What is a Metal Core PCB

What is a Metal Core PCB

A metal core PCB (MCPCB) is a specialized printed circuit board that uses a metal substrate—typically aluminum or copper—instead of the traditional FR4 fiberglass material. The metal layer serves as both a structural foundation and a highly efficient heat spreader, conducting thermal energy away from hot components far more effectively than epoxy-based alternatives.

The concept isn’t new—MCPCB technology emerged in the 1960s for high-power applications in military and industrial equipment. What changed is the explosive growth of LED lighting in the 2010s, which created massive demand for cost-effective thermal management solutions. Today, MCPCBs form the backbone of billions of LED products worldwide, from smartphone flash modules to stadium floodlights.

Understanding how these boards work requires grasping a fundamental thermal principle: heat flows from hot regions to cold regions along the path of least resistance. In electronics, that path depends heavily on material properties. Metals excel at conducting heat because their free electrons transfer thermal energy efficiently across the crystal lattice. Polymers and ceramics resist heat flow, which is why traditional PCB substrates trap heat near components.

You might also hear these boards called by other names in the industry:

  • Insulated Metal Substrate (IMS) PCB
  • Thermal PCB or Thermal Clad PCB
  • Metal Clad PCB
  • Aluminum PCB (when aluminum is the base material)
  • Metal Backed PCB

The key advantage? Metal core PCBs transfer heat 8 to 10 times faster than standard FR4 boards. This isn’t just marketing speak—it’s physics. While FR4 has a thermal conductivity of roughly 0.3 W/mK, aluminum sits around 200 W/mK, and copper reaches approximately 400 W/mK.

Metal Core PCB Manufacturing Process

Understanding how MCPCBs are made helps you design for manufacturability and avoid costly revisions. The process differs significantly from standard FR4 fabrication, requiring specialized equipment and process controls.

Step 1: Material Preparation

The process begins with preparing the metal substrate. Aluminum or copper sheets are cleaned, degreased, and surface-treated to promote adhesion. Any oxidation or contamination compromises the bond between metal and dielectric.

For aluminum substrates, manufacturers typically apply chemical conversion coatings (chromate or non-chromate alternatives for RoHS compliance) that create a microscopically rough surface with excellent adhesion properties. Copper substrates may receive micro-etching treatments or organic coatings.

Material inspection at this stage verifies:

  • Sheet thickness tolerance (typically ±0.1mm)
  • Surface flatness and freedom from scratches
  • Alloy certification matching specifications

Step 2: Dielectric Lamination

Thermally conductive prepreg (pre-impregnated dielectric material) is laminated onto the metal base under controlled temperature and pressure. This step determines the board’s thermal performance—voids or inconsistent thickness create hot spots that cause premature component failures in the field.

Quality manufacturers monitor lamination parameters continuously:

  • Temperature: 170-190°C typical (varies by dielectric formulation)
  • Pressure: 15-25 kg/cm²
  • Time: 60-90 minutes
  • Vacuum level: <5 mbar (prevents void formation)

The lamination press must accommodate the different thermal expansion rates of metal substrates versus standard FR4. Specialized fixtures prevent warping and maintain dimensional accuracy.

Step 3: Copper Lamination

Copper foil bonds to the dielectric layer, creating the circuit substrate. For multi-layer boards, additional lamination cycles add more copper and dielectric layers.

Copper foil specifications for MCPCBs match standard PCB grades:

  • 1 oz (35 μm) for signal traces and low-current applications
  • 2 oz (70 μm) for moderate power traces
  • 3-6 oz (105-210 μm) for high-current buses

The copper-to-dielectric bond must withstand thermal cycling without delamination. Peel strength testing (IPC-TM-650 2.4.8) verifies adequate adhesion.

Step 4: Circuit Imaging and Etching

Standard photolithographic processes transfer your circuit pattern to the copper. UV exposure through a photomask defines traces and pads, followed by chemical etching to remove unwanted copper.

MCPCB etching requires careful process control because the metal base conducts heat differently than FR4. Temperature fluctuations during etching affect etch rate uniformity, potentially causing over-etching or under-etching in different board regions.

Process parameters requiring control:

  • Etchant temperature: ±1°C stability
  • Conveyor speed: Optimized for uniform residence time
  • Spray pressure: Balanced across the panel width
  • Etchant chemistry: Continuous monitoring and regeneration

Step 5: Drilling and Routing

CNC drilling creates mounting holes and, for multi-layer boards, via holes. Drilling through metal requires specialized carbide tooling and slower feed rates to prevent burr formation.

Key drilling considerations for MCPCBs:

  • Spindle speed: Lower than FR4 (typically 20,000-40,000 RPM)
  • Feed rate: Reduced to prevent tool breakage
  • Entry/exit materials: Aluminum entry sheets minimize burrs
  • Tool wear monitoring: Metal drilling accelerates wear

Board outline routing uses similar equipment but with tooling optimized for the specific base metal. Aluminum routes cleanly with proper feeds and speeds; copper and steel demand more robust tooling and slower processing.

Step 6: Plating (Multi-layer Only)

Multi-layer MCPCBs require electroless copper deposition in via holes, followed by electrolytic copper plating to build sufficient conductor thickness. This step doesn’t apply to single-layer boards.

Via plating presents unique challenges in MCPCBs because the holes don’t extend through the entire board thickness. Blind vias terminating at the metal core require specialized processing to achieve reliable copper coverage without creating shorts to the base metal.

Step 7: Solder Mask and Silkscreen

White solder mask dominates LED applications because it reflects light back into the optical system, improving efficiency. Specifications often require reflectivity above 85% at 550nm wavelength.

Solder mask application on MCPCBs requires attention to thermal curing. The metal substrate’s high thermal conductivity means the board heats and cools faster than FR4 during thermal cure cycles. Process parameters must compensate to ensure complete crosslinking.

Silkscreen adds component identifiers, polarity marks, and regulatory symbols. UV-stable inks prevent yellowing over the product’s life—an important consideration for LED applications where the board surface may receive light exposure.

Step 8: Surface Finish

Common MCPCB surface finishes include:

FinishBest ForShelf LifeCost
HASL (Lead-free)General purpose, larger pads12+ monthsLow
ENIGFine-pitch, wire bonding12+ monthsMedium
OSPCost-sensitive, short storage6 monthsLowest
Immersion SilverHigh-frequency, flat surface6-12 monthsMedium
Immersion TinFlat surface, press-fit6 monthsMedium

HASL processes require care on MCPCBs because the metal substrate affects heat distribution during hot-air leveling. Improper parameters can cause solder bridging or insufficient coverage.

Step 9: Testing and Inspection

Every production board undergoes electrical testing (flying probe or bed-of-nails) and visual inspection. Thermal imaging on sample boards verifies heat distribution matches design predictions.

Critical quality checks include:

  • Dielectric breakdown voltage (Hi-Pot testing at 2-3x rated voltage)
  • Thermal resistance measurement per ASTM D5470 or equivalent
  • Peel strength between layers (IPC-TM-650 2.4.8)
  • Dimensional verification (CNC measurement)
  • Cross-section analysis of representative samples

UL certification (UL 796 for printed wiring boards) requires periodic surveillance testing to maintain file active status.

Date

30 July, 2022

Client

Ovatheme

Website

auntri.com

Location

New York, USA

Value

$40000

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