joubjonn
Well-known member
Would appreciate any thoughts and feedback. Dissolving everything I would think is a good idea.
There may be less than you believe.Would appreciate any thoughts and feedback. Dissolving everything I would think is a good idea.
Dissolving whole boards is generally very bad idea. That is one of primary headache-inducing type of threads that emerge here - "Hi, I put 20lb of boards in acid, now I don´t know what to do, gold isn´t in solution"Would appreciate any thoughts and feedback. Dissolving everything I would think is a good idea.
Care to share some info on that?Be very carefull touching that white thermal contact paste. It could be toxic.
i learned that at school thirty years ago.Care to share some info on that?
Thanks guys. Haven’t refined yet. I just bought a propane foundry. Think I’ll try and use that to get a button and then go from there.(edited to take out double text: "most are just zinc oxide but some can cantian")
i learned that at school thirty years ago.
so i Googled it.. From another forum (that looks just like the GRF lay-out b.t.w.):
How toxic is thermal paste and is there a safer version? - SPCR
(quote):
"Thermal greases use one or more different thermally conductive substances:
Ceramic-based thermal grease has generally good thermal conductivity and is usually composed of a ceramic powder suspended in a liquid or gelatinous silicone compound, which may be described as 'silicone paste' or 'silicone thermal compound'. The most commonly used ceramics and their thermal conductivities (in units of W/(m ·K)) are:[4] beryllium oxide (218), aluminum nitride (170), aluminum oxide (39), zinc oxide (21), and silicon dioxide (1). Thermal grease is usually white in colour since these ceramics are all white in powder form. These figures are for bulk material, not thermal grease.
Metal-based thermal grease contain solid metal particles (usually silver or aluminum). It has a better thermal conductivity[citation needed] and is more expensive than ceramic-based grease.
Metal-free thermal compound does not allow electrical conduction and therefore it eliminates the risk of short circuit and keeps the components safe. This type of thermal conductor is often used in computer systems to increase the thermal conductivity of the CPU or GPU. Besides, it is very easy to remove comparing with other types of thermal grease.[5]
Carbon based. There are products based on with carbon-based conductors, using diamond powder,[6][7][8] or short carbon fibers [1], they have the best thermal conductivity[citation needed] and are generally more expensive than metal-based thermal grease.
Liquid metal based. Some thermal pastes are made of liquid metal alloys of gallium. These are rare and expensive.
Phase Change Metal Alloy (PCMA) is not a "grease" but another type of Thermal interface material. The design consists of a sealed alloy metal pad that needs to be "reflowed" under high heat (typically 90-100C.) The alloy on the inside of the seal will change phases, and fill all the micro-voids. Since this material is made of mostly metal alloy, the thermal properties of this interface material are very good.
All but the last classification of compound usually use silicone grease as a medium, a heat conductor in itself, though some manufacturers prefer use of fractions of mineral oil.[citation needed]
All these compounds conduct heat far better than air, but far worse than metal. They are intended to fill gaps that would otherwise hold air, not to create a layer between component and heatsink—this will decrease the effectiveness of the heatsink. Ideally perfectly smooth and flat metallic surfaces would not need heatsink compound." (end quote)
So silicone paste with zinc oxide are not the worst of materials, but beryllium oxide is definitely not. Looking at its thermal conductivity, i think it will be the No 1 choice for high end industrial applications.
Not knowing what the manufacturer used, i would go for safe and use gloves. As far as other components in the paste, I always do: "Copy / Paste + MSDS" but it's a wide range of products and you never know for sure. I don't think it will pop up on the parts list.
Better to be safe than sorry.
Martijn.
Fortunately, beryllium oxide has very low aqueous solubility. In the paste, it's less dangerous than as powder. The big risk is getting it wiped on something you'll eat later! You won't even notice, since it has a sweet taste... and I think we can all figure out how scientists of olden days found that out. They weren't the brightest sometimes.(edited to take out double text: "most are just zinc oxide but some can cantian")
i learned that at school thirty years ago.
so i Googled it.. From another forum (that looks just like the GRF lay-out b.t.w.):
How toxic is thermal paste and is there a safer version? - SPCR
(quote):
"Thermal greases use one or more different thermally conductive substances:
Ceramic-based thermal grease has generally good thermal conductivity and is usually composed of a ceramic powder suspended in a liquid or gelatinous silicone compound, which may be described as 'silicone paste' or 'silicone thermal compound'. The most commonly used ceramics and their thermal conductivities (in units of W/(m ·K)) are:[4] beryllium oxide (218), aluminum nitride (170), aluminum oxide (39), zinc oxide (21), and silicon dioxide (1). Thermal grease is usually white in colour since these ceramics are all white in powder form. These figures are for bulk material, not thermal grease.
Metal-based thermal grease contain solid metal particles (usually silver or aluminum). It has a better thermal conductivity[citation needed] and is more expensive than ceramic-based grease.
Metal-free thermal compound does not allow electrical conduction and therefore it eliminates the risk of short circuit and keeps the components safe. This type of thermal conductor is often used in computer systems to increase the thermal conductivity of the CPU or GPU. Besides, it is very easy to remove comparing with other types of thermal grease.[5]
Carbon based. There are products based on with carbon-based conductors, using diamond powder,[6][7][8] or short carbon fibers [1], they have the best thermal conductivity[citation needed] and are generally more expensive than metal-based thermal grease.
Liquid metal based. Some thermal pastes are made of liquid metal alloys of gallium. These are rare and expensive.
Phase Change Metal Alloy (PCMA) is not a "grease" but another type of Thermal interface material. The design consists of a sealed alloy metal pad that needs to be "reflowed" under high heat (typically 90-100C.) The alloy on the inside of the seal will change phases, and fill all the micro-voids. Since this material is made of mostly metal alloy, the thermal properties of this interface material are very good.
All but the last classification of compound usually use silicone grease as a medium, a heat conductor in itself, though some manufacturers prefer use of fractions of mineral oil.[citation needed]
All these compounds conduct heat far better than air, but far worse than metal. They are intended to fill gaps that would otherwise hold air, not to create a layer between component and heatsink—this will decrease the effectiveness of the heatsink. Ideally perfectly smooth and flat metallic surfaces would not need heatsink compound." (end quote)
So silicone paste with zinc oxide are not the worst of materials, but beryllium oxide is definitely not. Looking at its thermal conductivity, i think it will be the No 1 choice for high end industrial applications.
Not knowing what the manufacturer used, i would go for safe and use gloves. As far as other components in the paste, I always do: "Copy / Paste + MSDS" but it's a wide range of products and you never know for sure. I don't think it will pop up on the parts list.
Better to be safe than sorry.
Martijn.
Could you answer some questions.Would appreciate any thoughts and feedback. Dissolving everything I would think is a good idea.
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