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Electrically heated, 500°F (260°C) cleanroom oven has two chambers, each 34 x 54 x 72”. A 10,000-cfm, 7.5-hp recirculating blower provides horizontal airflow to a common central duct system while 80 KW are installed in Incoloy-sheathed tubular elements.
Thermally curing adhesive bonds remains an essential part of medical-device manufacturing because thermal curing provides a high degree of process repeatability.
Seeking to develop a two-part polymer adhesive bonding step in their assembly process, a medical-device manufacturer in the northern United States performed extensive design of experiments (DOE) with multiple variables.
A 260°F (127°C) electrically heated, Class 100 cleanroom cabinet oven is used for drying coatings onto printed circuit boards. Workspace dimensions of No. 797 measure 36 x 36 x 39", and 20 kW are installed in Incoloy-sheathed tubular elements to heat the oven chamber.
Suited for areas where flammable gases, vapors or finely pulverized dusts may exist, the EPF-HPSM-24-480V has three spark-resistant cast-aluminum blades that move stale air at a rate of up to 6,860 ft3/min.
To comply with cGMP and USP Chapter 797 standards, one Florida compounding pharmacy added a benchtop clean room oven to depyrogenate glassware and record thermal processing data for recordkeeping.
The inventor of the modern cleanroom, Willis Whitfield, will be honored posthumously by the National Inventors Hall of Fame for a technology that revolutionized manufacturing in electronics and pharmaceuticals, made hospital operating rooms safer and advanced space exploration.