I've personally seen three applications of BeO in electronics. Two, including 
the most common, are a possible hazzard.
The most common application is RF power devices (transistors and terminating 
resistors). These hace a "washer" or slab of BeO between the semiconductor 
device and the mounting stud or flange. Asthis is trypically below the 
electrical connecting leads (often wide strips or tabs), application of 
excessive force between heatsink and PCB can fracture the BeO causing dust an 
chips/splinters. Splinters onder the skin or in the eye can cause problems as 
well as inhaled dust. force can be applied during manufacture / service or in 
an accident or if the item containing the unit is crushed. Next most common is 
the use in metal can semiconductors. One example are early LM78Hxx TO3 
regulators. These are fairly safe as the can has to be ruptured. The third is 
as a block of solid BeO bonded to metal plates used to insulate conduction 
cooled vacuum tubes. Some power tubesmay use it internally. A big problem is 
that it looks like any other ceramic. In some UK equipment
 devices containing BeO will be marked with "cornflower blue" paint dot. A 
non-electronic application is in some (eg argon-ion) lasers.
on a side note some vacuum tubes (especially cold cathode types) contain 
various radioactive materials.

Robert G8RPI.


--- On Fri, 16/1/09, Mike S <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Mike S <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] beryllium oxide
> To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" 
> <[email protected]>
> Date: Friday, 16 January, 2009, 6:28 PM
> At 12:45 PM 1/16/2009, Lux, James P wrote...
> >More realistically, the dangeris dust when something is
> physically 
> >overstressed (dropped, mounting overtightened, thermal
> shock). That, 
> >and if it gets ground up in trash disposal... Say
> someone throws it in 
> >the shredder.
> 
> So, if some electronics have an IC with a BeO package, and
> it sits 
> undisturbed, what's the problem? It seems to me that
> most, if not all, 
> such uses would be additionally contained by heatsinks and
> compound, 
> since it's the thermal conductivity properties which
> caused it to be 
> used in the first place.
> 
> Hard to say how much dust might be produced by dropping or 
> overtightening. In my experience, ceramics tend to break
> pretty 
> cleanly. Maybe BeO is different.
> 
> Granted, the manufacturer can be expected to be biased, but
> Brush 
> Ceramics claims "Beryllium oxide (BeO), in solid form
> and as contained 
> in finished products, presents no special health
> risks." They also 
> claim "Under federal regulations and most state
> regulations, BeO 
> ceramic or products containing BeO
> ceramics that are no longer recyclable and declared solid
> wastes are 
> not classified as hazardous waste due the content of BeO
> ceramic." 
> 
> 
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