Intro to plasma cleaning

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  • Опубликовано: 14 дек 2013
  • I describe how to use plasma to create very clean surfaces on microscope slides. This process is used extensively in the semiconductor industry.
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Комментарии • 275

  • @RimstarOrg
    @RimstarOrg 10 лет назад +224

    Amazing. I had no idea you could create a plasma just by lowering the air pressure and stimulating it with RF. Don't ever stop making these videos!

    • @vk2zay
      @vk2zay 10 лет назад +30

      It is called inductively coupled plasma. It is just like an induction heater, the RF field accelerates the charges in the plasma around keeping it ionised. The only trick is how to achieve the first ionisations that then grow into a full plasma via avalanches. If the field is strong enough it can directly ionise atoms, but generally there are enough ions/electrons available in the gas to almost immediately ignite the plasma even at moderate amplitudes, but at higher pressures the MFP is short and it takes larger amplitude fields to get things going. In limiting conditions it can take a moment for a cosmic ray or decay in the environment to provide some ions to start the discharge, but once established the RF energy keeps it lit. The species in the gas matter too, some things drink up ions and electrons or wash off their energy, quenching the discharge.
      You can do it even at atmospheric pressure with enough electric field amplitude. It would be almost impossible to do with HF RF at atmospheric pressure, but microwaves and light can be focused tightly enough with practical sized equipment to break down air directly (i.e. magnetrons and lasers).

    • @RimstarOrg
      @RimstarOrg 10 лет назад +3

      *****
      It sounds like he used just air starting at 2:12, even referring to it as an air plasma, though he does then talk about the alternative of using pure oxygen.

    • @RimstarOrg
      @RimstarOrg 10 лет назад +3

      vk2zay
      Thanks for the detailed answer. Now that you mention it, I've seen it done at atmospheric pressure with microwaves, in microwave ovens, but that's cheating. :) Doing it at RF makes it a fun challenge.

    • @maxk4324
      @maxk4324 5 лет назад +1

      @@vk2zay As well, many models of plasma torches induction to ionize gasses at around atmospheric pressures, although I am pretty sure they use argon which is easier to ionize.

  • @penguinkothe8323
    @penguinkothe8323 3 года назад +5

    Wow! Reading about this in papers (with it mostly being used for bonding plastic) I always assumed plasma cleaning was some super advanced thing done with a million-dollar machine, but this actually seems like something I could do at home! Thanks for the video!

  • @skidmoremusictech528
    @skidmoremusictech528 9 лет назад +11

    Outstanding demonstration and explanation of plasma cleaning! Thanks so much!!!

  • @cosimoto1
    @cosimoto1 10 лет назад +1

    I work with a ton of Engineers. Man these guys are a bunch of cut and paste, convert the equation to code, check it against past history robots! Thanks for combining hands on creativity with sound technical principles! That is the making of a great teacher!

  • @JustOneAsbesto
    @JustOneAsbesto 10 лет назад +6

    Maybe I'm just a weirdo, but I think this is one of your coolest projects yet.

  • @artifactingreality
    @artifactingreality 10 лет назад +12

    That's amazing I never knew you could do all this stuff with just a vacuum pump and a bell jar. When I saw you get the bell jar I was thinking ok so what I didn't know it had a million uses.

  • @DJChesley
    @DJChesley 3 года назад +1

    Your channel has become one of my very favorite. You are an inspiration Ben!

  • @HeaanLasai
    @HeaanLasai 10 лет назад

    Thank you for all your videos, I love the advanced techs mastered with a non-industrial machine park and resources!

  • @BobbyOfEarth
    @BobbyOfEarth 10 лет назад +9

    I worked in a Custom product development group at Siemens Corp, (medical product development) and while introducing the products into production in our Mfg. facility in Penang Malaysia, any product requiring die attachment or wire bonding had to go thru a plasma cleaning station.
    Its a very useful process for cleaning oil off leadframes or PCB substrates left from sequential punching or hand processing operations.
    The feared killer of molded IC's was residual chlorides that.. if allowed to remain on the leadframe would become activated with moisture. By adding an electrical component thru biasing, would allow this contamination to manifest into dendritic growth. This reaction is actually a fern like fractal grow of migrating silver molecules (from the silver die attach epoxy) that would lead to premature DUT failure do to a shorting of the junction of the IC.
    Very interesting to see this reaction during failure analysis. Great pics of this failure mechanism on the internet. Thanks for sharing...

  • @andrewhorizon8066
    @andrewhorizon8066 7 лет назад

    Subscribed! Great source of info for garage scientists. Love your simple, abrupt, with no reprise or excess, "See you next time" video conclusions.

  • @RadioTrefoil
    @RadioTrefoil 10 лет назад +1

    Great video, as always. I might actually research a bit into plasma cleaning. I've always loved near-vacuum plasmas, they are so pretty.

  • @danheidel
    @danheidel 10 лет назад +7

    Nice video! I used to use quite a bit of UV-induced ozone cleaning in grad school. Not quite as effective as plasma cleaning but way simpler and easier - just put the substrate under a very high intensity UV lamp and slowly blow air or O2 across it. You get a ton of O3 that also aggressively attacks the surface.
    I did want to mention that you can actually get really clean glassware with regular washing if you do it right. I would have a giant Tupperware bin with a strong Alconox (a brand of scientific cleaner designed for low residue) solution with a circulating heater in it that would keep it at about 70C. (temperature choosen for the maximum I could stand to put my gloved hands into) Put the glassware in that for a few hours. Then give it a good scrub with carefully cleaned brushes while wearing gloves and rinse in filtered, deionized water. You'll get glass that passes the drop test every time.

  • @AndrewSteffenHB
    @AndrewSteffenHB 5 лет назад +1

    Just amazing, I am off to build one myself. For some years now I've been wanting to find a way to clean glass beside ultrasonic, Thank You!

  • @nickmartinblue
    @nickmartinblue 10 лет назад +5

    I always love these videos.

  • @rickr7333
    @rickr7333 9 лет назад +62

    We use oxygen first, to combine with any contaminates that still exist in the < 10 micron atmosphere. That makes those contaminates heavy enough to be evacuated quickly. Then we use sputtering grade (99.995%) argon to blast off any oxides on the metallic surfaces, for our gold-wire bonding process. One note, we are using gold plated headers and if you leave them in the chamber too long, the argon will blast through the plating, rendering them unusable.

    • @nebnoswel
      @nebnoswel 3 года назад +3

      Hi Rick, can you explain more how argon gets rid of oxides? I was under the impression that you had to use a reactive gas like hydrogen to remove oxides. Thanks!

    • @rickr7333
      @rickr7333 3 года назад +2

      @@nebnoswel So this is what we do where I work and I maintain the machines but I'm not an expert on the physics exactly. Here is what I understand about the process. The argon in the high frequency field yields very heavy ions in the resulting plasma which blast the surfaces somewhat like a sand blaster but down at the molecular level. The ions being very small blast off material a molecule at a time as opposed to the analogy of sand blasting at a few ten thousands at a time. What we're doing is bonding gold alloy wire between a semiconductor die and the header pins that pass through the metal case. Think of a TO-5 transistor. Why we can't use reactive gases. Once started reaction will continue. If we use hydrogen and we get clean surfaces we weld, we test, everything is good, then send it out into the world and in 3 to 6 months it comes back failed. The reaction was started and unless you do something to stop it, it continues until failure.

    • @nebnoswel
      @nebnoswel 3 года назад +2

      Rick R Thanks so much for the info! So the argon cleaning is basically mechanical but at a small scale as opposed to other plasma cleaning (like hydrogen) which works chemically and can have unintended chemical side effects? That’s fascinating

    • @rickr7333
      @rickr7333 3 года назад +2

      @@nebnoswel As I understand it basically all of the plasma cleanings are mechanical but some of them leave reactive material behind that can have unstable results in the long term. They all bombard the target with ions within the plasma and those ions strip away material mechanically but some of them leave molecular charges that are reactive.

    • @zhungonlyx
      @zhungonlyx Год назад +1

      Hi, I have a question. We're using a sputtering machine with 3 guns. Is it possible to use that machine as a plasma cleaner similar to this video? If it is possible, how to do that? Thank you!

  • @jaytarro1846
    @jaytarro1846 8 лет назад +14

    When the free-flying wake shield facility was deployed from the space shuttle in the 1990s, the active deposition side of the wake shield was first faced toward the direction of travel. This caused atomic oxygen of the space environment to impinge on that side of the wake shield to clean it. It was then oriented in the opposite direction so that the deposition side was in the wake where the vacuum is extremely high, about 1000 to 10,000 times better than vacuum systems on earth. It's a clever method to obtain both cleanliness and very high vacuum.

    • @cherylm2C6671
      @cherylm2C6671 2 года назад

      This sounds like it could be used as part of a heat shield ablation package - maybe not on Venus, but perhaps for lunar entry.

    • @user-pe5yy1yo2v
      @user-pe5yy1yo2v 2 года назад

      @@cherylm2C6671 is it possible to fight with propeller cavitation

    • @ericlotze7724
      @ericlotze7724 10 месяцев назад +1

      I NEED a Scott Manley video on this, WILD concept that supposedly worked quite well. Thanks for showing me this!

  • @thefuture2025
    @thefuture2025 10 лет назад

    Nice vid. I just coated an alumina tube with metal in an evacuated chamber using a variable leak valve and a convection gauge to stabilize a partial pressure of argon to 600 mtorr. The electrode glowed bright blue and purple after I applied the high voltage to the feedthru which was coupled to the electrode. We also clean parts using a glow discharge method sometimes. This vid reminds me of that, thanks for sharing this.

  • @arthurharrison1345
    @arthurharrison1345 7 лет назад

    This is a great tutorial. Clear and informative!

  • @ChrisGammell
    @ChrisGammell 10 лет назад +77

    So free. So radical.

    • @biltema2000
      @biltema2000 10 лет назад +2

      Chris Gammell is the name of a guy here in Norway who makes the most delicious foie gras you can think of.

    • @joecobra48
      @joecobra48 3 года назад

      U smell like a free radical

  • @pautorruella2687
    @pautorruella2687 8 лет назад +2

    Hey, Nice video! Very well explained!
    I work extensively with transmission electron microscopes and I thought I'd let you know that we frequently use plasma cleaning in many samples precisely to get rid of organic contanimation, so there you have another application.

  • @nathanperri8639
    @nathanperri8639 10 лет назад +3

    This is the coolest channel ever!

  • @BushCampingTools
    @BushCampingTools 8 лет назад

    How much fun this must have been to do. I remember using a commercial plasma asher to clean TEM apertures with and remembered how boring it was If only I'd built it the device myself. Great video. I home school and hopefully this is on my list of cool things to do.

  • @PaulRonquillo
    @PaulRonquillo 9 лет назад

    This blew my mind more and more every step of the way. I need a reason to build one of these.

  • @spinafire
    @spinafire 10 лет назад

    Amazing stuff. Thanks for sharing, I always learn a lot!

  • @oddarneroll
    @oddarneroll 10 лет назад +1

    Wow! Thank you for making life intersesting!

  • @z3d12
    @z3d12 10 лет назад

    yay another awesome video. Your videos always make my day

  • @SkylerF
    @SkylerF 10 лет назад +1

    RF is so cool. I use it for ham radio, but I really want to expand on the uses and do fun stuff with it.

  • @s28400
    @s28400 10 лет назад

    Very, very cool video. Learn a lot every time. Keep it up!

  • @kwinzman
    @kwinzman 5 лет назад

    "I started the cleaning process by lowering the dirty slides into a vacuum chamber" What else? Love this channel!

  • @FXGreggan.
    @FXGreggan. 10 лет назад +2

    This is also possible to do in a microwave oven - in a container inside the microwave of course, just pull two tubes through the side.
    The plasma cleaners at work also used magnetrons in that exact frequency range...

  • @ForwardEngineering
    @ForwardEngineering Год назад

    Awesome stuff! Reminds me of old mercury rectifiers.

  • @toolhog10
    @toolhog10 10 лет назад

    Your channel is ALWAYS interesting.

  • @darkobul1
    @darkobul1 10 лет назад +1

    Ben I am your student. Thanks a lot for sharing all this research of yours.

  • @ajtronic
    @ajtronic 10 лет назад

    Oh. This was fascinating to watch. Thanks

  • @geraltofreviews6032
    @geraltofreviews6032 8 месяцев назад

    Clear and concise. Thank you

  • @teshk6256
    @teshk6256 10 лет назад

    You should really write a book, you have such a great way of teaching things

  • @sirislaursen6990
    @sirislaursen6990 7 лет назад +1

    Great video. What would I search for if I wanted to purchase an RF generator and network for a setup like this?

  • @sasjadevries
    @sasjadevries 10 лет назад

    I liked the video in advance, from the title i knew it would be interesting.

  • @ver64
    @ver64 10 лет назад

    Interesting....thanks Ben .....and happy new year

  • @keithnoneya
    @keithnoneya 8 лет назад

    Really cool idea, very well explained. Best Wishes n Blessings Keith

  • @haywoodmitchell8322
    @haywoodmitchell8322 9 лет назад

    Wow Ben. I am impressed. You have some nice gear. I buy whatever I can scavenge from UCSB.... universities are great for that and you can get some really nice stuff for pennies. Only problem is that what you get is random and depends on what they are getting rid of. I would love to check out your workshop and lab someday!

  • @Geogrn
    @Geogrn 2 года назад

    WOW , It's very thorough

  • @AdelAlouani
    @AdelAlouani 10 лет назад +1

    "But does it PlasmaClean?" I really want to see a channel like that.

  • @teresashinkansen9402
    @teresashinkansen9402 11 месяцев назад

    Ive discovered that the flame of a slightly air rich blow torch (when the flame cone turns from slightly greenish to a deep blue) works pretty good on glass, after a good mechanical cleaning torching the glass chasing the condensation on the glass makes the glass pass the water break test pretty well, the glass just heats up to about 60C° - 70C°.

  • @hasansiddiqui1337
    @hasansiddiqui1337 6 лет назад

    great video, can you suggest me power supply for cleaning glass in vacuum chamber.
    my chamber size is 2000*2600 mm and vacuum can be reach to 3.5 E-3 Pa.

  • @aaronholwick8659
    @aaronholwick8659 10 лет назад +1

    Ben, I have been absolutely amazed with your knowledge and ability to create and make applications of existing technology for your experiments since I first saw your video on creating freeze dried ice cream. I am really interested in everything that you do on your channel and I was wondering what you majored in and what your profession is, if you do not mind telling me (I understand if you do). I am currently in high school and do not know what I'm going to do but I love to watch and learn from your videos. Thanks for posting such awesome videos!

  • @VKRenato
    @VKRenato 10 лет назад

    Amazing! Thumbs Up.

  • @clarencecherrone7914
    @clarencecherrone7914 6 лет назад +3

    Could you give us a better description of the equipment you used? As far as the tuner and rf generator.

  • @vk2zay
    @vk2zay 10 лет назад

    Glad to see the RF source wasn't DOA. So many things you can now attempt!

  • @LarsBerntzon
    @LarsBerntzon 10 лет назад +2

    Nice video, I had not heard of this technique at all. Question, why use RF, couldnt you have used electric discharge inside the chamber instead?

  • @omsingharjit
    @omsingharjit 6 лет назад

    crazy Ques !!! but.. is there any way to make DIY Si Transistors or diode using Vacuum Deposition and Pure Silicone plates ????????

  • @05stickman
    @05stickman 10 лет назад +4

    Ben! This is awesome. We do something similar [we use microwave] and use them for wound healing.
    I'm in SF Bay Area. Could we maybe meet up? I'd love to show you what my company, Adtec Plasma Technology, does! :)

  • @angeldeanda3573
    @angeldeanda3573 6 лет назад

    wow only 19 people disliked, im impressed. Keep up the content thanks!

  • @proper1226
    @proper1226 7 лет назад

    +Ben Krasnow Could this be used to make beef jerky? Would be great to see the idea experimented with!

  • @MathMeansMore
    @MathMeansMore 10 лет назад

    Love your videos Ben, I'm a computatonal physics grad student so I never actually do anything in a lab, it's awesome to see someone with so much practical and hands-on knowledge! What do you do for a living?

  • @pooyamz
    @pooyamz 9 лет назад +1

    Hi Ben, Nice video, Your RF energy inspired me to make plasma with microwave owwn magnetron but I am pretty unsuccessful ! I tried building a very precise waveguide with horn antenna aimed to my vacuum bell jar and also tried to wrap 3 or 4 rounds of copper wire around bell jar with one side connected to magnetron antenna and other side is connected to ground but still nothing happened ! with my calculation Magnetron efficiency is around 60 ~ 65 % so the magnetron will make 2.45 GHz at 700 watts ( Input is around 1100 watts ) and when system is connected to my antenna setup ( 16 dBi horn + waveguide ) it will produce around 6000 watts of ERP which is very huge but still nothing happens ! I am really stuck and your help will be much appreciated. Thanks

  • @banama1758
    @banama1758 10 лет назад +1

    interesting videos dont stop please :)

  • @niuxx
    @niuxx 7 лет назад

    Ben, could you provide some details on how the impedance matching was done?

  • @GabiCarol08
    @GabiCarol08 5 лет назад

    Amazing explanation. THANKS! \o

  • @calebmcnevin
    @calebmcnevin 10 лет назад

    Even the titles of your videos make me feel smarter ;P

  • @DidntKnowWhatToPut1
    @DidntKnowWhatToPut1 10 лет назад +1

    Sounds useful for telescope mirrors.

  • @GGG-xx8lf
    @GGG-xx8lf 8 лет назад

    How did you seal the jar at the bottom? You can fit oring inside the glass?

  • @250kent
    @250kent 8 лет назад

    ?Do you think the plasma process can be used for case hardening steel
    (adding carbon etc.)

  • @gillardscott
    @gillardscott 9 лет назад

    Hello Ben I am fiddling with my own RF sputtering apparatus and would I get the same effect if I used the RF gun in the chamber instead of wrapping the coils around the bell jar? Or would i just be sputtering in the localized target area?

  • @stepandmitriyev5706
    @stepandmitriyev5706 8 лет назад +1

    Could you build a small particle accelerator and make hydride with it?

  • @aarons3166
    @aarons3166 4 года назад

    Is there a term for the process you mentioned where molecules kinetically (via collision) remove contaminants?

  • @chain3519
    @chain3519 8 лет назад

    Does this work similarly to a farnsworth-hirsch fusor?

  • @ronaldo70004
    @ronaldo70004 9 лет назад

    do you think it's possible to creat graphite sheets (microscopic sheets) with your technique?
    would be interesting to try!

  • @bigredinfinity3126
    @bigredinfinity3126 6 лет назад

    Would it attack rust (iron oxide as it would be great to clean rust of boats if you can do it on a commercial scale

  • @Admendment28
    @Admendment28 10 лет назад

    your video's are awesome

  • @waterandafter
    @waterandafter 9 лет назад

    What would the effects be on cloth? Non-organic of course. Could this replace the chemicals used at dry cleaners?

  • @svyl
    @svyl 10 лет назад

    This sounds useful for cleaning sensitive optics. Would using the magnetron from a microwave oven instead of the RF generator work?

  • @GMCLabs
    @GMCLabs 6 лет назад +1

    whats the peak to peak voltage of the RF generator?

  • @skycollection
    @skycollection 8 лет назад

    Have you made an experiment with an electrode of graphite and depositing graphene in the chystal plate...?

  • @smfield
    @smfield 10 лет назад +1

    "Plasma sandblasting"! Sounds like you can do some cool solar wind experiments with RF windsails. Try applying your aerogels sputtered with several layers of gold.

  • @msxcytb
    @msxcytb 10 лет назад

    Impressive video! Thanks for making it. How would cleaning with (negative) Corona Discharge compare with plasma used here?

  • @horrorhotel1999
    @horrorhotel1999 4 года назад

    I don't see why it would, but before I start tearing things apart, I tought I'd ask: Is the RF-frequency critical for this application? I'm thinking of replicating this system but I don't have a rf transmitter. However, I'm thinking about using the driver circuit from an ultrasonic cleaner, since it should have plenty of watts for this application and puts out 42kHz. Is it simply a matter of replacing the transducer with a couple of loops of sufficient awg wire, or am I overlooking something here?

  • @Groovewonder2
    @Groovewonder2 2 года назад

    You should do a short showing the power needed to give visible damage to a slide, maybe with a super condensed timelapse over how long it needs to become visible.

  • @johndoe-bq1xt
    @johndoe-bq1xt 4 года назад

    What a rad concept - reduce the atmospheric pressure of air, so you can electrify the remaining gas and then control its movement through EM modulation - back and forth on a surface, like glass. Transferring the Kinetic Energy from the plasma atoms to the surface contaminant atoms and vaporizing them into the GAS ! THEN SUCKING AWAY OR REMOVING THAT GAS !

  • @cdyoutoob
    @cdyoutoob 3 года назад

    Is pulsed laser ablation something that is used in electronics to do spot/area cleaning. Plasma cleaning would seem like a full part immersion solution potential damaging fragile/sensitive components. Looking for solution to clean fingerprint oils and other common fod that does not use chemical cleaning like Acetone or IPA.

  • @mnothem1
    @mnothem1 Год назад

    Can you recommend any books for understanding PVD (sputter and cathodic arc) and appications?

  • @jack_is_bored5091
    @jack_is_bored5091 10 лет назад

    Super neat.

  • @frac
    @frac 10 лет назад +3

    Now to incorporate that in to a shower so that "In the Year 2010" book I read as a kid in 1973 would finally come true...

  • @profesorfrink42
    @profesorfrink42 10 лет назад

    Is there a power threshold for removing different types of material or is it dependant on exposure time?
    Basically, you've showed us you can remove dirt and other types of contaminants this way, but, could it also remove a conductive layer on a PCB? (for example)
    Great video, as always!

  • @chrisX1722
    @chrisX1722 10 лет назад

    What about athmospheric pressure Plasma? I use it at my work.

  • @kgeorge1967
    @kgeorge1967 3 года назад

    Can you clean a metal sample in this apparatus?

  • @picnet
    @picnet 10 лет назад

    Is it possible to build a DIY small cold plasma system to achieve the same result?

  • @faxezu
    @faxezu 10 лет назад +2

    Is it possible to get some problems with authorities cause of the transmission power or are there no "free" waves? I only know that we have in Germany a national instution that measure the Electromagnetic spectrum to find illegal transmitter.

    • @MrJonEvans
      @MrJonEvans 10 лет назад +3

      Look up ISM bands - 13.56 MHz is reserved for all kinds of RF kit like semiconductor deposition/etching systems

  • @kreynolds1123
    @kreynolds1123 5 лет назад

    I wonder if one can use different coil geometries to inductivly push the plasma like a pulsed inductive thruster, except instead of pulsed power, it is fed continouse three phase power RF power to each of 3 coils physically roated 120 degrees from the other coils with the idea of creating a continuous linear induction plasma motor/pump/thruster.
    Presumably, the eddy currents in the plasma should push against the changing magnetic fields, and alternating the currents between three coils would create a traveling magnetic field down the length of the tube.

  • @gh0stmast3r
    @gh0stmast3r 10 лет назад

    Ben Krasnow what is the fundamental difference between fire, the flame, and plasma? i thought that fire was a plasma that was created by the high heat of the reaction between the fuel and oxygen.
    i know there's a video on youtube that shows that fire has conductivity, it was shown in the best way, a dude fired a flame thrower at a tesla coil.A
    by that way of thinking though if i were to clean a slide using a fire it would have close to the same effect right? i'm assuming though that the oxidized fuel that's left over would contaminate the slide.

  • @arsenymakarov6961
    @arsenymakarov6961 5 лет назад

    Is there a plasma powered dishwasher machine sold anywhere?

  • @Desam1000
    @Desam1000 6 лет назад

    Does anyone know if this the same type of cleaning as done for food cans or toothpaste tubes?

  • @the1cyrus
    @the1cyrus 10 лет назад

    How big is your bell jar and how can i get one?

  • @DanielHankewycz
    @DanielHankewycz 10 лет назад

    There's no risk in the oxygen combusting? Or does the vacuum somehow counteract that?

  • @MrJonEvans
    @MrJonEvans 10 лет назад

    Plasma treatment can also be a good way of modifying or hydroxylating surfaces for subsequent chemical functionalisation, useful when making e.g. sensors

  • @WakeUpWolfgang
    @WakeUpWolfgang 10 лет назад

    ***** Do you have to have a radio license with the FCC to do this since you are transmitting radio?

  • @imtotob
    @imtotob 10 лет назад +1

    Plasma water treatment in chile ur plasma unit i think can do it as well hope you can trty this also and give all the specs thanks

  • @m.s.l.7746
    @m.s.l.7746 6 лет назад

    Was everything else in the chamber part of this process or another?

  • @EDM713
    @EDM713 9 лет назад

    Hmm. Would this method of cleaning be good for say dish washing machines?

  • @harviecz
    @harviecz 6 лет назад

    What is the easiest way to build simple 5W RF generator for this use at home? Can i use mason jar and broken plasma ball or violet wand for this? :-)