I have blown up quite a few things. Luckily most of the things I blew up are nano-sized and contained inside a very cold, metal drum so there is no danger. It is pretty shocking though to have a perfectly nice sample, pass too much current through it and then look back and see just an empty hole where it used to be. The nano-wires will literally blow off the surface they are on.
I have also blown up our pre-amplifier. This is a machine that takes a very small current and converts it into a large voltage so our instruments can read it (just like a guitar amplifier). I put too much current through it and it beeped angrily at me and stopped working for a month. We had to replace some of the more delicate parts. No fire though, not in our lab!
When I was doing my degree and making circuits I was always blowing up little LEDs (little lights). They kind of pop when you put too much current through them.
Occasionally when I’m trying to bake my chips I melt them too, but I think I’ve stopped doing that and fixed that problem!
I’m like Eleanor as in, I’ve blown up stuff, but on tiny scales. Fried a few electric circuits etc. That may not seem dramatic but if you’re looking at the stuff with a microscope at the time you get quite a fright!
Hi Conall,
Shockingly enough I haven’t blown anything up. I am quiet accident prone usually. I have broken a few expensive things in the lab though, which is not a pleasant experience. But you learn by doing these things too, you also learn not to break them again because they are expensive!
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