Why do we need to use metal PCB?

164 views 0 replies
Reply to Topic
wisepowder

Age: 2023
Total Posts: 0
Points: 10

Location:
,
Why do we need to use metal PCB?

1. Heat Dissipation

At present, many double-sided and multi-layer PCBs are high density, high
power boards, which are difficult to dissipate heat. Conventional
substrates such as FR4 and CEM3 are poor conductors of heat, which are
insulated between layers and heat cannot be dissipated, while local
heating of electronics will result in high-temperature failure of the
components. Insulated metal substrates possess a heat dissipation
capacity 5-10 times than FR4, can solve this heat dissipation problem.To
get more news about fr4 circuit board, you can visit pcbmake official website.
2. Thermal Expansion

The conventional printed circuit board consists of resin, reinforcing
material (such as glass fiber) and copper foil. The thermal expansion
coefficient (CTE) of the substrate is 80~90PPM/°C in the Z-axis
direction, while the CTE of copper is 16.8PPM/°C, that means the
metalized hole wall and the insulating wall of conventional PCB have a
large difference in the CTE. If the generated heat cannot be eliminated
in time, the metalized hole will be cracked by thermal expansion and
contraction, resulting in unreliable electronic equipment.

SMT (Surface Mount Technology) makes this problem more prominent. Because
the connection is achieved by direct soldering between the metal pad and
SMD, the CTE difference of the ceramic chip (6PPM/°C) and FR4 substrate
(13-18PPM/°C) probably cause connection fracture after a long time
running.
Differences Between Metal PCB and FR4 PCB
Conductivity: FR4 has a low thermal conductivity, typically about 0.3W, while metal
PCB has a higher thermal conductivity from 1.0W to 4.0W, the most common
being about 1.0W.

PTH for Mount: Conventional boards typically requires PTHs to assemble DIP parts. But PTHs are not suitable for
1-sided metal PCBs, all of the components are surface mounted.

Heat Dissipation: Heat dissipation in FR4 PCB typically involves vias for
heat transfer, which require longer drilling cycle, more extra
processes. Metal PCB provide their own heat dissipation. Via drilling,
deposition, and plating processes are eliminated.

Solder Mask: Conventional PCB solder mask is usually
green/red/blue/white/black/Orange... Usually applied to the top and
bottom. Metal PCB solder mask is almost entirely white for LED boards.
Applied only to the top.

Thickness: Conventional PCB such as FR4 is available in a variety of thicknesses and can be selected using a
variety of material combinations and layers. The thickness variation of
the Metal PCB is limited by the thickness of the insulated metal
substrate.

Machining Process: Metal PCB uses the same standard machining methods with FR4 PCB, except that V-groove must use
diamond-coated saw blades for the added strain from cutting into metal.

Posted 22 Dec 2020

Reply to Topic