Thanks for clarifying this, so in this case if you have have a waste AP solution contaminated already with lead it could be useful to get rid of the Pb from the solder by givin it a bath?I think there might be a bit of confusion here...
Chips are made with a lead frame, not the metal lead but as a way to lead the signals in to the chip. The silicon die is often placed on top of a central flat piece. Sometimes with glue, sometimes with silver braze, gold braze or palladium. In most cases it's not made of precious metals in modern devices. The signals going to the chip is then connected with bond wires (gold, aluminium or gold plated copper is common). Every connection on the outside has it's corresponding bond wire inside the capsule.
After the bond wires are attached the lead frame with the die and bond wires are put into a mould and silicon dioxide filled epoxy is injected. After curing the lead frame is cut and the pins are formed so it reach down to the circuit board.
As a last step the pins or legs are plated or covered in tin solder. In older days the solder contained a bit of the metal lead but at least the last 20+ years the solder is lead free. There might be up to 3% of silver mixed in with the tin.
So there isn't a lot of the metal lead in most IC:s, but most of it, if there is some, is on the outside of the body.
The white ash is basically just fine sand. After a complete incineration the body should be white straight through. This takes some time though, so most videos I've seen shows a lot of black carbon left.
I have a temperature controlled oven that I use to burn off the carbon. 400-600 degrees C (slightly glowing) and a bit of air for a couple of hours, depending on the size of the lot, burns off most of the carbon and can even oxidize the lead frame. Then it's an easy task to crush the chips.
Göran
Add a few drops of Sulfuric, that will take care of it.Thanks for clarifying this, so in this case if you have have a waste AP solution contaminated already with lead it could be useful to get rid of the Pb from the solder by givin it a bath?
Correct - when we talk about the "lead frame" in IC chips we are NOT talking about the metal lead (Pb)Chips are made with a lead frame, not the metal lead
I was wondering if I have plastic and ceramic chips mixed, incinerating them would work?Unfortunately, it comes from the early posts on the forum, perpetuated by repetition and its inclusion in Ralph's forum handbooks, let alone all the other instances on the internet and youtube.
Dave
I really don't understand how your post, relate to the post you reply to?I was wondering if I have plastic and ceramic chips mixed, incinerating them would work?
It is a question about incineration, I was trying to ask him this question....I really don't understand how your post, relate to the post you reply to?
You reply to a post from Dave, with a question regarding a totally different topic.
Outside of that - processing IC chips has been discussed extensively on this form --- so you can do your own research using key words - IC Chips - incineration - milling - ball milling - bonding wires - concentrator table - etc. & you will find a HUGE amount of info posted by me & others about processing IC chips
Well, ask the question then, without quoting to something completely unrelated, please.It is a question about incineration, I was trying to ask him this question....
Per the bold print --- I don't mean to be rude - but - use some common sense hereI was wondering if I have plastic and ceramic chips mixed, incinerating them would work?
I was not sure of the exact composition of the so called "ceramic" is what people refer to ceramic, I heard even plastic is not actually quite plastic so due to the overwhelming number of variants I thought I could ask here.Per the bold print --- I don't mean to be rude - but - use some common sense here
Ask your self --- does ceramic burn ? --- Answer - NO
Does ceramic easily crush (mill) to a fine powder ? --- answer - NO
So - why would you mix them in with epoxy (plastic) chips that burn & then mill to a fine powder
Kurt
I have not started yet because I have some chips which I have collected together in a bucket and was not sure if plastics will melt or create some other unforeseen problem. My plan was to incinerate all, finely grind them with my new 39000 rpm mill and then use the washing and decanting method I have seen in an older video of Jeff where all water decanted is recirculated. My worry was that plastics will melt but was thinking that at a high temperature it will burn off.Have started to process any of them yet?
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