Palm Beach Professional Contractors
Dry Ice Blasting—Fast, Environmentally Friendly Cleaning
Dry ice blasting, or dry ice cleaning, is a cleaning process that uses media blasting of dry ice pellets to remove contaminants from equipment, tools, surfaces, etc.
How dry ice blasting works
Fundamentally, dry ice blasting works like other forms of media blasting (often referred to informally as “sandblasting”1). Media blasting propels a material at high-speed against a surface, typically using compressed air. In most media blasting, the material used to clean the surface is abrasive, scouring the surface clean of any contaminants. However, the material used in dry ice blasting—dry ice pellets—is virtually non-abrasive.
So how does dry ice blasting clean the surface? Through a combination of thermal shock and gas expansion.
A dry ice pellet is a form of solid carbon dioxide with a temperature of -109°F (-78°C). When a dry ice pellet strikes a contaminant, rapid heat transfer occurs. This heat transfer causes the contaminant to contract and detach from the surface. This rapid heat transfer also causes the dry ice pellet to vaporize, changing the pellet from a solid to a gaseous state. This state change is accompanied by rapid expansion, knocking away the loosened debris.
Advantages of dry ice blasting
Fast cleaning—equipment can be cleaned without cooling completely, or in many cases disassembled, shortening shutdown times.
Deep cleaning—the pressurized air stream can reach areas that are hard to reach using traditional cleaning methods.
Simplified cleanup—because dry ice vaporizes to a gas it leaves behind no secondary waste. The only material to be cleaned up is the original contaminant.
Environmentally responsible—dry ice pellets are pure carbon dioxide so don’t leave behind any toxic residue. (Although the contaminants on the surfaces being cleaned may themselves be toxic.)
Non-abrasive—because dry ice pellets are virtually non-abrasive, they won’t damage the substrate of the surface being cleaned.
Non-conductive—dry ice doesn’t conduct electricity, making it suitable for cleaning electronic equipment.
Dry cleaning method—because dry ice goes directly to a gaseous state from a solid one, dry ice blasting can be used when a dry cleaning method is required.
Microorganism decontamination—dry ice blasting can effectively remove Salmonella, E. coli and Listeria from surfaces such as stainless steel, ceramic tile and food grade plastics.2
Disadvantages of dry ice blasting
Even though dry ice blasting is virtually non-abrasive, some painted surfaces can be damaged by the process.
- Dry ice cleaning applications
- Food & beverage processing
Several advantages of dry ice cleaning make it suitable for cleaning food production equipment, food packaging equipment, and the food production environment itself:
- Dry cleaning method
- Deep cleaning
- Microorganism decontamination
- Non-toxic cleaning material
The carbon dioxide used in dry ice cleaning is the same grade used in the food and beverage industry.3
Semiconductor fabrication
Because dry ice is a non-conductive, non-abrasive material, dry ice blasting can be used in industries that rely heavily on semiconductors, like the electronics, aerospace, and medical device manufacturing industries.
General manufacturing
Dry ice cleaning can be used in many manufacturing environments to clean production equipment (including printing presses), molds, tooling, and electronic equipment.
- Disaster remediation
- Dry ice blasting is effective in remediating mold, smoke, fire, and water damage.
- Conservation & historical preservation
Because it produces no secondary waste, is non-abrasive, is environmentally responsible, and is a dry cleaning method, dry ice blasting is suitable for conservation and historical preservation projects.
Applications not suitable for dry ice cleaning4
Cleaning of soft surfaces
While dry ice cleaning is virtually non-abrasive, the material is still being propelled at 80 psi (5.5 bar) or higher, which can damage softer surfaces, like soft woods and soft plastics.
Removing strongly bonded coatings
Because dry ice cleaning is virtually non-abrasive, coatings that have strong bonds with the underlying material, e.g. baked-on enamels and some primers, can’t be removed by dry ice blasting.
Cleaning soft contaminants
Some soft contaminants, like oil, can spatter under the pressures involved in dry ice cleaning, so either special collection systems or low-pressure cleaning methods may work better.
Safety
As with any media blasting, you must take safety precautions when using dry ice blasting as a cleaning method:
Wear protective clothing, including face shields and gloves, as protection from both the ultra-low temperatures of dry ice and debris from the surface being cleaned
Wear hearing protection (ear muffs, ear plugs, etc.) to prevent noise-induced hearing loss
Wear a breathing mask to keep from inhaling particulate knocked loose by the cleaning process
In addition, if cleaning indoors, the room must be well-ventilated. In a poorly-ventilated room, the cleaning process could cause a build-up of carbon dioxide and lead to asphyxiation.