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Rethinking Reinforcement Materials for Advanced Packaging
May 14, 2026 | Ivana Ivanovic-Hesselink, Flexiramics B.V.Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
Considering Lower Temperatures, Lower Impact
What is the environmental footprint for these energy-intensive processes? Traditional glass fiber requires extremely high processing temperatures and significantly contributes to the overall embodied energy of electronic materials.
By contrast, ceramic nonwoven reinforcement can be produced at lower temperatures, thereby reducing energy consumption during manufacturing. These sustainability metrics across the electronics supply chain offer a meaningful advantage in reducing environmental impact.
The benefits extend into the use phase as well. Improved lateral heat spreading contributes to more efficient passive cooling, reducing the need for additional thermal management layers or active cooling components. While reinforcement is not typically viewed as a sustainability lever, materials that dissipate heat more effectively can indirectly reduce system level energy consumption and improve long-term reliability.
The Need for Reinforcement Alternatives
Beyond performance, the industry is facing supply chain pressures that are reshaping material strategies. It’s becoming more common to hear discussions around glass fiber availability, regionalization, and the need for second-source reinforcement platforms.
OEMs and substrate manufacturers are evaluating how reinforcement strategies fit into their long-term material planning. They ask questions about supply resilience, diversification, and futureproofing, such as what happens if traditional reinforcement supply tightens, how can the industry broaden its material options to reduce dependency on a single reinforcement class, and whether there are emerging platforms that better align with the performance requirements of next-generation architectures?
These considerations are prompting engineers to explore complementary reinforcement solutions that can support evolving design and manufacturing needs. Flexiramics introduces a fundamentally different material class into the reinforcement landscape, enabling diversification and reducing reliance on traditional glass fiber supply chains.
Application Drivers: Where Reinforcement Matters Most
This need is most acute in applications where thermal, frequency, and reliability demands intersect. These include RF and mmWave modules (5G infrastructure, automotive radar, satellite communications, antennas), high-speed digital substrates (high-performance computing, AI accelerators), power electronics (power modules, aerospace power systems), and advanced packaging (chiplets, heterogeneous integration, high-density interposers).
In each of these domains, reinforcement materials influence thermal behaviour, signal integrity, mechanical stability, and long-term reliability. As architectures become more complex and performance margins narrow, reinforcement becomes a key differentiator in advanced designs.
Engineering Feedback
Flexiramics combines the thermal and dielectric advantages of ceramics with the flexibility and processability required for laminate manufacturing.
Key characteristics include:
- Thin, stable, and uniform structure
- Compatibility with common resin systems
- Drop in process integration
- Improved thermal and frequency performance
- Mechanical flexibility despite ceramic composition
This combination is unusual and valuable because it allows ceramic performance to be introduced into substrates without requiring new equipment, new process flows, or disruptive manufacturing changes.
For material suppliers and substrate manufacturers, this lowers the barrier to evaluating and adopting new reinforcement technologies.
Early evaluations of flexible ceramic nonwoven reinforcement have shown promising results:
- Lower high-frequency loss compared to glass
- Significantly improved lateral heat spreading
- Thin, stable, uniform reinforcement layers
- Opportunities for new polymer combinations
- Consistent dielectric behaviour across temperature
Engineers exploring next-generation materials are increasingly considering reinforcement as a performance-enabling component rather than a fixed constraint. Flexiramics may serve not just as an alternative to glass, but as a platform for new laminate architectures.
Looking Ahead
The electronics industry is moving toward architectures that demand more from every material layer, and reinforcement is no exception. As thermal, frequency, and supply chain pressures intensify, the need for new reinforcement platforms becomes clear.
Flexiramics represents one such platform because it aligns with the direction of advanced packaging, RF systems, and high‑speed digital design.
We see a shift not simply from glass to ceramic, but from reinforcement as a passive structural element to an active contributor to performance, reliability, and scalability.
- Learn more here.
- Watch a video on the material here.
- Request samples or explore co-development opportunities here.
Ivana Ivanovic‑Hesselink is a business development and product strategy professional with deep experience in leading teams, shaping markets, and supporting the growth of innovation‑focused organizations. In her role at Flexiramics B.V., she drives customer engagement and commercialization efforts for advanced, flexible ceramic nonwoven microfiber material, collaborating with forward‑thinking companies across electronics, filtration, catalysis, membranes, and batteries markets as they explore Flexiramics material in proof‑of‑concept and development programs. She focuses on building the external ecosystem needed for successful adoption and translating emerging opportunities into scalable pathways
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