Selecting the right PCB substrate material is one of the most critical decisions in circuit board design. The choice directly impacts signal integrity, thermal performance, mechanical durability, and production costs. While FR-4 remains the industry standard for general-purpose applications, specialized materials such as PTFE, ceramic-filled laminates, and metal-core boards are essential for high-frequency, high-power, and extreme-temperature environments.
This comprehensive guide walks you through the main substrate types, their key characteristics, and how to select the optimal material for your specific application.
Overview: FR-4 is the most widely used PCB substrate, accounting for approximately 90% of consumer electronics and industrial control applications.
Key Characteristics:
FR-4 Variants:
| Variant | Tg | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard FR-4 | 130-150°C | Consumer electronics, general PCBs | Shengyi S1000-2 |
| High-Tg FR-4 | ≥170°C | Automotive, industrial equipment | Isola FR408HR |
| Halogen-Free FR-4 | 170°C+ | Medical devices, RoHS-compliant products | Various (RoHS) |
When to Use:
Overview: For applications requiring signal frequencies above 1 GHz, standard FR-4 introduces excessive signal losses due to its high dielectric loss. High-frequency materials minimize signal degradation and enable reliable data transmission.
Common High-Frequency Materials:
Specifications:
Applications:
Example Products: Rogers RT5880, Taconic RF-35
Specifications:
Applications:
Example Products: Rogers RO4350B, Panasonic Megtron 6
Selection Tip: Choose PTFE for lowest loss and highest frequency; choose ceramic-filled materials for better frequency stability and thermal performance.
Overview: Metal-core boards feature a layered structure: copper foil → insulating dielectric → metal core. They excel at dissipating heat from high-power components.
Structure and Thermal Performance:
| Type | Metal Core | Thermal Conductivity | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aluminum-Core | Aluminum | 1–3 W/m·K | LED lighting, power supplies, motor drivers |
| Copper-Core | Copper | >400 W/m·K | High-power MOSFETs, IGBT modules, power converters |
| Hybrid | Al + Cu layers | 3–50 W/m·K | Precision power applications |
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Example Products: Bergquist HT-07003 (aluminum), Sumitomo SLC-8000 (copper)
When to Use:
Overview: Flexible substrates enable PCBs to bend and conform to 3D form factors, essential for modern consumer devices.
Common Flexible Materials:
| Material | Tg / Tmax | Flexibility | Cost | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polyimide (PI) | >260°C | High | High | Smartphones, wearables, aerospace |
| Polyester (PET) | ~105°C | High | Low | Simple flexible circuits, labels |
| Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) | ~240°C | Good | Medium | High-frequency flexible circuits |
Polyimide (PI) - Preferred Choice:
Properties:
Applications:
Example Products: DuPont Pyralux AP
When to Use:
Properties:
| Property | Al₂O₃ | AlN |
|---|---|---|
| Thermal Conductivity | 20–30 W/m·K | 170–230 W/m·K |
| Dielectric Constant (Dk) | 9–10 | 8–9 |
| Operating Temperature | Up to +1000°C | Up to +1300°C |
| Cost | Moderate | Very High |
Applications:
Specifications:
When evaluating PCB substrates, consider these key electrical and thermal properties:
Definition: Measures how much a material concentrates electric field.
Impact:
Target Values by Application:
| Application | Target Dk | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| <1 GHz (FR-4 standard) | 4.0–4.5 | Acceptable for most digital circuits |
| 1–10 GHz | 3.0–3.5 | Minimize signal velocity variation |
| >10 GHz (5G/mmWave) | 2.1–3.0 | Maintain signal integrity, reduce losses |
Definition: Measures dielectric loss at a given frequency; proportional to heat generation.
Impact:
Target Values by Frequency:
| Frequency Band | Target Df | Example Material |
|---|---|---|
| DC–100 MHz | <0.01 | Standard FR-4 |
| 100 MHz–1 GHz | <0.005 | High-speed FR-4 |
| 1–10 GHz | <0.003 | Rogers, Isola |
| >10 GHz (mmWave) | <0.001 | PTFE, LCP |
Definition: Temperature at which the material transitions from glassy (rigid) to rubbery (flexible) state.
Impact:
Industry Requirements:
| Application | Minimum Tg | Standard Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer electronics | 130–150°C | Standard FR-4 |
| Automotive (underhood) | ≥170°C | High-Tg FR-4, IPC-4101 Type ER/FR |
| Aerospace/Military | ≥180°C | Ceramic, BT resin |
| Industrial (high-altitude) | ≥160°C | High-Tg FR-4 |
Definition: Rate of dimensional change per degree Celsius.
Impact:
Typical CTE Values:
| Material | Z-Axis CTE (ppm/°C) | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Standard FR-4 | 48–52 | Moderate (near-match) |
| High-Tg FR-4 | 45–55 | Acceptable with care |
| Rogers RO4000 | 40–48 | Good match |
| Ceramic (Al₂O₃) | 5–8 | Excellent match; specialty applications |
Rule: Monitor CTE when designing boards with high thermal cycling (automotive, aerospace) or thick copper-core layers.
Definition: Material's ability to conduct heat away from components.
Target Ranges by Application:
| Application | Required Conductivity | Material Choice |
|---|---|---|
| Low-power digital | >0.3 W/m·K | Standard FR-4 sufficient |
| LED driver (≤50W) | 1–3 W/m·K | Aluminum-core metal-IMS |
| Power supply (50–200W) | 3–50 W/m·K | Copper-core or thick aluminum |
| High-power RF module (>200W) | >100 W/m·K | AlN ceramic (170–230 W/m·K) |
Use this table as a quick reference guide for substrate selection:
| Application | Recommended Substrate | Key Requirements | Example Product |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smartphones / Laptops | Standard FR-4 | Low cost, established manufacturing | Shengyi S1000-2 |
| 5G / mmWave Modules | PTFE or Ceramic-Filled | Low Dk/Df (<0.003), signal integrity | Rogers RO4350B |
| LED Lighting | Aluminum-Core Metal-IMS | High thermal conductivity (1–3 W/m·K) | Bergquist HT-07003 |
| Power Supplies (50–200W) | Copper-Core or Thick Aluminum | Excellent heat dissipation | Sumitomo SLC-8000 |
| Automotive Underhood | High-Tg FR-4 or Ceramic | Tg ≥170°C, thermal cycling resistance | Isola FR408HR |
| Smartwatch / Wearables | Polyimide (PI) Flexible | Bendable, reliable under flexing | DuPont Pyralux AP |
| Power Amplifiers (GHz+) | Rogers RO4000 or PTFE | Optimized Dk/Df, thermal management | Rogers RO4350B |
| Satellite / Aerospace | Ceramic (AlN) + PI Flex | Extreme temperature stability, reliability | Custom specialty grade |
| Motor Driver / IGBT Circuits | Copper-Core Metal-IMS | High current handling, superior cooling | Custom high-conductivity |
| IoT / Edge Devices | Standard FR-4 | Balance of cost and performance | Shengyi S1141 |
FR-4 Remains the Benchmark:
Recommendation: Use FR-4 as the baseline. Upgrade only if simulations or prototypes reveal genuine performance issues.
Key Process Constraints:
| Material | Standard Drilling | Laser Drilling | Impedance Control | Via Fill | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR-4 | ✓ Easy | Optional | ✓ Well-established | Standard | Industry standard |
| PTFE | ✗ Poor | ✓ Required | ✓ Available | Difficult | Requires specialized equipment |
| Ceramic-Filled | ✓ Good | ✓ Optional | ✓ Available | Moderate | Slightly harder than FR-4 |
| Metal-Core | ✓ Good | Not needed | Limited | N/A | Single/dual-layer constraint |
| Flexible (PI) | ✓ Good | ✓ Optional | ✓ Available | Possible | Requires flex-compatible processes |
Action Items:
Regulatory Considerations:
| Regulation | Impact | Recommended Substrate |
|---|---|---|
| RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) | Eliminates Pb, Cd, Hg, Cr(VI), PBB, PBDE | Halogen-free FR-4 (e.g., Shengyi S1165) |
| REACH (EU Chemical Restrictions) | Limits SVHC (Substances of Very High Concern) | Verify with material supplier |
| Automotive AEC-Q200 | Reliability in harsh underhood environments | High-Tg FR-4, ceramic, BT resin |
| Medical ISO 13849 | Biocompatibility and long-term safety | Polyimide (PI), ceramic |
| UL 94 Flame Rating | Flammability classification (V-0, V-1, HB) | FR-4 certified V-0; verify alternatives |
High-Humidity Environments:
Chemical Exposure (Oil, Solvents):
High Altitude:
START: What is your primary design challenge?
1. COST-SENSITIVE?
→ Use Standard FR-4 ✓
2. HIGH FREQUENCY (>1 GHz)?
→ Dk or Df concerns?
→ YES: PTFE or Rogers RO4000 ✓
→ NO: High-Tg FR-4 ✓
3. HIGH POWER (>50W)?
→ Thermal management critical?
→ YES: Metal-Core (Al or Cu) ✓
→ Temperature >130°C in operation?
→ YES: Copper-Core ✓
4. TEMPERATURE EXTREME (>130°C)?
→ Flexible requirement?
→ YES: Polyimide (PI) ✓
→ NO: High-Tg FR-4 or Ceramic ✓
5. MECHANICAL FLEXIBILITY?
→ Required: Polyimide (PI) ✓
→ Optional: Standard FPC ✓
6. EXTREME ENVIRONMENT (Aerospace/Military)?
→ Ceramic (AlN or Al₂O₃) + Specialty hybrid ✓
Recommended 3-Stage Approach:
Order prototype boards in 2–3 materials
Assemble with real components
Perform benchtop testing:
| Layer | Material | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Antenna/LNA RF traces | Rogers RO4350B | Low Dk/Df, optimized for 3–5 GHz |
| Baseband/Digital | High-Tg FR-4 | Cost-effective, good for digital signals |
| Power Supply | Metal-Core Aluminum | Heat dissipation for RF amplifiers |
| Interconnect | Flexible PI | Thermal stress relief, mechanical damping |
| Component | Material | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Main IGBT Substrate | Copper-Core Metal-IMS | Max thermal conductivity (>400 W/m·K) |
| Gate Drive / Sensing | High-Tg FR-4 | Cost-effective, EMI immunity |
| Connector Interface | Ceramic (Al₂O₃) | Extreme temperature isolation |
| Thermal Interface | Specialized TIM (Thermal Interface Material) | Additional heat path to module case |
| Subsystem | Material | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Main PCB | Polyimide (PI) Flexible | Ergonomic conforming shape |
| Sensor Interface | High-Tg FR-4 | Stable impedance for analog sensing |
| Battery Connector | Copper-trace flexible PI | Reliable flex endurance |
| Isolation Barrier | Ceramic (Al₂O₃) | Medical safety compliance, thermal stability |
FR-4 Is Your Default: 90% of applications can be satisfied with standard or high-Tg FR-4. Use only when justified by performance testing.
DUXPCB specializes in custom PCB manufacturing with expertise in FR-4, high-frequency (PTFE, Rogers), metal-core, and flexible substrates. Our engineering team works with you from material selection through production validation, ensuring optimal performance and reliability for your application.
Contact us for a consultation on your next PCB project.
Document Version: 1.0
Last Updated: April 2026
Audience: PCB Design Engineers, Procurement Specialists, Product Managers
This guide is intended for informational purposes. Always consult with your PCB manufacturer and material supplier for specific application requirements and compliance certifications.