Even the most advanced cleaning chemistry requires an effective delivery system, so selecting the appropriate cleaning machine is crucial. Cleaning equipment must do far more than simply wash boards. As assemblies move toward lower standoff heights, finer pitches, and increasingly complex geometries, the equipment must deliver chemistry into confined spaces, reliably remove contamination, rinse thoroughly, and dry completely, all while balancing throughput, operating costs, and long-term reliability requirements.
This article examines the key engineering considerations for selecting cleaning equipment to clean highly dense assemblies. We will consider spray dynamics, machine configurations, process control, validation methods, and trade-offs among performance, cost, and manufacturing efficiency.
Cleaning Equipment as a Reliability System
In modern electronics manufacturing, cleaning machines are no longer viewed as simple post-soldering tools. They are engineered process systems designed to support long-term product reliability. An effective cleaning machine must be capable of:
- Delivering controlled mechanical energy
- Transporting cleaning chemistry into tight component geometries
- Maintaining optimal wash chemistry conditions
- Removing both ionic and non-ionic contamination
- Thoroughly rinsing away wash chemistry and residues
- Completely drying assemblies without trapped moisture
For high-density assemblies, successful cleaning depends on integrating all these functions. The cleaning process itself should consist of four primary phases: wash, rinse, DI rinse, and dry.
To continue reading this article, which appeared in the June 2026 SMT007 Magazine, click here.