Plasma treatment for printed circuit boards:

 

To increase production of its sensors for the automobile industry and machine building, Honesttech changed its surface treatment technology. Instead of low pressure plasma and vacuum chambers, a shift was made to inline Openair plasma, which tripled throughput

Thin, transparent insulating plasma polymer coatings that protect against aging can be deposited successfully with PlasmaGood to protect electronic components, especially printed circuit boards, in selected areas

CASE

For this product we built a new production line in 1999 with the objective to increase the capacity while reducing cost at the same time. With these considerations in mind, the previously processed, expensive ABS plastics was to be replaced, among others, by equally high-quality but lower-priced PP (polypropylene). There was only one problem: the difficult printability of PP. To enable printing of the rounded off handles of the immersion mixer in tampon print, a previous optimal pretreatment of the polypropylene is mandatory since without microfine cleaning and high activation of the plastic surface a strong, long-term stable adhesion of the printing ink cannot be achieved.

Pretreatment with corona, flame or low pressure plasma would have been conceivable on principle but these methods were not suited for our product given the particularly sensitive high-gloss surfaces. A corona treatment would have left "crows feet", i.e. mat lines on the plastics which would have remained visible while printing. In the case of a flame method, the gas would form cloudy, mat surfaces with the same negative effect on the appearance. A plasma treatment under low pressure would have necessitated a laborious vacuum chamber system on the one hand and could have hardly been integrated into the line on the other.

We found the solution to our problem in the Openair plasma technology. The then young, innovative method was presented to us by the female engineer, Irena Uranjek, with whose company, Rogac Plus, we had already cooperated at the time. The test series revealed that this plasma technique not only provided the best adhesion results but was also the only method to leave no visible traces on white and very bright polypropylene. Moreover, the system had been developed for automatic production and could be readily employed by us inline. When black PP was introduced for our product, BSH additionally purchased from Plasmatreat the RD1004 rotational-nozzle system which now also imparts a perfect appearance to dark, high-gloss material.

Openair plasma treatment does not leave even the slightest visible trace on the glossy surfaces.
For more than 10 years the original Plasmatreat Openair plasma unit has been in continuous operation. The system has been operating 24/7 during a 3-shift cycle without failure, and always with the same process safety and effectiveness as in the beginning. To date more than 10,500,000 immersion blenders have been pretreated with this plasma unit at BSH Nazarje.
For a producer, there is certainly no greater satisfaction than knowing about the high quality and durability of their own product. We are pleased to testify these features to Plasmatreat after our long experience with the Openair plasma process.

 

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ceramic crystal glass coating
conformal coating
fire retardant coating
heat resistant coating
lubricant coating
nano coating
polyurea coating
powder coating
printing ink
roof coating
scratch resistance coating
sound damping coating
texture coating
water proof coating
wood coating exteror decoration

texture coating
water proof coating
wood coating exteror decoration