4.4 Fire safety in thermal processes
Thermal processing equipment—such as reflow ovens, wave soldering machines, and curing ovens—essentially operates as a controlled fire inside a manufacturing enclosure. The boundary between a stable soldering profile and a catastrophic facility fire is governed by thermal regulation and fuel management. You must train your teams to treat flux residue not simply as “dirt,” but as accumulated fuel patiently waiting for an ignition source.
Fuel management (flux residue)
Section titled “Fuel management (flux residue)”Vaporized flux naturally condenses on the cooler metal surfaces within the oven tunnel and exhaust ducting, creating a highly flammable condensate.
- Reflow Soldering: Implement a strict preventive maintenance (PM) schedule to mechanically scrape and clean the tunnel entrance and exit zones. The residue depth should never exceed 2 mm.
- Wave Soldering: It is critical to remove dross and spent flux daily. Titanium fingers and solder pots operate at temperatures exceeding 250˚C; any accumulated paper or flux debris near the pot presents an immediate, highly probable ignition hazard.
- Exhaust Interlocks: If the exhaust velocity drops below 5 m/s, you must rapidly inspect the ductwork for physical blockage. Low flow allows volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to pool, creating an explosive atmosphere directly inside the oven.
Pro-Tip: Try using thermal imaging cameras during routine maintenance cycles to identify latent “hot spots” in the electrical cabinet or heating elements. This allows you to detect failing insulation or loose connections long before they can draw an arc.
Thermal runaway protection
Section titled “Thermal runaway protection”Software controls can hang, and relying solely on the PLC to manage critical temperature limits is an engineering failure.
- Primary Control Failure: If the primary control loop fails (e.g. a solid-state relay shorts ON), a dedicated hardware over-temperature switch must automatically cut the main power. This switch needs to be entirely independent of the PLC logic and must break the contactor coil circuit.
- Conveyor Failure: If the conveyor stops unexpectedly due to a jam or mechanical motor failure, the internal heaters must automatically shut off. Stationary PCBs resting under active convection heaters will char and ignite within seconds.
Suppression systems
Section titled “Suppression systems”Water sprinklers destroy sensitive electronics and can cause violent, explosive steam expansion when interacting with a bath of molten solder.
- Inside the Machine: Use only CO₂ or Clean Agent extinguishers. These suppress fire by rapidly displacing oxygen and do not leave any conductive residue that would otherwise irreparably destroy the machine’s internal electronics.
- Surrounding Area: Standard building water sprinklers should only serve as the absolute final defense for the facility structure itself, never as the primary defense for the machine.
Final Checkout: Fire safety in thermal processes
Section titled “Final Checkout: Fire safety in thermal processes”| Parameter | Metric / Rule | Critical State |
|---|---|---|
| Over-Temp Protection | Type | Hardware Switch (Non-Software) |
| Flux Residue | Max Depth | ≤ 2 mm |
| Exhaust Interlock | Logic | Fan Off = Heaters Off |
| Conveyor Interlock | Logic | Stop = Heaters Off |
| Extinguisher Type | At Machine | CO₂ / Clean Agent |
| Duct Inspection | Frequency | Quarterly |