My dad is an expert in pottery, so he knows _a lot_ of chemistry but it is fairly specialized.
So I find a cool article that says that a substance (that *I* never heard about before) is used in computers due to it's high heat resistance, and he is like "what, but it is not heat resistant at all! It melts under 1000 celsius!" and I have to remind him that computers should never ever get anywhere close to 1000 celsius.
@eldaking Now I'm curious what the material is, as someone who works with electronics and is currently focused on thermal issues!
-F
@Felthry I don't remember the details, and I am summarizing a bunch of different things..
Recently I was showing him thermal paste and he was just underwhelmed by every substance used (most of which I didn't know). Some of the oxides they use for thermal conduction are thermal insulators for him.
And I think I have mentioned the "high" melting point of copper, maybe even aluminum, a few times and he disagrees vehemently every time.
@Felthry Maybe it was the silicone in the thermal paste that couldn't stand to 1000 celsius? Or maybe the silver that some of them add.
@eldaking Silicone can handle pretty high temperatures, but I'm pretty sure a thousand degrees is too much even for it.
I'm a little surprised about that last bit though! Most of the thermal ceramics used are either aluminum nitride or beryllium oxide (sometimes also aluminum oxide because it's cheaper and nontoxic but it's nowhere near as good), which are the top two thermal conductivities known in ceramic materials
-F
@eldaking though. i don't know about in thermal pastes, i thought those mostly used metal particles for thermal conduction, like bits of silver
-F