Dress Code for the Microelectronics Industry
Anti-static Coveralls The immense power of microelectronics technology in aerospace, defense, and industrial automation is a well-known fact. Unmanned aerial vehicles can fly freely in the sky; artificial satellites, spacecraft, and space shuttles can accurately launch, fly, and locate themselves, automatically transmitting various information back to the ground. The widespread use of computers and various sensing technologies in industry can save manpower, improve automation levels and processing precision, and greatly increase labor productivity.
Do you know how rigorous the manufacturing process is for the chips used in these microelectronic devices? Clean production workspaces must implement anti-static measures. This is mainly due to the mechanical effects of static electricity; airborne dust particles can adhere to electronic components such as silicon wafers (components of chips), seriously affecting the quality of microelectronic chips. Therefore, workers are required to wear anti-static coveralls when entering production workshops. Anti-static work clothes made by incorporating conductive fibers into synthetic fabrics utilize both charge leakage and neutralization mechanisms. The current is discharged to the ground through conductive fibers; or, when not grounded, the current is dissipated by the weak corona discharge of conductive fibers.




