Traditional Materials, High-Frequency Boards?
June 18, 2024 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
Not long ago, high-frequency and RF boards required specialized laminates, which tend to be costly and difficult to manufacture. But now, high-frequency designers use traditional PCB laminates for certain high-frequency boards. How is this possible?
For some insight, we asked Ed Kelley, founder of Four Peaks Innovation and former CTO of Isola, to discuss how traditional materials have improved and what this means to PCB designers and design engineers today.
Andy Shaughnessy: Kris Moyer at IPC is teaching designers how to avoid overconstraining their board materials. There are ways to build high-frequency boards, even RF boards, without using high-frequency materials. What are your thoughts?
Ed Kelley: If we look back in history, there was a great divide between FR-4 materials and what people used for RF/microwave applications, which really boiled down to Dk and Df properties. If you look back at the loss range, or dissipation factors, and the typical types of polymers that were used in those applications, FR-4s back then would fit into the high-loss and standard-loss categories of today’s material sets. Even back then, the products used in RF applications were in today's ultra- or extremely low-loss categories.
The two markets were separate and there wasn't a lot in the middle. But as digital applications began to require more speed and higher frequencies, those of us involved in developing materials decades ago began to introduce lower Dk, lower-loss materials, with GETEK being one of the first. Material manufacturers created competing products and these other categories—mid-loss and low-loss material segments. We began using different resin chemistries to get to the electrical performance requirements in these materials. When you get down into the very-low, ultra-low, and extremely low-loss categories, the laminate suppliers are beginning to use resins that look more like what had always been used in RF microwave materials.
There were also other differences with RF microwave materials. Historically, they used a lot of fillers that were designed to maintain Dk stability over temperature, humidity, and frequency. One of the participants in that market had patents that limited others from developing similar products. Most of those patents have now expired.
Marcy LaRont: Because of these different polymers, adhesives, and blends, we can now potentially consider “FR-4” material as another option to traditional RF material.
Kelley: Yes, historically FR-4 was virtually all epoxy resins. But you just can't get to the Dk requirements for high-speed digital applications using only epoxy. So, the first step was blending them with other resins, be it PPO, BT, SMA, etc. Eventually, you get to the lowest-loss materials used today in high-speed digital, which usually use a resin called polyphenylene ether (PPE), and blends of PPE and other resins. Over the years, conventional copper-clad laminate (CCL) suppliers, particularly when lead-free assembly came on the scene, began to use a lot of inorganic fillers to control CTE properties. So, you've had this convergence. The RF guys almost always used fillers. Then, the conventional CCL suppliers became familiar with incorporating inorganic fillers into these other resin systems. Even the manufacturing processes look similar, with the exception of PTFE-type RF materials.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the May 2024 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.
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Don’t Overconstrain Your Board Materials
07/02/2024 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamWhen we started planning May’s issue, which centers on the use of traditional laminates in certain high-frequency PCBs, we knew we had to interview Kris Moyer and Ed Kelley together. Kris teaches advanced PCB design classes for IPC, and Ed is the former CTO of Isola and founder of Four Peaks Innovation. What ensued was a wide-ranging discussion on the evolution of “standard” PCB laminates and the recent trend by some OEMs to use these materials in high-frequency and even RF boards.