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Most High Tech manufacturing industries require that conditions in the assembly area to be ultra clean. This means not only must the walls, floors, ceilings, and work surfaces be immaculately clean, but also the air must be filtered to remove as many particles (particulates) as possible. High tech manufacturers can lose thousands of dollars worth of chips because a single skin flake floating in the air, one third of a micron in size, landed on a silicon wafer. Amicron is 125,000th of an inch so the sizes of these particles are microscopic. UBC members working in cleanrooms must know how to perform tasks without allowing contaminants to pollute the cleanroom. The facility owner will instruct workers on procedures so as to minimize the possibility of contamination. Cleanroom Protocol is the set of rules, guidelines, and procedures that are used in cleanroom construction to minimize the amount of contamination introduced into the clean zone. When you are working in a cleanroom facility, the owner's Protocol Manager will instruct the workers as to what the specific protocol procedures are for that particular facility. This Cleanroom Construction Training Course is designed to familiarize the Member with cleanroom protocol procedures and cleanroom construction processes. Participants will be required to attend a 24-hour course of instruction that includes classroom training along with building a complete cleanroom mockup in the shop - while dressed in proper cleanroom attire. Interactive computer presentations, text materials, training videos, and hands on mock-up construction will compliment this new approach to High Tech learning addressing this High Tech industry.
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