v>EPA United States Environmental Protection Agency Research and Development Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory Cincinnati, OH 45268 EPA/600/S-92/033 Sept. 1992 ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH BRIEF Waste Minimization Assessment for a Manufacturer Producing Printed Circuit Boards Harry W. Edwards and Michael Kostrzewa" Phylissa S. Miller" Abstract The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has funded a pilot project to assist small- and medium-size manufacturers who want to minimize their generation of waste but who lack the expertise to do so. Waste Minimization Assessment Cen- ters (WMACs) were established at selected universities and procedures were adapted from the EPA Waste Minimization Opportunity Assessment Manual (EPA/625/7-88/003, July 1988). The WMAC team at Colorado State University performed an assessment at a plant which manufactures single-sided, double- sided, and multilayer printed circuit boards — approximately 259,000 sq ft/yr. In general, circuit art work is received and digitized. The circuit design film template is laser generated from the digitized artwork. In addition copper/epoxy laminates and copper foil (the inner layer's material for multilayer boards) are cut into blank boards and layers with hydraulic shears. Component holes are cut by drilling machines. Drilled boards are mechanically scrubbed to prepare for plating. Circuit pat- terns are created on the boards and foil layers with a dry-film photoresist process and the multilayer boards are built up. The actual copper circuit pattern is generated by a series of photo- lithographic and plating processes. Final processing includes legend application, routing, rinsing, electrical testing, inspections, packing, and shipping. The team's report, detailing findings and recommendations, indicated that the majority of waste was generated in the plating lines and that the greatest savings could be obtained by installing a spray rinse and electrowinning system on the first rinse tank of the electrolytic copper plating line to reduce both copper plating rinse water (88%) and plating sludge (80%) due to drag-out in the first rinse tank. ' Colorado State University, Department of Mechanical Engineering " University City Science Center, Philadelphia, PA This Research Brief was developed by the principal investiga- tors and EPA's Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, Cin- cinnati, OH, to announce key findings of an ongoing research project that is fully documented in a separate report of the same title available from the University City Science Center. Introduction The amount of waste generated by industrial plants has become an increasingly costly problem for manufacturers and an addi- tional stress on the environment. One solution to the problem of waste is to reduce or eliminate the waste at its source. University City Science Center (Philadelphia, PA) has begun a pilot project to assist small- and medium-size manufacturers who want to minimize their formation of waste but who lack the inhouse expertise to do so. Under agreement with EPA's Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, the Science Center has established three WMACs. This assessment was done by engineering faculty and students at Colorado State University's (Fort Collins) WMAC. The assessment teams have consider- able direct experience with process operations in manufactur- ing plants and also have the knowledge and skills needed to minimize waste generation. The waste minimization assessments are done for small- and medium-size manufacturers at no out-of-pocket cost to the client. To qualify for the assessment, each client must fall within Standard Industrial Classification Code 20-39, have gross annual sales not exceeding $75 million, empby no more than 500 persons, and lack inhouse expertise in waste minimization. The potential benefits of the pilot project include minimization of the amount of waste generated by manufacturers, and reduced waste treatment and disposal costs for participating Printed on Recycled Paper ------- plants. In addition, the project provides valuable experience for graduate and undergraduate students who participate in the program, and a cleaner environment without more regulations and higher costs for manufacturers. Methodology of Assessments The waste minimization assessments require several site visits to each client served. In general, the WMACs follow the pro- cedures outlined in the EPA Waste Minimization Opportunity Assessment Manual (EPA/625/7-88/003, July 1988). The WMAC staff locate the sources of waste in the plant and identifies the current disposal or treatment methods and their associated costs. They then identify and analyze a variety of ways to reduce or eliminate the waste. Specific measures to achieve that goal are recommended and the essential supporting tech- nological and economic information is developed. Finally, a confidential report that details the WMAC's findings and rec- ommendations (including cost savings, implementation costs, and payback times) is prepared for each client. Plant Background The plant produces single and multilayer printed circuit boards. The plant operates 4,100 hr/yr to produce approximately 259,000 sq ft of printed circuit board. Manufacturing Process This plant manufactures single-layer and multilayer printed circuit boards. Raw materials for board production include copper/epoxy laminates and copper foil. Process raw materials include both dry-film and positive-image photoresist, copper etchant, black oxide reagents, B-stage resin, copper plating reagents, tin plating reagents, photodeveloper, photofixer, stripping and etching solutions, tin/lead solder, and gold-tab plating reagents. The following steps are involved in making the boards: • Circuit information is received from customers as blue- prints, films, computer floppy diskettes, or some combina- tion of these. Circuit information received as artwork is digitized and stored in a computer. Working film, a tem- plate for the circuit design, is laser generated from the customer's circuit information. • Laminates and foil are cut into blank boards and layers with hydraulic shears. Component holes are then gener- ated in the blank boards with high-speed, numerically- controlled drilling machines. Drill programs are generated digitally and provide drilling instructions for the drilling machines. Drilled boards are mechanically scrubbed to prepare for plating. • Circuit patterns are created on the board and layers with dry-film photoresist. For the individual inner layers of the multilayer boards, the circuit pattern is generated with positive-image photoresist. The electrical circuit design is transferred to the individual layers by first laminating a UV- sensitive dry-film photoresist to the layers. An image of the design is generated by placing a template of the circuit over the film, exposing the film to UV light, and developing the photoresist. Unexposed photoresist is removed, but exposed film is polymerized and protects the underlaying copper circuitry. Unwanted copper is removed with an ammonia etchant. The remaining protective film is re- moved, and exposed copper circuitry is oxidized and cleaned. Oxidation assures good interlayer bonding be- tween panels in the multilayer array. Fiberglass-weave sheets impregnated with resin are placed between each layer, and the array is heated and bonded in a hydraulic press. Component holes are then drilled in the multilayer panels. Further processing of multilayer boards is identical to that of single and double-sided boards. • The circuit pattern is generated by a series of photolitho- graphic and plating processes. First, the surfaces are copper plated in an electroless plating process. This process deposits copper on all exposed surfaces, including the surfaces of drilled holes. Photoresist is then laminated to the board surfaces. Additional copper is electrolytically plated on the surface circuit patterns. After cleaning, the pattern is plated with tin to protect the copper circuitry during subsequent steps to remove the resist film and unwanted copper. The tin layer is removed following resist stripping and copper etching. A solder mask is silk-screened and thermally cured to the board surfaces prior to dipping the boards in molten tin/lead solder. The solder layer provides a surface for mounting electrical components. Additional processing involves conditioning of the soldered surfaces, cleaning, rinsing, and inspecting the finished circuit boards. Connector tabs can be gold plated in sub- sequent processes if requested by the customer. • Final processing includes silk-screen application of a leg- end, routing, rinsing, electrical testing, quality assurance inspections, packing, and shipping. An abbreviated process flow diagram is shown in Figure 1. Existing Waste Management Practices This plant already has implemented the following techniques to manage and minimize its wastes: • Tin plating is used to provide a protective mask for the circuit image during photoresist stripping and copper etch- ing. Unalloyed tin plating replaces traditional tin/lead sol- der, thereby reducing lead contamination. Tin/lead solder is still used as a final circuit coating. • Bright tin plating has been replaced by matte tin plating. The matte tin is less dense and provides a greater topog- raphy than the bright tin. Thus, the matte tin requires less tin stripper and generates less spent tin stripper. • Dry film used as plating resist eliminates chlorinated sol- vents frequently used in silkscreening operations. Silkscreening is still used to apply wet resist solder masks and circuit legends. • Deburrers and scrubbers using water replace more tradi- tional solvent-based drying. • The water supply to the electroless copper plating, electro- lytic copper plating, black oxide, and gold tab plating lines has been divided so that each line has a separate supply valve. In the past, the water supply to all of these lines was controlled by one valve. By separating the water supply, less water is wasted when a given line is not in use. • Counterflow rinses and flow reducers are used in plating operations to reduce rinse water usage. Still drag-out tanks are used following electrolytic copper and tin plating to reduce contamination of subsequent flowing rinses. • An automated plating machine is used on the electroless copper plating line. Automation reduces excess rinse wa- ter contamination by providing consistent residence and drainage times. • Loss of gold in rinse water has been reduced with an ion exchange resin on the gold plating rinse. ------- Film Application and Development Water to Sewer Studge to Shelter Spent Reagent Batch Treatment - Water to Sewer - Sludge to Shelter Electrolytic Plating, Etching, Stripping Solder, Routing, Plating, Packaging • Scrap gold, solder, and aluminum are shipped offsite for recycling. Waste Minimization Opportunities The type of waste currently generated by the plant, the source of the waste, the quantity of the waste, and the annual man- agement costs are given in Table 1. Table 2 shows the opportunities for waste minimization that the WMAC team recommended for the plant. The type of waste, the minimization opportunity, the possible waste reduction and associated savings, and the implementation cost along with the payback times are given in the table. The quantities of waste currently generated by the plant and possible waste reduction depend on the production level of the plant. All values should be considered in that context. It should be noted that, in most cases, the economic savings of the minimization opportunities result from the need for less raw material and from reduced present and future costs associated with waste treatment and disposal. Other savings not quantifi- able by this study include a wide variety of possible future costs related to changing emissions standards, liability, and employee health. It should also be noted that the savings given for each opportunity reflect the savings achievable when implementing each waste minimization opportunity indepen- dently and do not reflect duplication of savings that would result when the opportunities are implemented in a package. This research brief summarizes a part of the work done under Cooperative Agreement No. CR-814903 by the University City Science Center under the sponsorship of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA Project Officer was Emma Lou George. Figure 1. Abbreviated process flow diagram. Table 1. Summary of Current Waste Generation Waste Generated Source of Waste Cuposit reagents Cuposit rinse water Oxide/desmear reagents Oxide/desmear rinse water Copper plating reagents Copper plating rinse water Spent copper etchant Spent tin stripper Gold-tab reagents Gold-tab rinse water Spent nickel plating solution Spent solvent (TCA) Press cooling water Developer rinse water Waste photo fixer Spent rack stripper Plating sludge Copper scrap (dropoffs) Solder dross Electroless copper plating line Electroless copper plating line Black oxide/desmear line Black oxide/desmear line Electrolytic copper and electrolytic tin plating line Electrolytic copper and electrolytic tin plating line Enclosed closed-loop etching machine on the electrolytic copper and electrolytic tin plating Two-step tin removal tanks on the electrolytic copper and electrolytic tin plating Gold-tab plating line Gold-tab plating line Gold-tab plating line Gold-tab plating line (to remc adhesive residue during wt Multilayer circuit board press Photoresist developer rinse Photoresist and film developing Rack stripping operation All plating lines Circuit board routing and, Hot-air leveling Annual Quantity Generated Annual Waste Management Cost 22,050 gal 1,117,200 gal 38,963 gal 705,600 gal 108,800 gal 3,823,470 gal 22,330 gal 5,795 gal $ 3,714 9,354 6,563 5,908 47,420 37,361 88,813 81,024 1 Plant personnel report no incremental cost associated with present disposal to POTW. *Plant personnel report no incremental cost associated with present disposal in municipal waste. e masking tape 7i/humid weather) 7 ing operations 765 gal 3,034,080 gal 165 gal 110 gal 282,240 gal 1,1 28,960 gal 30 gal 1,348 gal 1 16,900 Ib 8,575 Ib 6,500 Ib 129 1 1,804 570 980 893 3,572 O1 22,326 24,257 O2 23,230 . GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: I9M - S50-067/80172 ------- Table 2. Summary of Recommended Waste Minimization Opportunities Annual Waste Reduction Waste Generated Spent rack stripper Plating sludge 1 Copper plating rinse water Plating sludge 2 Minimization Opportunity Use polyethylene plating racks in the electrolytic copper plating bath to reduce the need for stripping solution. Install a spray rinse and electro- winning-system to replace the first rinse in the electrolytic copper plating line. Quantity 101 8 gal 448 Ib 328, 300 gal 14,240 Ib Percent 75.5 75.5 88 80 Net Implementation Annual Savings Costs $16,951 $28,300 14,453 4 17,433 Payback Years 1.7 1.2 Plating sludge3 Oxide/desmear rinse water Increase drain times over the 4,450 Ib electrolytic copper plating tanks to reduce drag-out. Install contact switches on the 183,750 gal rinses in the desmear/etchback line to reduce water consumption. 25 69 12,237 581 1 Plating sludge results from treatment of spent stripper. 2Plating sludge results from drag-out on first electrolytic copper plating line rinse tank. 3Plating sludge results from drag-out on electrolytic copper plating line. 4This figure includes copper recycling credit, increased electricity consumption, and cathode replacement cost. 1,000 645 0.08 1.1 United States Environmental Protection Agency Center for Environmental Research Information Cincinnati, OH 45268 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 EPA/600/S-92/033 BULK RATE POSTAGE & FEES PAID EPA PERMIT No. G-35 \ ------- |