Contact Sales & After-Sales Service

Contact & Quotation

  • 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.
Drag & Drop Files, Choose Files to Upload You can upload up to 3 files.

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.

Arlon 55NT Modified Polyimide Laminate: High Tg PCB Material Guide

If you’ve spent any serious time specifying advanced PCB stackups, you know that Arlon 55NT comes up repeatedly — particularly whenever the conversation turns to dimensional stability, lead-free assembly compatibility, and HDI microvia structures. It’s not a mystery why. This material sits in a very deliberate engineering sweet spot: it gives you the controlled thermal expansion of aramid reinforcement, the processability of a multifunctional epoxy resin, and just enough thermal ceiling to handle modern lead-free soldering without the cost and complexity of a full polyimide system.

This guide is written for engineers who need more than marketing copy — real numbers, real trade-offs, and the fabrication details that determine whether your build goes smoothly or turns into a rework nightmare.

What Is Arlon 55NT?

<a href=”https://pcbsync.com/arlon-pcb/”>Arlon PCB</a> materials are produced by Arlon Electronic Materials Division (EMD), a division of Arlon LLC headquartered in Rancho Cucamonga, California. With over 50 years of experience in specialty laminates, Arlon EMD has built its reputation on thermoset resin systems that push beyond standard FR-4 performance boundaries.

Arlon 55NT is classified as an epoxy laminate and prepreg system reinforced with non-woven aramid (Thermount®) reinforcement. The “NT” designation indicates the use of Thermount — DuPont’s non-woven aramid fabric — which is central to the material’s exceptional dimensional behavior. The resin system itself is a high-temperature multifunctional epoxy, not a polyimide, which often surprises engineers who expect full polyimide chemistry given the part’s performance profile.

The product falls under Arlon’s Controlled Thermal Expansion / SMT product family, sitting alongside the 45NK (woven aramid epoxy) and 85NT (polyimide non-woven aramid). Its IPC classification is IPC-4101/55.

Why the “Modified Polyimide” Label?

The term “modified polyimide laminate” in the context of 55NT refers to its performance positioning — not its base resin chemistry. It behaves closer to a polyimide in terms of dimensional stability and thermal resilience than a conventional epoxy, while retaining the processing advantages of an epoxy system. This distinction matters when you’re selecting materials: you get a large chunk of the polyimide benefit package without polyimide’s fabrication sensitivity and cost overhead.

Arlon 55NT Full Technical Specifications

These are the properties engineers actually reach for when comparing materials. The table below consolidates the key electrical, thermal, and mechanical parameters drawn from Arlon’s published datasheet.

PropertyValueTest Method
Glass Transition Temperature (Tg)170°CDSC
Thermal Decomposition (Td)368°CTGA
Z-Axis CTE (below Tg)~3%IPC-TM-650 2.4.41
X,Y In-Plane CTE6–9 ppm/°CIPC-TM-650 2.4.41
Dielectric Constant (Dk) @ 1 MHz~4.2IPC-TM-650 2.5.5.2
Dissipation Factor (Df) @ 1 MHz~0.020IPC-TM-650 2.5.5.2
Moisture Absorption0.30%IPC-TM-650 2.6.2.1
Flammability RatingUL94 V-0UL94
Peel Strength (1 oz. Cu)≥6.0 lb/inIPC-TM-650 2.4.8
Flexural Strength (MD)~55,000 psiASTM D790
Density~1.5 g/cm³
Weight Reduction vs. Glass~25% lighter
IPC ClassificationIPC-4101/55

Two numbers here deserve more attention than the others: the 6–9 ppm/°C X,Y CTE and the 0.30% moisture absorption. Let’s look at why these are the real differentiators.

X,Y CTE: The Core Engineering Benefit

Standard FR-4 has an in-plane CTE of roughly 14–17 ppm/°C. Ceramic-based SMT components — alumina chip carriers, leadless ceramic chip carriers (LCCCs), and high-pin-count BGAs — have CTEs in the 6–8 ppm/°C range. That mismatch under thermal cycling creates cumulative solder joint fatigue. 55NT’s aramid reinforcement pulls the laminate CTE down to 6–9 ppm/°C, effectively bridging the gap between the board and the component. The result is substantially reduced solder fatigue failure over the product’s thermal life — exactly what aerospace, automotive, and defense engineers need to demonstrate MTBF compliance.

Low Moisture Absorption: Why 0.30% Matters

Moisture absorption might seem like a secondary concern, but it’s a significant failure mode in high-reliability designs. When absorbed moisture volatilizes rapidly during soldering, it drives delamination and measling. At 0.30%, Arlon 55NT is over 60% lower in moisture uptake than the woven aramid 45NK (0.80%). This means more predictable behavior during lead-free reflow and less risk of internal delamination during the higher thermal exposure that SAC305 solder processes demand (peak temperatures of 250–260°C vs. the 183°C eutectic for Sn/Pb).

Arlon 55NT vs. Competing Materials

Understanding where 55NT fits requires a direct comparison with the alternatives engineers typically consider.

MaterialTg (°C)X,Y CTE (ppm/°C)Moisture Abs.ResinIPC SpecWeight
Arlon 55NT1706–90.30%Multifunc. EpoxyIPC-4101/55~25% lighter
Arlon 45NK1708–100.80%EpoxyIPC-4101/50~25% lighter
Arlon 85NT2507–90.60%PolyimideIPC-4101/53~25% lighter
Standard FR-4130–17014–170.10–0.15%EpoxyIPC-4101/21Baseline
Rogers RO4350B28014–160.06%HydrocarbonIPC-4103Similar

The comparison between 55NT and 45NK is instructive. Both share the same Tg and epoxy resin family, but the non-woven construction of 55NT achieves meaningfully lower moisture absorption and slightly tighter in-plane CTE control. If moisture is a serious concern in your operating environment, 55NT is the right call over 45NK.

The step up to 85NT makes sense when you need the Tg to clear 200°C — for example, in semiconductor burn-in applications or designs that see continuous elevated temperature in use. But 85NT polyimide brings stricter fabrication requirements, higher cost, and greater process sensitivity. For most lead-free SMT assemblies operating below 125°C in use, 55NT is the more pragmatic choice.

Key Applications for Arlon 55NT

HDI and Microvia PCBs

Arlon’s 55NT multifunctional epoxy resin system on non-woven aramid reinforcement provides excellent via quality, speed of laser processing, and exceptional dimensional stability for alignment of stacked microvias. This makes 55NT one of the preferred materials for blind microvia-in-pad technology, where registration accuracy across multiple lamination cycles is non-negotiable. The non-woven fiber structure responds well to CO2 laser energy without the glass-fiber scattering that can compromise microvia wall quality in standard FR-4. For engineers building 8-plus layer HDI boards with stacked or staggered vias, this processing advantage alone can justify the material cost premium.

Aerospace and Space Applications

Arlon 55NT maintains stable electrical properties through -55°C to 125°C temperature excursions for engine control units. This temperature range stability, combined with the 25% weight reduction compared to glass-reinforced laminates, makes 55NT attractive for avionics and space platforms where every gram is budgeted and thermal cycling tests are severe. The V-0 flammability rating is a baseline requirement for most aerospace applications, and 55NT satisfies it without special treatment.

SMT Assembly with Ceramic Components

This is probably 55NT’s primary use case from a volume standpoint. Whenever you have LCCCs, large ceramic BGAs, or chip-scale packages with CTEs significantly lower than standard PCB laminate, CTE mismatch under thermal cycling becomes a reliability risk. 55NT’s X,Y CTE of 6–9 ppm/°C closes that gap substantially. This is not theoretical — it’s a well-documented failure mode with a straightforward materials-based solution.

Automotive Electronics

Modern automotive PCBs face a brutal combination of thermal cycling, vibration, humidity, and long service life requirements. Arlon 55NT’s combination of controlled CTE, low moisture uptake, and lead-free processing compatibility makes it a solid choice for ECU boards, powertrain control modules, and ADAS processing boards where IPC Class 3 reliability is required.

Semiconductor Burn-in and Test

Burn-in sockets and test boards cycle through thermal extremes repeatedly. The 170°C Tg and 368°C Td of 55NT provide adequate thermal margin for these applications, and the dimensional stability ensures that registration doesn’t drift across test cycles — which matters when you’re contacting fine-pitch device pads.

Arlon 55NT Fabrication and Processing Guide

This is where a lot of articles stop short. If you’re actually building boards with 55NT, the processing details determine whether you get a good outcome.

Inner Layer Processing

Process inner layers through develop, etch, and strip using standard industry practices. Use brown oxide on inner layers and adjust dwell time in the oxide bath to ensure a uniform coating. Bake inner layers in a rack for 60 minutes at 107°C–121°C (225°F–250°F) immediately prior to lay-up. Vacuum desiccate the prepreg for 8–12 hours prior to lamination — skipping this step is a common source of delamination issues.

Lamination Cycle Parameters

StepParameter
Pre-vacuum30–45 minutes
Heat rise rate (100°C–150°C)4.5°C–6.5°C per minute (8°F–12°F/min)
Product temperature at cure start182°C (360°F)
Cure time at temperature90 minutes
Cool-down rate≤6°C/min (10°F/min) under pressure

Vacuum lamination is preferred. The controlled heat rise through the 100°C–150°C zone is important — too fast, and you risk voids from entrapped volatiles; too slow, and resin flow may be non-uniform.

Drilling and Via Processing

  • Laser drilling: CO2 laser preferred for the non-woven aramid substrate; chip breaker router bits are not recommended for mechanical routing
  • De-smear: Use alkaline permanganate or plasma. Plasma is preferred when positive etchback is required — settings appropriate for polyimide should be used
  • Plating: Conventional plating processes are fully compatible with 55NT
  • Pre-solder bake: Bake for 1–2 hours at 121°C (250°F) prior to solder reflow or HASL to drive out absorbed moisture

Common Fabrication Pitfalls

Engineers new to 55NT sometimes run into trouble in a few specific areas. Inadequate pre-lamination bake of inner layers is probably the number one source of field complaints — the moisture taken up by aramid fibers during normal handling needs to be driven out before lay-up. Failing to control the heat rise rate during lamination is the second most common issue. And on the drilling side, attempting to use chip-breaker bits on the non-woven aramid will cause fiber pullout and ragged hole walls that degrade plating adhesion.

Arlon 55NT Availability

Arlon 55NT is available in both laminate and prepreg forms across a range of constructions.

FormThickness RangeCopper Foil Options
Laminate0.005″ – 0.062″ (standard range)½ oz, 1 oz, 2 oz electrodeposited
PrepregVarious resin contents
Copper weight½ oz – 2 ozED and RTF options

Consult Arlon’s current availability matrix for specific constructions; not all thickness/copper combinations are stocked off-the-shelf, and lead times for non-standard configurations should be confirmed with your distributor early in the design cycle.

Arlon 55NT vs. FR-4: When Does the Upgrade Make Sense?

This is the practical question most engineers face. FR-4 is cheaper, more universally available, and well-understood across every fab house on the planet. Here’s a straightforward framework for deciding when 55NT justifies the cost:

Choose 55NT when:

  • Your assembly includes ceramic SMT components with low CTE (LCCCs, alumina BGAs)
  • Your board must pass rigorous thermal cycling qualification (MIL-spec, automotive grade)
  • HDI microvia structures require tight registration across multiple lamination sequences
  • Weight matters and you need to shed ~25% board mass vs. glass-reinforced construction
  • Lead-free soldering at 250°C+ peak is specified and long-term reliability data is required

Stick with FR-4 when:

  • The assembly is predominantly plastic-packaged components with CTEs close to the laminate
  • The application is commercial consumer electronics without extended thermal cycling requirements
  • Budget constraints make the material premium difficult to justify
  • Standard through-hole construction with no microvia requirements

Useful Resources for Arlon 55NT

ResourceDescriptionLink
55NT Official Product PageFull specs, availability, and process notesarlonemd.com/arlon_product/55nt-epoxy-nonwoven-aramid
55NT Datasheet (PDF)Downloadable technical datasheet55NT.pdf
55NT Processing Guide (PDF)Lamination, drilling, and plating process details55NT-Processing-Guide-v1.0.pdf
SDS – 55NT PrepregSafety Data Sheet for prepreg handlingSDS-55NT-Prepreg-US.pdf
Arlon Laser Drilled MaterialsApplication note on microvia suitabilityarlonemd.com/applications/laser-drilled-materials
Arlon Controlled CTE/SMT ApplicationBackground on CTE management for SMTarlonemd.com/applications/controlled-cte-smt
IPC-4101 SpecificationBase specification for laminate qualificationipc.org
PCB Directory – 55NT EntryThird-party specs and quote requestspcbdirectory.com

5 FAQs About Arlon 55NT

1. Is Arlon 55NT a polyimide material?

Not exactly. Despite sometimes being grouped under “modified polyimide laminate” — a label that reflects its performance positioning — 55NT uses a high-temperature multifunctional epoxy resin, not a polyimide. The polyimide-like dimensional stability comes from the non-woven aramid (Thermount®) reinforcement, not the resin chemistry. If you need a true polyimide system on non-woven aramid, Arlon 85NT is the correct choice, though it comes with higher cost and greater fabrication sensitivity.

2. Can Arlon 55NT be processed on standard FR-4 equipment?

Largely yes, with some important adjustments. The lamination cycle uses higher temperature and requires a controlled heat rise rate and a pre-lamination vacuum desiccation step. The drilling process works well with CO2 lasers but requires avoiding chip-breaker routing bits. De-smear chemistry should follow polyimide settings rather than standard FR-4 parameters. Most shops experienced with high-Tg laminates can handle 55NT without major equipment changes, but the process recipe adjustments are real and should be discussed with your fab house upfront.

3. What is the difference between Arlon 55NT and Arlon 45NK?

Both are aramid-reinforced epoxy systems with a 170°C Tg, but the reinforcement type differs. 45NK uses woven aramid, while 55NT uses non-woven aramid. The non-woven structure in 55NT delivers lower moisture absorption (0.30% vs. 0.80%) and is better suited for CO2 laser microvia drilling. If your design has HDI structures or moisture sensitivity is a concern, 55NT is the stronger choice. For simpler through-hole designs where laser drilling isn’t required, 45NK may be adequate at lower cost.

4. How does 55NT perform in lead-free soldering?

This was a core design intent for 55NT. The high-temperature multifunctional epoxy resin was specifically selected for compatibility with lead-free processing, which means SAC305 profiles with peak board temperatures of 245–260°C. The Tg of 170°C provides adequate margin above typical in-use temperatures, and the Td of 368°C is well above lead-free peak reflow exposure. The recommended pre-bake before soldering (1–2 hours at 121°C) is important to eliminate residual moisture before the board sees reflow temperatures.

5. What is the typical cost premium of Arlon 55NT over standard FR-4?

Material cost alone is typically 2x–4x higher than standard high-Tg FR-4 on a raw laminate basis, depending on thickness and copper weight. However, total board cost is also affected by additional fabrication steps (pre-bake requirements, process recipe adjustments) and the availability of qualified fab suppliers. For high-reliability applications where thermal cycling qualification is required, the cost of rework and field failures from CTE-mismatch-induced solder joint fatigue almost always exceeds the material premium many times over. The ROI calculation is straightforward in demanding applications — it becomes a tougher sell for moderate-reliability commercial designs.

Final Thoughts

Arlon 55NT occupies a genuinely useful engineering position. It’s not the right material for every PCB — but when you’re dealing with ceramic SMT components, HDI microvia structures, demanding thermal cycling environments, or weight-sensitive designs, it addresses real failure modes that standard epoxy-glass laminates cannot. The combination of 6–9 ppm/°C X,Y CTE, 0.30% moisture absorption, V-0 flammability, and full lead-free process compatibility is a difficult set of properties to replicate at the same cost point.

The key to getting good results with 55NT is treating it as the process-sensitive material it is — respect the pre-lamination bake, control the heat rise rate during pressing, use plasma de-smear for microvias, and brief your fab house on the specific recipe requirements before the first article build. Shops that have processed 85NT or other aramid-reinforced systems will transition quickly; shops that have only ever run standard FR-4 will need a learning cycle.

For engineers sourcing Arlon PCB materials, work with distributors who carry current stock and can confirm lead times on non-standard constructions — availability on specialty configurations is not always immediate, and design schedules have been delayed by late material discovery more than once.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Contact Sales & After-Sales Service

Contact & Quotation

  • 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.

Drag & Drop Files, Choose Files to Upload You can upload up to 3 files.

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.