Title: ESM 595 F
1ESM 595 F
- Pollution Prevention in the Electronics Industry
2Electronics Industry
- Fast growing sector of economy
- Few common appliances and machines could function
without electronics - Perceived as pollution-free since it has no
smoke stacks - Environmental impacts ...
3Semiconductor Manufacture
- Crystal Growth
- Wafer fabrication
- Deposit of active and inactive layers
- Oxidation to form silicon oxide
- Photolithography
- Etching
- Addition of impurities for special functions
4Crystal Growth
5Silicon Wafer
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7Printed Circuit Board
- Patterns of Conductive Material set on a
Non-conductive base - Conductive Materials Cu, Al, Cr, Ni
- Non-conductive Epoxy/paper, phenolic resin,
epoxy/glass resin, teflon - Conductor can be added as lines or as a layer
which is then etched
8Printed Circuit Board
- Clean and prepare surface (drilling, burring,
solvent wash, abrasive wash, alkaline wash) - Electroless copper plating (thin layer through
holes) - Pattern printing and masking
- Electroplating
- Etching
9Circuit Board Assembly
- Insert components
- Adhere components
- Cure adhesive
- Solder
- Final cleaning
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11Other Process Considerations
- Piping of gases and corrosive liquids
- Cooling water to control processing temperature
- Deionised water production
- Clean room conditions
- Handling of process wastes (gas, liquid, solid)
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13Waste Streams
14Waste Streams
15Waste Streams
16Example Copper Waste
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23Environmental Impacts
- From Manufacturing
- Air emissions
- Wastewater
- Solids, sludges and Haz wastes
- From Product Use
- Energy (electrical or batteries)
- From Product Disposal
24Example Pager
- Disposed due to
- end of useful life
- obsolescence
- To recover useful materials, need to consider
- labor to disassemble
- segregated storage transportation
- reprocessing
- Balance against scrap value of materials
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26Example Pager
- Circuit board is sent to a reclamation facility
- burn off organic materials (epoxy, paper)
- recover metals Au, Ag, Pt, Pd, Cu, Al, Ni, Cr
- Gold may represent less than 1 but account for
more than 90 of value - Estimated value of average circuit board is 7
per pound (3/kg) (1992 prices)
27Example Pager
- Other reusable parts
- vibrator motor
- microprocessor
- oscillator crystals
- filters
- coils
- antennae
- Valued at 19.28
- Warranty, obsolescence, disclosure
28Pollution Prevention Tools
- Life-Cycle Assessment/EIA
- Product Design
- Higher density of transistors in each chip
- Higher density Surface Mount Technology vs.
conventional plated-hole technology - Use more common plastics
- Reduce plastics/metals assemblies
- Use built-in plastic or metal clips for assembly
29Pollution Prevention Tools
- Process Design
- Vacuum pack after epitaxy
- Iron oxide masks (vs. emulsion masks)
- Single solvent systems (recover/reuse)
- Water based developer (vs. solvent)
- Infrared heating lamps for drying
- Filtering plating, etching baths
- Dry etching vs. wet etching
30Pollution Prevention Tools
- Material Selection
- Aqueous cleaning materials vs. solvents
- Purification of solvents
- Eliminate use of CFCs by substitution
- Reduce number of acids, and use those that result
in non-toxics when neutralized (e.g. HCl vs.
Trichloroacetic acid) - Lead-free solder
31Pollution Prevention Tools
- Operational Factors
- Process Control
- Preventive maintenance
- Monitoring of concentrations in air water
- Materials handling storage
- Inventory control
32Pollution Prevention Tools
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34Pollution Prevention Tools
35Waste Stream Processing
36Waste Stream Processing
37Waste Stream Processing
38Waste Stream Processing
39Step-by-Step Case Study
- Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board - Phase I Preassessment
- Step 1 Form audit team develop objectives
- Step 2 List Unit Operations
- Step 3 Construct Process Flow Diagrams with
emissions and waste streams
40Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
41Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
42Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Phase 2 Material Balances
- Step 4 Determine Inputs
- Step 5 Record Water Usage
- Step 6 Determine Reuse/Recycle Rates
- Step 7 Quantify Process Outputs
- Step 8 Characterize wastewater streams
- Step 9 Account for gaseous emissions
- Step 10 Account for off-site wastes
- Step 11 Assemble Input Output Information
43Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
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45Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
46Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
47Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 12 Develop Material Balance for each
processing area
48Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
Electroplating Line (Microplate 9000 line)
49Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
Oxide coating area
50Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
51Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 13 Evaluating the Material Balance
- Micro-etch rinse accounts for 90 of copper
loading in sensitizing area - Micro-etch rinse accounts for 56 of total plant
rinse water copper loading to treatment plant - Other major sources of contaminated rinse water
are electroplating rinse, sulfuric acid/peroxide
rinse and deburrer rinse
52Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 14 Refining Material Balances
- Step 15 Implementing Obvious Waste Reduction
Measures - Sand filter in deburring operation was backwashed
with dirty water, leading to entrainment of
copper fines throughout sand bed and release into
filtered water - Bag filter captures copper fines, but these are
sent to landfill. At 2.6 kg/3 days and 0.9/kg,
it means 275 per year
53Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 15 Implementing Obvious Waste Reduction
Measures - Recirculating pumps in copper electroplating line
drip weak copper solution onto floor, which then
goes to drains. Loading of about 70 g Cu/day - Alum added to wastewater in pit 1 not necessary
for metal hydroxide precipitation (only useful
for colloids). Increases sludge volume
54Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 15 Implementing Obvious Waste Reduction
Measures - Sand filters installed after sedimentation tank
were not reducing Cu in effluent (nor SS) - A 50 reduction in Cu loading from sensitizing
micro-etch rinse through improved rinsing could
result in a 40 reduction in rinse water loading
to wastewater treatment plant, and lower Cu in
outlet
55Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 16 Treatability Tests
- Step 17 Long-Term Waste Reduction Options
- Wastewater segregation and treatment
- Upgrading pH adjustment, clarification, sand
filtration systems - Installation of static rinse tank in electroless
copper plating bath to collect Cu
electrolytically in a special treatment unit
56Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 18 Economic Evaluation
- Copper recovery 3,500/yr
- Reduced sludge transportation and landfilling
costs 22,000/yr - Process improvements capital expenditures
265,000/yr
57Case Study of Pollution Prevention for Printed
Circuit Board
- Step 19 Other considerations
- Effluent does not comply with NPDES permit
- Legal action possible
- Time spent by upper mgmt on wastewater issues
- Step 20 Develop and Implement Action Plan