Specific device for cleaning electronic components and/or circuits
10099262 ยท 2018-10-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01F25/313
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F23/2323
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B3/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B3/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01F25/53
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B3/048
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B08B3/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B3/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The disclosure relates to a device for cleaning electronic components and/or circuits. The cleaning device comprises a first vessel containing a liquid, a support for holding the electronic components and/or circuits, a fluid injection system including nozzles allowing the projection of jets of fluid to sweep the surface of the components, and a fluid mixer including a first inlet suitable for receiving a pressurized liquid, a second inlet suitable for receiving a pressurized gas, and an outlet designed to supply the injection system with two-phase fluid. The first inlet is coupled to the outlet by an inner duct, the second inlet is coupled to a pressurized gas supply and to an injector for injecting the gas into the inner duct.
Claims
1. A method, comprising: keeping electronic components and/or a circuit immersed in a first vessel containing a liquid, producing a two-phase fluid by mixing a pressurized liquid with a pressurized gas using a fluid mixer having a first inlet suitable for receiving the pressurized liquid, a second inlet suitable for receiving the pressurized gas, an outlet designed for supplying the two-phase fluid produced by mixing the pressurized liquid and pressurized gas, spraying jets of the two-phase fluid onto the electronic components and/or circuit, using a fluid injection system comprising nozzles, sweeping the surface of the electronic components and/or circuit with jets of the two-phase fluid from the nozzles, wherein the first inlet of the fluid mixer is coupled to the outlet by an inner duct, the second inlet being supplied with the pressurized gas and connected to an injector for injecting said pressurized gas into the inner duct, injecting the pressurized liquid into the fluid mixer at a pressure between about 3 bar and 5 bar with a flow rate of 20 l/min, injecting the pressurized gas at a center of the inner duct of the fluid mixer, with a difference between the pressure of the pressurized liquid and a pressure of the pressurized gas inside the fluid mixer being about 1 bar, and the outlet supplies the injection system with the two-phase fluid.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pressure of the pressurized gas injected into the fluid mixer is 0.5 bar to 2 bar greater than that of the pressurized liquid with a flow rate of about 10 l/min.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pressure at the nozzles is less than or equal to 5 bar.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the liquid contained in the first vessel overflows into an overflow vessel.
5. The method according to claim 1, further comprising filtering the pressurized liquid prior to the pressurized liquid entering the fluid mixer.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the injecting of the pressurized gas is performed upstream of the first vessel.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sweeping includes vertically sweeping the surface of the electronic components and/or circuit by the jets of the two-phase fluid from the nozzles.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein the sweeping includes horizontally sweeping the surface of the electronic components and/or circuit by the jets of the two-phase fluid from the nozzles.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the spraying includes spraying jets of the two-phase fluid from the nozzles which are positioned on first and second sides of the electronic components and/or circuit, the nozzles being part of two nozzle arrays that are interconnected and arranged on the first and second sides of the electronic components and/or circuit.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pressurized gas injected in the second inlet of the fluid mixer is a neutral gas.
11. The method according to claim 4, wherein the liquid contained in the overflow vessel is routed to the fluid mixer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the following description. This description is purely illustrative and is to be read with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) Support means 8 arranged inside the first vessel 2 keep the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned immersed in the liquid contained therein. Said electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned are, for example, silicon substrates which may be flexible or assemblies of semiconductor-based chips. They may be also be circuit boards or screen printing stencils.
(6) The first vessel 2, also called the cleaning vessel, consists of metal walls of stainless steel. It comprises, inter alia, a first outer vertical wall 21, a lower horizontal bottom 22, and an inner vertical wall 23, referred to as the overflow wall with an uppermost edge 231 at a height less than that of an uppermost edge 211 of the outer vertical wall 21. The inner vertical wall 23 is designed so that the liquid contained in the first vessel 2 overflows over the uppermost edge 231 into the overflow vessel 4 adjacent to the first vessel 2.
(7) The overflow vessel 4 is also made of metal walls of stainless steel. It comprises, inter alia, a first outer vertical wall 42, a horizontal bottom 41, and a second vertical wall corresponding to the upper portion of the inner vertical wall 23 of the first vessel 2. In addition, both vessels are open at the top and the lower horizontal bottom 22 of the first vessel 2 is at a lower height than the horizontal bottom 41 of the overflow vessel 4.
(8) The electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned, as shown in
(9) The device 1 also comprises two hydraulic devices enabling the circulation of the liquid contained in the two vessels.
(10) A first hydraulic device 12 is associated with the first vessel 2. It enables circulation of the liquid in the first vessel 2 via a suction mouth 121 placed at the bottom of the first vessel 2 and a return at one end 122 of the first hydraulic device 12, preferably placed at the top of the outer vertical wall 21 of the first vessel 2, thus allowing the reinjection of the liquid into the first vessel 2.
(11) The first hydraulic device 12 allows the recovery, filtration, and injection of the liquid contained in the first vessel 2. It comprises for this purpose a valve V1, a pump P1, and a filter F1.
(12) The valve V1 can be electrically or manually controlled and allows, inter alia, isolating the first vessel 2 during potential incidents.
(13) The filter F1 is arranged within the first hydraulic device 12 and is placed for example downstream of the valve V1, to provide filtration and even the elimination of cleaning residues from the liquid coming from the first vessel 2.
(14) The pump P1 may be a vane pump or magnetic drive pump for example and is used for circulating the liquid in the first hydraulic device 12.
(15) Here, a manually or electrically controlled valve V5 is positioned downstream of the pump P1 to allow draining the liquid contained in the first vessel 2 into a recovery vessel (not shown in
(16) A second hydraulic device 14 comprises a valve V2, a pump P2, a filter F2, and a mixer 16. The second hydraulic device 14 allows, inter alia, suctioning the liquid in the overflow vessel 4 and injecting it into the first vessel 2. To do this, a suction mouth 142 is positioned so that the liquid is preferably suctioned at the bottom of the wall 42 of the overflow vessel 4. The liquid is returned through a fluid injection system placed in the first vessel 2.
(17) Valve V2, located in the second hydraulic device 14, can be manually operated or electrically controlled for example by solenoid. This valve V2 allows isolating the overflow vessel 4 for safety reasons when there is a potential incident.
(18) The liquid in the overflow vessel 4 is suctioned by pump P2, here placed downstream of valve V2. The filter F2 placed downstream of pump P2 allows filtration, in other words the removal of cleaning residues from the liquid coming from the overflow vessel 4, these residues originating from the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned, among other sources.
(19) The mixer 16 is placed downstream of the filter F2 in the second hydraulic device 14 and is placed upstream of the first vessel 2. It comprises a first inlet 161 adapted to receive a pressurized liquid coming from filter F2 propelled by pump P2 in the second hydraulic device 14, a second inlet 162 adapted to receive a pressurized gas, and an outlet 163.
(20) All numerical values given here are provided for purely illustrative and non-limiting purposes.
(21) The first inlet 161 is coupled to the outlet 163 by means of an inner duct of the mixer 16. The diameter of the inner duct is for example about 16 mm (1 mm=0.001 m) until the conical tapering 164 where the duct diameter changes from 16 mm (on the first inlet side 161) to a duct diameter of 13 mm (on the outlet side 163) (
(22) The second inlet 162 is coupled outside the mixer 16 to a source of pressurized gas. Inside the mixer 16, the second inlet 162 is connected to an injector for injecting said gas inside the inner duct. The inner diameter of the injector is, for example, about 2 mm with an outer diameter of about 4 mm. The mixer 16 thus has a Y-shape.
(23) In an advantageous embodiment, the injector is positioned at the center of the inner duct of the mixer 16, in other words concentric to the inner duct. In addition, the injector penetrates sufficiently far into the inner duct and its end in the inner duct is close to the conical tapering 164 of the inner duct so that the injection of the pressurized gas at the center of the inner duct enables the creation of a two-phase fluid. This conical tapering 164 accelerates the two-phase fluid, which homogenizes the distribution of the gas bubbles.
(24) The gas injected into the second input 162 may be an inert gas, such as nitrogen, making it possible to clean exposed or highly oxidizable copper parts such as power modules used for power management in electric vehicles. It is also possible for the injected gas to be a protective gas or reducing agent.
(25) The pressure of the liquid injected into the first inlet 161 is about 3 to 5 bar (1 bar=10.sup.5 Pascals) with a flow rate of 20 liters/min. The pressure of the gas injected into the second inlet 162 is 0.5 to 2 bar greater, preferably about 1 bar, than the pressure of the liquid and its flow rate is about 10 liters/min. Advantageously, the flow rates and pressures of the inlets of the mixer 16 are adjustable.
(26) The flow rate and pressure within the second hydraulic device 14 as well as at the second inlet 162 of the mixer 16 are sufficient to meet the requirements for cleaning the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned.
(27) The fluid injection system comprises two arrays of nozzles 1001 and 1003 immersed in the first vessel 2. The two arrays of nozzles 1001 and 1003 have nozzles 10 placed so that the jets from these nozzles 10 are laminar jets of liquid that are cylindrical in shape and that strike perpendicularly to the surface of the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned (see
(28) Said arrays of nozzles 1001 and 1003 consist of at least one row having at least one nozzle 10 and at least one column having at least one nozzle 10. The number of nozzles 10, in other words the number of rows and columns, in the nozzle arrays 1001 and 1003 can be modified according to the size of the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned.
(29) In addition, in order to protect the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned from all mechanical stresses created by spraying liquid onto its two opposing faces, the nozzle arrays 1001 and 1003 are positioned parallel to the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned, one on either side thereof (see
(30) The hydraulic supply device 1002 is preferably located at the bottom of the first vessel 2 but not touching its lower horizontal bottom 22 so that it does not interfere with the circulation of liquid in the first vessel 2.
(31) In addition, the first nozzle array 1001 and the second nozzle array 1003 can, by means of a sweep motion device not shown in
(32) This sweep motion device may also be coupled to the movement of the support means 8. The combined movements then facilitate the removal of residues deposited underneath integrated circuits. The removal of residues deposited in via holes is also enhanced using this technique.
(33) In addition, the distance between each nozzle array and the electronic components and/or circuits 6 to be cleaned is determined so as to maximize the effectiveness of the two-phase fluid jets: this can be for example about 5 to 10 cm.
(34) In another embodiment, a pressure regulating device (not represented in the figures), making use of pressure sensors for example, is used to control the pressure of the liquid and the gas. In order to improve the performance and reproducibility of the cleaning, a fluid temperature control device may also be used, for example making use of a temperature sensor. The gas may be for example at room temperature. However, it is also possible to consider a gas temperature control. It is thus possible to completely control the characteristics of the two-phase fluid.
(35) Effective cleaning of circuit boards, especially circuit boards for avionic applications, is now possible by means of a device as described above. The use of a two-phase fluid instead of an ultrasonic generator allows the device to be effective for cleaning without damaging or harming electronic components, even those containing quartz.
(36) In addition, as the effectiveness of the two-phase jet is independent of the nature of the materials, for example such as glue or solder paste, the cleaning of screen printing masks is optimized with such a device. It has been observed that the presence of microbubbles in the fluid injected from the nozzles onto the electronic components and/or circuits results in highly effective cleaning even for products such as glue which are considered as not being removable by cleaning.
(37) One will appreciate that the invention is not limited by the nature and form of the vessel or vessels. Also, the embodiment of the device shown in
(38) The above description has been provided for illustrative purposes only and does not limit the scope of the invention.