Hybrid - Ted Dangelmayer: Costly Controversial ESD Myths

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Sponsor:   IEEE Boston/Providence/New Hampshire Reliability Chapter

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Host:        IEEE Boston/Providence/New Hampshire Reliability Chapter


Abstract:

There are several common misunderstandings and controversies that can have significant impact on costs, quality and reliability of ESD programs. These misunderstandings or "myths" result in costly unnecessary expenditures and/or a compromise of the program integrity. These same myths are often cited by skeptics who do not fully understand the physics involved. Consequently, it is important to identify and dispel these myths.

Latency is a significant reliability consideration that is surrounded with controversy. Some experts will argue that latency is virtually non-existent while others claim that it is the dominant failure mode. Join us for this highly interactive discussion and learn about Latency as well as common myths such as:

Myth: ANSI/ESD S20.20 Is Sufficient For Class 0 Technologies

Myth: HBM Failures Dominate ESD Failures

Myth: Circuit Boards are Always Less Sensitive to ESD than Devices

Myth: Airflow Causes Charging

Myth: Humidity Control is Essential for ESD

Myth: Fieldmeters Make Accurate Measurements on Machines

Myth: Latency Failures Comprise 90% of ESD Failures

The Zoom recording may be found at

https://us06web.zoom.us/rec/share/ovzgjXTzJmxbd5PLY-es7aRKdWSoAc-rTECiJxhyeTtRkd5BuHmcOBffDds2TC2Q.FAFNwwzZYmI-UF8g

Passcode: f.2X6n?s


  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 13 Nov 2024
  • Time: 05:30 PM to 07:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
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  • Lincoln Laboratory
  • 244 Wood St
  • Lexington, Massachusetts
  • United States 02421
  • Building: Main Cafeteria

  • Contact Event Host
  • James P. (Jay) Yakura, Chair

    IEEE Boston/Providence/New Hampshire Reliability Chapter

  • Co-sponsored by ESDA NE Chapter
  • Starts 09 October 2024 12:00 AM
  • Ends 12 November 2024 05:30 PM
  • All times are (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Ted Dangelmayer of Dangelmayer Associates, LLC

Topic:

Costly Controversial ESD Myths

There are several common misunderstandings and controversies that can have significant impact on costs, quality and reliability of ESD programs. These misunderstandings or "myths" result in costly unnecessary expenditures and/or a compromise of the program integrity. These same myths are often cited by skeptics who do not fully understand the physics involved. Consequently, it is important to identify and dispel these myths.

Latency is a significant reliability consideration that is surrounded with controversy. Some experts will argue that latency is virtually non-existent while others claim that it is the dominant failure mode. Join us for this highly interactive discussion and learn about Latency as well as common myths such as:

Myth: ANSI/ESD S20.20 Is Sufficient For Class 0 Technologies

Myth: HBM Failures Dominate ESD Failures

Myth: Circuit Boards are Always Less Sensitive to ESD than Devices

Myth: Airflow Causes Charging

Myth: Humidity Control is Essential for ESD

Myth: Fieldmeters Make Accurate Measurements on Machines

Myth: Latency Failures Comprise 90% of ESD Failures

Biography:

TED DANGELMAYER

Ted Dangelmayer is the president of Dangelmayer Associates, LLC and has assembled an ESD consulting team consisting of the foremost authorities in virtually all ESD areas of both product design and manufacturing. He received the “Outstanding Contribution” award and the EOS/ESD Association, Inc. “Founders” award. He was president of EOS/ESD Association, Inc., chairman of the ESDA standards committee, and general chairman of the EOS/ESD Symposium. He has published two editions of his book, ESD Program Management, numerous magazine articles, and technical papers. Ted holds three patents and is iNARTE certified. He is currently president of the Northeast local chapter of EOS/ESD Association, Inc.

978-282-8888

www.dangelmayer.com

Email: Ted@dangelmayer.com





Agenda

5:30 PM     Pizza, salad, soda, and Networking

6:00  PM   Technical Presentation

6:45 PM    Questions and Answers

7:00 PM    Adjournment



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  Media

Presentation slides 5.44 MiB