On 07/25/2012 04:06 AM, Tothwolf wrote:
Being *too* conductive is not ESD safe. The idea is to
let the charge
drain away slowly. If a charge drains too quickly, it can induce a
charge nearby that might not be protected, like something internal to
a component.
So that black (carbon-impregnated) foam used for ICs isn't ESD-safe
becasue the resistance is only a hundred ohms or so per square inch?
It isn't 100% ESD safe because it isn't shielded. This is why many
electronic component distributors will still put parts that are in foam
inside an anti-static bag.
So you mean the lack of the Faraday effect?
A word of caution with black ESD foam... In the late
1990s I obtained a
bunch of 1960s logic chips stuck in black foam that had begun to break
down and it attacked (and literally corroded away) the IC leads. For
this very reason I prefer to store ICs in tubes vs conductive foam for
long term storage.
I've had this happen too. It makes quite a nasty mess, and whatever
ooze the foam turns into is very corrosive.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA