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The Computer-chip industry gets safer : manufacturers cut ethers to eliminate hazards

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1001 ‎$0‎MAPA20080003418‎$a‎Bone, Jan
24514‎$a‎The Computer-chip industry gets safer‎$b‎: manufacturers cut ethers to eliminate hazards‎$c‎by Jan Bone
520  ‎$a‎The U.S. semiconductor industry has consistently ranked in the top 5 percent among major durable goods manufacturers for low work-related injury-and-illness rates. That does not mean, however, that the industry is free of concern. Three separate toxicological investigations have shown that ethylene-based glycol ethers, used to assemble the silicon wafers that hold the microchips, may cause reproductive problems in female wafer-fabrication workers. In December 1993, Dr. Donald V. Lassiter, a San Jose, Calif., environmental and occupational health consultant, presented a paper that summarized the studies at a Tokyo Technology Symposium sponsored by Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International. Based on the studies, Lassiter expects that practically all U.S. companies will have switched to alternatives substances by the end of 1994
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080585679‎$a‎Higiene industrial
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080576769‎$a‎Microinformática
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080555245‎$a‎Microchips
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080560850‎$a‎Toxicología
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080562373‎$a‎Etilenglicol
65011‎$0‎MAPA20080575687‎$a‎Disco de silicio
7400 ‎$a‎Safety & health
7730 ‎$t‎Safety & health‎$d‎Itasca‎$g‎Vol. 149, nº 5, May 1994 ; p. 80-84