Static Control Clothing

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
73647

73647

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/SNAPS TEAL 4XL

7

73646

73646

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/SNAPS TEAL 3XL

0

04657

04657

EMIT

SMOCK, TRUSTAT, JACKET, WHITE, S

0

73604

73604

EMIT

LAB COAT W/SNAPS BLUE XLARGE

0

68100

68100

EMIT

GLOVES POLYESTER WHT LARGE 1PAIR

0

04645

04645

EMIT

SMOCK, TRUSTAT, JACKET, BLUE, SN

0

73626

73626

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/SNAPS WHITE 3XL

0

73627

73627

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/SNAPS WHITE 4XL

0

04658

04658

EMIT

SMOCK, TRUSTAT, JACKET, WHITE, S

1

73617

73617

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/CUFFS BLUE 4XL

23

73618

73618

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/CUFFS BLUE 5XL

1

73838

73838

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS WHITE 5XL

0

73856

73856

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS TEAL 3XL

12

73839

73839

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS WHITE 6XL

0

73837

73837

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS WHITE 4XL

0

73619

73619

EMIT

ESD LAB COAT W/CUFFS BLUE 6XL

3

73850

73850

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS TEAL XS

11

73836

73836

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS WHITE 3XL

2

73830

73830

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS WHITE XS

24

73773

73773

EMIT

ESD JACKET W/CUFFS BLUE 5XL

10

Static Control Clothing

1. Overview

Static Control Clothing refers to specialized garments designed to prevent electrostatic discharge (ESD) and contamination in controlled environments. These garments incorporate conductive materials and advanced fabric technologies to dissipate static charges, protect sensitive electronics, and maintain cleanroom standards. They play a critical role in semiconductor manufacturing, pharmaceutical production, and precision engineering industries where electrostatic interference or particulate contamination can cause catastrophic failures.

2. Major Types & Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Anti-Static CoverallsEmbedded carbon or stainless steel fibers, surface resistance 10^6-10^9 PCB assembly lines, cleanrooms
ESD Lab CoatsWoven conductive polymer threads, wrist strap grounding pointsResearch laboratories, electronics R&D
Cleanroom SuitsNon-shedding materials, HEPA filter compatibilityBiotech manufacturing, aerospace
Conductive Fiber JacketsHigh-tensile conductive yarns, static decay time <2sExplosive handling, fuel processing

3. Structural Composition

Typical static control garments feature a 3-layer construction:

  • Outer layer: Polyester blend with embedded conductive fibers (stainless steel/carbon)
  • Middle layer: Dielectric barrier coating (surface resistivity 10^7 /sq)
  • Inner layer: Moisture-wicking antistatic fabric (carbon particle dispersion)
Conductive elements form a Faraday cage effect, with grounding points at wrists and ankles. Advanced models incorporate phase-change materials for thermal regulation and micro-porous membranes for particle filtration.

4. Key Technical Parameters

ParameterValue RangeSignificance
Surface Resistivity10^5 - 10^12 /sqCharge dissipation efficiency
Charge Decay Time<0.1s - 2sStatic neutralization speed
Particle Shedding Rate<1000 particles/m /minCleanroom compliance
Grounding Resistance<1 Electrical safety assurance
Tensile Strength 50NMechanical durability

5. Application Fields

Key industries include:

  • Semiconductor manufacturing (photolithography equipment protection)
  • Medical device assembly (Class 100 cleanrooms)
  • Pharmaceutical production (ISO 14644-1 certified facilities)
  • Aerospace electronics (MIL-STD-1686 compliance)
  • Data centers (server rack maintenance)
Typical equipment integration: Ionizers, wrist strap monitoring systems, and ESD floor mats.

6. Leading Manufacturers & Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Features
DuPontTyvek Static ControlLow-linting, 10^8 resistivity
3MESD Cleanroom Suit 4200Integrated grounding system
HoneywellGamma Series Anti-Static CoatEMI shielding, 0.5s decay time
Kimberly-ClarkKimtech Pure ESDClass 10 particle specification

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  • Electrostatic properties (surface resistance matching ANSI/ESD S20.20)
  • Environmental compliance (ISO 14644-1, NFPA 99)
  • Garment durability (washing cycles >50, abrasion resistance)
  • Operator comfort (breathability >50g/m /h)
  • Integration with grounding systems (parallel resistance monitoring)
Example: Semiconductor manufacturers typically select Class 0 ESD garments with <10^6 resistance.

8. Industry Trends

Emerging developments:

  • Nano-coating technologies for permanent conductive properties
  • Smart garments with real-time discharge monitoring
  • Bio-based antistatic materials (PLA fiber composites)
  • Self-cleaning surfaces using photocatalytic coatings
  • AI-driven static risk assessment systems
Market growth driven by 5G electronics manufacturing and EV battery production requirements.

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