Why worry about ESD?
Source:本站 Time:2020/1/27 18:49:25 frequency:
ESD can cause unseen damage to electronic components during manufacture of electronic assemblies and equipment. If an ESD event occurs this can cause immediate or delayed damage. The delayed damage we often refer to as a ‘latent defect’. This can cause a device to malfunction at any moment of its lifespan.
If the damaged component fails immediately, the result can be a board that fail tests and requires rework. This represents lost production and additional manufacturing costs.
Worse than this, a
component may be partially damaged and weakened. It may suffer a change or
drift in characteristics. It may remain within specification, but fail later
when in use by a customer. It has been estimated that 90% of damaged devices
may be discovered in this way.
This is the most expensive type of failure, as it represents:
In manual assembly most ESD arises from charged personnel, if they are not grounded.
Many common activities may generate charges on a person’s body that are potentially harmful to electronic components.
Most people do not feel an ESD shock unless they are charged to over 3000 V (the sensitivity threshold varies between people, and even over parts of the body!). This voltage is quite common in the uncontrolled environment – how many of us have not felt the occasional electrostatic shock in everyday life?
However a
charge of just 30 volts is enough to damage the most sensitive electrical
components. And, most components are at risk from charges at 100 – 200 volts.
It is essential that you protect sensitive components during the manufacturing, assembly and shipping process. Furthermore, the work area should be grounded for effective anti-static control. This area is often referred to as an Electrostatic Discharge Protected Area (EPA). An EPA could be one small workbench or an entire manufacturing plant.
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