Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.
IPC-HDBK-850: Epoxy, Silicone & Urethane Potting for Electronics
When conformal coating isn’t enough protection for your PCB assembly, potting and encapsulation become the next line of defense. But choosing between epoxy, silicone, and urethane compounds isn’t straightforward—each chemistry has distinct advantages depending on your operating environment, thermal requirements, and rework needs. That’s where IPC-HDBK-850 comes in.
I’ve worked on projects ranging from consumer electronics to mil-spec assemblies, and the decision to pot (and with what material) often determines whether the product survives its intended environment. IPC-HDBK-850 consolidates decades of industry experience into practical guidance that helps engineers make informed decisions. In this guide, I’ll break down what the handbook covers and how to apply it to real-world potting challenges.
IPC-HDBK-850, officially titled “Guidelines for Design, Selection and Application of Potting Materials and Encapsulation Processes Used for Electronics Printed Circuit Board Assembly,” is a 68-page handbook released in July 2012. Developed by the IPC Potting and Encapsulation Task Group (5-33f), this document provides comprehensive guidance on protecting electronic assemblies through potting and encapsulation.
The handbook addresses a significant gap in industry documentation. As Barry Ritchie of Dow Corning (who chaired the task group) noted at release, nobody had systematically addressed these materials before—despite widespread use across aerospace, automotive, military, and consumer applications.
IPC-HDBK-850 Scope and Purpose
IPC-HDBK-850 covers potting and encapsulation specifically for electronic printed circuit board assemblies. The handbook helps engineers:
Purpose
How HDBK-850 Helps
Material selection
Compare epoxy, silicone, urethane, and other chemistries
Process design
Understand mixing, dispensing, and curing requirements
Design for potting
Account for thermal, mechanical, and electrical considerations
Troubleshooting
Diagnose adhesion, curing, and compatibility problems
Quality assurance
Establish validation and testing protocols
Potting vs Conformal Coating: When to Use Each
Before diving into IPC-HDBK-850 specifics, it’s important to understand when potting is the right choice versus conformal coating covered in IPC-HDBK-830.
Factor
Conformal Coating (HDBK-830)
Potting/Encapsulation (HDBK-850)
Thickness
Thin film (25-250 µm typical)
Bulk fill (mm to cm)
Protection level
Moisture, dust, mild contamination
Severe shock, vibration, immersion, thermal extremes
Weight addition
Minimal
Significant
Heat dissipation
Limited
Can be thermally conductive
Reworkability
Generally possible
Difficult to impossible (chemistry dependent)
Component stress
Low
Potential CTE mismatch stress
Cost
Lower material and process cost
Higher material volume and process complexity
IP protection
Insufficient
Enables IP obscuration
Choose potting when assemblies face severe mechanical shock, full immersion, extreme temperatures, or when intellectual property protection through obscuration is required.
Potting Material Types in IPC-HDBK-850
IPC-HDBK-850 covers three primary potting compound families, plus specialty materials. Each chemistry offers distinct advantages and limitations.
Epoxy Potting Compounds
Epoxy remains the workhorse of electronics potting, offering excellent adhesion, chemical resistance, and mechanical strength.
Key Characteristics:
Exceptional adhesion to metals, ceramics, and many plastics
High chemical resistance (acids, bases, solvents, fuels)
Good dielectric properties
Operating temperature typically 125°C to 155°C (specialty formulations to 220°C)
Rigid when cured (Shore D hardness)
Predictable and stable processing
Limitations:
Rigid cure can stress sensitive components
Difficult or impossible to rework
Exothermic cure reaction can damage temperature-sensitive components
Not suitable for thermal cycling without flexibilizers
Shrinkage during cure
Epoxy Property
Typical Range
Operating temperature
-40°C to +155°C (standard), to +220°C (specialty)
Thermal conductivity
0.2-0.3 W/m·K (unfilled), 0.7-7 W/m·K (filled)
Hardness
Shore D 70-90
Dielectric strength
>400 V/mil
Volume resistivity
>10^14 ohm-cm
Best Applications: High-voltage power supplies, motor controllers, industrial equipment requiring chemical resistance, applications where rigid encapsulation is acceptable.
Silicone Potting Compounds
Silicone compounds offer the widest temperature range and best flexibility, making them ideal for thermal cycling and sensitive component protection.
Key Characteristics:
Widest operating temperature range (-60°C to +200°C, some to +300°C)
Remains flexible after cure (absorbs shock and vibration)
Low stress on components during thermal cycling
Excellent moisture resistance
Good dielectric properties maintained across temperature range
Reworkable (can be cut or peeled for repair access)
Available as gels, elastomers, or rigid compounds
Limitations:
Higher material cost than epoxy or urethane
Lower chemical resistance (vulnerable to some solvents)
Lower adhesion strength (may require primers)
Can release low-molecular-weight silicones that contaminate sensitive processes
Silicone Property
Typical Range
Operating temperature
-60°C to +200°C (standard), to +300°C (specialty)
Thermal conductivity
0.13-0.15 W/m·K (unfilled), 0.6-3 W/m·K (filled)
Hardness
Shore A 10-70 (gels to elastomers)
Dielectric strength
>400 V/mil
Elongation
100-600%
Best Applications: LED lighting, automotive electronics (under-hood), aerospace, battery management systems (BMS), applications with extreme thermal cycling, assemblies requiring future repair access.
Urethane (Polyurethane) Potting Compounds
Urethane compounds bridge the gap between rigid epoxies and flexible silicones, offering good performance at lower cost.
Key Characteristics:
Wide formulation latitude (soft gels to rigid compounds)
Lower cost than silicone
Good flexibility and elongation
Low exotherm during cure (safer for temperature-sensitive components)
Lower cure temperatures than epoxy
Excellent abrasion resistance
Low water vapor permeability
Glass transition temperature (Tg) below -40°C makes them excellent for SMT boards
Limitations:
Lower maximum operating temperature (typically 130°C, specialty to 150°C)
Moisture sensitivity during processing
May yellow with UV exposure
Not suitable for continuous high-temperature operation
Limited adhesion to low surface energy (LSE) plastics
Urethane Property
Typical Range
Operating temperature
-40°C to +130°C (standard), to +150°C (specialty)
Thermal conductivity
0.2-0.6 W/m·K (typical)
Hardness
Shore A 30 to Shore D 70 (formulation dependent)
Dielectric strength
>350 V/mil
Elongation
100-400%
Best Applications: Consumer electronics, automotive (non-under-hood), cost-sensitive applications, SMT board potting, EV chargers, applications requiring shock absorption.
Potting Material Comparison Summary
Property
Epoxy
Silicone
Urethane
Max operating temp
155-220°C
200-300°C
130-150°C
Min operating temp
-40°C
-60°C
-40°C
Flexibility
Rigid
Very flexible
Moderate-flexible
Chemical resistance
Excellent
Good
Good
Adhesion
Excellent
Fair (may need primer)
Good
Reworkability
Very difficult
Good (can cut/peel)
Difficult
Relative cost
Medium
High
Low-Medium
Exotherm during cure
High
Low-None
Low
Moisture resistance
Excellent
Excellent
Good
Encapsulation Application Methods
IPC-HDBK-850 covers several application methods, each suited to different assembly types and production volumes.
Glob-Top Encapsulation
Glob-top applies a dome of potting material over individual components, typically wire-bonded die or chip-on-board (COB) assemblies.
Process: Dispense material directly over component, allow to self-level or use dam for containment, cure.
Applications: Wire bond protection, COB, bare die protection, LED encapsulation.
Dam-and-Fill Encapsulation
A two-step process using a dam material to create containment, followed by fill material.
Process: Dispense dam material around perimeter, cure or tack dam, dispense fill material inside dam, final cure.
IPC-HDBK-850 provides detailed explanation of properties critical to potting material selection.
Thermal Properties
Thermal Conductivity Determines how effectively the potting compound transfers heat away from components. Standard unfilled compounds have low conductivity (0.1-0.3 W/m·K). Thermally conductive formulations with ceramic fillers (alumina, boron nitride, aluminum nitride) achieve 1-7 W/m·K.
Thermal Conductivity Reference
W/m·K
Air
0.025
Unfilled silicone
0.13-0.15
Unfilled epoxy
0.2-0.3
Filled epoxy (silica)
0.6-1.0
Thermally conductive compounds
1-7
Aluminum
237
Exotherm Heat generated during cure reaction. Epoxies generate significant exotherm; large potting volumes can reach temperatures that damage components. Silicones and urethanes generate minimal exotherm.
Glass Transition Temperature (Tg) Temperature where material transitions from rigid to rubbery. For urethanes, Tg below -40°C provides excellent low-temperature flexibility. For epoxies, higher Tg indicates better high-temperature performance.
Mechanical Properties
Hardness Measured on Shore A (soft) or Shore D (hard) scales. Soft materials (Shore A 20-40) protect sensitive components; hard materials (Shore D 70+) provide structural rigidity and abrasion resistance.
Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) Mismatch between potting compound CTE and substrate/component CTE creates stress during thermal cycling. Flexible compounds absorb this stress; rigid compounds may crack or delaminate.
Adhesion Bond strength to substrates (PCB laminate, component bodies, potting shells). Epoxies generally have best inherent adhesion; silicones may require primers for adequate bonding.
Use lower-shrinkage material, add flexibilizer, slow temperature transitions
Delamination
Adhesion failure, thermal cycling stress
Improve surface preparation, use primer, select more flexible material
Component damage
Exotherm too high, excessive cure shrinkage stress
Reduce pour volume, stage cure, use lower-exotherm chemistry
Discoloration
UV exposure (urethanes), oxidation, contamination
Use UV-stable formulation, verify material compatibility
Health, Safety, and Environmental Considerations
IPC-HDBK-850 addresses important EHS factors:
Safety Precautions
Many potting compounds contain sensitizers (can cause allergic reactions)
Isocyanates in urethanes require respiratory protection
Uncured materials may be skin irritants
Adequate ventilation required during mixing and cure
Follow manufacturer SDS recommendations
Environmental Compliance
Consideration
Guidance
VOC emissions
Waterborne and 100% solids options available
RoHS compliance
Most potting compounds are RoHS compliant; verify with supplier
Halogen-free
Available for applications requiring halogen-free materials
Disposal
Cured material generally non-hazardous; uncured material disposal per local regulations
Industry Applications
Different industries emphasize different aspects of IPC-HDBK-850 guidance:
Automotive Electronics
Under-hood applications require high-temperature silicone or specialty epoxy. EV battery management systems use silicone for thermal cycling tolerance. Chargers often use urethane for cost-effective protection.
Aerospace and Defense
Emphasis on qualification testing, outgassing requirements (NASA outgassing specifications for space applications), and documentation. Full potting common for environmental sealing and ruggedization.
Consumer Electronics
Cost optimization drives material selection. Urethane common for moderate protection requirements. Glob-top for wire bond protection in cost-sensitive designs.
Industrial and Power Electronics
High-voltage power supplies require void-free potting with high dielectric strength. Thermally conductive compounds for heat dissipation. Chemical resistance for industrial environments.
What is the difference between potting and encapsulation?
IPC-HDBK-850 uses these terms somewhat interchangeably but provides working definitions. Potting typically refers to the liquid material itself, while encapsulation refers to the application process and cured result. Potting often implies filling an assembly within a container (potting shell) that becomes part of the final product. Encapsulation is the broader term covering any process where material surrounds and protects components, including glob-top, underfill, and dam-and-fill applications.
How do I choose between epoxy, silicone, and urethane potting compounds?
The choice depends on your application requirements. Choose epoxy when you need maximum chemical resistance, high adhesion, and rigid encapsulation—typical for high-voltage power supplies and industrial equipment. Choose silicone when operating temperatures are extreme (below -40°C or above 150°C), thermal cycling is severe, or future rework access is needed—common in automotive, aerospace, and LED applications. Choose urethane when cost is a primary driver, moderate flexibility is acceptable, and maximum temperature stays below 130°C—suitable for consumer electronics and cost-sensitive industrial applications.
Does IPC-HDBK-850 include test methods for potting compounds?
IPC-HDBK-850 is a guidance handbook, not a specification with mandatory test requirements. However, it references applicable test methods from ASTM, IPC-TM-650, and other sources for evaluating material properties like thermal conductivity (ASTM D5470), dielectric strength, viscosity, and adhesion. The handbook helps engineers understand what properties matter and how to evaluate them, but qualification requirements come from end-product specifications or customer requirements.
Can potted assemblies be reworked or repaired?
Reworkability depends entirely on the potting material. Silicone compounds—especially gels and soft elastomers—can often be cut away or peeled back to access components for repair, then resealed. Urethane compounds are more difficult to remove but may be softened with heat or solvents in some cases. Epoxy compounds are generally considered non-reworkable; removal typically destroys the assembly. IPC-HDBK-850 recommends considering rework requirements during material selection and designing access provisions if future repair is anticipated.
What causes voids in potted assemblies and how do I prevent them?
Voids result from entrapped air during mixing or dispensing, outgassing from substrates or components during cure, or too-rapid curing that traps volatiles. Prevention strategies include: degassing mixed material under vacuum before dispensing, preheating assemblies to drive off absorbed moisture, dispensing slowly to allow air escape, using vacuum potting for critical applications, and selecting materials with appropriate gel time for your assembly size. IPC-HDBK-850 discusses void prevention in detail because voids compromise dielectric strength, thermal conductivity, and mechanical integrity.
Conclusion
IPC-HDBK-850 fills a critical documentation gap for electronics potting and encapsulation. Before this handbook existed, engineers relied on fragmented supplier information and tribal knowledge to make potting decisions. The handbook consolidates industry experience into practical guidance covering material selection, process design, and troubleshooting.
For engineers working with potted assemblies, the key takeaways are: understand the distinct characteristics of epoxy, silicone, and urethane chemistries; match material properties to your operating environment and reliability requirements; design for potting from the start rather than treating it as an afterthought; and establish proper mixing, dispensing, and curing procedures to achieve consistent results.
Keep in mind that IPC-HDBK-850 is guidance—not a specification with pass/fail requirements. Actual qualification testing depends on your end-product requirements, customer specifications, and industry standards. Use the handbook as a foundation for making informed decisions, then validate your specific material and process choices through appropriate testing.
Combined with IPC-HDBK-830 for conformal coating, IPC-HDBK-850 completes the picture of PCB assembly protection options, helping engineers select the right level of protection for each application.
Suggested Meta Descriptions:
Primary (160 characters): IPC-HDBK-850 is the potting and encapsulation handbook for PCB assemblies. Compare epoxy, silicone, and urethane compounds for electronics protection applications.
Alternative 1 (157 characters): Complete guide to IPC-HDBK-850 potting handbook. Covers epoxy, silicone, urethane selection, application methods, design considerations, and troubleshooting.
Alternative 2 (155 characters): IPC-HDBK-850 explained: practical guidance on potting materials for electronics. Learn when to use epoxy, silicone, or urethane for PCB encapsulation.
Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.