Product category:
Materials and components
News Release from: Tecan
Edited by the Engineeringtalk Editorial
Team on 20 July 2006
Manufacturing director becomes a doctor
Peter Jefferies, Tecan's Manufacturing Director, has attained a doctorate in advanced manufacturing technology.
Weymouth-based precision metal etching specialist Tecan is again celebrating success in the field of environmentally friendly manufacturing, with the news that Peter Jefferies, the company's Manufacturing Director, has attained a doctorate in advanced manufacturing technology Conferred by the prestigious Cranfield University, the doctorate recognises highly specialised process control and chemical engineering research carried out by Dr Jefferies and a team of specialists at the university, culminating in a new technology which now saves the company thousands of pounds a year and is significantly kinder to the environment than traditional chemical rejuvenation techniques used to extend the life of the etchants used in the manufacturing processes
This article was originally published on Engineeringtalk on 12 Mar 2001 at 8.00am (UK)
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"My colleagues and I have developed the technology - which concerns the regeneration of ferric chloride etchant, used in the manufacture of metal parts, in our case the etching of solder paste screening stencils for the electronics manufacturing industry", said Dr Jefferies.
"The development has resulted in an environmentally friendly and cost-effective solution to an ongoing problem - Ferric chloride will, as a result of the etching process, naturally 'age' meaning that the ferric ions will be converted to ferrous ions, which will not etch metal have a tendency to cause other processing problems".
"Our technique is successful because, unlike traditional regeneration methods which use aggressive and potentially dangerous chemicals and gas, the new method uses oxygen as the oxidising agent".
Further reading
Detailed precision parts with critical tolerances
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To make the process work needs accurate monitoring and control of critical parameters.
These processes did not exist prior to the study and were developed by Dr Jefferies as part of the work.
He also was responsible for a further refinement of the regeneration process which involves the use of air resulting in a totally environmentally friendly process.
Benefits of the new process include significantly reduced processing costs, economical long-term acid life, greater operational safety, increased profitability - and a further boost in the company's ongoing initiatives to protect the environment.
The research was based on an original IBM patented technology released to the Photo Chemical Machining Institute (PCMI), subsequent developed by Dr Jefferies and his colleagues at Cranfield University.
Tecan, has been recognised for its ongoing commitment to minimising its effect on the environment, by recently being granted ISO14001 status for its in-house environmental management systems.
To achieve the accreditation it is necessary to prove that a company has established and is committed to maintaining a number of management procedures and initiatives to ensure ongoing conformance with the demanding International ISO14001 guidelines.
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