Any PCB uses a variety of materials to create a layer stackup, etch 
copper, apply solder mask, and print silkscreen. Each dielectric 
material you use to create your multilayer PCB stackup has different 
material properties, such as dielectric constant and thermal 
conductivity. When you’re designing for specialized applications, a 
thorough comparison of PCB materials can help you select the right base 
material for use in your next circuit board. Altium Designer gives you 
the features you need to select a base material for your multilayer PCB 
and prepare your new design for full-scale manufacturing.To get more 
news about 
BT PCB, you can visit pcbmake official website.
The
most powerful, modern and easy-to-use PCB design tool for advanced 
electronics. Use any PCB material and prepare your board for 
manufacturing with Altium Designer.
Any PCB stackup you create 
for your circuit board will include multiple materials. Many different 
materials will be used during the PCB manufacturing. The materials you 
choose will determine power/signal loss, interconnect impedance, 
temperature rise, copper surface roughness, and temperature rise in your
PCB. Not every base material is ideal for every application, so you’ll 
need to pick just the right base material for your PCB stackup to 
balance performance in these different areas.
With a thorough 
comparison of PCB materials, you can determine the best base material to
use for your next system. Once you determine the best material to use 
for your circuit boards, the PCB stackup design and analysis tools in 
Altium Designer help you create a PCB layout for high speed circuit 
boards or HDI designs. Here is a comparison of PCB materials to help you
choose the right base material for your circuit boards.
Fabricators 
continue to discover materials better suited to high speed circuit 
boards, HDI circuit boards, and high temperature environments. The 
various material properties above affect how high speed signals 
propagate in a substrate due to dispersion, as well as how the disperse 
heat and withstand mechanical shock. Some of these materials are 
suitable for microwave and mmWave devices, or for use in high 
temperature environments, but they are more expensive to produce. Your 
best bet in choosing a material is to start with FR4 and evaluate 
whether this material will be suitable for your application.
The 
industry primarily uses grade FR4 nonconductive material between layers 
of copper to build printed circuit boards. FR4 is a NEMA grade 
designation for glass-reinforced epoxy laminate material. The 
designation represents the ratio of fiber to resin and indicates 
characteristics such as flame retardant, dielectric constant, loss 
factor, tensile strength, shear strength, glass transition temperature, 
and z-axis expansion coefficient. FR4 is flame retardant making it 
suitable for safety requirements, and it is robust in varying 
temperature and humidity environments, increasing the quality of 
performance.
The major material components of PCBs are the 
polymer resin (dielectric material) with or without fillers, 
reinforcement, and metal foil. To form a PCB, alternate layers of 
dielectric, with or without reinforcement, are stacked in between the 
copper foil layers. The majority of the materials are epoxy, but some 
are BT, PPE, cyanate ester, and modified acrylates. The structure of a 
typical epoxy PCB laminate is shown above. 
					
 
					
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