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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.
Metal Core PCB Automotive Electronics: Bergquist Dielectric Selection Guide
If you have ever spent an afternoon wrestling with thermal runaway in an automotive ECU or watched a headlight driver module fail after 18 months in the field, you already know that FR-4 can only take you so far. The moment your power dissipation climbs past roughly 2–3 W per component in a constrained enclosure, you are in metal core PCB territory — and in the automotive world, selecting the right substrate is not an academic exercise. It directly determines whether your design survives a 15-year service life baking under-hood.
This guide focuses specifically on metal core PCB automotive design using Bergquist Thermal Clad dielectrics — the materials behind a huge share of production automotive lighting, motor controllers, and battery management hardware worldwide.
What Is a Metal Core PCB and Why Does Automotive Demand It?
A metal core PCB (MCPCB) replaces the standard glass-epoxy core with a metal substrate — nearly always aluminum in automotive cost-driven applications, with copper reserved for the most thermally aggressive designs. The board stack is simple: copper circuit layer on top, a thin thermally conductive dielectric layer in the middle, and the metal baseplate at the bottom.
That dielectric layer is where everything happens. Unlike conventional prepreg, which has a thermal conductivity of around 0.25 W/m·K, a well-specified MCPCB dielectric can push that number to 1.0–4.1 W/m·K. In practical terms, that means heat moves laterally into the metal plate and out of the component junction far faster than any FR-4 construct can manage — even one loaded with thermal vias.
Why FR-4 Hits a Wall in Automotive Applications
Metal-core PCBs offer thermal conductivity in the range of 1–2 W/m·K versus 0.25 W/m·K for FR-4, reduce the need for thermal vias, and are better suited for applications with more than 100 W of localized power dissipation. In automotive, that threshold is reached faster than many designers expect — adaptive headlights, SiC inverter gate drivers, DC-DC converter stages, and EV BMS circuits all qualify.
Unlike consumer electronics with typical lifespans of 2–3 years, automotive electronics must maintain reliability for 15 years or more under conditions that include extreme temperature cycling, humidity, vibration, and electrical noise. A substrate that performs adequately at room temperature and degrades at 125 °C sustained simply is not acceptable in an AEC-qualified design.
Bergquist Thermal Clad: The Dielectric-First Philosophy
Bergquist (now part of Henkel) built its Thermal Clad platform around a core idea: the thermal performance of an insulated metal substrate lives entirely in its dielectric layer. Other manufacturers use standard prepreg as the dielectric layer, but prepreg does not provide the high thermal conductivity and resulting thermal performance required to help assure the lowest possible operating temperatures.
Thermal Clad Metal Core PCBs minimize thermal impedance and conduct heat more effectively than standard printed wiring boards. These substrates are more mechanically robust than thick-film ceramic and direct bond copper construction, and represent a cost-effective solution that can eliminate components, allow for simplified designs, smaller devices, and an overall less complicated production process.
The Bergquist PCB Thermal Clad lineup gives automotive engineers four dielectric families to work with, each engineered for a different performance-cost envelope. Understanding the difference between them is the most useful thing you can do before issuing a purchase order.
Bergquist Dielectric Series: Full Comparison for Automotive Engineers
Thermal Clad circuit board materials are available from the Bergquist Company in four different thermal conductivities: High Power Lighting (HPL), High Temperature (HT), Low Modulus (LM), and Multi-Purpose (MP). Here is how they stack up against each other and against a typical FR-4 baseline:
Engine bay modules, gate drivers, high-temp power supply
HT-04503
~2.2
0.0045″ (114 µm)
>170 °C
ECU power stages, motor controllers
MP-06503
~1.0
0.0065″ (165 µm)
~130 °C
Low-cost interior lighting, HVAC control boards
LM (Low Modulus)
~1.0–1.5
Various
~130 °C
Boards subject to CTE-mismatch stress, flex attachments
FR-4 (reference)
~0.25
—
130–170 °C
Low-power signal boards only
HPL-03015 — The High-Power Lighting Specialist
HPL is a dielectric specifically formulated for high power lighting LED applications with demanding thermal performance requirements. This thin dielectric at 0.0015″ (38 µm) has an ability to withstand high temperatures with a glass transition of 185 °C and phenomenal thermal performance.
In automotive terms, HPL is the go-to for Matrix LED headlamp systems and high-current DRL modules. The extremely thin dielectric minimizes the thermal resistance between the LED junction and the aluminum baseplate. HPL achieves a very low thermal resistance of 0.05 °C·in²/W and a high thermal conductivity of 4.1 W/m·K. If you are designing a 40-channel adaptive pixel headlamp running at 1 A per channel continuously, HPL is almost certainly your material.
One caution: the 38 µm dielectric is thin enough that micro-voids or delamination caused by poor handling will show up as voltage breakdown failures. Process discipline during assembly is non-negotiable with HPL.
HT-07006 — The High-Temperature Workhorse
HT-07006 is a dielectric resistant to degradation from high temperature exposure and features high dielectric breakdown characteristics, proven in applications such as LED and power electronics.
For automotive engineers, the practical differentiator on HT-07006 is the 0.0070″ thickness combined with the high-temperature resistance. This is the dielectric you reach for when the application sits near the engine, under-dash near exhaust ducting, or inside a motor inverter where ambient temperatures can push 85–105 °C continuously. HT dielectrics are UL solder-rated at 325 °C for 60 seconds, enabling Eutectic Gold/Tin solders. That matters for any design targeting AuSn die attach or high-reliability wire bonding.
MP-06503 — The Cost-Optimized Entry Point
The Multi-Purpose series sits at the lower end of Bergquist thermal performance but remains a massive step above FR-4. At approximately 1.0 W/m·K, it is appropriate for interior LED modules, HVAC actuator boards, or body control modules where junction temperatures are managed and ambient never approaches 125 °C sustained.
If your thermal simulation shows comfortable margins with a 1.0 W/m·K dielectric, MP-06503 gets you onto a metal core substrate without the cost premium of the HT or HPL series. Just make sure the application’s long-term temperature profile genuinely stays benign — MP’s lower Tg leaves little headroom if the thermal environment is worse in production than it looked in simulation.
LM — Low Modulus for Stress-Relief Applications
Low Modulus dielectric is the choice for boards where CTE mismatch between ceramic or large die-attach components and the aluminum substrate creates mechanical stress. Bond-Ply provides for the mechanical decoupling of bonded materials with mismatched thermal coefficients of expansion. LM extends that philosophy into the dielectric layer itself, making it valuable for large-footprint power modules and applications with aggressive thermal cycling profiles.
Automotive Application Mapping: Which Bergquist Grade for Which System?
Different vehicle systems present wildly different thermal and reliability environments. Here is a practical guide to mapping Bergquist dielectrics to production automotive applications:
Table 2: Automotive System to Bergquist Dielectric Mapping
Vehicle System
Peak Ambient (°C)
Key Thermal Challenge
Recommended Bergquist Grade
Matrix LED headlamp (exterior)
−40 to +85
High current density, long ON time
HPL-03015
Front fog / DRL module
−40 to +85
Moderate LED power, cost-sensitive
MP-06503 or HT-04503
Interior ambient lighting
−40 to +70
Low power, compact form factor
MP-06503
EV battery management system (BMS)
−40 to +105
High voltage isolation, sustained load
HT-07006
DC-DC converter (12V/48V)
−40 to +125
High junction temp, vibration
HT-07006
SiC gate driver board
−40 to +150
Extreme dV/dt, high-temp cycling
HT-07006 or copper MCPCB
ECU power supply stage
−40 to +105
Mixed thermal loads
HT-04503
HVAC control module
−40 to +85
Modest heat, low cost priority
MP-06503
Traction inverter power stage
−40 to +150
Very high power density
Copper MCPCB + HT-07006
Thermal Resistance: The Number That Actually Matters in Design
Every thermal simulation eventually comes back to junction-to-board thermal resistance (Θ_jb). The dielectric layer is the dominant resistance element in an MCPCB — not the copper foil, not the aluminum plate. Choosing a higher thermal conductivity dielectric can greatly reduce thermal resistance, leading to better overall cooling performance, though the right choice depends on your specific demands.
A rough calculation illustrates this. For a dielectric of thickness t and conductivity k over an area A:
R_thermal = t / (k × A)
For an HPL dielectric at 4.1 W/m·K and 38 µm thickness under a 5 mm × 5 mm LED package:
R = 0.000038 / (4.1 × 0.000025) ≈ 0.37 °C/W
For the same geometry using MP-06503 at 1.0 W/m·K and 165 µm:
R = 0.000165 / (1.0 × 0.000025) ≈ 6.6 °C/W
That is nearly an 18× difference in dielectric thermal resistance for the same package. At 2 W dissipation, the temperature delta at the junction shifts by over 12 °C — meaningful when you are designing for 125 °C maximum junction over a 105 °C ambient.
Table 3: Comparative Thermal Resistance by Dielectric (5 mm × 5 mm footprint)
Dielectric
Conductivity (W/m·K)
Thickness
R_thermal (°C/W)
ΔTj at 2W (°C)
HPL-03015
4.1
38 µm
0.37
0.7
HT-04503
2.2
114 µm
2.07
4.1
HT-07006
2.2
178 µm
3.24
6.5
MP-06503
1.0
165 µm
6.60
13.2
FR-4 prepreg
0.25
100 µm
16.0
32.0
Automotive Reliability Standards That Shape Dielectric Selection
Automotive electronics qualification is a different planet from consumer electronics. Automotive-grade chips must withstand extreme temperatures from −40 °C to 150 °C, demonstrate exceptional reliability over 15-year lifespans, and comply with rigorous quality standards such as AEC-Q100 and ISO 26262.
AEC-Q100 Grade 1 components are rated to 125 °C junction temperature continuously. A designer specifying such parts must ensure the PCB layout maintains the component below 125 °C. This creates a feedback loop: if thermal simulation predicts 135 °C, you must increase copper area, add heatsinks, or select lower-power components.
This feedback loop is exactly where Bergquist dielectric selection becomes a design lever, not just a materials decision. Choosing HT-07006 over MP-06503 might be what allows your gate driver to pass AEC-Q100 Grade 1 qualification without requiring a redesign of the heatsink or a switch to a lower-power (and more expensive) semiconductor.
ISO 16750 defines how automotive electrical and electronic components should be tested to survive real-world conditions in vehicles, covering heat, cold, vibrations, moisture, and power fluctuations. The thermal cycling in ISO 16750 — often −40 °C to +125 °C for hundreds of cycles — is a direct stress on the dielectric-to-baseplate bond. HT-series dielectrics, with their higher Tg, maintain bond integrity through these cycles far better than standard prepreg or MP-grade dielectrics.
Practical Design Considerations When Specifying Bergquist MCPCBs
Copper Weight Selection
Heavier copper (2 oz, 3 oz) benefits from the thermal spread provided by the metal core, but it also introduces more thermal expansion stress at the dielectric interface during temperature cycling. For most automotive single-layer MCPCB designs, 1 oz to 2 oz copper hits the right balance. If the PCB must endure vibration or mechanical stress such as automotive lighting, choose thicker copper for added durability.
Aluminum vs. Copper Baseplate
Aluminum is the most commonly used metal core because it offers a good balance of performance, weight, and affordability, providing moderate thermal conductivity around 237 W/m·K and is suitable for many applications, especially LED lighting, consumer electronics, and automotive circuits where heat is present but manageable.
Reserve copper baseplates for applications where the baseplate itself needs to become a thermal interface to a heatsink with demanding conductivity requirements — typically SiC power modules and high-power inverter stages. The cost premium is real, and the weight increase matters in EV applications where every gram counts.
Dielectric Breakdown and High Voltage
In EV battery management and 48V/400V/800V automotive architectures, the electrical isolation rating of the dielectric is as important as its thermal conductivity. HT-series dielectrics carry higher dielectric breakdown voltages than MP-series. Always verify the application’s working voltage against the dielectric’s rated breakdown, applying the standard 20× safety margin typical for automotive isolation requirements.
Solder Process Compatibility
MCPCB dielectric material must withstand soldering temperatures above 288 °C for lead-free processes. Both HPL and HT series are qualified for standard SAC305 reflow. The thin HPL dielectric (38 µm) requires careful attention to the soldering profile — rapid thermal excursions can propagate micro-cracks through the dielectric that won’t appear as immediate electrical failures but degrade over the product life.
Useful Resources for Automotive MCPCB Engineers
The following resources are directly useful during design and qualification work on metal core PCB automotive projects:
5 FAQs: Metal Core PCB Automotive Design with Bergquist Dielectrics
Q1: Is a metal core PCB always necessary for automotive LED applications?
Not always, but for power LEDs above roughly 1 W per device in a compact module, MCPCB will consistently outperform FR-4 with thermal vias. Below that threshold, or where the PCB can be mounted directly to a heatsink with a gap pad, FR-4 may remain viable. For production automotive headlamp and DRL applications above 5 W total, metal core PCB is essentially the industry standard.
Q2: Can I use the same Bergquist dielectric for both my ECU and my headlamp driver?
You can source from the same family, but the optimal grade differs. ECU power stages near harsh thermal environments typically warrant HT-07006 for its higher operating temperature and Tg. Headlamp modules where die size is small and thermal density is high benefit more from HPL-03015. Specifying HT-07006 for a headlamp to simplify BOM is a reasonable trade-off — you pay a small cost penalty for thermal performance that exceeds what the headlamp strictly needs.
Q3: How does CTE mismatch between the aluminum baseplate and the dielectric affect reliability in automotive thermal cycling?
This is one of the key failure modes in automotive MCPCB. Aluminum has a CTE of around 23 ppm/°C, while the copper circuit layer sits at 17–18 ppm/°C. The dielectric bond holds these together through hundreds of −40 °C to +125 °C cycles. HT-series dielectrics with higher Tg maintain their mechanical properties through these cycles far better than MP-series, which can show early delamination. For particularly aggressive cycle counts, Low Modulus (LM) dielectric provides a compliance layer that absorbs differential expansion stress.
Q4: What is the minimum dielectric breakdown voltage I should target for a 48V automotive application?
For a 48V rail, the practical working voltage is 48V DC, but transient spikes in automotive systems (load dump, jump start events) can reach 60V or above transiently. As a conservative rule, target a dielectric breakdown voltage of at least 1,500V for 48V applications, which both HT and HPL series comfortably exceed. For 400V and 800V EV architectures, the isolation requirements need to be verified against the specific dielectric grade’s datasheet and validated through application-specific hipot testing.
Q5: Does Bergquist Thermal Clad comply with RoHS and automotive halogen-free requirements?
Yes — Bergquist Thermal Clad dielectrics in the HT and HPL series are RoHS compliant. Halogen-free variants should be confirmed with the specific part number when ordering, as automotive OEM programs increasingly require halogen-free material declarations. Always request the material Safety Data Sheet and the UL certification file alongside the technical datasheet when qualifying a Bergquist dielectric for a new vehicle program.
Summary: Matching the Right Bergquist Dielectric to Your Automotive Design
Selecting a metal core PCB dielectric for automotive electronics is not about picking the highest thermal conductivity number in the catalog. It is about matching the dielectric’s thermal conductivity, operating temperature ceiling, Tg, CTE behavior, and isolation rating to the specific thermal and reliability demands of the application.
For most production automotive lighting engineers, the choice will come down to HPL-03015 for maximum thermal density in small packages, HT-07006 for sustained high-temperature operation near the engine or in power electronics, and MP-06503 where cost is a primary driver and thermal margins are comfortable. LM grades deserve consideration any time the assembly includes large ceramic components or requires flex attachment.
What the Bergquist platform consistently delivers — across all four dielectric families — is a substrate that treats thermal management as a first-class design parameter rather than an afterthought. For automotive electronics carrying AEC-Q100 or AEC-Q200 qualification requirements and a 15-year reliability mandate, that starting position is exactly where you want to be.
For more information on sourcing and fabricating with Bergquist Thermal Clad materials, visit the Bergquist PCB resource page.
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.