Plastics: Shielding Solutions (Jan. 2008)
by Larry Adams
January 2, 2008
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| Telecom terminal using SABIC Innovative Plastics’ LNP
Faradex Specialty Compounds. |
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Consider all the tradeoffs before choosing a
barrier option.
Fabricating electronic device housings out of plastic offers
several advantages, including design flexibility and inherent coloring, but
polymer has an Achilles heel when it comes to electromagnetic interference
(EMI), which passes through even the hardest plastic like ghosts through walls.
Unchecked interference can cause a range of problems, from mild annoyance in a
consumer electronic device to a life-threatening malfunction in a sensitive
piece of medical equipment. The issue has become of greater
importance to design engineers due to the growth of electronic devices in
general, and of wireless devices in particular. And increasingly tighter
European regulations targeting interference make it an issue that cannot be
ignored. Those regulations make specific demands regarding both a product’s
emissions of EMI and its immunity to EMI. The only way to
plug the EMI holes in plastic is with some type of conductive material, which
can be either embedded inside the polymer material, or applied after molding to
the plastic part. There are different approaches to both concepts, and design
engineers need to understand all the tradeoffs involved with each before
settling on the optimal solution for their product. The following issues need
to be examined: - The level of immunity defense
needed.
- The level of needed emissions limitations.
- Cost
targets for materials.
- Assembly/manufacturing costs and need for
secondary operations.
- Effect on molding of the part and tooling
life.
- Design flexibility for the part, particularly regarding color
options.
- Effect on the recyclability of the part.
- Environmental
considerations involved with any post-molding operations.
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An illustration detailing absorption, reflection and
transmission of electromagnetic emissions.
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Essential to pondering the first two points is
establishing what mandates must be met and how do they limit ones choices. EMI
emissions and a product’s immunity against them are regulated in different ways
in different places around the world. Fabrizio Montauti, vice president of
engineering for WaveZero, a Sunnyvale, Calif., manufacturer of shielding
technology that coats products with metallic films, says that in the U.S. the
FCC regulates EMI emissions, but does not require products to be certified
against their immunity to these radiated fields. This is not true however in
Europe where the EU’s EMC directive has stringent rules against about EMI. In a
nutshell, the directive states that the devices are “secure in, and cause no
harm to, the environment into which the device will be placed,” says Larry
Rupprecht, Manager of Conductive Materials Development, RTP Co., Winona, Minn.
Most regulations describe the maximum allowed level of
emission within the frequency range from 30 MHz to 1 GHz, which is the range at
which most electronic equipment operate. However, the frequency range used by
electronics is expanding to higher frequency ranges such as 10 Ghz or even 40
Ghz, according to Eric Jiang, product manager of Faradex, SABIC Innovative
Plastics, EMI Shielding Compounds,
SABIC Innovative Plastics is formerly GE Plastics, with U.S.
headquarters in Pittsfield, Mass. Designing an electrically
quiet circuit board is a good practice for reducing emissions, but by itself
does nothing to shield the electronics to interference from other nearby or
far-away systems. Unfortunately, one of the all-too common problems today is
that engineers focus their attention on the control of emissions, while
ignoring immunity, says Montauti. This is acceptable design practice when the
product is limited to the American market, but it becomes a liability when the
product is sold on the international market, he says. While
metal parts block EMI inherently, plastic parts must rely on the addition of
some conductive material to stop EMI from coming in and going out. The three
basic means of achieving this include: 1.
Embedding the raw polymer materials with conductive particles such as carbon,
metallic fibers, or other conductive fillers, thereby turning the molded
plastic part into a shield.2. Installing a metal or metallized
barrier component inside the molded plastic housing that conforms to its shape,
or alternately installing the barrier only around the pertinent electronic
circuit board.3. Applying a thin conductive film to the inside of the
plastic housing by painting, electroplating, or physical vapor deposition
(PVD).
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Waves can be blocked from leaving the electronic device as
well being blocked from entering the device.
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Each of these various shielding methods have
their pluses and minuses and tradeoffs may need to be made. What is optimal for
one application may not be optimal for another, so designers need to understand
how those pros and cons apply to their particular application.
“The best way to reduce the level of emission is to aim
for an optimal design of electronic device, including the design of circuits,
placement of components, and filters,” says Jiang. “When these methods are not
adequate to meet the requirements, an enclosure can be used such as a Faraday
cage around the electronic device to shield against EMI.” A Faraday cage, which is also known as a
Faraday shield, is a term for an enclosure formed by a metal or conducting
material to block electrical fields from escaping or entering the barrier from
either side. The traditional shield is a fabricated metal barrier, which is
considered an effective way to achieve shielding. The downside can be added
weight, cost and cycle time to the product. Shielding by
dispersing conductive fillers into compounds is an option offered by suppliers
such as RTP and SABIC. According to Jiang, moldable plastics with shielding
properties can improve cycle times, logistics and overall system cost can be
improved when the enclosures are made from inherently shielded thermoplastics.
Available EMI shielding thermoplastics fillers include
those based on the dispersion of stainless steel fiber, carbon fiber, graphite,
nickel-coated carbon fiber, and silver-based additives and other fillers in a
thermoplastic. It is the inherent conductivity, volume percentage and
dispersion of the shielding additive in the thermoplastic that affects the
part's volume conductivity. In inherently shielding thermoplastics the volume
conductivity determines the overall shielding effectiveness. Typically, with
this technology shielding values ranging from 40 dB to 60 dB can be obtained
under far field conditions, which is sufficient for most consumer applications,
says Jiang.
-wave-zero.jpg) |
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WaveZero's Form/Met EMI suppression process creates a form
fitting shield that conforms to the shape of the housing.
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Carbon filler is often used, especially when color is not
important, because of cost. Carbon filler will color most plastic black or
grey. While carbon-based polymer additives are cheaper than other fillers, and
do provide increased shielding effectiveness, Rupprecht says that carbon cannot
compete with the metal and metalized additives. The metal fibers, he says,
reflect and shield wave energy better than carbon. Metal
fibers also work better than powders and particulates, he says. A metal coating
provides a metal skin as a shield for reflecting and absorbing. A
metal-additive filled plastic makes use of an internal matrix of overlapping
shields to accomplish the reflecting and absorbing actions. This internal
matrix is more effectively formed with high aspect-ratio fibers as compared to
metal powders or particulates. The lower loading of high aspect-ratio fibers
provides an economic advantage versus higher loadings of low aspect-ration
powders and particulates, says Rupprecht. An issue when
adding additives to plastics is that some of the material’s properties can be
altered. Generally speaking, impact performance will typically get reduced when
fillers are added. Carbon filled thermoplastics have higher stiffness, higher
HDT and smaller mold shrinkage. Stainless-steel-fiber filled thermoplastics
have similar mold shrinkage, stiffness, HDT as unfilled resin, says Jiang.
Metal and metal-coated additives typically provide less
mechanical improvement than traditional glass fiber or carbon fiber
reinforcement. However, most parts that require shielding do not typically
require mechanical strength. If they do, then the plastic compound can be
altered to improve strength. When strength is critical to the application,
modification of the plastic compound will provide the needed performance, says
Rupprecht.
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Designed to conform to the inner contours of a product's
enclosure, the enclosure level shield from WaveZero encapsulates a PCB in a
pseudo-Faraday cage.
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The compounds can be “tuned” to different frequency ranges
and also incorporate other properties such as fire retardance. For instance,
RTP, recently introduced a family of thermoplastic compounds that were
specifically created for use on electronic devices that use the Bluetooth
wireless communications protocol. The compounds are tuned to allow transmission
of Bluetooth frequencies from the device, while blocking other EMI emissions
and providing immunity from EMI from other electronics.
SABIC Innovative Plastics’ also recently released a new
compound to its LNP Faradex line. The company’s approach is to infuse stainless
steel fibers into the plastic compounds so that the finished product features
inherent EMI and radio frequency interference. The new line of compounds has
resulted in equal shielding ability as past products, but with less of a stainless-steel
fiber load, which the company says helps keep costs and part weight down. The
proprietary filler technology also increases modulus to enable strong and
durable thin-wall parts. The five new LNP Faradex compounds are alloys of
polycarbonate and acrylnitrile butadiene styrene (PC/ABS).
Metals serve as a key ingredient in the processes offered
by WaveZero, including PVD and electroplating. The California company offers
functional thin films of metal coatings that shield EMI. The PVD coating process
deposits a thin metallic film by the condensation of a vaporized form of the
material onto various surfaces. This process permits the creation of conductive
coatings, 0.5 microns to 6 microns thick, that do not chip, peel, or flake.
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| Antennas from the Centurion Wireless
Technologies company use RTP compounds. |
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WaveZero also offers the Form/Met EMI suppression process,
which Montauti says are the optimal choice for new product development and
design teams. The shields are created by thermoforming and die cutting a
lightweight plastic substrate that conforms to the interior shape of the
housing. The substrate is then metallized, creating a form-fitting shield that
is dropped into housing. It can also be shaped just to cover the circuit board.
Designed as a separate component that fits in perfectly, the barrier eliminates
the need for coating the part after molding and also eliminates the need to use
conductive fillers in the polymer. The shield is easily removable for recycling
of the device after disassembly at the end of its lifecycle. A plated part or a
part filled with stainless steel fibers is not. The
diversity of these approaches requires design engineers to establish their
priorities and understand the tradeoffs with each method, but they must also
keep abreast of new techniques and materials that may change the calculation.
The range of shielding methods today provides a solution
for nearly every application. And, tomorrow, materials and methods will have
even more capabilities. Jiang says that future materials will likely include
some with high microwave absorption function in a low frequency range. Another
future innovation may include a long-conductive fiber reinforcement process
that will give better EMI efficiency. Rupprecht adds that,
something that is impossible today becomes can become state-of-the-art
tomorrow, and that new materials and processes will continue to evolve to meet
challenges in cost, performance, and processing. “For example, commercial
nano-materials for shielding are not yet available, but it seems that
nanotechnology can improve on the aspect-ratio related issues of cost/content
and performance.” For more information, email:
RTP Co.: rtp@rtpcompany.com
SABIC Innovative Plastics:
productinquiries@sabic-ip.com
WaveZero: scott.aaron@wavezero.com
Sidebar: Get the Lead Out
Ever since the European Union’s Restriction of
Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS) went into effect in 2006 -— with stricter
guidelines approaching in 2010 — OEMs have been scrambling for ways to remove
banned substances such as lead from their products.
Since
2001, Thogus Products, a custom injection molder in Avon Lake, Ohio, has been
developing a process to replace lead with tungsten-filled polymers for
shielding certain specialized applications. Lead, which can block
electromagnetic energy waves, can also block radiation energy. That is why lead
is so often used with X-ray and CT scan machines to protect the patient as well
as the caregiver. Working with compounder PolyOne of Cleveland, and more
recently GE Plastics (now SABIC), Thogus Products has integrated the tungsten
material into several plastic materials including Nylons (6, 66, and 12) and
certain TPEs and are working to incorporate the material into higher heat
resins, says Matthew Hlavin, vice president of sales and marketing for Thogus.
Tungsten-filled
polymer has the same specific gravity as lead, 11.0 specific gravity, and it shields
radiation at the same attenuation, Hlavin says. Thogus has been able to hold
tolerances of the injection moldable material to +/- 0.002 in., and has made
wall sections of about 1/2-in. thick. The smallest part molded by Thogus has
been 20 g and the largest was 26 lbs.
The ability to mold
the component can reduce the number of overall parts needed, reduce secondary
machining operations, and other costs related to making products from lead,
according to Hlavin. This helps to offset the additional costs of tungsten.
Typically, lead sells for under $1 per pound, whereas tungsten can cost between
$30 and $80 per pound depending on purchase quantities, he says. Tungsten is
also an abrasive material that will wear on tooling.
Hlavin
says that because of the toxic nature of lead and the cost of recycling the
non-RoHS compliant material out of discarded equipment, the next couple years
will see growth in the use of the tungsten based material in finished products.
The tungsten-filled polymers can often be directly substituted for lead in
applications such as collimators, X-ray tube housings, and other
medical-shielding applications. To date, the company has used the technology on
more than 50 different applications.
One early application
was the lining of a collimator for a CT scan machine where a tungsten-filled
polymer part replaced an aluminum fabricated housing that was lead. Thogus worked with GE Plastics’ (now SABIC)
LNP Thermocomp HSG (high specific gravity) high-density compounds on the
collimator for GE Healthcare’s OEC 9800 X-ray machine. Collimators absorb stray
radiation and limits X-ray exposure.
According to Clare
Frissora, market director, Healthcare, GE Plastics, the transition from
machined and stamped lead to injection-molded engineering resins enabled
tighter tolerance specifications and greater part consistency, enhancing the
performance and safety of the X-ray equipment. It also helped avoid secondary
operations required with lead. Also, combining multiple components into one
part helps reduce manufacturing time, system cost, and complexity, she says.
For
more information, email: info@thogus.com
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