Hello all,
I found this while scrapping some boards. Not really good with identifying this type of stuff.
It is ceramic and photos are below... Any gold in this thing?
As always thank you all for anyband all education. I am forever grateful, for you all.
CHEERS!!
Pic number 1, 2 & 4 are epoxy molded chips not ceramic - pic number 3 is a ceramic chip
The epoxy chips will have gold bond wire in them - the ceramic chips do not have gold bond wire but instead have aluminum bond wires --- the only gold found in the ceramic chips will be a VERY thin gold brazing under the silicon die AND only "some" of them have that gold braze under the silicon die
As far as yields go for processing these type chips go --------
1)
at best - with the epoxy chips you can expect 0.1 grams gold per pound of chips - that is one tenth of a gram per pound of chip so you need 10 pounds of these chips to get 1 gram gold- AND - that is if you don't lose any of the gold bonding wires during the many steps you need to go through in processing these chips
Odds are that you will lose at least some of the bonding wires during the different steps in processing these chips - so don't count on the one tenth gram per pound
2) with the ceramic chips it depends on if (&/or) how many of them have the gold brazing under the silicon die meaning you could get zero grams gold if none of them have gold braze under the die (of a pound of chips) to at best one tenth gram gold if there is gold braze under ALL the dies in a pound of the chips
Therefore in my opinion I personally would never consider processing the ceramic chips as the cost of time & chems to process them far exceeds the value of the gold recovered
And the ONLY reason I would ever process the epoxy ones is because I would throw in a pound or 2 or 3 of them when processing a MUCH larger batch of higher yielding chip
In other words - when processing 50 - 60 pounds of HIGHER yielding chips I would throw in a pound 2 or 3 of these chips as the one tenths to 3 tenths gold was an addition to the larger batches of HIGHER yielding chips
I would never consider processing these chips on their own as like the ceramics the cost of time & chems far exceeds the value of the recovered gold - in my opinion they are only worth processing if they are processed along with other higher yielding chips
Kurt