Why a Helium Leak Disabled Every iPhone in a Medical Facility
Why a Helium Leak Disabled Every iPhone in a Medical Facility

Why a Helium Leak Disabled Every iPhone in a Medical Facility

Why a Helium Leak Disabled Every iPhone in a Medical Facility
Why a Helium Leak Disabled Every iPhone in a Medical Facility
Helium doesn't just kill apple devices, It kills anything with a MEMS oscillator. Helium atoms are so small that it's impossible to make a seal that completely blocks them.
Hmm.
That seems like it'd open a lot of potential abuses.
I wonder what the failure mode of various electronic locks is when they're exposed to helium?
Well that's not true. It's just a real bitch. As a welder, helium leak check is about the toughest damn QC to pass. Most welding QC has some reasonable margin for error during inspection, but the damn helium doesn't care. You can have a beautiful weld with a tiny imperfection at the start or end and it'll piss helium just as badly as an entirely scuffed bead.
...Yet both Android and Apple phones use MEMS silicon for their devices, so why were only Apple phones affected? The answer, it seems, is because Apple recently defected from traditional quartz-based clocks in its phones in favor of clocks that are also made of MEMS silicon.
So, they ask the question of why iPhones are the only ones affected if androids also went to MEMS, then answer it by saying that apple went to MEMS. Are they saying that the clocks in Androids still use quartz, but iPhones use MEMS clocks, even though they both use general MEMS silicon?
Edit, autocorrect
Are they saying that the clocks in Androids still use quartz, but iPhones use MEMS clocks, even though they both use general MEMS silicon?
Correct. MEMS technology is used in the accelerometers and gyros in the inertial measurement units (IMUs) that are in pretty much every smartphone. Apple decided to switch to using MEMS clocks, probably because it means that they can reduce part count slightly as it would mean that they can incorporate them on the same chip as the CPU or the like.
Wasn't this exact scenario posted to r/talesfromtechsupport a few years ago? It sounds very familiar
This article is from 2018.
By Daniel Oberhaus October 30, 2018, 5:20pm
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Yet both Android and Apple phones use MEMS silicon for their devices, so why were only Apple phones affected?
Glad I've got an Android since I could potentially work with liquid Hydrogen...
Hydrogen
This says that hydrogen isn't just a problem, just helium:
It seems that MEMS is very sensitive to helium, but only helium. This Link stated that hydrogen does not affect MEMS, which surprised me.
Can't speak for MEMS specifically, but it absolutely can make chips shut down whole instruments by changing their properties. It intercalates slower, but has much the same effect once it's in there.
Oh derp
the fate worse than quenching.
and now I'm imagining Siri speaking in a very high-pitched voice.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microelectromechanical_system_oscillator
Interesting
So the helium causes physical interference by leaking into the housing?
Yup. Helium is such a tiny thing it can diffuse through almost anything, and in MEMS oscillators which are supposed to be at a rock solid 32kHz, causes variance in the frequency eventually just "gumming" it up entirely and causing it to stop working.
If you want to know how and why, Applied Science did a video on it. Five years ago. Because that's when this leak happened.