sediment moisture - meaning and definition. What is sediment moisture
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What (who) is sediment moisture - definition

Moisture sensitivity; Moisture Sensitivity Level

Sediment         
  • [[Holocene]] [[eolianite]] and a carbonate beach on [[Long Island, Bahamas]]
  • Glacial sediments from Montana
  • Glacial transport of boulders. These boulders will be deposited as the glacier retreats.
  • [[Hjulström curve]]: the velocities of currents required for erosion, transportation, and deposition (sedimentation) of sediment particles of different sizes}}
  • Modern asymmetric ripples developed in sand on the floor of the Hunter River, New South Wales, Australia. Flow direction is from right to left.
  • Comparison chart for evaluating roundness of sediment grains
  • rounding]] (horizontal).
  • Sediment in the [[Gulf of Mexico]]
  • Sediment off the [[Yucatán Peninsula]]
  • River discharging sediment into the ocean}}
  • Sinuous-crested dunes exposed at low tide in the Cornwallis River near Wolfville, Nova Scotia
  • Sediment builds up on human-made breakwaters because they reduce the speed of water flow, so the stream cannot carry as much sediment load.
PARTICULATE MATTER THAT IS DEPOSITED ON THE SURFACE OF LAND
Sediments; Detrital sediment; Sea Sediment; Sedements; Sedimented; Sedimentary soil; Sedimentary layer; Lake sediment; Fluviatile sediment; Sediment (geology)
·noun The material of which sedimentary rocks are formed.
II. Sediment ·noun The matter which subsides to the bottom, frrom water or any other liquid; settlings; lees; dregs.
sediment         
  • [[Holocene]] [[eolianite]] and a carbonate beach on [[Long Island, Bahamas]]
  • Glacial sediments from Montana
  • Glacial transport of boulders. These boulders will be deposited as the glacier retreats.
  • [[Hjulström curve]]: the velocities of currents required for erosion, transportation, and deposition (sedimentation) of sediment particles of different sizes}}
  • Modern asymmetric ripples developed in sand on the floor of the Hunter River, New South Wales, Australia. Flow direction is from right to left.
  • Comparison chart for evaluating roundness of sediment grains
  • rounding]] (horizontal).
  • Sediment in the [[Gulf of Mexico]]
  • Sediment off the [[Yucatán Peninsula]]
  • River discharging sediment into the ocean}}
  • Sinuous-crested dunes exposed at low tide in the Cornwallis River near Wolfville, Nova Scotia
  • Sediment builds up on human-made breakwaters because they reduce the speed of water flow, so the stream cannot carry as much sediment load.
PARTICULATE MATTER THAT IS DEPOSITED ON THE SURFACE OF LAND
Sediments; Detrital sediment; Sea Sediment; Sedements; Sedimented; Sedimentary soil; Sedimentary layer; Lake sediment; Fluviatile sediment; Sediment (geology)
¦ noun
1. matter that settles to the bottom of a liquid.
2. Geology particulate matter carried by water or wind and deposited on the land surface or seabed.
¦ verb settle or deposit as sediment.
Derivatives
sedimentation noun
Origin
C16: from Fr. sediment or L. sedimentum 'settling'.
sediment         
  • [[Holocene]] [[eolianite]] and a carbonate beach on [[Long Island, Bahamas]]
  • Glacial sediments from Montana
  • Glacial transport of boulders. These boulders will be deposited as the glacier retreats.
  • [[Hjulström curve]]: the velocities of currents required for erosion, transportation, and deposition (sedimentation) of sediment particles of different sizes}}
  • Modern asymmetric ripples developed in sand on the floor of the Hunter River, New South Wales, Australia. Flow direction is from right to left.
  • Comparison chart for evaluating roundness of sediment grains
  • rounding]] (horizontal).
  • Sediment in the [[Gulf of Mexico]]
  • Sediment off the [[Yucatán Peninsula]]
  • River discharging sediment into the ocean}}
  • Sinuous-crested dunes exposed at low tide in the Cornwallis River near Wolfville, Nova Scotia
  • Sediment builds up on human-made breakwaters because they reduce the speed of water flow, so the stream cannot carry as much sediment load.
PARTICULATE MATTER THAT IS DEPOSITED ON THE SURFACE OF LAND
Sediments; Detrital sediment; Sea Sediment; Sedements; Sedimented; Sedimentary soil; Sedimentary layer; Lake sediment; Fluviatile sediment; Sediment (geology)
(sediments)
Sediment is solid material that settles at the bottom of a liquid, especially earth and pieces of rock that have been carried along and then left somewhere by water, ice, or wind.
Many organisms that die in the sea are soon buried by sediment.
N-VAR

Wikipedia

Moisture sensitivity level

Moisture sensitivity level (MSL) is a rating that shows a device's susceptibility to damage due to absorbed moisture when subjected to reflow soldering as defined in J-STD-020. It relates to the packaging and handling precautions for some semiconductors. The MSL is an electronic standard for the time period in which a moisture sensitive device can be exposed to ambient room conditions (30 °C/85%RH at Level 1; 30 °C/60%RH at all other levels).

Increasingly, semiconductors have been manufactured in smaller sizes. Components such as thin fine-pitch devices and ball grid arrays could be damaged during SMT reflow when moisture trapped inside the component expands.

The expansion of trapped moisture can result in internal separation (delamination) of the plastic from the die or lead-frame, wire bond damage, die damage, and internal cracks. Most of this damage is not visible on the component surface. In extreme cases, cracks will extend to the component surface. In the most severe cases, the component will bulge and pop. This is known as the "popcorn" effect. This occurs when part temperature rises rapidly to a high maximum during the soldering (assembly) process. This does not occur when part temperature rises slowly and to a low maximum during a baking (preheating) process.

Moisture sensitive devices are packaged in a moisture barrier antistatic bag with a desiccant and a moisture indicator card which is sealed.

Moisture sensitivity levels are specified in technical standard IPC/JEDEC Moisture/reflow Sensitivity Classification for Nonhermetic Surface-Mount Devices. The times indicate how long components can be outside of dry storage before they have to be baked to remove any absorbed moisture.

  • MSL 6 – Mandatory bake before use
  • MSL 5A – 24 hours
  • MSL 5 – 48 hours
  • MSL 4 – 72 hours
  • MSL 3 – 168 hours
  • MSL 2A – 4 weeks
  • MSL 2 – 1 year
  • MSL 1 – Unlimited floor life