Aqueous Cleaning Handbook

Soldering & Surface Mount Technology

ISSN: 0954-0911

Article publication date: 1 December 1999

88

Keywords

Citation

(1999), "Aqueous Cleaning Handbook", Soldering & Surface Mount Technology, Vol. 11 No. 3. https://doi.org/10.1108/ssmt.1999.21911cae.001

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited


Aqueous Cleaning Handbook

Aqueous Cleaning Handbook

Malcolm McLaughlin and Alan Zisman

The Morris-Lee Publishing Group, Hardcover, 122 pages, 9 chapters, diagrams and photos,$39.95 in the USA,ISBN: 096453567X

Keyword Cleaning

There are established books in the industry covering cleaning, varying in age, but nevertheless all of value. This latest text book has been passed to this reviewer, not as an alternative to existing text, but as a further source of information to engineers. When you consider that in the electronics industry over 80 per cent of companies have eliminated cleaning from their electronic assembly operations, why are we still considering it?

The book's chapters cover the process of cleaning rather than being industry specific, which does open up the text to a wider audience. The book covers aqueous cleaning, chemistry, selecting detergents and machines, applications, waste treatment and health and safety. The text explains why the industry went away from solvents and the change to aqueous and semi-aqueous. Although this reviewer is from the no-clean camp, aqueous is the best alternative choice for electronics and not the semi-aqueous process in some sectors; by all means try out different techniques, which is what the text helps you to undertake.

There is a nice section on cleanliness assessment using some of the techniques this reviewer has used over the years. This section's one major omission is ionic contamination, which is the technique most often used in electronics. It should have been covered as should SIR testing. The water break test is the simplest and least used test method in our industry and is usually confined to printed board fabrication, where it can be very useful.

The text is an interesting read but of limited value to the electronics process engineer when compared to other more established sources of information. It is a more general text and not best suited to our industry. You do, however, have the opportunity to receive a complimentary copy of the book if you are evaluating materials from Alconox and you agree to provide a report on your test results. Nice sales ploy.

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