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Circuit Protection
Forum Modern electronics. Do we still need to be careful about ESD?
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Modern electronics. Do we still need to be careful about ESD?

macnewton
macnewton over 5 years ago

Years ago, when I got started in electronic repair and design,  we were trained in all areas of ESD protocols. As a bench tech I felt naked if I didn't have my grounding strap attached to my left hand.

35 years later I'm still paying close attention and making sure that I'm well-grounded whenever I'm handling any kind of electronic circuit boards.

 

I'm now retired from business, and I'm now a full-time maker. Whenever I get a new visitor to my shop I always provide a short overview of ESD rules and regulations. It now appears that most younger makers haven't been trained to protect their electronics and in fact I get ridiculed whenever I bring the subject up. So my question today is this, are modern electronics designed to be handled without having to be grounded?

 

Let's look at one piece of electronics that I use in the number of my Raspberry Pi projects.

It's the element14 Raspberry Pi V2 Camera. Can this camera module be handled on the bench without having to worry about EST protection?

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Top Replies

  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 5 years ago +5 suggested
    Hi Dale, I have a copper strip that runs the front edge of all my work tables. The strip is tied to Earth ground through a 10K resistor. As I sit at the bench and work my forearms are frequently in touch…
  • dougw
    dougw over 5 years ago +4 verified
    ESD is still a big deal in electronic assembly areas. Most electronic components today have some level of ESD protection built-in, but it always has its limits. It would take a large volume to describe…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 5 years ago +4 suggested
    ESD damage is certainly real - and almost all modern components are susceptible in some way or other. How much of a problem it is depends on a great many local factors. Where I live (SW Scotland, cool…
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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 5 years ago

    Hi Dale,

     

    It also depends on the context, to determine the amount of attention that is needed.

    If you're prototyping then you can get away without much care. If ESD damage occurs you can troubleshoot or replace the part, and probably you're taking some precautions without realising it, just out of habit, like not moving as much while assembling parts, not touching the legs of parts if possible, etc. Running up or down the stairs and then immediately handling a MOSFET is probably not a good idea though!

     

    In production it's a totally different story for good reason. Any slight failure rate will result in significant failure quantity over time, and it could manifest in the field later too. Then it's another problem to deal with all the issues caused to the customer. I had a full-time job once just trying to figure out if field failures were due to production issues or not, such as bad ESD practice or faulty machines knocking parts etc.

     

    Personally for prototyping I do the same thing as mentioned above, regarding soldering down all passives first if possible, so that the semiconductors have a bit more protection. Some (perhaps older) circuit topologies used very sensitive parts, like particular MOSFETs that came with wires shorted together to be remove after soldering.

     

    Anyway, long story short, for prototyping you may find practically that some ESD practices can be reduced with little noticeable effect, given that some steps are mentally performed to minimise the risk anyway. Personally though I still take care to store parts well, use conductive mat, at least regularly touch the metal conductive part of the iron (a cold part of it obviously!), don't move around too much, don't have loads of layers of clothes on, not touch metal parts of components when placing them with tweezers, use ESD tweezers and so on. They are all small easy things to do.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 5 years ago

    Hi Dale,

     

    It also depends on the context, to determine the amount of attention that is needed.

    If you're prototyping then you can get away without much care. If ESD damage occurs you can troubleshoot or replace the part, and probably you're taking some precautions without realising it, just out of habit, like not moving as much while assembling parts, not touching the legs of parts if possible, etc. Running up or down the stairs and then immediately handling a MOSFET is probably not a good idea though!

     

    In production it's a totally different story for good reason. Any slight failure rate will result in significant failure quantity over time, and it could manifest in the field later too. Then it's another problem to deal with all the issues caused to the customer. I had a full-time job once just trying to figure out if field failures were due to production issues or not, such as bad ESD practice or faulty machines knocking parts etc.

     

    Personally for prototyping I do the same thing as mentioned above, regarding soldering down all passives first if possible, so that the semiconductors have a bit more protection. Some (perhaps older) circuit topologies used very sensitive parts, like particular MOSFETs that came with wires shorted together to be remove after soldering.

     

    Anyway, long story short, for prototyping you may find practically that some ESD practices can be reduced with little noticeable effect, given that some steps are mentally performed to minimise the risk anyway. Personally though I still take care to store parts well, use conductive mat, at least regularly touch the metal conductive part of the iron (a cold part of it obviously!), don't move around too much, don't have loads of layers of clothes on, not touch metal parts of components when placing them with tweezers, use ESD tweezers and so on. They are all small easy things to do.

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