Skip to content

3.4 Ionization & insulator control

Grounding straps and conductive floors are fundamentally effective, but they share a key physical limitation: they only work on conductors. They are chemically incapable of draining an electrical charge from insulators, such as plastics, epoxies, or glass. When an ungrounded insulator—like a plastic connector housing or the fiberglass substrate of a circuit board—accumulates a static charge, it creates a persistent electrostatic field. This invisible field can induce a voltage onto nearby open conductive traces without any physical contact, a phenomenon known as Field-Induced Charging. This can lead to Charged Device Model (CDM) failures the exact moment the board touches a grounded tool. Therefore, ionization is never just optional “air blowing”; it is the only viable method to safely neutralize charged insulators.

Since it is impossible to eliminate all insulators from the manufacturing process—after all, the printed circuit board itself is a primary insulator—you must systematically manage the electrostatic risk based on physical proximity. This is most effectively accomplished through strict proximity rules and active neutralization.

The standard industry approach is the “30 cm Rule.” If an insulator is non-essential for the manufacturing process, such as personal coffee cups, standard scotch tape, ordinary paperwork, or plastic binders, it should be banned from the EPA entirely. At a minimum, these items must maintain an exclusion zone of more than 30 centimeters away from any Electrostatic Discharge Sensitive (ESDS) components. Conversely, if an insulator is deemed “process essential,” such as connector bodies, the PCB fiberglass itself, or specialized manufacturing jigs, it needs to be actively neutralized using targeted air ionization.

Ionizers operate by continuously flooding the local air with both positive and negative ions. These airborne ions are naturally attracted to oppositely charged surfaces, effectively neutralizing any static charge on objects that cannot be traditionally grounded.

Selecting the correct ionizer depends entirely on the application. Overhead blowers are excellent for providing general, sweeping coverage across an entire workbench. However, you must carefully manage the workspace to prevent airflow blockages, ensuring that boxes or equipment do not obstruct the direct “line of sight” between the ionizer and the sensitive product.

For more focused, high-static activities, such as working inside a wave solder machine or dealing with automated tape-and-reel feeders, you should deploy point-of-use or “snake” ionizers. Finally, when cleaning dust off sensitive optics or sensors, standard compressed air should be avoided, as it generates massive amounts of static friction. In these scenarios, the use of ionized air guns is recommended.

Pro-Tip: Ionizers are rarely “set and forget” devices. Over time, the internal emitter points will erode and collect airborne silica and dust. This contamination causes the electrical balance of the ionizer to drift. If left unmaintained, a dirty ionizer can reverse its function and become an active static generator, continuously pumping thousands of volts of destructive charge directly onto your product.

Once a sensitive product leaves the protected environment of the EPA, its survival during transport relies entirely on creating an external shield that electrostatic fields cannot penetrate.

It is important to differentiate between packaging materials based on their physical properties. Silver “Metal-In” shielding bags are generally mandatory for PCBAs and sensitive components moving outside the EPA. The embedded metal layer in these bags creates a literal Faraday Cage, actively blocking external electrostatic fields from reaching the product inside.

In contrast, Pink Poly bags are merely dissipative. They are suitable only for “low risk” items like screws, metal brackets, or non-sensitive hardware. You should clearly communicate that pink poly is not a shield. It merely prevents the plastic bag itself from generating a triboelectric charge when handled; it offers essentially zero protection against external electrostatic fields in the environment.

When transporting these packed materials on mobile carts, the carts themselves must be electrically bonded to the ESD flooring system via conductive drag chains or specialized conductive casters. However, if those cart wheels are allowed to become dirty, the accumulated grime acts as an insulator, turning the entire cart into an isolated floating conductor. Regular, monthly cleaning of cart wheels is a critical, often-overlooked maintenance requirement.

Final Checkout: Ionization & insulator control

Section titled “Final Checkout: Ionization & insulator control”
Control ParameterSpecification / LimitFrequencyOwner
Ionizer Decay Time1000V to 100V in < 2.0 SecondsQuarterlyMaintenance
Ionizer BalanceOffset Voltage ± 35 VoltsQuarterlyMaintenance
Process InsulatorsNeutralized (Ionized) or > 30 cm awayDailyOperations
Mobile CartsGround Path < 1.0 x 10^9 ΩMonthlyESD Lead
PackagingShielding (Silver) for all activesSpot CheckLogistics