What is Material Handling?
Material handling products for electronics include ESD-safe bins, component storage systems, reel holders, anti-static bags, pick-and-place feeders, and workstation accessories. These products ensure components are safely stored, transported, and accessed during manufacturing. LCSC stocks 1,000+ material handling SKUs.
Material Handling — Definition and Sub-Categories
Material handling in electronics manufacturing refers to the equipment and systems used to store, transport, and manage electronic components and assemblies through the production process while maintaining ESD protection and inventory organization.
|
Sub-Category |
Function |
Key Parameters |
|
ESD-Safe Bins |
Static-safe storage for components |
Size, material, ESD rating, stackability |
|
Anti-Static Bags |
Protect components during shipping/storage |
Size, shielding type, seal method |
|
Reel Storage |
Organize and access SMD component reels |
Capacity, shelf type, dimensions |
|
Workstation Accessories |
Trays, mats, dispensers for assembly stations |
Function, ESD compliance, size |
How to Choose: Material Handling Selection Guide
For component storage, use ESD-safe conductive bins for ICs and semiconductors, dissipative bins for general components. Anti-static shielding bags (metallized) provide Faraday cage protection for shipping sensitive components. Organize SMD reels on dedicated reel racks or shelving systems for efficient pick-and-place feeder loading.
Material Handling Comparison
|
Product |
ESD Protection Level |
Best For |
|
Conductive Bin (black) |
< 10⁴ Ω |
ICs, MOSFETs, sensitive components |
|
Dissipative Bin (blue) |
10⁴–10¹¹ Ω |
General component storage |
|
Shielding Bag |
Faraday cage effect |
Shipping/transit protection |
|
Static-Dissipative Tray |
10⁴–10¹¹ Ω |
IC/BGA waffle tray storage |
Why Source Material Handling from LCSC Electronics
LCSC stocks 1,000+ material handling products that can be ordered alongside electronic components, streamlining procurement for production facilities.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between conductive and dissipative ESD packaging?
Conductive materials (surface resistance < 10⁴ Ω) quickly dissipate charges and shield components from external fields — use for highly sensitive parts. Dissipative materials (10⁴–10¹¹ Ω) dissipate charges more slowly, preventing rapid discharge that could damage components — use for general storage and handling.
Q: Why are anti-static bags pink and silver?
Pink bags are anti-static (prevent charge generation) but don’t shield. Silver/metallized bags are shielding bags that create a Faraday cage, protecting contents from external ESD events during shipping. Use shielding bags for transit; pink bags are adequate for short-term bench storage.
Q: How should I store SMD component reels?
Store reels in a humidity-controlled environment (preferably <30% RH in a dry cabinet) to prevent moisture absorption in moisture-sensitive components. Use reel racks or shelving systems organized by component type for efficient access during production.