Title :
Evaluation of cleanroom/ESD garment fabrics: test methods and results
Author_Institution :
Maxtor Corp., Longmont, CO, USA
Abstract :
It was observed that Class 100 cleanroom garments, reported to be ESD safe, could easily be tribocharged to relatively high voltage potentials while in use. They also showed very slow and incomplete dissipation of these voltage potentials. With the introduction and widespread use of magneto-resistive (MR) technology in the disk drive industry, it was felt necessary to determine whether there are cleanroom/ESD safe fabrics which provide better ESD performance than others. This is especially important due to the close proximity of a garment´s sleeve to the MR product, and the risk of the failure mechanism known as field induced breakdown (FIB). The testing reported within this paper was performed to accomplish two main goals. The first goal was to identify a material that would provide the best overall ESD performance, by performing comparative testing of numerous fabrics. The second goal was to make the test methods both simple and repeatable, while using moderately priced, commercially available equipment. It was found through this work that there are in fact substantial differences in the performance of cleanroom/ESD fabrics, and two materials were identified as clearly outperforming the others tested. Additionally, methods of testing with common instruments were developed that proved to be useful for the comparative testing of fabrics.
Keywords :
clean rooms; electronic equipment manufacture; electrostatic discharge; magnetic heads; magnetoresistive devices; materials handling; protection; surface charging; Class 100 cleanroom garments; ESD performance; ESD safe garments; cleanroom/ESD fabrics; cleanroom/ESD garment fabrics; cleanroom/ESD safe fabrics; comparative fabric testing; comparative testing; disk drive industry; failure mechanism; field induced breakdown; garment sleeve-MR product proximity; incomplete voltage potential dissipation; magneto-resistive technology; test methods; testing instruments; tribocharging; voltage potentials; Clothing; Disk drives; Electric breakdown; Electrostatic discharge; Fabrics; Failure analysis; Materials testing; Performance evaluation; Textile industry; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical Overstress/Electrostatic Discharge Symposium Proceedings, 1998
Conference_Location :
Reno, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
1-878303-91-0
DOI :
10.1109/EOSESD.1998.737016