Essential Design Guidelines for Flex PCBs
4 min
- 1. Ensure Adequate Hole and Via Clearances
- 2. Avoid Via-in-Pad Designs
- 3. Prevent Oxidation on Large Copper Surfaces
- 4. Reinforce and Strategically Place Pads
- 5. Design According to Coverlay Requirements
- 6. Optimize Gold Finger and Connector Pad Designs
- Conclusion
Flexible Printed Circuit Boards (Flex PCBs) play a crucial role in modern electronics by enabling compact and lightweight designs. Flexible PCBs are not new in the market, they are the part of almost every electronics item, which include small dimensions and fittings. Because bending the wires, fitting the components and enabling power in small handheld devices are not that much easy with rigid PCBs. They are specially designed and used for routing the power and display lines. Although the heavy electronics like CPU and GPU are still placed on rigid PCBs due to several design and reliability issues. The design and fabrication process requires engineers to follow specialized design principles. Based on JLCPCB’s in-depth recommendations, here are some key guidelines to ensure reliable, manufacturable, and high-performance Flex PCB designs.
1. Ensure Adequate Hole and Via Clearances
Through-Hole to Board Outline: Under the DRC we have to maintain a minimum clearance of 0.5 mm between through-holes and the board. For a more practical approach, use U-shaped slots open to the frame to prevent structural failures.
Via-to-Solder Mask: Keep vias at least 0.2 mm away from solder mask openings to avoid copper exposure. Exposure of copper may lead to short circuits and corrosion.
2. Avoid Via-in-Pad Designs
JLCPCB has via in pad technology with rigid and flexible boards. Via in Pad is possible in rigid structures because there is no issue of reliability. Rigid boards also contain BGA packages which increase the need of via in pad. But unlike rigid PCBs, Flex PCBs cannot be resin plugged, which can result in solder wicking and unreliable solder joints.
3. Prevent Oxidation on Large Copper Surfaces
If copper remained in air without a solder mask, solid copper regions may trap air during the lamination of the coverlay, leading to oxidation under heat and pressure. To avoid this problem:
● Use hatched copper patterns to reduce surface area.
● Add solder mask windows to vent trapped air.
4. Reinforce and Strategically Place Pads
Independent pads, especially those overlapping on both sides, can easily detach since the FPC core is only 25μm thick. It’s recommended to add copper reinforcement around the pad and connect pad corners to the copper area, and offset pads on opposite sides for better adhesion. The method is to design soldermask defined pads to prevent this, as the soldermask coverage on the pad’s rim provides mechanical strength.
● Avoid isolated or overlapping pads, especially on thin 25μm cores.
● Connect pad corners to copper areas to enhance mechanical adhesion.
5. Design According to Coverlay Requirements
For flexible boards, coverlay acts as the solder mask. It needs to be pre-windowed before application. Ensure a 0.2mm gap between pads and adjacent traces, and a 0.5mm spacing between pads. Otherwise, bridged apertures should be used, accepting exposed traces. For tight spacing (<0.5 mm), expose connecting traces through a single window. Add anti tear routing lines if required.
6. Optimize Gold Finger and Connector Pad Designs
In the FPC usually a cable ends with a gold pad going to some connector, which is used to improve the signal integrity and in this way the cable can be easily replaced during repair. For this we can use solder mask-defined pads for connectors.Shrinking gold finger lengths by 0.2 mm helps and avoid micro-shorts from laser cutting. Ensure the coverlay overlaps connector pads by at least 0.3 mm for mechanical durability.
Conclusion
Designing Flex PCBs requires careful attention to mechanical and thermal factors. By following these 7 critical guidelines, engineers can significantly improve the durability, and manufacturability of their flexible circuit designs. But these 7 guidelines are just a getting started guide to FPC, in future we will come with such amazing guides on FPC and design related issues. We will keep sharing in-depth guides related to PCB issues on our blog page.
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