Frequently Asked Questions
What is vapor degreasing used for?
Vapor degreasing is used for precision cleaning of metal and other manufactured parts — removing oils, greases, waxes, flux residues, and other contamination prior to coating, bonding, assembly, inspection, or shipment. It is used across aerospace, electronics, medical device, automotive, and defense manufacturing.
Is vapor degreasing better than aqueous cleaning?
For precision parts with complex geometry, tight cleanliness specifications, or fast cycle time requirements, vapor degreasing typically outperforms aqueous cleaning. Its ultra-low surface tension solvents penetrate geometries that water-based systems cannot reach, it produces zero residue, and it is faster per cycle. Aqueous cleaning is preferred for high-volume, simple-geometry applications or where solvent use is restricted.
What solvents are used in vapor degreasing?
Modern vapor degreasing solvents include trans-1,2-dichloroethylene blends (such as Enviro Tech’s NEXT HD Pro), n-propyl bromide (nPB) based solvents (such as Enviro Tech’s EnSolv), and hydrofluorocarbon and hydrofluoroether blends. PERC (perchloroethylene) and TCE (trichloroethylene) are being phased out under EPA TSCA Section 6 regulations.
What is KB value in solvent cleaning?
KB value (Kauri-Butanol value) measures a solvent’s solvency strength — its ability to dissolve hydrocarbon-based contamination. Higher KB values indicate stronger solvency. Matching KB value to the contamination profile is critical for effective vapor degreasing.
How do I switch solvents in my vapor degreaser?
Switching solvents requires draining the existing charge, cleaning the machine interior, confirming equipment compatibility with the new solvent, charging the new solvent, running qualification parts, and updating hazard communication documentation. Enviro Tech provides technical support for the full changeover process.
What replaced PERC in vapor degreasing?
Trans-1,2-dichloroethylene blends such as Enviro Tech’s NEXT HD Pro are the most widely adopted PERC replacement for vapor degreasing. They are non-flammable, carry no TSCA Section 6 restrictions, and provide comparable cleaning performance for most industrial contamination profiles.