Issue



Table of Contents

Solid State Technology

Year 2001
Issue 4

PRODUCTS

New Products


New Products

Gas monitor from Neutronics Inc.; Flow filtration system from Pall Biopharmaceuticals; Imaging software from Horiba Instruments ...


DEPARTMENTS

Viewpoint


Here's the beef

My sister, Anne, recently made a visit home from Germany, and as soon as she got off the plane my parents asked her if she was hungry and what she wanted to eat. "Red meat," she replied in desperation and without hesitation.


Unfiltered


It's a matter of common sense

The goal of business is to make a profit. In my many years of involvement in particle and microbial management, I have observed countless missed opportunities to increase product yield at very little to no cost.


Inventors Corner


Inventor's Corner

Check valve/strainer-filter assembly; Assembling and packaging medical devices; Outdoor enclosure with heated desiccant...


Viewpoint


A spoonful of common sense

Over the past year I've made countless phone calls to readers and vendors in an attempt to point out, shake out, figure out, the single biggest issue that runs across all cleanroom market segments.


FEATURES

Built To Spec


Former sneaker factory gets new sole

If the walls could talk, the 23,000-square-foot building would speak of Volkswagens and Converse sneakers. There would also be some chatter about the new inhabitants of this building, for the V-dubs and Chuck Taylors no longer tread here.


Special Report


Floats like a butterfly, Stings like a bee...What to do about AMC?

It's never really been enough just to get a handle on all the particles floating around in cleanrooms. Today's manufacturing engineers, who have a pretty good handle on taking particles out of the air, are now turning their attention to a new potential yield-limiting culprit: airborne molecular contamination (AMC). And unlike particle contamination, airborne molecular contamination is sneaky.


Features


Healthcare IAQ: Guidance for infection control

Indoor-air-quality (IAQ) challenges outnumber all others in the health-care industry. Unfortunately, the cost-conscious "powers that be" have failed to make the management of critical infection-control systems a top priority.


Features


Dirt and aspergillus in surgical suite renovation

The renovation or expansion of an existing surgical suite is not a project to be undertaken lightly. In general, facilities put this off until the need to expand or update can be financially justified.


NEWS

Particles


Particles...

Quorex gets funding for antibacterial compound; Synetics moves; Metrics facility completed; Purdue Pharmaceuticals undergoes expansion...


News


ISO 14644-7 open for comment

MOUNT PROSPECT, IL—In late February, the ISO Technical Committee 209 (TC 209) released a draft standard of ISO 14644-7, also known as "Separative Enclosures (clean air hoods, glove boxes, isolators and minienvironments)."


News


New York, SEMI take stake in high-tech workforce

NEW YORK STATE—With close to $1 billion at stake, the state of New York hopes to keep its competitive status in luring high-tech firms to the region.


News


Plastic superconductor could revolutionize cleanrooms

MURRAY HILL, NJ—Scientists at Bell Labs have developed a plastic that can conduct electricity at low temperatures without any resistance, making it a superconductor and perhaps the catalyst that could revolutionize cleanroom efficiency and change the face of chipmaking.


News


Fabric ventilation ducts targeted for cleanroom use

DUBUQUE, IA—Frommelt Safety Products' cloth ventilation ducts—called DuctSox—treated with antimicrobials, have gained acceptance in the food processing industry.


News


Photoresist removal method has huge implications

LOS ALAMOS, NM—Scientists working on a new method to remove photoresist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), have developed a process using super critical CO2 that could significantly alter the need for the rinse and dry activities currently employed in silicon wafer production cleanrooms.


News


Euro food agency launch slated for 2002

The outbreak of a virulent livestock ailment, foot-and-mouth disease, in addition to the civil unrest brought on by mad cow disease has forced the European Union (EU) to increase food safety efforts and target early 2002 for the establishment of an agency similar to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).


News


Sieves make catch of the day

ALBUQUERQUE, NM—Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories say the same technology that is used to trap lobsters off the coast of Maine can also capture radioactive and other volatile molecules lurking in hazardous waste.


COLUMNS

Electronics


Indecision 2000: Particle counter version

Remember the indecision in Florida associated with the 2000 presidential election? Each side insisted upon new counts, partial recounts or no recounts; new counting rules or the unconstitutionality of changing rules.


Life Sciences


Cross contamination in pharmacies

The preparation and delivery of the final drug substance either in the retail pharmacy or hospital setting is an area of increasing concern. The patient final dosage in all cases exceeds the "no effect" level for the compound.