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Handling Heat in High-Frequency PCBs

June 4, 2019
Thermal management is an essential part of the design of active PCBs that feature long operating lifetimes.

Heat can be a danger to the most ruggedized printed-circuit boards (PCBs)—whether from within the devices on the PCB or from beyond—in the working environment. Fortunately, John Priday, Chief Technology Officer of Teledyne Labtech, has managed practical research on the effects of heat on PCBs and how to provide thermal management for improved reliability even under hostile thermal environments.

The results of the research are reported in a company application note, “Thermal Management in High Performance RF and Microwave PCBs,” available for free download from the company’s website. Teledyne Labtech, a Teledyne Defense Electronics company, will be on hand as an exhibitor at the 2019 IEEE International Microwave Symposium (IMS) in the Boston Convention Center, June 4-6, 2019 (Booth 1124).

Military and aerospace electronics environments are typically evaluated for wide operating temperature ranges, although constraints such as reduced size, weight, and power (SWaP) can apply even to large high-power amplifiers and antenna arrays. Meeting thermal-management requirements are becoming more difficult with the increasing power densities of active devices, such as power transistors based on gallium-nitride (GaN) semiconductor substrates. The high-power capabilities of such small devices require reliable dissipation of excess heat to avoid hotspots and heat buildup on a PCB.

Plated-through holes (PTHs) and other structures are added to PCBs to minimize heat buildup around active devices such as GaN transistors. (Courtesy of Teledyne Defense Electronics)

Traditionally, plated through-holes (PTHs) are used in a PCB to transfer excess heat from the area of an active device to a heatsink or other structure for dissipating the heat. But engineers at Teledyne have applied “coin” technology to PCBs, in effect adding heatsinks throughout the PCB, as an effective approach to thermal management even with high-power-density GaN power transistors. Work continues on the exploration of different materials in the quest for the highest thermal conductivity possible to shift heat from an active device. It’s all in the effort to extend the operating lifetimes of the device as well as the PCB.

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