ABC's of UV Measurement and Process Control November 2012
ABC's of UV Measurement and Process Control November 2012
ABC's of UV Measurement and Process Control November 2012
Of UV Measurement &
Process Control
Instrument Markets
Jim Raymont
Sterling, VA
The “Real” ABC Experts Were
Not Available
The CBAV’s of UV Measurement &
ABC’s Process Control
Webinar Agenda
• Review ‘key’ UV measurement &
process control concepts
• All inclusive? No
• Good start? Yes-these are a few on my
favorite terms
• Reviewed by “letter” with some poetic
license
• Resources
• Copy of this presentation available
• RadTech UV Measurement Glossary
(www.radtech.org)
ABC’s of UV Measurement &
Process Control
• Wide variety of commercial instruments available for different
sources and applications
• What are your needs?
• Define a process?
• Maintain process?
• R&D?
• Data Retention?
• Where will you measure?
• Production environment or lab environment
• Who will use it?
• Ease of use and features needed
• What is source type, size, expected dynamic range, spectral output?
• What values do you need?
• Absolute: Joules, Watts, Irradiance Profile, Spectral Profile
• Relative: Change over time, continuous monitoring
RTM
Read
The
Manual
Data Organization
• Do not rely only on formulator
“radiometer”
Dynamic Range (Instrument) o Clipboard?
• Match Instrument to Source &
Application o Electronic?
o Procedures?
o 10’s of mW to 20,000+ mW/cm2
• Weigh a Baby on Truck Scale? But I Get
Readings?
o Barely trip instrument ‘on’ or using it in
the suggested operating range
o Low side of range-variation
o Very, very, very stable readings: Did I
max out unit?
Equipment Suppliers
Time • Use as a resource
Focus
0.025 seconds
Formulation/Formulator
• Match Formulation to Application
• Use Formulator as a Resource and not just a complaint department
Goals
Goals are deceptive-the unaimed arrow never misses
Charles Knief (Kimo’s Rules)
Guess
Anything that you can measure, you have a better chance of controlling.
Things that you do not measure become the cause of mysterious
problems Larry Goldberg-Beta Industries
Health & Safety
• www.radtech.org
How Often Do I Measure?
• Chemical Safety
• Application?
• PPE
• Value of Product?
• Housekeeping
• Type of Product?
• Reporting Requirements
• Process Window?
• Hygiene
• Equipment Safety
Handshake
• The UV source and formulation need to do a “handshake”
• Modify formulation designed for broadband UV sources to work
on a narrow band UV source such as UV LED
• Verify you get the desired properties and performance under a
new source
Irradiance (Intensity)
• Expressed in watts or milliWatts per square centimeter (W/cm2 or mW/cm2)
• Total radiant power of (all) wavelengths passing from all incident directions
onto an infinitesimally small area (cm2)
• Readings decrease with the square of the distance (True for LEDs?)
• Depth of cure, penetration through pigments and opaque colors, adhesion to
the substrate
dA
Infrared
• What role does it play in your
application?
o Cure?
o Substrate?
o Cooling of UV Source?
Coating Specification: 4 Joules/cm2
1 Joule = 1 Watt for 1 Second
4 Joule Exposures
• 4 Watts-1 Second
4 Watts
• 1 Watt-4 Seconds
1 Second • 2 Watts- 2 Seconds
2 Watts
1 Watt-4 Seconds
2 Seconds
Line Speed
Log Dwell Time UV System: North Line Lamp: 2 Other Signature
Date FPM/RPM
Ind. Actual. Power Hour Irradiance Energy
WPI Meter (W/cm2) Density
(J/cm2)
Spectral
1
Irradiance is
Relative Radiant Power/Responsivity
0.7
LED
0.6 365nm
0.5
UVA
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
200 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600
Wavelength (nm) Radiant Power data is for 100mW Nichia LED.
UVA Responsivity obtained from EIT LLC.
Caution! I’ve Got Numbers
(UV) LEDs
• Instrument Bandwidth Not Matched to Source
• Measurement of 395 nm LED with EIT UVA (320-390 nm) and EIT UVV (390-445nm)
1 Spectral
Irradiance is
Relative Radiant Power/Responsivity
0.7 LED
395nm
0.6
UVA
0.5
0.4 UVV
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
200 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600
Wavelength (nm) Radiant Power data is for 395nm Nichia LED.
UVA and V Responsivity obtained from EIT LLC.
(UV) LEDs
• 395 nm LED with EIT UVA2 (380-410 nm)
• Instrument Bandwidth Matched to Source
Microwave
Nanometer
• A nanometer is equal to one billionth
(1/1,000,000,000 or 10-9) of a meter
o Water molecule is less than 1 nm
o Typical germ is about 1,000 nm
o Hair is about 100,000 nm wide
o Shaquille O’Neal is 2,160,000,000 nm tall
• Non-vacuum UV: +/- 200 nm to 400-450
nm (visible light)
• Nanometers also used to describe
instrument bands
– EIT UVA response is 320-390 nm
NIST Traceability
• Process to transfer “NIST” traceable reading into customer instrument
Online UV Measurement
• Continuous feedback & monitoring
– Tight process windows/High $
Products
– UV changes with time
– Feedback to display, PLC, Alarms
• Applications where a radiometer will
not fit or is not practical
– Web, Bank of multiple lamps
– Lamps high off ground
• Communication
– Percentage readings
– Coordinate with absolute radiometer EMI Hardened Sensor for
Online measurements
Optics
• Filter and detector specifications
• Spatial response (Cosine)
• Design-Balance between optical stability &
repeatable electronic signal level
• Proper care and cleaning
Penetration (Adhesion)
UVC UVB UVA UVV
Normal Operating Window
Reflectors
• 60-80% of energy reaching
the substrate is reflected
• Optimize reflected energy,
reflector focus and lamp
position through design and
maintenance programs
• Shape, type, material, coating
of reflector matched to
process
Radiochromatic Strips
• Web press option
• Clean Reflectors are key to
success • Correlate to radiometer or color?
Specification (Cure)
• Applied electrical power is not enough (i.e. 200 WPI lamp)
• Minimum energy density: 700 mJ/cm2, EIT UVA (320-390)
• Minimum irradiance: 650 mW/cm2, EIT UVA (320-390)
• Lamp Type, Reflector Type, Thermal, Coating Thickness
Spectral Radiometer
• Irradiance as function of wavelength
• Available from UV bulb/equipment supplier
• R&D value vs. production value?
Sampling Rate
• Did your instrument take enough samples
to avoid errors and ‘catch’ the peak? 910 mW/cm2 (RMS)
Temperature
• Avoid sending an instrument through rapid, repeated,
long duration, high UV intensity/temperature runs
• Alarms on units
• If the instrument is too hot to touch – it’s too hot to
measure
IL UVA
250-415
EIT nm
UVA 320-
390 nm
Total power applied to the system or the lamp power setting is not the
effective amount of UV generated or effective amount of UV
reaching the cure surface
Xenon Sources
• Pulsed UV energy
• Not all instruments can measure short duration
high energy pulses-need modified electronics for
pulsed sources
• Coordinate with source and instrument supplier
Yield
• At the end of the day, UV Measurement &
Process Control is all about being able to
produce good quality products at a profit
Thank You EIT-Instrument Markets
Jim Raymont
• Zee Presentation available as PDF 108 Carpenter Drive
• Zee Questions? Sterling, VA 20164
Phone: 703-478-0700
Fax: 703-478-0291
jraymont@eit.com
uv@eit.com
And now that you know www.eit.com
your UV ABC’s, won’t
you sing along with
me…!