How you clean electronics can have a major impact on how they perform. If your organization has business-critical objectives that rely on electrical equipment, choose an electronics cleaner carefully. It could affect the operation of the equipment, the safety of those who clean it, and how often the equipment is cleaned.
To help ensure you purchase the right precision cleaning chemicals for electronics, ask the following questions before you select a solvent and place an order.
What types of soils need to be removed?
Step one is choosing a cleaner that removes the soils you want gone. For example, if you need to remove soldering flux, engine oil accretions, or an organic substance such as bitumen, limit your search to eco friendly cleaners that are designed to remove the soil in question. If more than one accumulation of soil must be removed, you may need more than one type of cleaner.
What type of materials need to be cleaned?
Choose a cleaner that’s compatible with every material it touches during the cleaning operation. For example, if you’re cleaning stainless steel electrical contacts, be sure the solvent doesn’t degrade plastic or rubber wire coatings that lead away from the metal contacts.
Does the hardware have complex geometries?
If so, using a cleaner in aerosol form may offer the highest level of cleanliness. Particles of aerosol distribute evenly across the surface areas that have intricate spatial configurations. Trying to clean these areas with wipes is an exercise in futility, and using cleaner in pump spray form can result in overusing solvent in order to saturate and cleanse hard to reach places.
Will the hardware be cleaned while energized?
If so, be sure the cleaner you use contains a dielectric buffer that prevents electricity from traveling through the solvent stream, potentially exploding the solvent container and causing the worker to be shocked and or burned. If you can’t find the cleaner you need in dielectric form, Ecolink can produce a custom formulation that contains the dielectric capacity you need.
Will cleaning occur near sources of ignition?
Some precision cleaning chemicals for electronics have a low flashpoint, which means they ignite rather easily. If you’ll clean electronics in areas where ignition sources (e.g. open flames, sparks from grinders, orange hot electrical filaments, etc.) are present, it’s ideal to use a cleaner that has no flashpoint. It helps prevent burn injuries and building fires.
Is residue on cleaned components acceptable?
In most cases, users of precision cleaning chemicals for electronics don’t want the cleaner to leave a residue. The reason why is simple: Residue tends to attract dirt and grime, which means the equipment needs to be cleaned more often than if a non-residue electronics cleaner were used instead.
Get Precision Cleaning Chemicals for Electronics
Ecolink offers a variety of environmentally preferred cleaners that are designed to clean electronics. For assistance selecting the right precision cleaning chemicals based on your wants and needs, please call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to supplying you with affordable, efficacious, eco friendly cleaning solvents!
Choosing Precision Cleaning Chemicals for Electronics: Key Questions
/in Electrical Contact Cleaning Solutions/by Industrial DegreasersHow you clean electronics can have a major impact on how they perform. If your organization has business-critical objectives that rely on electrical equipment, choose an electronics cleaner carefully. It could affect the operation of the equipment, the safety of those who clean it, and how often the equipment is cleaned.
To help ensure you purchase the right precision cleaning chemicals for electronics, ask the following questions before you select a solvent and place an order.
What types of soils need to be removed?
Step one is choosing a cleaner that removes the soils you want gone. For example, if you need to remove soldering flux, engine oil accretions, or an organic substance such as bitumen, limit your search to eco friendly cleaners that are designed to remove the soil in question. If more than one accumulation of soil must be removed, you may need more than one type of cleaner.
What type of materials need to be cleaned?
Choose a cleaner that’s compatible with every material it touches during the cleaning operation. For example, if you’re cleaning stainless steel electrical contacts, be sure the solvent doesn’t degrade plastic or rubber wire coatings that lead away from the metal contacts.
Does the hardware have complex geometries?
If so, using a cleaner in aerosol form may offer the highest level of cleanliness. Particles of aerosol distribute evenly across the surface areas that have intricate spatial configurations. Trying to clean these areas with wipes is an exercise in futility, and using cleaner in pump spray form can result in overusing solvent in order to saturate and cleanse hard to reach places.
Will the hardware be cleaned while energized?
If so, be sure the cleaner you use contains a dielectric buffer that prevents electricity from traveling through the solvent stream, potentially exploding the solvent container and causing the worker to be shocked and or burned. If you can’t find the cleaner you need in dielectric form, Ecolink can produce a custom formulation that contains the dielectric capacity you need.
Will cleaning occur near sources of ignition?
Some precision cleaning chemicals for electronics have a low flashpoint, which means they ignite rather easily. If you’ll clean electronics in areas where ignition sources (e.g. open flames, sparks from grinders, orange hot electrical filaments, etc.) are present, it’s ideal to use a cleaner that has no flashpoint. It helps prevent burn injuries and building fires.
Is residue on cleaned components acceptable?
In most cases, users of precision cleaning chemicals for electronics don’t want the cleaner to leave a residue. The reason why is simple: Residue tends to attract dirt and grime, which means the equipment needs to be cleaned more often than if a non-residue electronics cleaner were used instead.
Get Precision Cleaning Chemicals for Electronics
Ecolink offers a variety of environmentally preferred cleaners that are designed to clean electronics. For assistance selecting the right precision cleaning chemicals based on your wants and needs, please call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to supplying you with affordable, efficacious, eco friendly cleaning solvents!
Isopropyl Alcohol Manufacturers: What Separates Them?
/in IPA/by Industrial DegreasersOne of the advantages of living in a technologically advanced nation is that there are plenty of suppliers for almost any technology-based product you could possibly need, including isopropyl alcohol (IPA).
Already know you need 99% IPA? Shop here!
If you require isopropyl alcohol for industrial grade cleaning operations, and you need some assistance choosing the right supplier, check out the following four factors that distinguish isopropyl alcohol manufacturers one from another. They can help you choose the right supplier.
Consumer grade IPA commonly has a purity of just under 80%, while IPA for industrial cleaning operations typically has a purity of at least 99%. Looking at the purity levels of a manufacturer’s IPA solutions is a good way to determine whether the company is in the business-to-consumer (B2C) market or the business-to-business (B2B) market. As an industrial IPA user, choosing a B2B IPA manufacturer is the best option.
High-purity IPA, without additional ingredients, is often used as a cleaner for general surfaces and specific types of parts (especially parts from electronics) However, IPA is also used as a base for cleaners that contain multiple ingredients. This opens the way for custom formulations of IPA cleaner that are designed to meet the needs of specific customers.
Not all isopropyl manufacturers offer custom formulations. If you can’t find a stock IPA cleaner that meets your needs, a custom IPA formulation can solve the problem.
Many isopropyl alcohol manufacturers advertise industrial IPA cleaners as “drop in” solutions for quickly replacing other cleaners. The only way to be certain an IPA cleaner can be immediately substituted without additional measures is to test the solution before you buy.
Some manufacturers offer free samples and others don’t. When it comes to evaluating the efficacy of a IPA cleaner, working with a manufacturer that offers free test samples is optimal.
Isopropyl alcohol manufacturers are also distinguished by the supply options they offer. For example, some offer supply-on-demand for low-volume users and some don’t. The same applies to bulk orders for high-volume users.
The supply options at your disposal can have a significant impact on the economics and logistics of using an IPA cleaner. Focus on choosing a manufacturer that offers a wide range of supply options designed to accommodate all users.
Contact Ecolink Today
If this is your first time evaluating isopropyl alcohol manufacturers, the range of options can be dizzying. When you choose Ecolink as your source for IPA, you receive industrial grade IPA, the option to produce a custom formulation through dilution with water or the addition of other ingredients, a free test sample of the degreaser you plan to buy, and the opportunity to customize supply options based on your volume and patterns of IPA use.
To get started on ordering the perfect IPA solutions for your industrial cleaning needs, call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to providing IPA cleaner that tackles you toughest IPA-based cleaning operations!
Medical Industry Cleaners for Critical Degreasing: FAQ
/in Ecolink News/by Industrial DegreasersMedical industry cleaners comprise a category of cleaning solvents that are used to clean medical equipment of various sorts. Degreaser is one type of solvent that falls within the category. If this is your first time shopping for degreaser for critical cleaning of medical equipment, you may have some questions regarding critical degreasers. The answers below can help.
What is the official definition for critical parts degreasing?
Critical parts degreasing is the process of using a degreaser to remove “sub-micrometre particles and non-volatile residue measured in Angstroms” (Wikipedia). The process is typically performed in a clean room environment. The maximum allowed soil for critical cleaning is ? 5 mg / m² (1). “Critical cleaning” is the highest level of cleaning for any type of equipment.
How do standard degreasers and critical degreasers differ?
Most standard degreasers are formulated to perform “intermediate cleaning” and “final cleaning”. As mentioned above, these types of cleaning provide a lower level of soil removal than “precision cleaning” and “critical cleaning.” If you need to perform critical degreasing on medical equipment, a standard degreaser will not suffice. Using a degreaser made for critical cleaning is the only option.
Is it necessary to use precision degreasers in a parts washer?
No. However, using a parts washing system is an easy way to ensure that parts are cleaned according to the definition of critical cleaning. Parts that have simple geometrical designs are easier to clean outside of a washing system than parts that have complex geometrical designs. It’s optimal to clean the latter type of parts using an industrial grade parts washer.
What if I can’t find a degreaser for parts with multiple materials?
This is common problem organizations un into when they first start shopping for a critical degreaser. Metal, rubber, and plastic — and different grades of these materials — are commonly found in a single part. If you can’t find stock medical industry cleaners that meet your needs, working with Ecolink to develop a custom precision cleaning solution is the best option.
How do I know whether a precision degreaser is eco friendly?
Eco friendly medical industry chemicals fall within two basic categories: solvents that are “environmentally safe” and solvents that are “environmentally prefered”. These classifications apply to degreasers containing no ingredients the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) bans, regulates, as well as no ingredients that the EPA is slated to ban or regulate in the future.
Need Medical Industry Chemicals for Critical Degreasing?
If so, Ecolink is a great place to find them. We offer several types of stock degreasing solutions, and we routinely formulate custom degreasers that match customers’ unique requirements. Medical equipment needs the level of degreasing that only critical cleaning can offer. We can provide a degreaser that performs according to the strict requirements for this level of cleaning.
To get started on evaluating your options for medical industry chemicals for degreasing, please call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to presenting you with dynamic, industrial grade degreasing solutions for a great price!
Medical Instrument Solvents: The Pros and Cons of IPA
/in Medical/by Industrial DegreasersIsopropyl alcohol (IPA) is found in many solvents used in medical settings. The alcohol is also used in a highly concentrated water/alcohol mixture (e.g., 99% IPA) to perform certain medical cleaning operations. Do aqueous formulations of IPA belong among your organization’s medical instrument solvents?
That’s what we look at in this entry, listing major pros and cons of using IPA solutions in place of traditional medical instrument solvents, according to information from the CDC presented on Reference.com.
Pro: Readily Kills Fungi and Viruses
The CDC notes that IPA is “useful as a surface disinfectant,… [killing] most bacteria, fungi and viruses”. Ultimately, this means IPA can be an effective solution for cleaning instruments that don’t come into contact with patients (e.g., tweezers used to grasp and dispose of biohazard material in a controlled lab setting) but should not be used to clean instruments found in the medical treatment environment.
Con: Doesn’t Kill Bacterial Spores
Medical instrument solvents containing high percentages of IPA excel at killing bacteria, fungi, and viruses, but they don’t eradicate bacterial spores.
According to the CDC, “The FDA has not approved any products using alcohol as the main active ingredient as a high-level disinfectant for health care settings. While alcohols kill most bacteria, fungi and viruses, they are incapable of killing bacterial spores. Use of alcohol-cleaned surgical instruments contaminated with such spores [can spread] deadly infections.”
Pro: Highly Economical Solution
Because IPA is miscible in water at all concentrations, it provides economies of scale that allow hospitals and health clinics to achieve cost savings by using IPA in precise concentrations. In comparison, butyl alcohol (a.k.a. n-butanol) has a maximum concentration of roughly 10% when combined with water. Along with its low price, IPA’s miscibility with water makes it one of the most cost effective industrial cleaners to use on a regular basis.
Con: Can Harm Certain Materials
IPA is a skin irritant and a powerful solution for banishing oil residues, but it generally isn’t considered a “harsh” cleaning solution. Even so, IPA can damage certain types of materials.
According to the CDC, “The use of alcohol for disinfection causes harm to some equipment. The solvent dissolves shellac mountings and causes rubber and plastics to harden and swell, especially with repeated use… In some uses, it softens and deteriorates glue.”
Whether to include IPA among your medical instrument solvents depends partly on the composition of the instruments you would use it to clean.
Need Medical Instrument Solvents?
If so, whether to include high-purity IPA in your lineup of medical instrument cleaners depends on what types of instruments you would clean with the solution. In many cases, IPA proves to be an excellent cleaner for removing soils from electronic medical equipment and an insufficient cleaner for medical instruments used in patient procedures.
For help determining whether IPA formulations and/or non-IPA medical instrument solvents are a good fit for your instrument cleaning needs, call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to helping you support good health outcomes!
Why Make Ecolink Your IPA Chemical Supplier?
/in Ecolink News/by Industrial DegreasersIsopropyl alcohol (IPA) is one of the most used chemical compounds for industrial cleaning. In addition to being used in its original form, the compound serves as an efficacious ingredient in various solvents that feature blends of multiple chemicals.
Due to its plentitude and broad range of application, industrial-grade IPA is available from hundreds of solvent suppliers in the U.S. alone. With so many options on the table, why should you make Ecolink your trusted IPA chemical supplier? There are five good reasons.
1. Solvents With No EPA Regulated Ingredients
Implementing a solvent with EPA regulated ingredients generally means you can’t use a large volume of the solvent regularly. It’s also important to note that using a solvent with ingredients that are scheduled for regulation by the EPA will eventually lead to the same situation. We provide environmentally-prefered solvents that contain no EPA regulated ingredients.
2. Container Seals That Prevent Vapor Emission
Industrial grade IPA is usually 99% pure isopropyl alcohol. However, when the compound is placed inside a storage container, its purity — and thus its efficacy — can diminish due to vapor loss caused by the vapor density of the compound. Our industrial grade IPA arrives in containers designed to prevent IPA from evaporating during shipping and storage.
3. Option of Custom Solutions for Unique Needs
If you need a blended solvent that contains IPA, and you can’t find a stock solvent that’s exactly the right fit, creating a custom IPA solvent is the solution. We can custom blend an IPA cleaner that meets your precise cleaning requirements, and supply the solution in the volume you need, on the schedule you require.
4. Free Test Sample Prior to Purchasing Solvent
The best way to assess how a solvent performs is to try before you buy. This is why we offer free samples of any solution you’re interested in using. The IPA solvent you plan to order may look perfect on paper, but why not try it out and see if it performs perfectly based on your requirements? To order a free sample, visit the Request Sample page on our website.
5. Order Various Amounts on Various Schedules
Industrial IPA users frequently need IPA in large volumes, but not always. This is why we offer containers that have different supply volumes. We also offer scheduled shipments and shipments on an as-needed basis, giving you the flexibility to order the amount of solvent you need, when you need it.
Contact Us Today
Choosing an IPA chemical supplier should be an educated decision. When you consider everything you could need from an IPA chemical supplier now and in the future, we feel confident that Ecolink will be your strongest supply options for IPA and IPA-based solvents.
To place an order, or to learn more about the benefits of making us your IPA chemical supplier, call us today at 800-563-1305, or send us an email through our contact form. We look forward to helping you tackle your toughest IPA cleaning needs!