Molecular Organic Contamination (MOC) Monitoring
The testing and characterization capabilities at Lucideon cover a wide range of needs and demands. MOC Monitoring utilizes the FTIR facilities to determine the organic airborne particles found in a cleanroom. Combining this facility and years of expertise, Lucideon can provide material solutions, so the client's cleanroom complies with the European Space Agency's (ESA) Cleanliness and Contamination Control Plan (C&CCP).
Challenges
Contamination can have detrimental effects on products that are used in space. For example, optical properties of vehicle and payload surfaces, and spacecraft performance are impacted, particularly for sensitive optics. Therefore, products for space are manufactured in cleanrooms.
Consequently, European Space Agency (ESA) request the definition of a Cleanliness and Contamination Control Plan (C&CCP). This includes Molecular Organic Contamination (MOC) monitoring, for the manufacture of appropriate hardware.
Solutions
Molecular Organic Contamination (MOC) Monitoring is the monitoring of airborne organic species that could contaminate the product. This is performed by placing witness plates in appropriate areas of the cleanroom, where high level of contamination is most likely. These are left for a known period of time (typically monthly and quarterly) and sent to a laboratory for analysis.
Capabilities
Lucideon has recently developed and validated a cleanroom monitoring method, using witness plates, that is capable of accurately measuring and reporting to a limit of <50 ng/cm2 using FTIR in accordance with the Indirect method described in ECSS-Q-ST-70-05C.
Plates will be cleaned at Lucideon and placed into transport cases, tightly wrapped in aluminum foil and placed into an ESD bag (as per the ECSS protocol) and shipped to the cleanroom for placement. The lid is then taken off the transport case, left for the required amount of time, re-packed and submitted to Lucideon for analysis.
The results can then be used by the manufacturer to prove that they are complying with the C&CCP. There is a drive for future missions to have lower contamination tolerance within the manufacturing process and this service is well placed to support this.