MENU
Toggle navigation
Products
FreeStyle 8400™ Interlocking Floor System
ESD Vinyl Tile
8400 Series Conductive ESD Vinyl Tile
8400 Series Dissipative ESD Vinyl Tile
FreeStyle 8400 Interlocking Flooring System
7900 Series Conductive ESD Vinyl Tile
Modular Conductive Interlocking Floor Tile
ESD Modular Carpet Tiles
Colonial Series
Discovery Eco Series
Landmark Series
Presidential Series
Adhesive and Grounding Strips
Conductive Rubber Tiles and Rolls
Conductive Adhesive, Grounding and Weld Rod
Dissipative Floor Finishes
Statguard® Low-VOC Dissipative Floor Finish
Statguard® Dissipative Floor Finish
Statguard® Floor Label
ESD Floor Maintenance Products
Statguard® Floor Stripper
Statguard® Floor Neutralizer
Statguard® ESD Floor Cleaner
Statfree® Dissipative Spray Buff
Statfree® Burnishing Restorer
Measurement Meters
Statguard® Conductive Epoxy
New Products
Resources
Partners
Webinar
Videos
REGISTER / LOGIN
SHOP
CART (
0
)
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR EMAIL LIST - Be the first to know
about exclusive deals, tips, new products & more!
Questions And Answers
#
952
List All Questions
Search
List by Category
Question
Recently one of customer feedback to us that one of the particular IC (ICH2) on the board fail due to EOS. They says that this failure is cause by handling. This boards after performing the ICT and FT will be going into Burn-in testing. The customer suspect that this failure could be duringloading and unloading in the Burn-in. I have measured the body charge generation on the person who works on the Burn-in. The average body charge generation with heel strap is 40 volts, with wrist strap is 5 volts andwithout any grounding device is 400 volts. All personnel are grounded either with wrist strap or heel strap. The production floor is covered with dissipative mat, the reading is 10E8 - 10E9 ohms/square. I use the Novx 5000 series voltage detector to measure the body voltage. Attached is the scan copy of failure after FA. Appreciate if you could kindly advise what action should be taken during the customer audit. - Anonymous
Answer
An ESD (electrostatic discharge) is a type of EOS (electrical overstress). From the images you sent, it looks like these devices were damaged via the CDM (charge device model). The devices themselves can become charged without any human intervention and discharge (ESD event) when in contact with a good conductor (metal tray, etc.) and result in the Failures you showed in your images. To minimize this problem, keep the devices from coming into contact with each other by storing them in ESD antistatic packaging, and do not place or let these devices contact metal or other very good conductors or employ an ionizer at places where this may happen if there is no other way to control this environment.
Related Categories:
Failure Analysis
CDM
If you have found this Q/A useful, please rate it based on its helpfulness.
This question has been rated:
(
0
% at
0
Ratings)