Intensive Trainings
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Contamination Control in High Purity Manufacturing
6th June 2022 - 8th June 2022
Why Choose this Training Course
This is a 3-day training course. Particulate, chemical and microbial contamination is widely recognized as a key factor that affects process yield and product reliability in diverse industries, such as microelectronics, data storage, aerospace, pharmaceutical, biomedical devices, automotive, food processing, and nano-materials synthesis. The control of microorganisms is especially critical in the medical device, pharmaceutical and food industries. There are many potential sources of contamination in a cleanroom process– facilities, chemicals, workstations, process, garments, consumables, people, etc. The relative magnitudes of these sources vary from process to process, and must be quantified and prioritized via a Pareto chart. Contamination control is a multi-disciplinary skill which is not taught in classrooms, but is an expertise acquired primarily through on-the-job learning. This 2-day course, with a special focus on microbial control, is intended to supplement such learning by practice.
Who Should Attend
Engineers and managers in the areas of:
- Contamination control & cleaning
- Chemical integration
- Yield Improvement
- Reliability Engineering
- Failure Analysis
- Process Development
- Process Engineering
- Product Development
- Product Engineering
- Quality Control & Optimization
- Process Control
- Analysis & metrology
- Audits & education
In addition, manufacturing personnel (operators, supervisors) working in contamination-controlled environments (e.g. cleanrooms) will benefit as well.
Key Learning Objectives
- Identify sources of chemical and particulate contamination, and their effects
- Develop familiarity with use of laboratory and in-line instruments to quantify contaminants
- Understand the fundamentals of contamination generation, transport, deposition and adhesion on exposed surfaces
- Comprehend the operating principles underlying surface cleaning methods, such as power ultrasound, megasonics, and dry methods such as CO2 snow
- Appreciate the basics of cleanroom and tooling design to minimize contamination
- Quantify the contribution of these and other sources (such as consumables, chemicals, etc) to the overall contamination loading in a cleanroom environment
- Audit cleanroom processes for contamination sources, and document findings for appropriate corrective actions