively remove all traces of the chelating agent
and surfactant. TOF-SIMS measurements were carried out to confirm the absence
of both organic additives. No trace of additive-specific residues was observed on
the processed wafers. Thus, organic contamination through use of appropriately
selected chelating agents and/or surfactants can be eliminated through process optimization. The absence of any heavy metal signature in the TOF-SIMS data also
confirms our VPD-ICPMS results.
4. SUMMARY
In this paper we have shown that the addition of an appropriately selected chelating agent to SC-1 solutions can eliminate the need for an additional metal removal
step, potentially saving time and money. In addition, the use of a surfactant can
enhance particle removal efficiencies for very small particle sizes (<0.14 m).
This modified SC-1 solution, containing both additives, was shown to have excellent particle removal efficiency, to reduce metal deposition on the wafer surface
to below VPD-ICPMS detection limits, and to remove surface metal contamination. Methods to improve metal removal efficiency are currently underway. Furthermore, rinsing can be optimized to eliminate all traces of the chelating agent
and surfactant residues.
REFERENCES
1. H. Hiratsuka, M. Tanaka, T. Tada, R. Yohsimura and Y. Matsushita, Ultra Clean Technol., 3,
No. 3, 18-27 (1991).
2. W. Kern, in: Proceedings of the First International Symposium on Cleaning Technology in
Semiconductor Device Manufacturing, J. Ruzyllo and R.E. Novak (Eds.), Vol. 90-9, pp. 3-19,
Electrochemical Society, Pennington, New Jersey (1990).
3. A. Ringborn, Complexation in Analytical Chemistry, John Wiley & Sons, New York (1963).
4. R. Donovan and V. Menon, in: Handbook of Semiconductor Wafer Cleaning Technology: Science, Technology, and Applications, W. Kern (Ed.), pp. 152-197, Noyes Publications, Westwood, New Jersey (1993).
5. M. Itano and T. Kezuka, in: Ultraclean Surface Processing of Silicon Wafers: Secrets of VLSI
Manufacturing, T. Hattori (Ed.), pp. 115-136, Springer-Verlag, Berlin (1995).
AbstractAn inexpensive qualification technique is described for wafer cleaning tools used after
chemical-mechanical polishing (CMP). Pipette deposition of slurry onto a monitor wafer can provide the particle challenge needed to qualify the performance of a post-CMP wafer cleaning tool. In
addition to gauging the performance of these tools, this pipette method is faster and less expensive
than many common particle deposition techniques, including immersion, polishing and aerosol
deposition.
Keywords: Brush cleaning; chemical-mechanical polishing; CMP; particle deposition; PVA; slurry;
wafer cleaning.
1. INTRODUCTION
Surface preparation and cleaning is one of the most critical steps in semiconductor manufacturing [1]. For all wafer cleaning tools, routine qualification is necessary to ensure that no particle contamination is introduced by the wafer cleaning
equipment [2]. The broad category of wafer cleaning tools includes the poly(vinyl
alcohol) (PVA) brush scrubbing tool [3]. The brush scrubber has been increasingly utilized [4] in semiconductor fabrication as a preferred technique for particle
removal after CMP. Because of the high particle removal performance required of
post-CMP cleaning tools, it is critical to monitor and maintain the performance of
such tools [5]. The most direct measure of tool performance is inline inspection of
actual product wafers [6]. While inline defect analysis is invaluable, it may require a time lag of hours or even days between wafer cleaning and discovery of
high wafer defectivity. In a high-volume manufacturing environment, this delay
can lead to hundreds of product wafers with possible contamination. For this reason, inline inspection of product wafers is supplemented by regular tool qualification using less expensive particle monitor (PMON) wafers. This PMON qualification should provide an accurate measure of the tool performance with the quickest
possible turnaround time. For post-CMP cleaning tool qualification, it is neces
250
M.T. Andreas
sary to use prepared PMON wafers with contamination analogous to that found
on polished product wafers. There are several methods for preparing these contaminated monitor wafers. One way is to use polished monitor wafers [7]. In this
method, test wafers can be selected which represent the surface chemistry of
product wafers without the expense of underlying circuitry. The test wafer surface
can be homogeneous or heterogeneous, depending on the process being qualified.
These test wafers can be polished under the same CMP conditions as product wafers. This method requires the same resources as inline product inspection, therefore providing an accurate measure of post-CMP tool performance but not necessarily decreasing the turnaround time. Another common method is the slurry dip
[8, 9], where monitor wafers are dipped in a wet process tank of diluted slurry.
Again, monitor wafers can be selected to represent the surface chemistry of product wafers. The diluted slurry can be selected to simulate the CMP chemistry.
This method has the advantage of providing contaminated monitor wafers without
the time or expense of using a CMP tool. Also, it is possible to deposit dry particles using an aerosol deposition technique [10]. While it is claimed that this
method is more controllable and repeatable than aqueous slurry immersion, these
dry particles may not represent polishing residue as accurately as a CMP slurry.
Here we describe an extremely simple contamination technique direct pipette
deposition of a small volume of undiluted slurry onto a monitor wafer.
2. EXPERIMENTAL
Bare silicon and blanket oxide wafers were used for all tests. Blanket oxide wafers were prepared by plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) using tetraethoxysilane (TEOS). These TEOS derived films were deposited to 350
nm thickness on 200 mm diameter silicon substrates. All wafers were cleaned using OnTrak DSS-200 Series II brush cleaning tools. These tools were run using a
dilute (<1%) basic cleaning solution. All wafers were inspected with a Tencor
SurfScan 6420 laser scattering wafer inspection tool [11, 12]. Bare silicon monitor wafers were inspected for all light-scattering point defects (LPDs) >0.16 m.
Blanket oxide wafers were inspected for LPDs > 0.18 m.
3. RESULTS
251
Table 1.
Initial slurry drop test results
Experimental conditions
Run
order
Wafer
surface
Contamination
Brush
time,
sec
Before
slurry
deposition
After slurry
Difference
deposition and
PVA scrub process
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8-24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32-48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
silicon
silicon
silicon
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
silicon
silicon
silicon
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
silicon
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
silicon
none
alumina
alumina
alumina
alumina
alumina
none
none
none
none
fumed silica
fumed silica
fumed silica
fumed silica
none
none
none
none
ceria
ceria
ceria
ceria
none
none
colloidal silica
colloidal silica
colloidal silica
colloidal silica
colloidal silica
none
80
2
20
40
60
80
80
80
80
80
2
20
40
80
80
80
80
80
2
20
40
80
80
80
2
20
40
60
80
80
4
34
36
37
33
35
12
6
4
32
32
65
120
5
2
2
62
57
72
111
4
12
29
35
40
26
52
3
256
18596
465
96
65
76
596
113
33
786
54
32
32
45
296
21
2394
40
35
29
20
52
2680
77
39
18
37
35
252
18562
429
59
32
41
584
107
29
754
22
-33
-88
40
294
19
2332
-17
-37
-82
16
40
2651
42
-1
-8
-15
32
perimental factor. Uncontaminated silicon wafers were processed immediately before and after the oxide wafers to determine any slurry particle carryover. The results from this test are summarized in Table 1. A plot of post-scrub LPD count
versus brush cleaning time is shown in Figure 1. Here we determined that among
all the slurry types, alumina slurry provided the highest level of wafer contamina-
252
M.T. Andreas
tion (as measured by laser scatterometry) for a given drop size. Maps showing the
LPD distribution after 2 second scrubbing are shown in Figures 2 and 3 for wafers
contaminated with alumina and colloidal silica, respectively. In all cases, the 80
second brush cleaning time was sufficient to attain particle levels below the predefined production limit of 100 LPDs. Silicon monitor wafers run before and after
each group of slurry drop test wafers did not show significant slurry carryover.
Due to the simplicity of this procedure, slurry drop deposition was investigated
further as a method for routine tool qualification.
3.2. Development of the slurry drop qualification method
To evaluate the resolution of scrubber qualification methods (SQMs), several experimental scrubber recipes were created which simulated sub-optimal tool performance [13]. These scrubber recipes are described in Table 2. Several different
SQMs were evaluated using these sub-optimal scrubber recipes. These methods,
including slurry drop, slurry immersion and CMP polishing, are described in Table 3. The oxide polish method (SQM index 6) had been in use in our production
line for some time prior to this experiment. Silica-containing slurries were used
for all contamination methods because these slurries were the most readily available at the time. For the slurry immersion methods, 10 ml of slurry was diluted
with 18 L of deionized water, and the wafers were immersed for 10 sec immediately before cleaning. For the polished oxide wafers, a 60 second pre-clean using
~ 0.5% HF was utilized between polishing and scrubbing. Many trials were repeated using new (freshly installed) and old (near end of service) PVA brushes.
For each combination of qualification method and experimental scrubber recipe,
253
Figure 2. Wafer map showing LPD distribution after alumina slurry drop and 2 second scrub.
Figure 3. Wafer map showing LPD distribution after colloidal silica slurry drop and 2 second scrub.
M.T. Andreas
254
Table 2.
Experimental scrubber recipes
Recipe
Brush height,
mm
Chemical flow,
L/min
Brush rotation,
1/min
Brush time,
sec/brush
Rinse time,
sec
C
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E7
3.5
1.0
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
3.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.0
0.5
0.5
139
139
40
139
139
139
139
139
40
40
40
10
20
40
40
40
9
9
9
9
9
9
5
13
Table 3.
Experimental scrubber qualification method details
SQM index
Wafer surface
Contamination
1
2
3
4
5
6
silicon
silicon
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
255
Table 4.
Experimental details, dLPD results and method dynamic range (MDR) for each series
Series conditions
MDR
SQM Silica
index
Brush
age
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E7
1
1
2
2
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
5
5
6
6
old
new
old
new
old
old
new
new
old
old
new
new
old
new
old
new
105
5
114
2
3857
357
68
10
5
39
3
5
243
-75
4
3
242
545
324
26
1107
565
126
25
21
68
55
7
13
-46
51
48
69
10
95
40
1547
149
15
-2
83
120
11
22
5
-1
-18
365
8
817
32
1020
10
8
38
34
1
43
-17
103
5
84
8
7495
403
33
4
9
92
-26
1
43
14
8
-50
66
30
84
12
>30000
228
72
11
0
3
26
10
133
-40
66
6
48
20
121
7
8421
204
24
41
26
2
50
-71
82
-32
1516
17
1275
8
3446
3485
19
1
30
99
0
2
-58
56
-3
colloidal
fumed
colloidal
fumed
colloidal
fumed
fumed
fumed
colloidal
fumed
colloidal
colloidal
1468
540
1191
38
>30000
3336
96
21
43
89
146
10
241
89
82
98
M.T. Andreas
256
Table 5.
The full factorial of scrubber qualification tests using a known good brush installation
Series conditions
Wafer surface
Slurry
Quantity
A1
A2
silicon
silicon
silicon
silicon
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
CVD oxide
silica
silica
alumina
alumina
silica
silica
alumina
alumina
1 drop
3 drops
1 drop
3 drops
1 drop
3 drops
1 drop
3 drops
25
38
69
108
-14
-4
-2
247
125
125
508
2574
2850
376
>20188
>29959
>29997
>28245
>29997
>29997
701
1535
>29932
>29933
MDR
>29972
>28207
>29928
>29889
2864
1539
>29934
>29712
Figure 4. Several wafer maps from the SQM optimization tests. These silicon wafers were scrubbed
using recipe A1. The lower left note in each frame indicates drop size (1d = 1 drop, 3d = 3 drops)
and slurry composition (S = silica, A = alumina).
257
Figure 5. Wafer map for a CVD oxide wafer contaminated with one drop of alumina slurry and
scrubbed using recipe A1.
Table 6.
Recipe details for more sub-optimal scrubber recipes used to test the sensitivity of optimized SQMs.
Recipe C is the control scrubber recipe.
Recipe
C
A1
A2
T1
T2
T3
Brush Module 1
Brush Module 2
Rotation,
1/min
Rotation,
1/min
Height, mm
Time, sec
139
139
38
139
139
139
3.5
1.5
1.5
1.5
1.5
3.5
139
139
38
139
139
139
3.5
1.5
1.5
1.5
3.5
1.5
40
30
30
40
40
40
40
30
30
40
40
40
experimental scrubber recipes A1 and A2. The improved SQM using 3 drops of
alumina slurry was selected for comparison to the previous SQM using 1 drop of
colloidal silica slurry. Based on results with experimental recipes A1 and A2,
three more sub-optimal scrubber recipes were created. These recipes (T1, T2 and
T3) were designed to perform somewhere between recipes C (control) and A1.
These recipes are described in Table 6. Bare silicon wafers were used for all further tests. Wafer run order was randomized to average out any brush carryover effects. Process details and results are shown in Table 7. Wafer maps showing sensitivity to radial defect pattern formation are shown in Figure 6. The dLPD results
comparing optimized alumina and silica slurry drop methods are plotted in Figure
7. The alumina slurry drop SQM shows better sensitivity to inefficient scrubber
M.T. Andreas
258
operation, especially using recipe T1. All wafers using silica and alumina SQMs
met contol levels for dLPDs when using the control scrubber recipe. One of the
silica drop trials showed anomalously high residue. This may have been carryover
from the previously scrubbed wafer, which brought alumina slurry contamination.
Further tests confirmed that carryover from 3 drops of alumina appeared when using recipe T1. All experiments confirmed the improved alumina drop SQM as
more sensitive to conditions which may cause radial defect patterns. After implementing this improved SQM, no further radial defect patterns were discovered on
product wafers.
Table 7.
Process details and inspection results for improved slurry drop SQM comparison. All tests were run
using bare silicon wafers. The high dLPD result for 1dS wafer 19 (5312 adders) may be due to
carryover from 3dA wafer 18
Series conditions
MDR
Slurry
Quantity
Run order
T1
T2
T3
silica
1 drop
1, 4, 9, 11
2, 5, 13, 15
3, 6, 22, 19
30
30
38
34
23
34
67
69
83
236
308
5312
206
271
5278
alumina
3 drops
7, 12, 14, 8
17, 18, 16, 10
20, 24, 21, 25
19
100
92
3711
30553
31077
80
169
128
202
580
468
3692
30453
30985
Figure 6. Representative wafer maps from the 3 drops alumina (3dA) qualification method on silicon wafers, showing sensitivity to radial defect patterns when using recipes T1 and T3.
259
Figure 7. Plot of dLPD versus scrubber recipe for optimized alumina and silica slurry drop SQM trials.
4. CONCLUSION
Manual pipette deposition of CMP slurry onto a monitor wafer is a quick and effective way to provide qualitative particle challenges to wafer cleaning equipment. This method is much faster and cheaper than other common particle deposition techniques, including polishing, aerosol deposition and immersion in dilute
slurry. We have shown that this method provides enough particle loading to determine whether or not a post-CMP cleaning tool will perform within acceptable
particle removal limits. This, in turn, translates to lower defects on product wafers
and improved yields at a lower quality control cost.
REFERENCES
1. W. Kern (Ed.), Handbook of Semiconductor Wafer Cleaning Technology, pp. 416-419, Noyes
Publications, Park Ridge, NJ (1993).
2. F.W. Kern, Jr. and G.W. Gale, in: Handbook of Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology,
Y. Nishi and R. Doering (Eds.), pp. 87-104, Marcel Dekker, New York (2000).
3. W. Krusell, J.M. de Larios and J. Zhang, Solid State Technol., 38, No. 6, 109-114 (1995).
4. R. DeJule, Semiconductor Intl., 56-64 (Nov. 1998).
5. J.M. de Larios, J. Zhang, E. Zhao, T. Gockel and M. Ravkin, MICRO, 15, No. 5, 61-73 (1997).
6. C. Dennison, MICRO 16, No. 2, 31-42 (1998).
7. D.W. Cooper, R.C. Linke and M.T. Andreas, MICRO 17, No. 7, 55-64 (1999).
8. A.A. Busnaina, N. Moumen, M. Guarrera and J. Piboontum, in: Semiconductor Fabtech 9th
Edition, M.J. Osborne (Ed.), pp. 279-282, ICG Publishing, London (1999).
9. S. Ramachandran, A.A. Busnaina, R. Small, C. Shang and Z. Chen, in: Semiconductor Fabtech
13th Edition, G. Oliver (Ed.), pp. 271-277, ICG Publishing, London (2001).
260
M.T. Andreas
10. Y.H. Liu, S.H. Yoo, S.K. Chae, J.J. Sun, K. Christenson, J. Butterbaugh, J.F. Weygand and
N. Narayanswami, Semiconductor Intl., 145-152 (June 2000).
11. R.S. Howland, Semiconductor Intl., 164-170 (Aug. 1994).
12. J.J. Shen and L.M. Cook, MICRO 15, No. 3, 53-66 (1997).
13. N. Moumen, M. Guarrera, J. Piboontum and A.A. Busnaina, in: Proceedings, 10th Annual
IEEE/SEMI Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Conference, pp. 250-254 (1999).
1. INTRODUCTION
The typical processed surface is dry as the process starts. If a chemical reagent is
dispensed onto a dry surface it is likely that different parts of the surface will be
subjected to the reagent for different time intervals thus resulting in a nonuniform
processing result. Therefore, prior to dispensing chemical reagents on the surface,
it is imperative that the surface be covered with an inert liquid. This liquid is typically deionized water which covers the whole surface and fills the trenches. The
time required to fill a trench depends strongly on the characteristics of the surface
processed, the surface tension of the water, and the width and depth of the trench.
If the trench is hydrophilic, the capillary action of the water/air interface will ensure that the trench fills with water. The geometry of the process is shown in Fig.
1. The pressure of the gas trapped in the feature is increased due to the capillary
force, and this increase in pressure enhances the diffusion of the gas into the liquid. The process continues until the gas trapped in the cavity is completely consumed by this diffusion process. The upper limit on the time required to fill the
trench can be estimated (for details see [1]) as follows:
M. Olim
262
Figure 1. Geometry of the trench filling process. PL is the pressure in the liquid, P is the capillary
pressure difference across the interface, w and h are the trench width and depth, respectively, and
is the contact angle.
Figure 2. Time required to complete the trench filling process as a function of trench width for contact angle values of 30 and 60 degrees. The surface tension of the liquid is 70 mN/m, and trench aspect ratio h/w = 10.
t fill =
k 1 + Ph 2
h
DRT P
(1)
where k, D, R, T, and h are, respectively, a proportionality constant, vapor/air diffusion coefficient, universal gas constant, temperature, and trench depth, and Ph
and P are the atmospheric pressure and capillary pressure difference, respec-
263
tively, across the interface. The results of the calculation are shown in Fig. 2. It
can be seen that the time required to fill a 0.25 m wide trench is well below one
second even for a trench whose aspect ratio is 10.
2. TRANSFER OF REAGENTS INTO AND OUT OF THE TRENCH
With the trench full of DI water, a chemical reagent is dispensed onto the substrate. In the interest of uniformity of processing along the full depth of the
trench, it is important that the spatial concentration of the reagent along the trench
depth be kept as uniform as possible. For analysis purposes, one may assume that
the trench is full of water and the top of the trench is covered with liquid reagent.
The reagent may penetrate the trench through either (a) convective or (b) diffusive
mixing. In order for convective mixing to take place, the flow characteristics must
allow for vortices to exist. The possibility of vortex existence may be ruled out by
comparing the relevant geometric parameters to the smallest vortex diameter predicted by Kholmogorov scales (see [2]) using the following equation:
ul
l v
3/4
(2)
where is the smallest length scale that can sustain turbulence (i.e. the smallest
vortex diameter possible), l is a characteristic length of the system (in this case it
is the width of a trench), and u and v are the flow velocity and kinematic viscosity, respectively. With relatively large trench width and velocity values of l = 0.5
m and u = 1 m/s one obtains /l 1, and with more realistic values of l = 0.25
m and u = 0.01 m/s one obtains /l 100. Since the smallest possible vortex diameter is noticeably larger than the trench width, it is clear that turbulent mixing
cannot take place in the trench. This implies that the reagent is transferred into the
trench by diffusion only. The same argument applies to transfer of reagents out of
the trench when DI water is dispensed onto the surface in order to stop the reaction.
Since it is desired that the results of the chemical process be uniform along the
depth of the trench, it is clear that the exposure time of any point on the trench
wall to the reagent should be as close as possible to that at any other point along
the trench wall. The uniformity of the process may be estimated by comparing the
time it takes for the reagent concentration at the bottom of the trench to equalize
with that at the top of the trench. For practical purposes, let us consider the concentrations equalized when the concentration at the bottom reaches 95% of the
concentration at the top. The time required for the reagent concentration at the
trench bottom to reach a given concentration level can be estimated (see [1]) using the following one-dimensional diffusion equation:
264
M. Olim
Figure 3. Normalized chemical concentration at the trench bottom vs time. u is the velocity of the
liquid at the top of the trench, and D is the diffusion coefficient of the chemical in the liquid.
C 2C
+ 2 =0
t
z
(3)
where D = 1.e-9 m2/s is the diffusion coefficient and C is the reagent concentration subject to C(t,z=h) = 1, Cz(t,z=0) = 0, C(t=0,z<h) = 0. The results shown in Fig. 3
clearly show that the concentration at the trench bottom reaches 95% of the
concentration at the trench top in approximately 25 ms.
The transport of the reagent out of the trench is described by the same equation
with different initial and boundary conditions C(t,z=h) = 0, Cz(t,z=0) = 0, C(t=0,z<h) = 1
and calculations show that within 100 ms the maximum concentration is reduced
by seven orders of magnitude.
3. DRAINAGE
Typically, the de-ionized water used to rinse the substrate must be removed (in
the liquid state) from the substrate and out of the features fabricated in the substrate. Water that is not removed in the liquid state would evaporate leaving originally dissolved contaminants to coagulate on the substrate and in the features thus
adversely affecting the yield of the manufacturing process.
265
Substrate rotation, since it increases the body force on the water in the features,
is often utilized as a means of water removal enhancement. However, as the typical size of the features decreases, the importance of body forces compared to surface tension (manifested in the Bond number) also decreases thus reducing the efficiency of rotation as a mechanism for water removal. It has been shown [4] that
the amount of water removed from a trench for a given contact angle does not
change significantly below Bond number of 0.1 which may, therefore, be defined
as the critical Bond number. The parameter that determines the amount of water
removed when the Bond number is below the critical value is the contact angle ,
and the maximum amount of water removed from the trench of width L does not
exceed L2/4 per unit length of a long trench. Since the depth of the trench is significantly larger than its width, very little water is removed from the trench in the
liquid phase and most of the water must evaporate.
4. EVAPORATION
This step is typically achieved by purging the process chamber using dry nitrogen
at ambient temperature and pressure. The equations describing the time interval
required to dry by evaporation a feature of a given depth are developed in [3] and
they allow for any temporal variation of vapor concentration in the ambient.
The rate of evaporation through a stagnant gas in one dimension is expressed in
Equation (17.2-15a) in [5]. A slightly modified version of this equation is presented below:
N =
PD P Pv ,top
ln
RTz P Pv ,int
(4)
where P and T, respectively, are the pressure and temperature in the system, D is
the diffusivity of the vapor in the ambient gas, R is the universal gas constant, z is
the distance between the top of the feature and the liquid/gas interface, and Pv is
the partial pressure of the vapor either at the top of the feature (top) or at the liquid/gas interface (int). This may be converted into an equation showing the rate of
recession of the air/liquid interface which, in turn, may be integrated (for details
see [3]) to yield
%
s 1 P
v ,top
%z 2 = ln
ds
%
0
1 Psat
(5)
where
1/2
L RT
%z = z
2 M L PD
%
P
v ,top =
Pv ,top
P
% = Psat ,
P
sat
P
(6)
M. Olim
266
driving mechanism
wetting
chemical in
chemical out
drying
capillary action
diffusion
diffusion
evaporation
100
10
100
100
REFERENCES
1. M. Olim, J. Electrochemical Soc., 144, 4331-4335 (1997) .
2. H. Tennekes and J.L. Lumley, A First Course in Turbulence, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA
(1990).
3. M. Olim, J. Microscale Thermophys. Eng., 3, 183-188 (1999).
4. M. Olim, J. Microscale Thermophys. Eng., 4, 223-230 (2000).
5. R.B. Bird, W.E. Stewart and E.N. Lightfoot, Transport Phenomena, John Wiley, New York
(1960).
AbstractAs the state of technology advances in data storage and integrated circuits, the need to
remove smaller particles becomes more critical in order to maintain economical yields and avoid
product failures due to contamination. Present textile materials are approaching the limits of their
ability to achieve particle removal. New materials are being developed and investigated for providing the high level of cleaning efficiency required. These new materials fall into the general class
known as microdeniers. They are being shown to have the properties required to overcome the
shortcomings of traditional textiles.
Keywords: Contamination control; wipers; microdenier; cleanroom wipers; particle removal; fiber
construction.
1. INTRODUCTION
The critical dimensions in data storage and integrated circuit technologies continue to get smaller and smaller, putting these high-tech products at risk from submicrometer particles. As flying heights approach 25 nm, contamination of disk
media and read-write heads during their manufacture becomes even more of a
concern. A half-micrometer (500 nm) particle is more than ten times the readwrite gap, perhaps leading to a read-write error or a crash. Similarly, integrated
circuits continue to have ever-decreasing line width ground rules, requiring the
control of particles of ever decreasing size limits. Particles hundredths of a micrometer in size can be killers [1].
The relatively large fiber diameters of standard wipers make them less efficient
in picking up these small particles. Microfibers have been shown to be more efficient in this application based on their geometry and the physics of particle removal [2].
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: 201-327-9100 X330, Fax: 201-3275945, E-mail: jskoufis@texwipe.com
Now retired.
268
During plant and cleanroom construction, and then throughout operations, rigorous cleaning is needed, using such consumable materials as wipers, swabs, cleaning compounds, and cleaning tapes. Such materials need to be selected carefully
both with respect to contaminating potential and ability to clean. Cleanliness is
measured by examining materials, extracting particulate matter in agitated liquid
or in air, and by extracting chemical constituents such as ionics, hydrocarbons,
non-volatile residue (NVR or residue after evaporation) etc., with appropriate solvents [3].
Cleanroom wipers (and swab heads) selected for cleanrooms of different levels
of cleanliness generally follow these guidelines:
A. Cleanest, Fed-Std-209E Class 1 (= Class M1.5) to Class 10 (= Class M2.5)
rooms:
laundered sealed-edge polyester knit (lowest contaminants) or Nylon knit
(somewhat higher non-volatile residues). A portion of such a wiper is shown
in Figure 1.
B. Class 10 to Class 100 (= Class M3.5) rooms:
laundered polyester knit or hydroentangled polyester (somewhat higher particles and fibers due to unsealed edges).
C. Class 100 to Class 10,000 (= Class M5.5) rooms:
hydroentangled polyester/cellulose blends.
Figure 1. Laundered sealed edge wiper representing the highest level of cleanliness for critical
cleanroom applications.
269
D. Classes >10,000:
These consist of various composites, including polypropylene and natural fibers such as cotton and polyurethane foam.
The progression of wiper offerings is logical:
1. sealed-edge products are cleaner than unsealed;
2. laundered products are cleaner than unlaundered;
3. continuous filaments give less fiber contamination than do cut (staple) fibers;
4. natural fibers contain contaminants harder to control than those in synthetic
fibers, and natural fibers are only available as staple fibers.
The efficacy of a wiper includes absorbency and ability to pick up and retain
particulate matter. This will depend on the fiber or foam base material and on
construction details. Inevitably, some contaminants will reach the work surface
where non-contaminating materials are needed to remove them.
3. MICRODENIER FABRICS
The denier of a yarn or fiber is the linear density expressed as the number of
grams in 9000 m of the yarn or fiber. Microdenier fibers (filaments) are defined as
1 denier or less, where 1 denier for polyester corresponds to a circular cylinder
with a diameter D of about 11 m [4].
For fabrics of the same fiber composition of denier d:
the total length of fibers will be proportional to 1/d
270
Figure 2. Various manufacturing techniques for forming microdenier fibers. Other technologies can
be used but generally will fall into one of the four shown. The first is a single component while the
others are multicomponent fibers.
Mochizuki et al. [5] of Unitika Ltd. of Japan have described the formation of
ultra-fine fibrous materials by splitting bi-component fibers after they have been
formatted as a spunbonded fabric (molten continuous fibers are laid down and adhere where the fibers cross). They noted that three methods were conventionally
used (Figure 2) to form microdenier fibers from bi-component fibers: dissolution
of one of the components, separation of the components by swelling or shrinking,
and separation by mechanical distortion, the last being the approach they used. A
sunflower pattern (Figure 3) of six polyester fibers surrounding a polyethylene
core was split apart by flexing, taking a 3-denier fiber and making six 0.25-denier
fibers and a 1.5-denier core segment. The thin fibers contributed softness and
flexibility; the core allowed convenient thermal bonding. The density of the fabric
decreased, giving greater porosity. Triboelectrification of the fibers from dissimilar materials can produce charging that enhances the effectiveness of dry wiping
in picking up dust particles [6]. Of course, this is not recommended for contact
with semiconductors.
Teijin Ltd. of Japan markets its Micro-StarTM material, made of bi-component
nylon/polyester fibers, that are arranged into 16 filaments that have wedge-shaped
cross sections (Figure 4). Such filaments are typically 0.16 denier, but can be made
smaller. The materials are useful for absorbing both oil and water. Tests done on
cleaning tapes made from these materials generally showed lower levels of ionic
271
Figure 3. Sunflower pattern showing six polyester fibers surrounding a polyethylene core. Splitting
results in making 3 denier fiber into six 0.25 denier fibers with a 1.5 denier core. The left figure
shows an oblique view and the right figure shows a cross section of the bicomponent filaments.
Courtesy of Unitika Ltd.
contaminants than from tapes made with conventional denier fibers (1.5 denier).
This is not an inherent quality but the result of a more rigorous cleaning step.
Kuraray Ltd. of Japan produces its SOLIV (R)TM fibers by splitting polyester
fibers longitudinally, forming fibers that have roughly rectangular cross sections,
claimed to facilitate wiping through a scraping mechanism (Figure 5) [7].
Toray Industries, Inc. of Japan markets its microdenier cleaning cloth as TorayseeTM and LuminexTM. The polyester fibers are produced by splitting thicker fibers,
creating material with a 2-micrometer diameter (0.06 denier) and having sharp
edges rather than being round. Figure 6 shows a comparison against materials
made with larger, traditional microdenier fibers (ca. 5 micrometers in diameter).
The current technology allows the formation of woven and knit goods from fibers having deniers as low as 0.06. It also allows the formation of nonwoven
items, typically synthetic leathers, having deniers as low as 0.0001. While these
nanofiber materials have not yet been utilized into cleanroom wipers, the technology is nearly available to allow weaving and knitting these fibers into cleaning
materials. These fine fibers will probably be much more fragile in an unbonded
state and their usefulness as wiping cloths need to be determined.
272
J. Skoufis and D.W. Cooper
Figure 5. Longitudinally split fibers showing how the rectangular shapes facilitate wiping through a scraping mechanism. The upper left shows the
construction of a single filament while the upper right shows the same filaments split and knit into a wiper.
Courtesy of Kuraray Ltd.
273
Figure 6. Ultra microdenier polyester cleaning cloth showing split wedge shaped fibers approximately 2 micrometers in diameter (0.06 denier) is shown on the left. Comparison is made with two
traditional larger microfiber cloths on the right.
Courtesy of Toray Ltd.
The force needed to break a fiber (in tension) is generally proportional to its
cross-sectional area, a, so that the tensile strength of a textile fiber is often given
as gpd, grams per denier, which should be roughly independent of fiber diameter.
For polyester this is about 3-10 gpd and is commonly called the fiber tenacity.
The yarns of interest to us are in the range of 50 to 150 denier (composed of many
filaments), meaning a single yarn could suspend 150 to 1500 g without breaking,
depending on the tenacity of the particular polyester material [8].
The strength of an individual filament determines whether it breaks when
snagged; the strength is proportional to (denier)/(# filaments) = d/n. Bending
strength is usually also proportional to cross-sectional area, so the same proportionality can be expected. To prevent pilling (formation of lint balls), most
polyester in commercial use is low tenacity. Higher tenacity fibers are needed for
wipers required to have abrasion resistance.
The geometry of a twisted yarn is complicated. The densest plausible packing
would be that of a unit cell that is a hexagon of contiguous cylinders surrounding
a central cylinder, which would give less than 10% open cross-sectional area. A
more plausible approximation is a square unit cell, with sides 4r in length, circumscribing four cylinders, of radius r, shown in Figure 7. This gives a porosity
274
Figure 7. Calculation of cross-sectional porosity, e, or open space, of a twisted yarn from the densest possible packing of filaments.
e = 1-(/4) = 0.215 = 21.5%. The spaces around these cylinders are complicated,
but they are roughly cylindrical pores with radii that are about half that of the
filament cylinders, r/2. r/2 will be taken here to be the characteristic dimension of
these inter-filament pores in the yarn. Note that this model is quite approximate,
as this geometry would in fact let liquid enter only from the ends of the yarn, and
not from the periphery, which clearly is not the case in practice.
The packing density is a determining factor in many of the properties of the
wiper: the absorbency, ability to pick up particles, and feel are all affected. Once
the filament size is determined, the science of fabric construction comes into play
in order to provide optimum properties.
5. LIQUID REMOVAL EFFECTIVENESS
The liquid to be wiped up usually contains particulate and molecular contaminants that will be removed roughly in proportion to how much of the liquid is removed [9].
There is reason to believe that the residual liquid (boundary-layer) left by
wiping with a fabric made from a yarn would be roughly the size of the interfilament spacing, r/2. The filament radius, thus the inter-filament spacing, and, by
275
inference, the boundary layer will be proportional to the square root of the filament cross section and therefore to (d/n) . Some boundary-layer reduction advantage is expected for microdenier fabrics based on this analysis.
The height to which a non-volatile liquid can rise in a fabric by absorption is
inversely proportional to the pore size. Microdenier fabrics, because of their
smaller pore sizes compared to standard denier fabrics, should raise liquids
higher. The speed the liquid will travel horizontally through the fabric is proportional to the pore size. Microdenier fabrics provide less speed of absorption. This
may not be critical for many applications but in cases where it is, fabric construction can overcome this disadvantage.
The amount of liquid a wiper can hold is roughly proportional to its thickness.
For the same knit, the thickness can be expected to be roughly proportional to the
square root of the yarn denier, so wipers with larger deniers should offer greater
absorption capacity. However, the weight of the wiper will be the product of the
denier and the length of yarn used to knit it. To keep the basis weight the same,
the length of yarn will have to be inversely proportional to the denier. This would
mean fewer or shorter loops. In the limit of a very large denier, one would have
almost a very loose weave, rather than a knit, which will adversely affect absorption capacity. Larger denier yarns would also feel stiffer and more difficult to get
into tight spaces.
It is not completely clear what the implications of denier are in absorption capacity as so much is dependent on basis weight and construction. Experience has
shown that the ability to hold liquid is of less interest in critical cleaning than the
ability to pick up small particles and reduce boundary layers.
For different fabrics with the same basis weight (g/m2), there will be the same
volume of polyester contained in a total length of filaments L'. The volume of the
filaments would be r2L'. The surface area would be 2rL'. The surface area per
unit volume (thus per unit weight) would be 2/rL', inversely proportional to the
filament radius, thus the surface area would be proportional to (n/d) . The
greater the surface area, the higher the liquid absorption, but cleaning the fabric
may be more difficult.
6. PARTICLE REMOVAL EFFECTIVENESS
276
Figure 8. If one circle represents a particle and the other a fiber, the force, Fv, required to lift the
particle can be calculated. The smaller the fiber, the smaller the particle it can push up from the surface.
The contact (idealized) between the cylindrical fiber and the spherical particle
occurs at their surfaces, along a line from one center to the other. The vertical
component of the force is then
Fv = F sin,
where F is the force at the contact and is the angle with respect to the surface or
Fv = F (r - R) / (r + R),
with the smaller object being pushed toward the surface and the larger object being pushed away. The smaller the denier, the smaller the particle it can push up
from the surface.
Besides the size advantage microdeniers offer in picking up very small particles, microdeniers can be made in a variety of shapes, even within the same
unsplit bicomponent filament. Common shapes include: shovel, wedge, star,
multi-lobe, and interior hollows. The wide variety of shapes provides opportunities for investigation into their suitability for particle removal. Specific shapes
may be optimal only for specific particle types.
277
7. FUTURE ACTIVITIES
While microdenier materials have been in wide use throughout Asia in cleanrooms, they have been commercialized slowly in the United States. One reason is
the lack of US producers; another is their higher cost compared to standard denier
products.
Interest in microdenier materials is gradually increasing in the U.S. More sophisticated microelectronic products demand better contamination control. The
price of microdeniers is decreasing due to competition as more microdenier material manufacturers are entering the market.
Several manufacturers who intend to revolutionize fiber production and significantly reduce manufacturing costs have designed new equipment in the U.S. Several companies and universities have purchased pilot-scale and production equipment. Initial trials look promising. The equipment is able to change polymer types
quickly, and configurations not previously possible are now feasible. These machines can produce nanofibers of various shapes and various polymers by simple
economical screen changes, rather than the time-consuming changes in expensive
spinnerets previously needed.
8. CONCLUSIONS
The new microdenier fibers being used for textiles should be able to produce
highly absorbent and very clean and effective wiping materials for cleanroom use.
The technical developments of the industry are driving the need for fibers and
fabrics which are more effective in removing ever smaller particles. Asia has led
in development and use of microdenier fibers, but in the U.S. manufacturers are
catching up, using economical and flexible designs and methods.
REFERENCES
1. D.W. Cooper, Microcontamination, 3(8), 4854, 73 (1985).
2. Kuraray Ltd. Publication 124158, Wiping Cloth for High Class Cleanrooms (1998).
3. Evaluating Wiping Materials Used in Cleanrooms and Other Environments, IES Publication
RPCE0042 (1992).
4. J. Skoufis, Fabrics for Disk Media, Internal Training Document PMG1A (1998). Available
for the author.
5. M. Mochizuki, K. Nagaoka and M. Hirai, A Sunflower Comes into Blossom, The Technical
Progress, Unitika Publication, undated.
6. D.W. Cooper, A2C2 (October 1998).
7. Teijin Ltd. Publication 93.6.2000, Microstar Wiping Cloth.
8. B.P. Saville, Physical Testing of Textiles, Woodhead Publishing, Abington, Cambridge, England
(1999).
9. R. Wang, Microcontamination, 14(2), 3947 (1996).
AbstractOptical reflectometry was used to study the attachment and subsequent detachment of
silica particles (diameter 25 nm) from the surfaces of titanium dioxide wafers under well-defined
hydrodynamic conditions. The rate of detachment and maximum detached amount was studied as a
function of both pH and added linear polyphosphate solutions. The latter have the general formula
[PnO3n+1](n+2)- where n is the number of phosphorous atoms in the molecule. The maximum detached
amount increased with increasing pH. The maximum detached amount also increased with n.
Atomic force microscopy was used to measure the interaction between silica spheres (diameter
7 m) and titanium dioxide wafers under the same solution conditions. The detachment force
needed to separate the surfaces decreased with increasing pH as well as with n in direct agreement
with the reflectometry data. It was shown that, in addition to repulsive electrical double layer forces,
adsorbed polyphosphates provided a short-ranged steric layer that reduced the lateral interaction between the surfaces. The use of these two complementary techniques has given valuable insight into
the processes responsible for fine particle detachment and has particular application to surface
cleaning.
Keywords: Fine particle detachment; reflectometry; atomic force microscopy; particle adhesion.
1. INTRODUCTION
To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +46 8 790 9971, Fax: +46 8 20 89 98,
E-mail: adam.feiler@surfchem.kth.se
280
nanosized silica particles onto titanium dioxide surfaces has been studied as a
function of pH and addition of solutions of linear polyphosphates. Previous in-situ
infra-red studies [2] have shown that linear polyphosphates selectively adsorb
onto titanium dioxide forming strong chemical bonds. Streaming potential measurements [3] have shown that for a fixed polyphosphate concentration, the titanium dioxide becomes more negative with increasing n, which was attributed to
an increased charge density with n. In addition, direct force measurements [3-5]
have shown that adsorbed polyphosphate introduces a steric layer which leads to a
short-ranged repulsive interaction.
Reflectometry combined with a stagnation point flow cell was used to measure
silica particle attachment and detachment. The stagnation point flow is ideally
suited for the study of colloidal particle attachment and detachment processes in
which their transport is governed only by diffusion [6].
2. EXPERIMENTAL
2.1. Materials
2.1.1. Titanium dioxide wafers
A titanium dioxide layer was deposited on the surface of silicon wafers by sputtering (prepared at Philips Research, The Netherlands) [3]. Ellipsometry measurements showed the titanium dioxide layer to be 40 nm thick and XPS analysis
showed the composition of the deposited layer to be pure titanium dioxide. X-ray
diffraction showed the deposited TiO2 to be amorphous. Imaging by AFM showed
an rms roughness of 0.3 nm over an area of 1 m2 with a maximum peak height
of 2 nm. The wafers were cleaned by detergent washing followed by rinsing with
high-purity water, ethanol, heptane and copious amounts of more high-purity water. Finally, the wafers were blown dry in a stream of nitrogen and plasma cleaned
(Harrick Plasma Cleaner/Steriliser PDC-32) for 1 minute immediately prior to
use. The isoelectric point of the titanium dioxide covered wafers was determined
to be pH 4.2 using streaming potential measurements [3].
2.1.2. Silica
Suspensions of silica particles used for reflectometry experiments were prepared
from LudoxTM AS40 (DuPont). The particles were dialyzed for 2 days in Milli Q
water and then suspended in solutions of KNO3 (10-3 M) with a particle concentration of 100 mg/l. The mean particle radius was R = 12 2 nm, determined by
transmission electron microscopy (CESMA, Adelaide University). The silica
spheres used for AFM measurements were obtained from Allied-Signal, (Chicago, Illinois). XPS analysis (CSIRO Division of Molecular Science) showed the
composition of the sample to be pure silica. The typical diameter was found to be
7 m. AFM imaging of the spheres over an area of 500 nm2 showed the rms
roughness to be 0.8 nm.
281
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of the combined reflectometry and stagnation point flow cell.
282
brief description of the essential features is given. The reflected light from a plane
polarized He/Ne laser off an adsorbing surface is measured. The adsorbing surface in this work was titanium dioxide covered silicon wafers. The reflected light
is split into its parallel (p) and perpendicular (s) components and the measured
signal, S, is the ratio of these intensities:
S=
IP
IS
(1)
This ratio depends on the refractive index profile close to the surface of the
substrate. Material adsorbed at the interface, in this case silica nanoparticles, will
change the refractive index profile and hence result in a change in S. Quantitative
measurements of the attached particle amount () can be obtained from the
change in signal via:
1 S
As S 0
(2)
where S0 is the intensity ratio prior to adsorption and S is the change in intensity
ratio. The sensitivity factor, As, takes into account the explicit refractive index
contributions from the surface, the adsorbed material and the aqueous medium.
2.2.1.1. Stagnant point flow
In the stagnant point fluid cell, the collector surface is positioned at a critical distance from the inlet tube such that a stagnant point flow is generated at the point
where the fluid impinges the surface. Under these conditions the hydrodynamics
can be very well defined [9]. The particles arrive at the surface under the influence of surface forces and Brownian diffusion only. Solutions were gravity fed
into the reflectometry cell from high-density polyethylene (HDPE) containers
(250 ml) mounted on adjustable laboratory jacks. The height of the liquid above
the inlet port to the fluid cell determined the flow rate. The flow rate was maintained at 1.5 cm3/min with a height of the liquid 13 cm above the inlet port. A
valve was used to switch between solutions entering the cell. The cell volume was
30 cm3. A vacuum pump was used to suck excess solution from the cell.
2.2.2. AFM
A sphere attached to the end of an AFM cantilever comprises a colloid probe. A
silica sphere was attached to a cantilever using a heat softening resin (Epikote
1004, Shell) using a micromanipulation arm attached to a metallurgical microscope (Olympus BH2). The cantilevers were silicon nitride, tipless, 200 m long,
wide legged from Nanoprobe (Park Scientific, USA). Spring constants were determined to be 0.1 0.05 N/m by measuring the resonance frequency of the cantilevers with added known masses [10]. Prior to measurement the colloid probe was
rinsed with ethanol, dried in a stream of nitrogen and plasma cleaned (Harrick
Plasma Cleaner/Steriliser PDC-32) for 1 minute. A Nanoscope III controller and
283
An example of typical reflectometry data is shown in Figure 2. Electrolyte solution at pH 4 was flowed into the reflectometry cell for 20 minutes before the start
of the measurement. This ensured that the solution in the cell had reached thermal
Figure 2. Typical reflectometry raw data showing change in signal with time upon introduction of a
particle suspension at arrow (a) followed by the introduction of a displacing solution at arrow (b).
284
equilibrium with the solution in the reservoirs. The baseline signal, S0 was monitored during this time to ensure that the signal was stable prior to measurement.
The background electrolyte solution was permitted to flow into the cell for a further 100 seconds after the measurement began. After this time (point (a) in Figure
2), the valve was switched to allow silica particles into the cell (the electrolyte
concentration remained unchanged). The reflectometer signal increases due to the
attachment of the silica particles. Initially the signal increases linearly with time.
The rate of attachment decreases markedly close to saturation coverage. At point
(b), the valve was switched to introduce a new solution, containing either a particle-free electrolyte solution at high pH or a solution of linear polyphosphate. The
decrease in the signal at point (b) is due to the detachment of the silica particles.
Initially the decrease in signal is very rapid but the rate of detachment slows down
as the maximum detached amount is reached. The signal reaches a plateau detached amount before complete detachment of the particles has been obtained.
The attachment of silica particles to a titanium dioxide wafer at pH 4, followed
by their detachment upon introduction of electrolyte solutions at higher pHs, is
shown in Figure 3. The rate of attachment and the maximum attached amount,
max, was the same for each experiment. The linear attachment regime is indicative of a rate limited only by the mass transport of the particles from solution to
Figure 3. Amount of silica particles attached at the titanium dioxide surface as a function of time after the introduction of a particle suspension in 10-3 M KNO3 at pH 4 followed (at t = 1000 s) by introduction of particle-free solutions of 10-3 M KNO3 at higher pHs.
285
the surface [16, 17]. A similar observation was made in other reflectometry studies of nanometre-size particles [8, 18, 19]. No detachment was measured when
electrolyte solutions below pH 6 were introduced into the cell. Upon switching to
electrolyte solutions at pH 6 and higher, detachment of silica particles was detected. Both the rate of detachment and the maximum detached amount increased
with increasing pH. At pH 6, only a small quantity (10%) of silica particles were
detached and the detachment rate was slow compared to initial rate of attachment
at pH 4. At pH 9, half of the pre-attached particles were detached and the initial
rate of detachment was faster than the initial rate of attachment.
In Figure 4 the detachment force measured by AFM between a silica sphere
and titanium dioxide substrate as a function of pH under the same solution conditions as in Figure 3 is presented. A pH dependent adhesion force is evident. Previous studies have shown [3, 20] that the interaction force between silica and titanium dioxide surfaces is well described by the DLVO theory of colloidal stability.
The adhesion results presented here may be rationalised in terms of the combined
effects of an attractive van der Waals force and pH-dependent electrical double
layer interactions. The isoelectric point (iep) of the silica particles and the titanium dioxide wafers have been measured to be at pH ~ 2 and pH ~ 4.5 respectively [3, 20]. At pH values below the iep of the titanium dioxide, in addition to
Figure 4. Force-distance curves for the retraction of a titanium dioxide wafer from a silica sphere (R
= 3.5 m) as a function of pH in 10-3 M KNO3. The curves correspond to, from top to bottom, data
at pH 9, 8, 7, 6, and 5.6.
286
Figure 5. Amount of silica particles attached at the titanium dioxide surface as a function of time after the introduction of a particle suspension in 10-3 M KNO3 at pH 4 followed (at t = 1000 s) by introduction of solutions of linear polyphosphates (10-5 M) at pH 4 in 10-3 M KNO3. The subscript in
Pn refers to the number of phosphorous atoms in the molecule.
the attractive van der Waals force, there will be an attractive electrical double
layer interaction between the oppositely charged surfaces. At pH values above the
iep of titanium dioxide both surfaces will be negatively charged and the electrical
double layer interaction will be repulsive. A tensile force is needed to separate the
surfaces from intimate contact at pH 5.6. This is indicated by the negative value
of the normalised force at the point at which the surfaces jump out of contact. At
this pH, the electrical double layer interaction will be weakly repulsive and the
adhesion is due to the attractive van der Waals forces. At higher pH values the
electrical double layer interactions become increasingly repulsive and the surfaces
are seen to separate from contact even in the presence of a positive applied force.
The separation force curves correlate well with the detachment data seen in Figure
3 and explain why no detachment of silica particles was detected below pH 6 and
also why the detached amount increased with pH.
The attachment of silica particles at pH 4 onto titanium dioxide substrates followed by their detachment upon switching to solutions of linear polyphosphates
(10-5 M) is presented in Figure 5. As discussed in the Introduction, adsorption of
polyphosphate onto titanium dioxide modifies the surface rendering it negatively
charged. Note that whereas changes in pH affected both the silica and titanium
287
Figure 6. Force-distance curves for the retraction of a titanium dioxide wafer from a silica sphere (R
= 3.5 m) at pH 4 in 10-3 M KNO3 in the presence of linear polyphosphate solutions (10-5 M) from
top downwards P<10>, P3, P2 and P1.
288
Figure 7. Amount of detached particles measured by reflectometry against the normalised detachment force measured by AFM under similar solution conditions. The symbols refer to the data
measured as a function of pH () and in the presence of polyphosphate ().
measurements [3] and can be directly related to chemical modification of the titanium dioxide surface due to adsorbed polyphosphate. The increase in the repulsive interaction with n is due to an increased negative surface potential on the titanium dioxide and also the presence of a steric layer, whose thickness, ,
increases with n ( 0.4-0.6 nm for n = 1-3 and 1.6 nm for n = <10>) [3].
A good correlation between the detached amounts of silica particles measured
by reflectometry and the normalised detachment force measured by AFM is seen
in Figure 7. The detached amount of particles is plotted as a percentage of the total attached amount of particles prior to switching to the displacing solution. The
detached amount of particles increases as the normalised detachment force becomes more positive (more repulsive). The detachment of the silica particles is
clearly sensitive to the variation in the electrical double layer interactions brought
about by changes in pH as well as due to adsorbed polyphosphate. The fact that
detachment of silica particles is detected at all in the presence of P1 despite the
force curves showing an adhesional interaction is evidence that the steric layer
due to adsorbed polyphosphate is important in the detachment process. The slight
discrepancy from a linear trend between the detached amount and detachment
force seen for the P<10> data point can be understood in terms of the polydisperse
289
Figure 8. The effect of the sequence of addition of silica particles and P3 solution. Curve I is for the
introduction of silica particles followed by the introduction of P3 (10-5 M) at t = 1500 s. Curve II is
for the introduction of silica particles after pretreatment by flowing P3 solution into the cell for 1000
seconds and rinsing with electrolyte solution for 100 seconds. Curve III is for the introduction of a
suspension containing a mixture of silica particles and P3 (10-5 M). All experiments were conducted
in 10-3 M KNO3 at pH 4.
nature of the P<10> sample which contains a range of linear polyphosphates from n
= 1-19. In the reflectometry measurements, the diffusion rate of the polyphosphate species becomes a critical factor. The diffusion rate of the polyphosphate
species will decrease with n. Thus, although the larger n species will impart a
more repulsive force on the silica-titanium dioxide system, the smaller n species
will diffuse to the surface more quickly. The consequence is a competition between the rate of polyphosphate adsorption and the modification of the resultant
polyphosphate adsorption.
Finally, it is of interest from an application viewpoint as to the most efficient
use of a dispersing agent such as polyphosphate in preventing particle attachment.
In Figure 8 the order of addition of silica particles and P3 solution (10-5 M) to the
cell is investigated. Curve I shows the attachment of particles in the absence of
polyphosphate followed by their detachment upon introduction of a P3 solution
(10-5 M). This sequence of addition is identical to that shown in previous figures.
Curve II shows the attachment of silica particles on a titanium dioxide wafer that
290
The attachment of nanosized silica particles onto titanium dioxide surfaces and
their subsequent detachment due to changes in solution pH or in the presence of
linear polyphosphates was studied using reflectometry. The rate of detachment
and maximum detached amount increased with both pH and n. It was seen that increasing the pH led to repulsive electrical double layer interactions, which were
responsible for the detachment of the particles. In addition to electrical double
layer interactions, adsorption of linear polyphosphate onto titanium dioxide provided a steric component, which facilitated the particle detachment. A good correlation was seen between the amount of detached particles and the AFM measured
detachment force. Furthermore it was shown that a solution containing excess linear polyphosphate could prevent particle attachment all together.
REFERENCES
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AbstractIn Lunar or Martian habitat systems it is impossible to avoid contact with dust. Martian
dust storms, containing submicrometer to 50 m particles, are an environmental threat to solar cells,
spacecraft, and spacesuits. Because of the high electrostatic charge of the dust and its strong adhesion properties, its deposition onto life support equipment could damage or degrade equipment, reducing the mission duration and endangering personnel. The inhalation of electrostatically charged
airborne dust is also a health hazard to astronauts inside the habitat. Ways to minimize or eliminate
the potential hazards caused by charged particles on space life support equipment are therefore
needed. Specifically, the following topics are discussed in this paper: (1) tribocharging of insulating
materials, (2) the design of a sensor to measure particle size and electrostatic charge distributions of
Mars dust on a single particle basis and in real-time, (3) an experimental plan to minimize deposition of charged particles on solar cells and life support equipment, and (4) a novel method for removing deposited dust particles.
Keywords: Mars dust; solar panels; electrostatic; charged particles.
1. INTRODUCTION
294
S. Trigwell et al.
The settling of this dust, especially during a Martian dust storm, can have a
significant effect on the efficiency of solar panels, due to the settled dust impeding the sunlight from the cells. Results from the Materials Adherence Experiment
(MAE) on the Mars Pathfinder mission measured an obscuration of the solar arrays due to dust deposition at a rate of about 0.28% per day [3] with an estimate
that settling dust may cause degradation in performance of a solar panel of between 22% and 89% over the course of two years [4].
Particles may also settle on the solar arrays by a process known as saltation, in
which particles are lifted from the surface by the wind. These have a size range of
1200 m in diameter and an average trajectory of 10 to 20 cm off the surface [5].
Due to the low barometric pressure in the atmosphere, of about 10 mbar, saltation
occurs at wind velocities greater than 15 m/s, which has been recorded at Viking
lander sites [5]. Dust accumulation can also occur due to settling from the atmosphere. However, the real deposition rate will also depend on the geographical location and from season to season.
The removal of dust settled on an array by natural wind forces on Mars has been
ruled unlikely due to the low atmospheric pressure, which will necessitate high wind
velocities of the order of 35 m/s [6]. The measurements of wind velocities at Viking
sites showed that maximum peak wind velocity was only 25 m/s, with winds over 15
m/s occurring only 1% of the time [6]. Therefore, it was concluded that for longduration missions, prevention of deposition or periodic removal of accumulated dust
must be performed to maintain the efficiency of the solar power arrays.
The problem with the design of any mechanism that has to work on a Mars
spacecraft is the hostile environment in which it is expected to perform. The atmosphere of Mars is quite different from that of Earth in that it is composed primarily of carbon dioxide (95.3%) with minor amounts of other gases (nitrogen
2.7%, argon 1.6%, oxygen 0.13%, and trace amounts of water and neon) [2].
Although the water content of the atmosphere is about 1/1000 that of Earth, it can
condense out forming clouds and even ground frost in the winter. The most significant factor is the temperature on the surface. The average recorded temperature on Mars is 63C, with a maximum and minimum of approximately 20C
and 140C, respectively. However, the temperature variation depends on the location. Temperatures of 133C are observed at the winter poles, while temperatures as high as 27C are observed on the dayside during the summer [2].
In this study, the goal was to develop an understanding of the principles of particle charging and to perform theoretical and experimental studies on the adhesion
and removal of charged particles. Specifically, the following are presented: (1) a
study of the effects of tribocharging of insulating materials and how it can play a
role in dust accumulation on solar panels, (2) design of a sensor to measure particle size and charge distributions of Mars dust, (3) development a self-cleaning
panel with electrodynamic screens to repel charged dust from settling on solar
panels, and (4) development of an electrostatic wiper type brush for removing deposited particles utilizing minimum mechanical parts.
295
2. TRIBOCHARGING OF PARTICLES
There exist two primary mechanisms of charge transfer for contact or tribocharging between two dissimilar materials. The first is electron transfer in that a linear
relationship is observed between charge transferred during contact of two dissimilar materials. The second is ion transfer in that real surfaces of metals or insulators are covered by adsorbed layers, which are frequently ionic in nature, and that
charge transfer is by positive or negative ion transfer between the materials. A
third theory is postulated that involves material transfer that carries an associated
charge.
2.1. Electron transfer
In a metal at absolute zero, all the states below the Fermi level in the metal are
filled, and all those above are empty. When two dissimilar metals with different
work functions, A and B, are brought into contact, then electrons will flow from
metal A into metal B decreasing the potential difference until equilibrium of the
Fermi levels is reached. Metal B will now have a net negative charge, and metal
A will have a net positive charge of equal magnitude, where the contact potential
difference, Vc, is given by:
VC = (B - A) /e
(1)
where A and B are the work functions of metals A and B, respectively. However, in metal/metal tribocharging, a back tunneling current exists when the two
materials are separated, resulting in a net zero charge on the two metal surfaces.
In a metal-insulator contact electrification, which is likely to be found on Mars as
the dust comes into contact with spacecraft parts and instrumentation, electrons
may pass from the metal into the empty states in the insulator, or from occupied
insulator states into the metal. Insulators, specifically polymers, have been considered to have a wide forbidden band gap where very few extrinsic states exist.
However, there are likely to be localized surface states, surface impurity states,
bulk defect states, or bulk impurity states [7-9]. These states may emit or accept
electrons in contact electrification. Bulk defect levels and surface states give rise
to an effective work function for an insulator I. Before contact, the surface
states are filled to the equivalent Fermi level, EFP. A simple surface states theory
of contact electrification of insulators is shown in Figure 1.
Surface states on an insulator can be intrinsic or extrinsic. In either case, contact
with a metal will cause empty states below the metal Fermi Level EF to be filled,
and full states above it will be emptied. The number of electrons that transfer to the
insulator will be equal to the number of surface states with energies between I and
EF. However, there is still a considerable uncertainty in this description of insulator
charging [7-9], but most theories assume that the amount of back tunneling of
charge when the materials are separated is negligible, and that the final charge upon
separation is approximately the same as when the surfaces were in contact.
296
S. Trigwell et al.
Figure 1. (a) The insulator is uncharged with states filled below the neutral level. (b) On contact,
empty states below the Fermi level are filled and the insulator charge is now proportional to - I.
(2)
where f is the fraction of area that makes intimate contact, e is the electronic
charge, NS is the surface state density per unit area per unit energy (eV), I is the
insulator surface work function, is the metal surface work function, a is the
thickness of the oxide layer, and is the permittivity of the oxide layer.
In the case of a low surface state density, NS << /fe2a,
= -feNS[I - ]
and in the case of a high surface state density, NS >> /fe2a,
(3)
= -fNS[I - ]/ea
297
(4)
It is the concentration of the surface states, NS that determines whether the electrons occupy bulk states in addition to surface states during the time of contact
[11]. If the charge transfer is completed in a very short time, then only surface
states are involved. If charging is notably dependent upon time, then charge transfer into the bulk is more probable. However, the above equations (3) and (4),
show that contact charging depends upon both surface oxidation and density of
surface states. The physical meaning of the surface work function of an insulator,
I, and the distribution of the surface states within the forbidden gap are still not
clearly established.
This uncertainty in describing insulator charging as it applies to contact with
metals, therefore, leads to uncertainty in the understanding of insulator contact
charging with other insulators. The accepted theory that even insulators higher up
in the triboelectric series will charge positive when contacted with insulators lower
down has led to several published triboelectric series [7, 13, 14]. However, no two
series agree absolutely, with positions on the list of some materials varying widely
between different series, and only a rough agreement as to the relative positions of
several polymers. There is some uniformity for certain selected polymers such as
Nylon and poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (PTFE), which are consistently found on the
opposing ends of the series. Similarly, polyethylene and polystyrene are usually
found in consistent positions among the different series. This uniformity between
different triboelectric series suggests that for insulator/insulator charging, a similar
mechanism as for metal/insulator exists. Therefore, an insulator/insulator contact
charging theory may be constructed. Charge exchange between insulators can be
predicted from the knowledge of the charge acquired by contact with metals, and
so the general conclusion is that insulator-insulator charging is caused by the same
basic mechanism as metal-insulator charging.
2.2. Ion transfer
Real surfaces are always covered with an adsorbed layer. This layer is frequently
ionic in nature or contains a charged double layer. This covering layer can act as a
significant potential barrier through which the electrons must travel. However, ion
exchange between two covered contact layers can take place. In this case, the possible mechanisms for ion transfer include the difference in the affinities of the two
contacting surfaces for specific ions and the abundance of a particular ion on one
surface. In addition to the above, material transfer may also be considered. Fragments of one material may break off one surface and be deposited on the other.
The break point is a few molecules beneath the surface, and mass transfer has
been detected between combinations of certain polymers [1]. However, in this
case, the amount of material transferred exceeded that considered necessary for a
typical measured charge transfer. At this point it is emphasized that all theories of
charge transfer for both metal-insulator and insulator-insulator contacts are still
poorly understood, and a much better understanding of the nature of the surfaces
298
S. Trigwell et al.
of polymers and insulators regarding the electron energy levels and the role of
impurities is needed.
2.3. Experimental
In order to better understand the factors involved in how the surface properties of
materials influence the charge that can be transferred to a material, the surface
work function and the surface chemical composition of various metallic, ceramic,
polymeric, and mineral materials were analyzed. The metal and polymer materials
used were typical of those that are or may be used in a Mars mission. Pulverized
quartz (SiO2), alumina (Al2O3), and pyrite (FeS2) were used as examples of minerals as spectroscopic analysis of Mars dust had shown it to be composed of silicates and iron and magnesium rich sulfates [15]. The samples were analyzed in
the as-received condition with no prior cleaning except for the polymeric materials that were scraped with a clean scalpel blade to expose a fresh surface. The
samples were then analyzed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to determine the surface chemistry, and by ultra-violet photoelectron spectroscopy
(UPS) in air to measure the surface work function.
The XPS data were obtained on a PHI Quantum 2000 ESCA Spectrometer using a focussed monochromatic Al K (h = 1486.7 eV) x-ray source. The x-ray
beam used was a 100 W, 100 m diameter beam and was rastered over a 1.5 mm
by 0.2 mm area. The survey scans were collected using a pass energy of 117.4 eV
producing a Full Width at Half-Maximum (FWHM) of less than 1.6 eV for the
Ag 3d 5/2 peak. The high energy resolution data were collected using a pass energy of 23.5 eV, producing a FWHM of less than 0.75 eV for the Ag 3d 5/2 peak.
The collected data were referenced to an energy scale with binding energies for
Cu 2p 3/2 at 932.67 +/ 0.05 eV, and Au at 84.0 +/ 0.05 eV. On some insulating
samples, positive charging of the surface was observed due to the loss of electrons, causing the peaks to shift during data acquisition For these cases, low energy electrons were used to flood the specimen to neutralize the surface.
The UPS data were obtained on a Riken Keiki AC-2 UV photoelectron spectrometer. The samples and detector were placed in open air. The UV source was a
deuterium (D2) lamp with a spot diameter of 2 mm by 2 mm. For the samples with
a high efficiency of photoemission (the metals and graphite) the light source
power was 49.9 nW, and for those samples that have a low efficiency of photoemission (the polymers, coal, pyrite, and vitrinite) the light source power was increased to 600.2 nW. The resolution of the instrument for precision measurements
is given as 0.02 eV. The samples were analyzed at a temperature of 22C, a relative humidity of 40%, and a pressure of 1 MPa.
2.4. Results
The XPS data are presented in Table 1. The relative atomic concentrations of the
observed elements as reported in Table 1 were obtained by integrating the area
under each peak of interest and normalizing with sensitivity factors supplied by
299
Table 1.
Surface element concentrations (atomic %) of selected materials as measured by XPS
C
Cr
Ag Al
Mg F
Ca
Zn
Cl S
Copper
70
21
316L steel
53
35 0.8
0.9
8.7 1.7
Electro. 316L 69
0.8 0.7
1.1
0.2
0.3 0.3
Silver
40
16
40
2.6
Aluminum
23
53
24
1.2
PTFE
30
0.2
70
Nylon 66
79
13 7.8
0.2
Polystyrene
75
21 2.4 1.2
0.7
Glass
15
55
9.5 17
2.9
0.3
SiO2
9.9 64
0.6 26
0.7
Pyrite
51
27 0.4 0.6
5.4
1.4 14
Graphite
98
2.3
Polycarbonate 84
16
0.1 0.2
0.1 0.1
Acrylic
27
73
Na Si
Cu Fe
1.4 7.4
the instrument manufacturer. The data showed that the metal specimens had particularly high levels of surface contamination (carbon and oxygen) compared to
the ceramic and polymeric specimens. For example, copper showed 70 atomic %
of carbon on the as-received surface, compared to the quartz (SiO2) specimen
with only 9.9 atomic % of carbon. For PTFE, the XPS data showed the surface
composition to be 30 atomic % carbon and 70 atomic % fluorine, which is very
close to the CF2 stoichiometric composition of PTFE. This supports the fact that
polymers do not pick up surface contamination in air as readily as metals. The
graphite specimen shows only a minimal oxygen concentration (2.3 atomic %).
The measured UPS data are shown in Table 2. The value of the work function
for each material is compared with the value reported in the literature.
It was observed in Table 2 that the measured work function for each material
was higher than the reported values. A closer examination showed that the ratio of
the measured-to-reported work function value for copper (1.17:1) was higher than
for the other metals; silver (1.08:1), and aluminum (1.05:1); and these metals
showed less carbon surface contamination by XPS than the copper. In contrast,
the measured-to-reported work function value for PTFE was approximately unity,
and the PTFE showed no discernible carbon contamination by XPS. Clearly, a
correlation between the amount of surface contamination and increase in work
function can be observed.
S. Trigwell et al.
300
Table 2.
Measured work functions by UPS in air compared to work function values reported in the literature.
Measurement errors were +/ 0.002 eV
Material
Aluminum
Silver
Graphite
Copper
Stainless steel
Polystyrene
Pyrite
Acrylic
Polycarbonate
Nylon 66
PTFE
4.53
4.66
5.09
5.11
5.37
5.48
5.50
5.52
5.57
5.61
5.80
4.30
4.30
4.50
4.38
Unknown
4.90
5.40
4.72
4.80
4.30
5.75
301
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 3. High resolution XPS scans of peaks for pyrite (FeS2). a) Carbon C1s peak, b) Sulfur S2p
peak, and c) Iron Fe 2p peak.
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S. Trigwell et al.
The XPS survey spectrum shows the peaks associated with the surface composition. In addition to the peaks for carbon and oxygen, minor amounts of sodium,
nitrogen, and chlorine were also detected. In the high resolution scans, the peak
for each element was curve fitted with the component peaks as reported in numerous reference literature and data bases [16-18]. What can be observed from
the high resolution peaks is that the carbon present on the mineral is predominantly C-C or C-H bonding indicating carbonaceous contamination, with minor
amounts of carbon-oxygen species. A small amount of organic carbon-sulfur was
also detected. However, the sulfur peak shows the sulfur to be mainly in the sulfate form with very little, if any, iron sulfide present. This is confirmed in the iron
peaks where the iron is present predominantly as iron sulfate, and in this case no
iron sulfide is detected. The data show that for the case of pyrite what is actually
chemically present on the surface is very different from the bulk composition,
which can affect the value of the work function. This is important in understanding how materials charge relative to each other in the triboelectric series. However, these data were taken in an Earth environment, and so it is of great interest
to determine what the surface composition of minerals would be in a Martian environment.
3. DESIGN OF SENSOR
There are a number of instruments that can be used to characterize the aerodynamic size distribution of particles. Instruments such as a Faraday cup are available to estimate the net average electrostatic charge on particles samples. However, the choice of instruments for real-time simultaneous measurements of both
aerodynamic diameter and electrostatic charge distributions of particles on a single particle basis is limited. The Electrical Single Particle Aerodynamic Relaxation Time (E-SPART) analyzer is used extensively for simultaneous characterization of particle size distribution (PSD) and electrostatic charge distribution [19].
The analyzer can be used in the diameter range from 0.5 to 50 m and charges in
the range from 0 to their saturation charge limit.
The E-SPART analyzer, as shown in Figure 4, uses an AC electric drive to oscillate the particles in air. The resultant oscillatory motion of the particle lags behind the external AC field. The phase lag () relates to the aerodynamic diameter
of the particle, and the amplitude of the particle trajectory determines the particle
charge and polarity, as shown in Figure 5(a). Figure 5(b) shows a still from a
video image taken of charged particle tracks in the chamber. The particle tracks
are analyzed by Laser Doppler Velocimetry. The details of the operation of the
instrument are available [20-23].
Figures 6(a) and (b) show typical particle size and charge distribution, respectively, for a positive copier toner with a mean particle size of 8 m. Although the
data show the overall particle count, individual particle data can be extracted.
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(a)
(b)
Figure 5. (a) Principle of operation of E-SPART, and (b) video image of particle tracks. The ESPART analyzer uses an AC electric drive to oscillate the charged particles.
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(a)
(b)
Figure 6. (a) Particle size distribution, and (b) charge distribution for a positive toner.
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Dust settling out of the atmosphere onto any horizontal surface is a potential problem in the obscuration of solar arrays. A method is required to periodically remove the dust, or prevent the dust from settling in the first place. Ideally, a
method that requires no moving parts and is robust in operation is most desirable,
as shown in Figure 7.
The static charges on the particles provide an opportunity to prevent dust deposition by using an AC voltage driven electrode screen. This type of screen creates a
repelling force to the charged particles regardless of their polarity. The device consists of an electrode screen that contains a number of parallel electrodes placed
equidistant from each other, embedded in a insulating coating as shown in Figure 7.
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307
Figure 8. Property change versus temperature for martensitic transformation in NiTi alloy.
lower transformation temperatures (< 50C) are available. Data from the Pathfinder mission showed a high level of consistency in the surface temperature
range at the Ares Vallis landing site [25], as shown in Figure 9. From these data, a
NiTi alloy with a transformation temperature of approximately 50C (223K)
would suffice.
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(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 10. (a) NiTi spring in tension. (b) Upon heating through the transformation temperature, and
(c) after heating.
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The tribocharging of Mars dust can contribute to strong adhesion of dust particles to
solar panels, spacecraft, and spacesuits. Both the polarity of the charged dust particles as well as the amount of charge depend upon the surface composition of the
particles and the contacting materials. It has been shown that in an ambient Earth
environment, surface contamination and oxidation produce significant changes to
the surface composition and hence the work function of a variety of materials.
An instrument has been developed that can simultaneously measure both size
and charge distributions on an individual particle basis. A smaller, more robust
version of which is proposed to measure size and charge distributions of Mars
dust in situ.
An electrodynamic screen shows promise for preventing deposition of charged
dust particles, and an electrostatic brush for dust removal has been developed using NiTi shape memory alloy. The electrodynamic screen and cleaning device
proposed have no mechanical parts so the probability of failure is minimized.
7. CONTINUING AND FUTURE WORK
In order to understand the tribocharging properties of Mars dust, an environmental chamber has been constructed that can effectively control the relative humidity from 0 to 98% with a +/ 1% stability. The atmospheric composition
within the chamber can simulate that on Mars (predominantly CO2). The chamber
can be mounted on top of an E-SPART analyzer. The charging properties of a
Mars dust simulant, obtained from NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC Mars-1),
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will be investigated against stainless steel and PTFE to determine the charging
characteristics in a Martian type environment. Simultaneously, an Ultra-violet
Photoelectron Spectrometer is being developed to allow work function measurements to be taken as a function of relative humidity within the chamber.
A compact E-SPART analyzer that is robust enough for space flight is also being developed, as well as the development of the electrodynamic screen is being
continued.
REFERENCES
1. G.A. Landis, Paper presented at the Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference,
Honolulu, HI, July 27August 1, 1997.
2. Mars News, www.marsnews.com/planetology, November 1999.
3. G.A. Landis and P.P. Jenkins, Proc. 26th IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference, 865-869
(1997).
4. G.A. Landis, Acta Astronautica, 38, 885-891 (1996).
5. R. Greeley, N. Lancaster, S. Lee and P. Thomas, Mars, pp. 835-933, University of Arizona
Press, Tuscon, AZ (1992).
6. J.R. Gaier, M.E. Perez-Davis and M. Marabito, Paper presented at the 16th AIAA/NASA/
ASTM/IES Space Simulation Conference, Albuquerque, NM, November 58, 1990.
7. J. Cross, Electrostatics: Principles, Problems and Applications, Adam Hilger, Bristol, England
(1987).
8. Y. Murata, Jap. J. App. Phys., 18, 1-8 (1979).
9. J. Lowell and A.C. Rose-Innes, Adv. Phys., 29, 947-1023 (1980).
10. C.B. Duke and T.J. Fabish, Phys. Rev. Lett., 37, 1075-1078 (1976).
11. D.A. Hays, Proc. International Conf. on Modern Electrostatics, Ruinian Li (Ed.), Beijing, China,
pp. 327-330, International Academic Publishers, New York (1988).
12. H. Bauser, Dechema Monographs, 72, 11-28 (1974).
13. W.R. Harper, Contact and Frictional Electrification, Laplacian Press, Morgan Hill, CA (1998).
14. D.M. Taylor and P.E. Secker, Industrial Electrostatics: Fundamentals and Measurements, John
Wiley & Sons, New York (1994).
15. C.D. Cooper and J.F. Mustard, Paper #6164 presented at The Fifth International Mars Science
Conference, Pasadena, CA (1999).
16. Ph. De Donato, C. Mustin, R. Benoit and R. Erre, Appl. Surface Sci., 68, 81-93 (1993).
17. C.D. Wagner, W.M. Riggs, L.E. Davis and J.F. Moulder, Handbook of X-Ray Photoelectron
Spectroscopy, Perkin-Elmer Corp., Eden Prairie, MN (1983).
18. NIST XPS Database, http://srdata.nist.gov/xps/Bind_e_spec_query.asp
19. M.K. Mazumder and R.E. Ware, US Patent #4633714 (1987).
20. P.A. Baron, M.K. Mazumder and Y.S. Cheng, in: Aerosol Measurements: Principles, P. Baron
and K. Willeke (Eds.), Chap. 17, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York (1992).
21. M.K. Mazumder, S. Banerjee, R.E. Ware, C. Mu, N. Kay and C.C. Huang, IEEE Trans. Ind.
Applications, 30, 365-369 (1994).
22. M.K. Mazumder, S. Banerjee and C. Mu, in: Dispersion and Aggregation, B.M. Moudgil and P.
Somasundaran (Eds.), Engineering Foundation, New York (1994).
23. M.K. Mazumder, R.E. Ware, J.D. Wilson, R.G. Renniniger, F.C. Hiller, P.C. McLeod, R.W.
Raible and M.K. Testerman, J. Aerosol Sci., 10, 561-569 (1979).
24. C.R. Wayman, MRS Bull., 49-56, April 1993.
25. Mars Pathfinder website: http://www.mars.jpl.nasa.gov (1997).
26. S. Trigwell, R.D. Hayden, K.F. Nelson and G. Selvaduray, Surface Interface Anal., 26, 483-489
(1998).
AbstractWe report on experiments on the underlying physical mechanisms in the Dry- (DLC)
and Steam Laser Cleaning (SLC) processes. Using a frequency doubled, Q-switched Nd:YAG laser
(FWHM=8 ns) we removed polystyrene (PS) particles with diameters in the range of 110 nm to
2000 nm from industrial silicon wafers by the DLC process. The experiments have been carried out
both in ambient conditions as well as in high vacuum (106 mbar) and the cleaned areas have been
characterized by atomic force microscopy for damage inspection. In DLC we have determined the
cleaning laser fluence thresholds for a large interval of particle sizes. Additionally we could show that
particle removal was due to a combination of at least three effects: substrate thermal expansion, local
substrate ablation as a consequence of field enhancement at the particle, and explosive evaporation
of moisture adsorbed from the air. Which effect dominates the process depends on the boundary
conditions. For our laser parameters no damage-free DLC was possible, i.e. whenever a particle was
removed by DLC we damaged the substrate by local field enhancement. In our SLC experiments
we determined the amount of superheating of a liquid layer adjacent to surfaces with controlled
roughness. On silicon wafers the water layer could be superheated to 250 C prior to the onset of laser
induced bubble nucleation. The heat transfer from the silicon substrate into the liquid was found to be
limited by a thermal boundary resistance which can be characterized by a heat transfer coefficient of
3 107 W/(m2 K). Based on the knowledge about the particle removal mechanisms and the determined
cleaning efficiency we discuss the advantages and disadvantages of DLC and SLC as possible future
industrial surface cleaning procedures.
Keywords: Particle removal; laser cleaning; field enhancement; cleaning mechanisms.
1. INTRODUCTION
The removal of particle contamination from surfaces is one of the crucial prerequisites for a further increase in the integration density of ICs and for the progress in
nanotechnology. At all stages of the production of ICs, e.g., from the bare Si wafer
to the patterned chip, particles even smaller than 100 nm in size can cause a damage
to the produced structure and hence be responsible for the failure of the final device.
In the late 1980s, the experts in the field of cleaning technology predicted that
traditional cleaning methods such as ultrasonics and wet techniques would reach
1 To whom all correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +49-7531-882627, Fax: +49-7531-
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their limit of capability [1, 2]. In addition, these traditional techniques were and
still are harmful to the environment as they consume large quantities of aggressive
chemicals and water. Although the traditional methods have been continuously
improved [3], still particle contamination causes considerable production losses
[4], and with further shrinking of line widths [5] there is a definite need to replace
traditional methods by new cleaning technologies.
One of these new approaches is called laser cleaning. In Dry Laser Cleaning
(DLC) [6 8] the surface to be cleaned is irradiated by a short laser pulse. In Steam
Laser Cleaning (SLC) [6, 7, 9, 10] prior to the application of the laser pulse a liquid,
e.g. a water-alcohol mixture, is condensed onto the surface.
After the first attempts of implementing laser cleaning in prototype cleaning
tools [11], this strategy was not pursued any further as there were too many open
questions related to the underlying physics. In the following years several research
laboratories around the world [12 20] started to investigate the physical processes
involved both in SLC and DLC, starting from the simple scenarios suggested by
the authors of the first publications on the subject. These scenarios also formed the
basis for certain models to describe laser cleaning and to interpret the experimental
results obtained [6, 7, 10, 18, 19, 21 33]. However, recent experiments [31, 33
41] show that both the DLC and SLC scenarios that have been taken as common
sense so far do not incorporate all the important cleaning mechanisms and hence
are oversimplified.
In this article we will first summarize our knowledge on the cleaning processes
involved in laser cleaning and their interplay, and then present the results of
systematic measurements of cleaning efficiencies in both DLC and SLC for particle
sizes from 110 nm up to 2000 nm. The interpretation of these results will clearly
point out the importance of the cleaning mechanisms neglected in the original SLC
and DLC scenarios. Against this background we will discuss briefly the state of
theoretical modeling of laser cleaning. Based on the previous sections we will finish
the article with a statement of the prospects and problems of laser cleaning as an
industrial cleaning process from todays state of knowledge.
2. EXPERIMENTAL ASPECTS
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Figure 1. Typical sample as used in the laser cleaning experiments imaged in a scanning electron
microscope. The displayed area is 4.8 m 4.8 m and the particle size is 110 nm.
removal efficiencies for various, well-defined sizes. Their spherical shape additionally facilitates a comparison with theoretical models, as adhesion forces of particles
are mostly calculated for the geometry of a sphere on a flat substrate. Some experiments were also performed using irregularly shaped Al2 O3 particles (Summit
Chemicals Europe GmbH, Dsseldorf, Germany) as contaminants.
As substrate we used industrial silicon (100) wafers (Wacker Siltronic, Burghausen, Germany) that were cleaned in isopropyl alcohol (IPA) in an ultrasonic bath
before applying the contaminants.
The particles were deposited on the silicon substrate by a spin coating process,
described in detail in [17, 41]. We were able to prepare samples with more than
95% of isolated spheres at particle densities above 1000 per cm2 . A typical example
can be seen in Fig. 1 where 110 nm sized PS particles were deposited onto a
Si wafer. Care was taken to prevent particle agglomeration, which is important
for quantitative experiments, as agglomerates exhibit a different cleaning behaviour
compared to single particles [15, 35].
2.2. Laser sources
For all experiments we used a frequency doubled, Q-switched Nd:YAG-laser ( =
532 nm, FWHM = 8 ns).
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Figure 3. Optical determination of laser induced bubble nucleation (for details see text).
Already the authors of the first publications on laser cleaning [6, 7, 9, 10] suggested
physical mechanisms to describe the particle removal process. In DLC the removal
process was ascribed to the thermal expansion of the substrate due to the heating
with the laser pulse. SLC was explained as a consequence of the explosive
evaporation of the applied liquid. However, recent research [40, 44, 45] in the field
of laser cleaning has shown that several other mechanisms are of importance for
the process. In the following sections we will describe the cleaning mechanisms
experimentally verified so far.
3.1. Thermal substrate expansion
Most authors explain the particle removal process in DLC in the following way:
during the laser pulse its energy is absorbed in the substrate. Due to the subsequent
thermal expansion the surface with the adhering particle is accelerated and the
particle gains kinetic energy. Depending on their elastic properties some energy
is also stored in elastic deformation of both particle and surface. At the end of the
pulse the expansion of the surface stops and the particle leaves the surface due to its
inertia.
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From this it is clear that a measurement of the dynamics of the substrate expansion
upon illumination with a laser pulse provides insight into this cleaning mechanism.
Detailed discussions of our experiments can be found in [41, 43], therefore we will
only highlight the results here.
Using an interferometric setup as described in Section 2 we measured the
expansion of a silicon substrate after illumination with a Nd:YAG laser pulse
(FWHM = 10-20 ns, =532 nm) with ns time resolution. Typical values of this
displacement were a few nm. By numerical derivation of the averaged displacement
as a function of time of 600 individual experiments we obtained the deceleration of
the substrate surface. This deceleration of the surface, rather than its acceleration as
discussed by most authors in the description of DLC, is the relevant parameter for
the particle removal [45]. For typical laser cleaning fluences of a few 100 mJ/cm2
the decelerations are in the order of about 107 m/s2 , just the order of magnitude that
is thought to be necessary for removal of such small particles [7].
The experimental values are in good agreement with a simple theoretical description of the thermal expansion of the substrate. Taking into account only the 1D
heat equation2 and denoting by R the reflectivity, by the linear thermal expansion
coefficient, by CP the specific heat of the substrate, by its density, by f (t) the
time dependent normalized intensity of the laser, and by F its fluence the surface
displacement is given by
(1 R)F
d(t) =
CP
f (t ) dt
(2)
as the Grneisen parameter /( CP ) is almost temperature independent. Expression (2) can be derived for a known pulse shape f (t), and for a gaussian pulse with
FWHM it yields a maximum deceleration of
amax = 1.71 106 g
ns2
F
2 2
mJ/cm
(3)
detected by the interferometer was at least ten times smaller than the illuminated spot and was located
in its center. Thus lateral thermal gradients are neglected at this spot.
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Figure 4. Intensity (E 2 ) of the electromagnetic field around a PS particle (diameter 1700 nm,
refractive index 1.59) in vacuum when illuminated by a laser at =800 nm. The laser enters from
the left, and the light is polarized in the image plane. At the light averted side (i.e., not directly
illuminated by the laser) of the particle the intensity is enhanced by a factor of about 30.
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Figure 5. Surface damage caused by local melting and ablation of the substrate. The melting was
induced by the enhancement of laser intensity in the near field of the particles at the surface. Shown
are AFM images in top view (left) and a 3D illustration (right) of the same site.
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Typically, these studies were carried out on rather rough surfaces such as metal
films. Here quite moderate superheatings of about 20 K were found to be
sufficient for the nucleation of laser induced bubbles, a value much lower than the
theoretically predicted one of 200 K for water [57]. This has been attributed to the
surface roughness of these substrates. But to our knowledge there are no systematic
studies that confirm this roughness-dependency of the threshold. Yet this is the
crucial point in the transfer of the obtained results from the water/metal film system
to the water/silicon wafer system under consideration in laser cleaning studies. With
respect to this several open questions arise: 1) Supposing rough metal films provide
nucleation sites for gas bubbles and cause only moderate superheatings of the liquid,
what will in contrast be the degree of superheating on smooth substrates like silicon
wafers? 2) Is it justified to determine the temperature of the superheated liquid
by measuring [58] or computing [28] the temperature of the silicon substrate and
simply assuming a perfect heat transfer from the substrate into the liquid?
3.3.3.1. Bubble nucleation thresholds. We, therefore, studied [40, 42] the nucleation of bubbles at a superheated liquid/solid interface under controlled surface
roughness. When the incident laser fluence reached a well defined threshold, scattered light was observed. This indicates a sharp nucleation threshold. The threshold decreases with increasing starting temperature T0 of the water as less energy
is needed to reach the nucleation temperature. Figure 6 shows these temperature
dependent thresholds for the examined systems. The lines are linear extrapolations
to vanishing fluence and yield the nucleation temperature by their intersection with
Figure 6. Comparison of the bubble nucleation thresholds and extrapolated superheating limits of
water on substrates of different roughnesses.
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Q
(4)
=
AT
the
quantifies this thermal boundary resistance as functions of the heat flow Q,
boundary area A and the temperature jump T . Clearly, in laser cleaning the
thermal resistance can limit the heat flow from the substrate into the liquid and thus
lower the liquid temperature considerably. None of the published computations of
temperature profiles in laser cleaning incorporates this fact. Probably one reason is
that although the phenomenon is well investigated for low temperatures below 50 K
(Kapitza resistance, see [59]) and for technical applications at room temperature,
long time scales (several seconds) and macroscopic dimensions (Nusselt-number,
see [60]), there are no data at ns time scales and nm length scales, as needed for the
interpretation of laser cleaning data.
The data obtained in the bubble nucleation experiments allow us now for the first
time to give the heat transfer coefficient for these scales. Figure 7 shows computed
maximum temperatures of the water layer adjacent to the silicon surface. Our
computations are based on the 1D heat equation implemented in a finite element
algorithm taking into account different values for the heat transfer coefficient
between silicon and water. The calculations have been repeated for different starting
temperatures of the water and the corresponding experimentally determined laser
threshold fluence for bubble nucleation was applied.
At this threshold fluence the water layer must reach a specific temperature which
is the same for all starting temperatures. If the assumed value of is too small
or too large, however, the water layer will reach maximum temperatures that are
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Figure 7. Computed maximum temperatures in water on a silicon surface as function of the heat
transfer coefficient (HTC) H2 O for different starting temperatures T0 . As laser fluence we used the
experimentally determined threshold fluence for bubble nucleation.
different for each starting temperature. It can be seen from these computations that
for all starting temperatures of the water the graphs of the calculated maximum
temperatures as a function of the assumed heat transfer coefficient intersect at
one single point. This point is given by a value of H2 O = 3 107 W/(m2 K)
and a maximum water temperature of 250 C just as determined experimentally.
Therefore, this -value represents the heat transfer coefficient in the studied system.
Interestingly, the computations exclude values of < 3 106 W/(m2 K), as in this
case the equilibrium boiling temperature of 100 C is not reached for all starting
temperatures.
3.4. Further mechanisms
The mechanisms described above are those that could be identified by our experiments (see Sec. 4) so far. However, this does not mean that they are the only ones
involved in laser cleaning! There are at least three more mechanisms that may play
a role in the process and have been suggested: particle vibrations/elastic deformations, light pressure, and surface acoustic waves. In a very recent publication [45]
Arnold et al. suggested that elastic deformation of the particles might lead to particle removal if the particles were stimulated in resonance with their eigenfrequency.
Vereecke et al. [61] suggested that at grazing incidence of the laser pulse the light
pressure might roll the particles over the surface. Also surface acoustic waves may
facilitate DLC [62]. Although in our opinion so far there is no conclusive experimental evidence for those mechanisms, they might well be found in laser cleaning
as well as others unknown today.
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4. EFFICIENCY MEASUREMENTS
Figure 8. Cleaning efficiency for various colloidal particles in SLC with =532 nm, FWHM=7 ns.
The cleaning threshold is found to be the same for all particles.
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observed a very steep increase in the cleaning efficiency, and values above 90%
after 20 cleaning steps (laser pulse plus steam jet) are reached well below the
melting threshold of a bare silicon substrate, even for particles as small as 60 nm.
The threshold cleaning fluence of 110 mJ/cm2 found in SLC is larger than the
threshold fluence of 80 mJ/cm2 determined for bubble nucleation in bulk water
(see. Sec. 3.3). This needs further experimental investigation, however there are
two possible explanations. First, the bubble nucleation process may depend on the
film thickness, and hence there would be differences in the process dynamics when
comparing bulk liquid to liquid films. Second, it is not clear so far whether the mere
nucleation of bubbles is sufficient for an efficient cleaning or whether more laser
fluence is needed to create larger or faster growing bubbles.
4.2. Dry laser cleaning in ambient conditions
A first step in the investigation of DLC is the study of particle removal in ambient
conditions (relative humidity 30-40%) with a ns Nd:YAG-laser. This environment
represents the conditions that may be found in a possible future application of the
process. A flow of pressurized, filtered air was used to blow away the removed
particles and to prevent their redeposition.
In Figure 9 the thresholds in applied laser fluence for the removal of PS particles
are plotted as a function of the particle size.
First we would like to draw the readers attention to two very important thresholds
in the laser cleaning process. One of them is the threshold for the onset of melting
of the bare substrate. As DLC is aimed for an industrial application, any change
Figure 9. Thresholds in the applied laser fluence for particle removal in DLC in ambient air. Particles
smaller in diameter than 110 nm could not be removed.
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of the structure of the silicon wafer, i.e. the silicon substrate and the native oxide
layer of specified thickness, as induced by melting has to be strictly avoided. From
experiments [63] this melting threshold is known to be about 280 mJ/cm2 for our
laser parameters, which therefore represents the upper limit of applicable laser
fluence. The second threshold, also indicated in Figure 9, is the cleaning threshold
of the SLC process as discussed in Section 4.1.
In order to obtain information on the dependence of the cleaning threshold on
the particle size we investigated many different particle diameters in the range of
110-2000 nm. It turned out that only by the investigation of this large variety of
particle sizes some main characteristics of the dependence of the cleaning threshold
on the particle diameter could be revealed. At first sight the shape of the curve
roughly follows a 1/rk -trend, r denoting the particle radius and 1< k <2. This
monotonic behavior was predicted by the first DLC models, and in fact already the
first publications on DLC reported that smaller particles were harder to remove than
larger ones due to the nature of the adhesion forces [6 8].
Taking a closer look, however, one discovers an oscillating behavior of the threshold fluences which we attribute to optical resonances as discussed in Section 3.2.3.
This is illustrated in the graph by the line connecting the data points. However, it
should be pointed out that this line is just a guide to the eye and does not describe
the field enhancement efficiency as function of the particle diameter. The number
of particle sizes used in our experiments is not sufficient to resolve this dependency.
In DLC using sub-ns pulses the removal of a particle is always accompanied by
the formation of a hole [38], i.e. the hole formation threshold is identical with
cleaning threshold. From this, one can conclude that here the dominant cleaning
mechanism is local substrate ablation. Against the background of field enhancement
as the origin of surface damage, it is a natural consequence also for nanosecond laser
pulses to determine not only the cleaning threshold fluences in DLC, but also the
local melting/ablation thresholds. The latter ones, instead of the melting threshold
of the bare silicon surface, represent the true upper limit for the applicable laser
fluence and are by their nature particle dependent. For its determination we made
use of the Gaussian spatial beam profile of our cleaning laser. Due to this profile a
spatial variation of the position in the cleaned area corresponds to a variation in the
locally applied laser fluence. In a post process analysis we investigated the cleaned
areas of our samples with an atomic force microscope (AFM, Digital Instruments).
By imaging damage sites such as displayed in Figure 5 at different locations in
the cleaned areas and especially at their borders, corresponding to the cleaning
threshold fluence, we determined the damage threshold for each particle size. For
all particles investigated the cleaning threshold was identical with the damage
threshold. Damage-free DLC was not possible by applying the laser parameters
we used!
The AFM images of damage sites contain even more information on the particle
removal mechanism as they reveal quantitative topographical information. All the
investigated damage sites showed the same features: a trench surrounding a
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Figure 10. Trench depth at the damage sites as a function of the particle size when the particles were
removed in DLC applying the threshold cleaning fluence. For particles larger than 250 nm in diameter
the depth increases strongly with the particle size, for smaller particles it remains almost constant.
central hillock. Generally speaking, at high laser fluences the hillock was lower
and the trench deeper, whereas for low laser fluences a hillock was detectable but
the trench almost disappeared. In Figure 10 we plotted for the investigated particles
the mean trench depths for damages that occurred at the cleaning/damage threshold
in a double logarithmic graph.
This plot clearly shows two regimes: for particles smaller than about 250 nm in
diameter the depth remains almost constant at about 1 nm. For larger particles we
found a strong increase in the trench depth and the volume of the hillock was smaller
than that of the trench, i.e., ablation of substrate material had taken place.
From this observation we conclude that even for DLC using ns pulses local
ablation of the substrate plays a role as a cleaning mechanism for large particles
where the field enhancement is high and thus provides fluences high enough for
ablation. For smaller particles field enhancement probably causes local melting, but
no ablation at the threshold cleaning fluence.
4.3. Dry laser cleaning in high vacuum
As already discussed in Section 3 there exists experimental evidence that dry laser
cleaning in ambient air is facilitated by adsorbed humidity from the surrounding
atmosphere. In order to minimize this effect and hence to exclude explosive
evaporation of adsorbed moisture as a cleaning mechanism, we repeated the
experiments reported above in high vacuum (HV, 106 mbar). The samples were
allowed to degas approximately for 10 hours at HV before cleaning.
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Figure 11. Comparison of the cleaning thresholds in ambient air and high vacuum. In vacuum the
thresholds are distinctly higher.
The results and the comparison with the ambient values are presented in Figure 11.
In vacuum the laser fluences necessary for particle removal are higher for particles
smaller than about 800 nm in diameter. For larger particles no difference in the
threshold was detected between ambient conditions and HV.
We attribute this to the predominance of different cleaning mechanisms for different particle sizes. Cleaning in ambient conditions is facilitated by explosive evaporation of adsorbed moisture from the air. When exposed to vacuum for several hours
the amount of moisture at the particle-surface contact is significantly decreased, the
contribution of explosive evaporation to the cleaning forces decreases, and consequently the cleaning threshold increases. This argument should also be valid for
particles larger than 800 nm in diameter. However, as discussed above, for large
particles local ablation induced by field enhancement appears to strongly contribute
to the cleaning process. And, of course, this is the case as well in ambient air as in
vacuum and hence no large difference in the cleaning thresholds for the two different environments is detected.
Against the backdrop of the results presented above we now discuss the prospects
as well as the problems of using laser cleaning as an industrial cleaning technique.
In this context we would like to highlight three main aspects: the systematic
determination of cleaning thresholds, the role of different cleaning mechanisms,
and the consequences for the applicability of theoretical models proposed so far.
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whenever a particle was removed in DLC. This means that damage-free DLC was
impossible with our laser parameters. In fact, the local substrate ablation combined
with a momentum transfer to the particles was found to be the dominating cleaning
mechanism with large size parameters and sub-nanosecond laser cleaning [40].
A second consequence of field enhancement also argues against a technological
application of DLC. The DLC results obtained both in ambient conditions and in
HV confirm a general trend already obtained by other authors [6, 7, 19, 31, 33, 64]
and predicted by their models: cleaning thresholds for smaller particles tend to
be higher than for larger ones. Yet this is not a strict rule. In contrast to the
above cited experiments we used a large variety of particle diameters ranging from
110 nm to 4100 nm and could show that the dependence of the cleaning threshold
as a function of the particle diameter was non-monotonous as a consequence of the
optical resonances in the near field of the particles. This non-monotonous behaviour
in DLC makes it difficult to apply the correct cleaning fluence for the removal of a
specific particle size, unlike the universal threshold in SLC.
It should be pointed out that field enhancement is an intrinsic physical effect that
cannot be avoided in laser cleaning. However, it can be minimized by choosing
suitable wavelengths to reduce the size parameter or by carrying it out in an
environment with a refractive index close to that of the particles.
5.3. Models
Models which describe the laser cleaning process accurately would be an important
tool in the real world application, as they could predict the optimum cleaning
conditions for various substrates, particles, lasers and cleaning environments.
However, such models must inevitably incorporate all the knowledge gained
regarding the physical processes behind both SLC and DLC.
So far in DLC the particle removal has always been solely ascribed to the
thermal expansion of the substrate. Field enhancement was taken into account
only as increased laser fluence [19, 34], but not as the origin of an additional
cleaning mechanism via local ablation. The third cleaning mechanism, evaporation
of adsorbed ambient moisture, is not incorporated into any model published so
far. The latter is even more important, as most of the experiments carried out
to compare with laser cleaning models were performed in ambient conditions
[22, 24, 26 28, 30, 64]. Only in [19] the experiments were conducted in vacuum,
and Vereecke et al. [31] varied the relative humidity and reported a higher cleaning
efficiency at increased humidity levels. In addition to this, only recent models
[44, 45] consider the elastic properties of the substrate/particle system which might
have a great influence on the cleaning process as well.
Future models should incorporate at least these three cleaning mechanisms and
treat DLC as an interplay of all of them. Depending on the process parameters
(laser wavelength, pulse duration, optical constants of the materials, etc.) their
overall contribution to the cleaning will vary. It should also be pointed out that
332
M. Mosbacher et al.
the cleaning mechanisms are not independent of each other, e.g. adsorbed moisture
may influence the field enhancement pattern.
Compared to DLC the state of modeling the SLC process is at a rather initial
stage. Two groups [28, 65] have suggested models to describe it. Yet these models
rely on far-reaching assumptions in the description of the processes of laser induced
bubble nucleation and growth as well as on the assumption of the temperature of the
superheated water layer as growth medium. As our experiments on the last aspect
show, it is impossible to transfer the results gained on rough metal films [50, 55, 56]
to the water film/silicon system. Furthermore, it is not clear neither qualitatively nor
quantitatively how the explosive evaporation differs between bulk water (as in our
investigations) and water films (as in SLC) or even small water menisci as they can
be found in ambient environment DLC. Therefore, a good deal of future research
on the dynamics of laser induced bubble nucleation and the explosive evaporation
in all these systems is necessary to accurately describe SLC.
6. SUMMARY
In this paper we have described our state of knowledge on the cleaning mechanisms
responsible for particle removal in laser cleaning. Besides the well-known thermal
expansion of the substrate and the explosive evaporation of a water film we
identified local substrate ablation as another cleaning mechanism. Additionally
we have shown the significant impact of the explosive evaporation of atmospheric
moisture adsorbed at the particles for DLC.
Local substrate ablation caused by field enhancement in the particles near field
not only causes particle removal in DLC, but inevitably also causes substrate
damage. Furthermore a damage-free DLC process was not possible with the laser
parameters we used in our experiments.
Steam laser cleaning, on the contrary, proved to be superior to the DLC process
due to its higher efficiency, universal cleaning threshold and its capability to remove
much smaller particles.
These findings argue for the application of SLC in wafer cleaning and underline
the need for further research on the physics of both DLC and SLC as only this
knowledge will ensure a successful implementation of the technique in future
industrial applications.
Acknowledgements
We thank Prof. B. Lukyanchuk (DSI, Singapore) and Dr. Nikita Arnold (JohannesKepler-University, Linz, Austria) for useful discussions. The authors would also
like to thank Dr. Bernd-Uwe Runge, Christof Bartels, Johannes Graf, Florian Lang,
and Michael Olapinski (all of University of Konstanz) for constructive discussions
of the findings of our experiments. Financial support by the EU TMR project Laser
Cleaning (No. ERBFMRXCT98 0188) and the Konstanz Center for Modern
333
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AbstractA new photonic cleaning process that minimizes exposure of the substrate is introduced.
The concepts of the Resonant Laser Detachment (RLD) are described. The RLD process uses a laser
light source with intensity modulation to remove sub-micrometer contaminant particles from a substrate. Unlike other laser removal methods, which eject the particle from the surface with a single
high-intensity laser pulse, RLD uses a continuous series of low-intensity laser pulses. The timing
and shape of these laser pulses are tuned to exploit the kinematic properties of the particle-surface
system and laser-material interactions. Theoretical analysis suggests a correlation between system
resonant frequency and the particle separation mechanism. This technique results in an efficient particle removal mechanism that minimizes stress and heat loading to the underlying substrate.
Keywords: Particle detachment; laser cleaning; resonance.
1. INTRODUCTION
The trends in the manufacturing of Integrated Circuits (ICs) and Flat Panel Displays (FPDs) and in other related manufacturing industries and the requirements
for environmentally safe cleaning technologies are driving the need to investigate
advanced dry photonic based cleaning methods.
Contamination remaining on the substrate after a processing step may create
device defects, rendering final end products useless. It is recognized that submicrometer particles can cause major defects that can result in defective components and lower production yield. With the trend towards reduced feature size in
ICs, contamination will have an even greater impact on manufacturing yield. The
need is to increase yield, thus lowering production cost and increasing manufacturing competitiveness.
This investigation focuses on the use of a light based cleaning technology for
the purpose of developing a commercially viable critical cleaning process.
336
Strong adhesion forces exist between particles and surfaces due to van der Waals,
electrostatic, and capillary attraction mechanisms. Bowling [1] has discussed
these forces in detail, while a concise summary can be found in Tam et al. [2].
van der Waals forces are comprised of London-dispersion force, dipole-dipole
and dipole-induced dipole interactions. Capillary forces arise when atmospheric
moisture condenses in the gap between a particle and a substrate, and are a function of particle radius and liquid surface tension. Coulomb electrostatic forces
originate from the electrostatic double-layer formed between the particle and the
substrate.
Tam et al. [2] note that as particle size decreases, the relative adhesion force
increases dramatically. Particle mass (m) decreases as the cube of the diameter,
while adhesion forces (F) decrease directly with diameter; hence, the acceleration
(a=F/m) required to detach a particle from a surface scales inversely with the
square of the diameter. As will be shown later, adhesion forces on a micrometersize particle greatly exceed gravitational forces.
As noted by Bowling [1], the contact area of a particle in contact with a surface
is quite small, resulting in tremendous pressures at the particle-substrate contact
point. For a typical 1-m particle, force per unit area is estimated to be 10.9 N/m2
which is enough to deform the particle and increase the particle to surface contact
area. Since the force of adhesion depends on the contact area, this effect will further strengthen the binding of the particle to the surface.
2.1. van der Waals forces
For particles in the semiconductor-processing environment, van der Waals forces
predominate. Vissers [3] treatment of van der Waals forces between a particle of
radius r and a flat surface at a distance z away from the surface shows that,
h d
FvdW = 2 ,
6 z
(1)
337
Figure 1. The particle contact area increases with the time the particle remains on the surface due to
deformation forces, thus increasing the total particle adhesion force.
h
Fdeformation =
6
r
3
z
(2)
Krishnan et al. [4] have shown that as a particle is allowed to rest on a substrate
the increase in contact area due to deformation begins immediately upon contact
and can increase by a factor of 50% within ten minutes.
As shown in Figure 1, for a substrate being contaminated during the manufacturing process it is apparent that if particles are not removed shortly after being
deposited they will become increasingly more difficult to remove and may ultimately be impossible to remove. In production, as the substrate is moved through
the manufacturing process particles not removed shortly after being deposited
may cross-contaminate subsequent processes or ultimately accumulate on the substrate, therefore contributing to potential product defects. Thus, it is important to
remove particles immediately after they land on the substrate.
2.3. Particle-surface potential energy
As a particle comes in close contact with the substrate, van der Waals attractive
forces begin to be offset by the quantum mechanical repulsion force associated
338
Figure 2. A particle resting on a substrate surface is trapped in a particle-surface potential well. The
potential energy of a particle at a given separation distance from a surface is shown.
with the orbital electrons of the particle and surface molecules. The two forces are
estimated to be equal at a distance of 0.4 nm from the surface [1]. This distance,
indicated in Figure 2, represents the minimum of the potential well in which the
contaminant particle is trapped. Although the exact shape of the potential well is
difficult to calculate precisely, it will have the general functional form shown in
Figure 2. A particle bound to a surface may thus be considered an oscillator. As
discussed below, the RLD technique exploits this kinematic behavior by exciting
the resonant frequencies of the oscillator.
3. EXISTING LASER PARTICLE REMOVAL TECHNIQUES
339
Figure 3. Laser light sources utilize photothermal energy for a direct energy transfer to the particle
and surface. The net effect is a rapid thermal expansion of the particle and substrate surface, dislodging the particle from the surface.
340
(axial) is directed along the laser beam axis. The second component (transverse)
arises due to the transverse light intensity gradient (e.g., a gaussian beam profile).
The combined effects of refraction and the transverse intensity gradient are such
that an unequal angular distribution of light (and hence momentum) exits at the
spherical surface of the particle, producing a net effective force towards the center
of the beam. This effect has been well demonstrated experimentally, and can be
used to form an optical trap for small particles [14]. In practice, the presence of
a viscous medium is required to stabilize oscillations about the center of the potential well formed by the intensity profile. For typical beam diameters and light
intensities, the transverse force can be made comparable to the axial force, and
both can exceed the particles weight by many orders of magnitude.
The radiometric force has been exhaustively verified, and is commonly used in
aerosol studies [13]. The radiometric force is caused by uneven heating of the particle surface, and the interaction of the heated particle with the ambient background gas. Under optimum gas pressure conditions, the radiometric force can be
several orders of magnitude greater than the radiation force.
4.2. Photophoresis
Photophoresis has been investigated by Periasamy [16] as a mechanism to inhibit
particle attachment to a substrate. The motivation in their research was to prevent
particles from initial contamination. Our proposal is to use the mechanism of photophoresis to transport particles, which have been laser-detached from the substrate, away from the surface and, ultimately, to a particle collection device such
as an electrostatic filter or vacuum line.
5. THE RLD TECHNIQUE
The Resonant Laser Detachment technique utilizes a low-intensity, amplitudemodulated (or repetitively pulsed) laser light directed onto the particle and substrate. Energy absorption by the particle-surface system is maximized when the
laser light (energy) is applied at a pulse rate equal or near to the natural resonant
frequency of the system. Thus applying the laser light at a pulse rate equivalent to
the resonant frequency of the system allows for lower laser fluences and greater
energy transfer to the particle-surface system.
As noted earlier, laser light interacts with the system in a number of ways.
First, the incident light imparts direct momentum pressure to the particle. Second,
it deposits heat energy into both the particle and the substrate. This heat, in turn,
generates photothermal expansion in the particle and a photothermal surface expansion in the substrate. Depending on the laser parameters, other interactions
such as bond breaking and non-equilibrium carrier (electron) energy-distributions
may also be present.
The RLD technique uses the electrostatic field from low energy fluence laser
pulses as a driving force to induce a resonant motion of the particle. The resulting
341
Figure 4. A number (n) of light sources (L) of various pulse frequencies and incident angles (Q) can
be applied to achieve the desired resonant response.
forces and heat loads are kept very small. Figure 4 demonstrates the application of
a single light source at a given incident angle to the substrate surface. Several incident light sources may be required to achieve an effective particle detachment.
Defining the particle movement to be along a path orthogonal to the surface,
we can assume that the particle is bound in a potential well with an equilibrium
distance of approximately 0.4 nm above the surface. By applying a small, perturbative force to the particle it is possible to cause the particle to oscillate about this
equilibrium position. For very small displacements, we can represent the potential
near the minimum as a parabola i.e., a harmonic oscillator potential. This approximation will break down as the oscillations increase in amplitude. However,
it is sufficient to obtain an order-of-magnitude estimate of the resonant vibrational
frequency of the particle in the potential well.
For a 1 m silicon particle resting on a silicon substrate with a contact diameter
of 0.03 m we can estimate the resonant frequency by calculating the total adhesion force (van der Waals and deformation forces, F) and applying Hookes law
to calculate the effective spring constant (k) for the particle-surface system:
F = kx
(3)
Again, assuming the distance x at which the particle is initially separated from the
substrate to be 0.4 nm gives a resonant frequency
f =
1
1
=
2
2
k
94 MHz
m
(4)
The actual frequency scales with the effective particle separation distance as
mately 1.5 MHz. For a 0.1 m particle the initial resonant frequency can exceed
1 GHz. In any case, these order of magnitude frequencies are within the limits of
342
Figure 5. The calculated resonant frequencies for 0.5 m, 1 m, 5 m silicon particles on a silicon
substrate as a function of particle-to-surface separation distance is shown. The curves show the dependence of resonant frequency on initial separation distance, particle size, and strongly suggest that
the applied driving force must be adaptive in relation to separation distance.
available laser modulation techniques. Figure 5 shows calculated resonant frequency of 0.5 m, 1 m and 5 m particles at a given surface separation distance.
The curves in Figure 5 suggest that to employ RLD will require a shift or
chirping of applied pulse frequency as the particle-to-surface separation distance increases. As the particle-to-surface distance is increased the modulation
frequency is reduced to match the particle-surface system resonant frequency. In
practice, the incident laser light sources (suggested in Figure 4) would be spatially
and temporally coordinated with each other and repetitively chirped on a continuous basis.
The RLD technique used in conjunction with a method to prevent particle reattachment (such as photophoresis, as discussed earlier) can provide an efficient
particle removal process. Gettering techniques can be applied to remove the particles from the surrounding environment.
6. CONCLUSION
343
particle surface roughness the initial resonant frequency can exceed 1 GHz for a
0.01 m silicon particle resting on a silicon substrate. The resonant frequency of a
particle on a surface decreases as the particle-to-surface distance increases requiring an adaptive, chirped light source(s) for complete particle detachment. Particle
removal is accomplished by collecting particles, after resonant detachment from
the surface, using electrostatic gettering and vacuum suction to prevent reattachment.
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10. S.D. Allen, S.J. Lee and K. Imen, Optics and Photonics News, 3, No. 6, 28-30 (1992).
11. S.J. Lee, K. Imen and S.D. Allen, Microelectronic Eng, 20, 145-157 (1993).
12. W. Zapka, W. Ziemlich, W.P. Leung and A.C. Tam, Microelectronic Eng, 20, 171-183 (1993).
13. O. Preining, in: Aerosol Science, C.N. Davies (Ed.), pp. 111-135, Academic Press, London
(1966).
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1.
2.
3.
4.
AbstractIn this paper, the author presents some of her findings in the pursuit of safer and greener
chemical solvents for hard-surface cleaning, as well as some of the new directions that the science
of cleaning may take in the next five to ten years. Specifically, innovative methods of research and
development into cleaning alternatives are explained, including molecular modeling, data mining,
and the use of ionic liquids. A discussion on chemical risk assessment ensues, in light of the scientific concepts of hormesis and endocrine disruption. This is followed by a comparative analysis of
the European approach to policy-making, known as the Precautionary Principle and recent events
pertaining to cleaning issues in the U.S. Finally, conclusions are drawn based on a hypothetical case
of over-cleaning.
Keywords: Data mining; designer molecules; endocrine disruption; hormesis; ionic liquids; molecular modeling; precautionary principle.
1. INTRODUCTION
346
C. LeBlanc
Table 1.
Physical properties of a chlorinated solvent (TCE) and water
Properties
TCE
Water
Chemical Formula
Molecular Weight
Boiling Point
Density
C2HCl3
131.39
87oC
1.46 g/cm3
H2O
18.02
100oC
0.99 g/cm3
For this reason, the author described the significance of choosing the right
piece of mechanical equipment in process conversions involving aqueous cleaning in her thesis, The Search for Safer and Greener Chemical Solvents in Surface Cleaning: A Proposed Tool to Support Environmental Decision-Making.a
Nevertheless, the author is familiar with at least two situations in which an overdependence on chemical properties led investigators to a much narrower field of
replacement candidates than the computer program, The Aqueous Way to Go,b the
tool developed during her doctoral research, would have recommended. In both
cases, an organic solvent was replaced with yet another organic solvent.
As a result, only incremental improvements, if any, were made to the health
and safety of workers and to the protection of the environment upon implementing the alternative cleaners. The replacement cleaners shared a variety of traits
with the original solvents and the inherent dangers in using any organic and/or
chlorinated compound remained the same.
2. RESEARCH METHODS AND DEVELOPMENTS
347
ware reveals important molecular functions, just as engineering modeling programs reveal stress and metal fatigue patterns in, for example, aircraft parts.
RasMol and CHIME are two popular computer programs for the visualization
of molecules. RasMol was written by Roger Sayle of Glaxo-Wellcome and
CHIME, a web browser plug-in based on RasMol, is a product of MDL Information Systems (www.mdli.com). Instructions for downloading RasMol can be found
at www.umass.edu/microbio/rasmol and instructions for downloading CHIME are
located at www.mdli.com. Originally intended for biological systems such as proteins and nucleic acids, both programs could be used for less complicated systems
such as cleaning chemicals in the development of safer and greener alternatives.
An important aspect of these programs is the researchers ability to manipulate
structures. Chemical models can be displayed as traditional stick figures, balland-stick figures or space-filled structures. They can be controlled by threedimensional rotation, size alteration and color coding. Different parts of a model
(for example, the asymptotic or active site of an enzyme) can be selected and
treated separately. Coupled with the information obtained from the Surfactant
Virtual Library at www.surfactants.net, this ability could be very useful in creating new surface-active agents or, for that matter, new composite materials. Scientists could conceivably formulate chemicals designed to disassociate into benign
forms of their components after performing certain tasks, like cleaning. Figure 1
presents a three-dimensional model, capable of rotation, of the simplest chlorinated solvent. For comparison, Figures 2 and 3 are traditional one-dimensional,
line representations of more complex surfactant formulations and an aqueous
metal-cleaner in action, respectively.
Much work has already been done in molecular modeling and virtual compounds can be ordered from web-based suppliers listed at www.umass.edu
/microbio/rasmol/whereget.htm or synthesized via molecular mechanics calculations with a computational chemistry package such as Chem3D. Once a model is
displayed in RasMol, it can be saved in other documents as well as printed.
CHIMEs program allows for the dissemination of live molecular models on the
World Wide Web.
Combined with other sources of data, RasMol and CHIME are powerful
mechanisms for global communication among scientists and should be helpful for
improving the understanding of chemical information among all stakeholders.
Computer modeling of chemical structures also advances the cause of nanotechnology, the study and control of matter at the atomic or molecular level. The manipulation of substances at the nano-level to the precise site and at the exact moment they are needed should decrease the amounts of chemicals required to
achieve a certain response, thereby decreasing the generation of wastes and the
likelihood of over-exposure of humans or the environment to toxic substances.
Nanotechnology may make possible the bio-inspired design of enzymatic or protein-based cleaners more cost effective.
348
C. LeBlanc
349
application was limited to the companys Axarel line of products. The Aqueous
Way to Go further merges the function of a computer program with Hansen-like,
actual performance criteria.
While application-specific testing is still required, the results of pertinent cleaning tests from the Toxics Use Reduction Institutes Surface Solutions Laboratory
(SSL) are stored in The Aqueous Way to Go program. Additional performance information from other databases is also inserted into the program and serves to (1)
further decrease the time required to identify greener chemical cleaners and (2)
further increase the proficiency of the final selection. Like the molecular modeling used to accelerate chemical formulating described in the previous section, a
mechanism is needed, preferably computer-based for speed and accuracy, to (1)
sort through a plethora of data that may, or may not, be relevant and (2) determine
what chemical interactions, if any, reveal important trends for cleaning. Table 2
contains some of the newer tools available to conduct this kind of research.
Recently, algorithmic programming has been applied to advance the cause of
solvent substitution. In March of 2000, three simulation programs with different
algorithms were reviewed for designing greener solvents by Cabezas, Harten and
Green [3]. The three simulations were: (1) the U.S. EPAs Program for Assisting
the Replacement of Industrial Solvents (Paris II), (2) the Technical University of
Denmarks software, Computer Added Molecular Design (CAMD) and (3) Molecular Knowledge Systems chemical design software, Synapse. The Paris II algorithm (www.tds.cc) uses chemicals from the Design Institute for Physical Property Research (DIPPR) database and looks for potential replacement solvents
whose properties are as close to the required parameters as possible. The CAMD
solvent-design algorithm (www.capec.kt.dtu.dk) operates in a five-stage process
using valence (i.e., molecular charge) rules. The Synapse algorithm
(www.molknow.com) generates candidate chemical structures, which are then
screened as potential solvent replacements in a four-step methodology.
Unlike these programs that focus on theoretical scenarios with data that are
primarily intended for the scientific community, The Aqueous Way to Go concentrates on actual performance data of existing cleaners for the end-user community,
in addition to applications development. Data mining, or knowledge discovery in
databases, offers the best approach for manipulating this kind of information to
arrive at meaningful insights from observed tendencies (for example, the performance of certain surfactants) in would-be relational databases.
Nevertheless, it would still be possible to use any, or a combination of, the remaining computer tools described in Table 2 for research and development into
greener cleaners. The web site http://surfactants.net/huibers/greenchem.html lists
a number of computer programs developed for property prediction, solvent replacement studies, and reaction design as well as additional solvent substitution
resources on the World Wide Web, in particular, the U.S. EPAs Envio$en$es
(http://es.epa.gov) links to data systems.
C. LeBlanc
350
Table 2.
Examples of math-based/computer-enhanced research tools
Research
method or
principle
Algorithmic
Programming
Chaos
Theory
Fuzzy
Logic
Visualization
Software
Data
Mining
351
Figure 5. The combination of an ionic liquid and supercritical CO2 to separate an organic compound from solution.
Unlike water-soluble compounds that can be extracted with water, or the removal of chemicals with high vapor pressures by distillation, ionic liquids require
very high temperatures to effect separation of compounds. This post-separation of
chemical products from ionic liquids may be difficult to achieve since the heat
needed may cause the products to degrade. Furthermore, the energy needed to
drive these reactions may be too expensive. If these problems can be solved, ionic
liquids may become safer, greener solvents since they do not possess any measur-
352
C. LeBlanc
able vapor pressure and so, unlike chlorinated/organic solvents, do not evaporate
to be inhaled by workers or to be emitted into the atmosphere and cause air pollution. (The dermatological consequences of exposure to ionic liquids as well as
their impact on water pollution are currently unknown.)
To address this separation issue, Brennecke and Beckman performed experiments using a combination of an ionic liquid and supercritical carbon dioxide at
room temperature [5]. Their experiment, first reported in 1999, is diagramed in
Figure 5.
Both the carbon dioxide and the ionic liquid are recoverable for reuse. The
same system used for the separation of naphthalene could theoretically be used
for the removal of organic surface contaminants. While liquid-liquid (as opposed
to liquid-CO2) extractions would still be possible, they would invariably return the
system to the use of organic solvents, depending on the coefficient of partition, or
to the use of water, which would be almost entirely ineffectual for the separation
of most hydrocarbons. The use of various polymers, surfactants or solubilizers
may enhance the extraction/cleaning process.
To date, no toxicological or environmental fate studies have been published on
ionic liquids. This is urgently needed before much more additional application
work is done.
3. DISCUSSION
353
Figure 7. Identification of hormetic zone of zinc affecting cell reproduction. Source: H. Rubin,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA), 72, 1676 (1975).
Currently, chemical risk assessments are primarily conducted by studying highlevel exposures and extrapolating to predict safe levels. Inclusion of hormesis in
risk assessments would reveal hormetic zones where the chemical/biological responses may be significant. An example is given in Figure 7. Nowhere is this
phenomenon more important than in the study of cancer. Approximately twenty
toxicological studies have been conducted whereby hormesis occurred, followed
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C. LeBlanc
by the onset of cancer. All three stages of the disease initiation, promotion and
proliferation have been linked to hormetic behavior [8].
Whether or not a chemical is said to exhibit a dose-dependent beneficial or
deleterious reaction depends upon the conditions defined at the time of the exposure. For example, many chemicals used in the treatment of Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) are considered toxic under almost every other nondiseased circumstance; AIDS patients themselves need to be monitored closely
for toxicity levels during treatment. Problems arise when conditions are not defined prior to a chemicals release into the general environment, turning the biosphere, if not the patient, into a laboratory. This is descriptive of the use of most
of mankinds synthesized chemicals, including the detergents and solvents used
for cleaning.
The point of this discussion on hormetic behavior is that exposure may be more
harmful at lower, as opposed to higher, concentrations for the same chemical, toxicity notwithstanding. In fact, hormesis contains the root word hormones, which
are very powerful, biologically-active compounds that function effectively at low
concentrations. This refutes the principle learned by most chemists trained before
1990 that dilution is the solution to the problem and demonstrates the importance of identifying potential chemical hazards before they enter the biosphere, to
avoid the difficulty of separating minute amounts of powerful toxins (for example, dioxin) from various waste streams.
3.1.2. Surfactants and endocrine disruption
Surfactants are surface-active chemicals that are very important to the cleaning
process. Their concentrations in aqueous cleaners are deceptively low (< 10%),
given that they are the power horses of the cleaners formulation. It should, therefore, come as no surprise that some of these surface-active agents may exhibit the
kinds of effects described above at very low concentrations. The proven health
hazards associated with organo-chlorinated cleaning solvents were described by
the author [9] while the suspected health hazards involving some surfactants in
some aqueous/semi-aqueous cleaners, acting as endocrine disruptors, were only
briefly mentioned. More investigative work needs to be done.
The endocrine (or hormonal) system is made of glands throughout the body
that synthesize and secrete hormones into the bloodstream and various receptor
sites in target tissues that recognize and respond to hormones, especially the sex
organs. The endocrine system controls a complex interplay between the sex hormones of the oestrogens and androgens, and other hormones, such as those of the
thyroid system. The immune and nervous systems are also affected by hormonal
regulation. In general, hormonal signaling is more long-lived than neural transmission. It is precisely because of these systems complexities that it is extremely
difficult to accurately predict the behavior of a single chemical compound or its
metabolites on the bodys organs.
355
356
C. LeBlanc
357
Table 3.
Reasons for scientific uncertainty [20]
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
col on Biosafety under the Convention of Biological Diversity. At the International Conference on Biotechnology in the Global Economy held at Harvard University in September 2000, a discussion was facilitated by the Universitys Center for
International Development (CID) that supported efforts to better understand the institutions of precaution through which governments move from science to policy highlighting the institutional differences among OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries, sub-Saharan countries and international
institutions. The precautionary principle is important to industrial cleaning since its
implementation in Europe has led to a ban of some surfactants while the U.S. continues to allow these chemicals in cleaners; many scientists believe that the safer, albeit
more expensive, alcohol ethoxylate (Figure 2) is as effective and readily available as
the suspect alkylphenol-ethoxylated surfactants. The computer program or tool, The
Aqueous Way to Go can be used to screen nonylphenol ethoxylate from potential
solvent substitutes in much the same way. An overview of current policies covering
chemical usage throughout the world, in particular suspect endocrine disrupters, is presented in Table 4.
The author suggests that the proactive stance of the precautionary principle,
rather than a variety of reactive policies, should form the basis of technical innovation paired to chemical regulation/trade. This is especially true in areas such as
the production of genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) and the development
of solvent alternatives, where the risks are so high for so many. More information
on hormone disrupting chemicals and chemicals policy can be found at Tulane
Universitys web site, www.tmc.tulane.edu/ecme/eehome in the report, Environmental Estrogens and Other Hormones.
3.2.2. The effects of a recent policy change: the United States
In a different, but related matter, a recent change in U.S. regulations has led to a
loosening of the use of an important solvent chemical, the de-listing of acetone as
a volatile organic compound (VOC). This may lead to an increase in the use of
acetone and other hydrocarbons as cleaning agents, even though the quantity and
quality of safer and greener alternatives continues to rise.
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C. LeBlanc
Table 4.
Overview of global policies affecting suspect endocrine disrupting chemicals [1]
European Union
(EU)
United Kingdom
(UK)
United Nations
(UN) and NGOs
United States
(US)
Chemical Industry
In fact, consultants to the U.S. space agency have recommended the use of butane (lighter fluid) in some part-cleaning operations since this policy change. It
would appear that as older scientists retire and/or are replaced by younger, inexperienced researchers/contractors, there is a lack of a common understanding of
the past lessons learned from the use of these solvents. This may cause American
society to repeat some of the same mistakes made earlier. In other words, the U.S.
public may be facing a retreat to increased exposure to hydrocarbon products, and
their associated health hazards, used for cleaning prior to the discovery of the destruction of the ozone layer by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). These developments
are especially troubling in light of the United States active opposition to the
Kyoto Protocol to decrease global-warming (i.e., carbon-based) emissions. The
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re-introduction of brominated cleaners, notably n-propyl bromide (nPB), is likewise a concern. UNEPs STOC considers nPB to be ozone depleting and is not
recommending it as a solvent substitute since non-ozone-depleting solutions exist for all cleaning applications for which nPB is being promoted.
Aberrations in legal structures, especially liability issues, are no doubt at the
root cause of how some societies approach environmental decision-making for
cleaning applications. Consumerism, (i.e., the educated consumer) and organized
labor (i.e., trade unions representing various segments of the workforce performing cleaning duties) also have roles to play. Various chemical formulators have
become more adept in addressing worker safety and the environment due to these
concerns. Partly because of these advances, the lines separating parts, precision
and institutional (i.e., maintenance and janitorial) cleaning have blurred and are illustrated in Figure 9. As workplaces approach the safety of households in cleaning operations, overlaps among cleaning standards and performance guidelines
may become more commonplace. Ironically, these same developments may also
tend to increase multiple chemical sensitivities to certain, at-risk, individuals
within a given population.
4. A CONCLUDING SCENARIO: PROVOCATIVE POSSIBILITIES INVOLVING
SEMICONDUCTORS
C. LeBlanc
360
ponentially. Table 5 contains the water quality guidelines for chip manufacture
and blood dialysis as a means to compare each systems level of desired contamination control.
The goal of this treatise is not to expose the semiconductor industrys overreliance on energy and water resources; other researchers such as Ted Smith,
founder and director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, are far more familiar
with the industry and have documented this dependency. The purpose here is to
reflect on the unsustainable nature of the current technology (indeed, most computers are considered obsolete within eighteen months of manufacture), more specifically, the unhealthy, unnatural conditions to which workers are exposed in
cleanrooms.
Table 5.
Water quality guidelines for semiconductors (A) and hemodialysis (B)
B
A
Contaminant
Maximum
concentration*
Contaminant
mg/l*
Aluminum (Al)
Arsenic (Ar)
Barium (Ba)
Cadmium (Cd)
Calcium (Ca)
Choramines
Chlorine (Cl)
Chromium (Cr)
Copper (Cu)
Fluoride (F)
Lead (Pb)
Magnesium (Mg)
Mercury (Hg)
Nitrate (AS N)
Potassium (K)
Selenium (Se)
Silver (Ag)
Sodium (Na)
Sulfate (SO4)
Zinc (Zn)
0.01
0.005
0.1
0.001
2.0
0.1
0.5
0.014
0.1
0.2
0.005
4.0
0.0002
2.0
8.0
0.09
0.005
70.0
100.0
0.1
18.3 megohm-cm /
3 ppb
0.2 ppb
0.3 ppb
0.02 ppb
0.002 ppb
0.02 ppb
0.05 ppb
0.1 ppb
0.05 ppb
0.02 ppb
0.1 ppb
0.05 ppb
0.05 ppb
0.1 ppb
0.2 ppb
0.05 ppb
0 counts per 100 ml
Source: P. Cartwright, Proc. of the Precision Cleaning meeting held in Rosemont, IL, May 1995.
*Measurement system chosen by industry.
361
Staphylococci are gram positive bacteria that are typically arranged in clumps or grape-like clusters. They can be distinguished from streptococci in that only the staphylococi are catalase-positive
(catalase is an enzyme that liberates oxygen from hydrogen peroxide).
d
Enterococci are gram-positive bacteria that are widely distributed in nature and are part of the
normal flora of the gastrointestinal and genital tracts.
362
C. LeBlanc
of antibiotics, appears to be the root cause of these infectious mutations. The disease involves prions. Prions are tiny biological bits that may or may not be alive
and so are impossible to kill (in the conventional sense of the term) to prevent
the infections spread. Some of these prions can be viewed three-dimensionally
with RosMol/Chime at www.mad-cow.org/prion_structure_folder/viewers.html.
4.2. The cleaner connection
Recently, Americans have been introduced to a line of household cleaners, advertised as antibacterial, for applications where no antibacterial activity is warranted.
The more popular the cleaners become, the more product varieties appear on grocers shelves. Studies at Tufts Universitys School of Medicine (Boston, Massachusetts) revealed that the antibacterial agent triclosan, used in many of these
products, acts like an antibiotic to promote bacterial resistance and, potentially,
the spread of untreatable infections. Furthermore, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reports that antibacterial soaps kill the beneficial bacteria that
live on skin. Unlike their pathogenic counterparts, these bacteria apparently
strengthen the immune systems of children [22].
These seemingly unconnected events or trends have one or two things in common: they are related to the things we chose to clean well or not to be able to keep
clean enough. Meanwhile, microscopic forms of life have been found in Arcticlike conditions and other species such as the archaea have evolved near volcanic
emissions under the sea, both environs thought to be uninhabitable by the scientific community not too long ago. Somehow, life finds a way.
In hospitals, sterility is maintained (most notably for surgery), cleaning is performed and dressings (gowns, masks, gloves) are donned to protect the person
from pathogens. In cleanrooms, sterility is maintained, cleaning is performed and
dressings donned to protect the product from the person. Cleanrooms, whose sterile environment routinely outrivals the surgeons needs, may offer the next best
habitat for a super bug, perhaps of prion-nature, to establish a foothold. The technical staff of these high-tech establishments may already have damaged immune
systems due to the unnatural conditions in which they work on a daily basis (there
is no such thing as a good bacterium in a cleanroom). Regardless, the spread of
a hypothetical cleanroom-acquired infection may not require an at-risk host, as
has been previously discussed.
4.3. Closing statement
Several aspects of the search for surface cleanliness are neither simple nor
straightforward. The Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics located in Boston, Massachusetts, an international organization with members from more that
ninety countries, has been monitoring the worldwide emergence of treatmentresistant microbial strains since 1981. This group, and others in the scientific
community such as the U.S. Center for Disease Control (CDC), should be made
363
aware of the developments in the cleaning industry so that other studies, like
those conducted at Tufts medical school, can be undertaken.
In the meantime, unless and until the chemical industry provides complete
chemical disclosure on a global basis, institutions such as the Toxics Use Reduction Institutes research facility at the University of Massachusetts Lowell should
assist in formulating green chemical cleaners, in addition to providing education
and training programs and state-of-the-art laboratory testing of existing products.
This could be accomplished through partnerships with commercial enterprises
and/or other research facilities. Remaining pertinent issues, some having nothing
to do with cleaning performance, could then be addressed. These include studies
on the chemical additives of fragrances (over 80% of the odorants now used are
synthetic in origin) and dyes or colorants (often added for worker safety in product recognition). Tighter quality control on percentages of ingredients could also
be maintained, since currently the concentrations of a cleaners components reported on its Material Safety Data Sheet can vary by as much as 400%. Most importantly, chronic, hormetic and synergistic chemical-exposure tests need to be
developed and implemented before cleaners are marketed.
The development of the computer program, The Aqueous Way to Go revealed
many of these trends and potential hazards in cleaning processes and chemicals.
The successful technical diffusion of this tool will require an educational component, the topic of an upcoming paper.
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