Thermite sounds a bit excessive for a typical home or office. How about baking in an oven or roasting on a grill? Is modern flash memory fragile enough to be destroyed irreversibly at 230C/450F?
They have to be rated to survive those temperatures for short periods of time during reflow soldering.
Apparently flash memory is rated to last a minimum of 10 hours baking at 125c, or 360 hours at 85c. The decay is exponential, so in theory 30-60min at 230c should do a lot more damage.
But I'm not sure you should rely on it, that 10 hours @ 125c number is for when the bit-errors exceed the capabilities of the ECC. The data will be partially recoverable for much longer. Or you might have some flash which does a lot better than the minimum spec.
How about microwave? Powerful charges at every exposed terminal looks like a nice way to fry some chips. Maybe submerge the whole PCB in a bowl of salt water to prevent sparks flying everywhere...
They have to be rated to survive those temperatures for short periods of time during reflow soldering.
Apparently flash memory is rated to last a minimum of 10 hours baking at 125c, or 360 hours at 85c. The decay is exponential, so in theory 30-60min at 230c should do a lot more damage.
But I'm not sure you should rely on it, that 10 hours @ 125c number is for when the bit-errors exceed the capabilities of the ECC. The data will be partially recoverable for much longer. Or you might have some flash which does a lot better than the minimum spec.
https://www.eeweb.com/blog/eli_tiomkin/industrial-temperatur...