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There’s a specific problem in base station antenna and power amplifier design that a Dk of 2.5 doesn’t fully solve: miniaturization. As antenna panels get packed tighter, as tower-mounted amplifiers shrink to fit smaller enclosures, and as 5G massive MIMO arrays demand more radiating elements per square centimeter, the trace widths and element dimensions that come with very low Dk materials start working against you. That’s where the Arlon AD300 laminate family steps in. With a nominal dielectric constant around 3.0, AD300 trades a small amount of loss performance for meaningfully more compact trace geometry — while still delivering the low loss, low PIM, thermal stability, and PTFE-based reliability that the telecom infrastructure market demands.
This article covers the full technical picture on Arlon AD300: the generational history of the product line, complete datasheet specs, how it compares to competing laminates at similar Dk, PCB design and fabrication considerations, and practical application guidance for engineers working on base station, power amplifier, and RF feed network designs.
What Is Arlon AD300? The Full Product Line Context
Arlon PCB laminates were developed by Arlon Electronic Materials, a specialty laminate manufacturer founded in 1969. Rogers Corporation acquired Arlon in 2015, and the AD Series — including the entire AD300 family — now operates under Rogers’ Advanced Electronics Solutions division, maintaining the original Arlon branding and material specifications.
The AD designation stands for Antenna Dielectric. The “300” in Arlon AD300 refers to the nominal dielectric constant of 3.00. Like the rest of the AD Series, AD300 is a woven fiberglass-reinforced PTFE composite material with microdispersed ceramic filler, designed specifically for high-volume commercial wireless and telecom infrastructure PCB applications.
Understanding the AD300 Generational Progression
The AD300 family has evolved through three distinct generations, and understanding the differences matters when you’re sourcing material or reviewing historical designs.
Generation
Designation
Key Improvement Over Previous
First Generation
AD300 (original)
Baseline PTFE/woven glass/ceramic composite
Second Generation
AD300A
Lower cost construction, improved CTE, lower Df vs. original
Third Generation
AD300C
Further improved Df, lowest-in-class TCEr, improved CTE in all axes
Variant
AD300D
Different Dk and standard thickness options vs. AD300C
The AD300A was specifically developed for base station antennas and base station power amplifiers where low loss and low PIM are critical. AD300C, the current production standard, represents a significant improvement in cost/performance over AD300A and other traditional fluoropolymer-glass laminates, built on a cost-effective construction of unique chemistry formulation and processing. AD300C is the material engineers should be designing with today unless legacy compatibility with an existing AD300A design is the constraint.
Arlon AD300C Electrical Properties: Full Specifications
Dielectric Constant, Loss Tangent and Phase Stability
The electrical properties of AD300C are what drive its selection in antenna and power amplifier designs. The headline numbers hold up well against competing materials in the Dk 3.0 range.
Property
Value
Test Condition
Test Method
Dielectric Constant (Dk)
2.97
10 GHz
IPC TM-650 2.5.5.6c
Dk Tolerance
±0.05
Production controlled
IPC TM-650 2.5.5.6 (FSR)
Dissipation Factor (Df)
~0.0020
10 GHz
IPC TM-650 2.5.5.6c
Thermal Coefficient of Dk (TCEr)
−25 ppm/°C
—
Measured vs. temperature
Volume Resistivity
>10⁷ MΩ·cm
—
IPC TM-650 2.5.2.1
Surface Resistivity
>10⁷ MΩ
—
IPC TM-650 2.5.2.1
The Dk tolerance of ±0.05 is among the tightest available for any commercial laminate in the 3.0 range, which translates directly into impedance consistency across production boards. Every panel is tested using the IPC TM-650 2.5.5.6 FSR test method to maintain this consistency — not sampled, tested per panel. For antenna feed networks where matching accuracy across multiple splitting stages defines the antenna pattern, this level of Dk control reduces the scatter you’d see from board-to-board variation in a less rigorously controlled material.
The TCEr of −25 ppm/°C is described as the lowest in class for AD300C. This number determines how much the dielectric constant drifts as temperature changes. A lower TCEr magnitude means the Dk — and therefore trace impedance and antenna resonance — shifts less across the operating temperature range. For outdoor base station antennas that sweep from −40°C on a winter night to 85°C in a radome baked by summer sun, minimizing TCEr directly translates into less resonance frequency shift and less bandwidth rolloff at temperature extremes. That keeps antenna gain and efficiency consistent across the full operating temperature range, which is exactly what network operators need to maintain coverage quality.
The PIM performance of AD300C is rated as low as −165 dBc using S1 smooth foil, placing it in the same ultra-low PIM tier as other AD Series materials. As always with PIM specifications, this value is dependent on foil type — the smooth S1 foil is the required choice for PIM-critical designs.
Arlon AD300 Mechanical and Thermal Properties
CTE and Thermal Conductivity
The mechanical and thermal properties of AD300C are where the ceramic loading pays off most clearly compared to unfilled PTFE/glass laminates.
Property
Value
Units
Test Method
CTE — X-axis
~9
ppm/°C
IPC TM-650 2.4.41
CTE — Y-axis
~15
ppm/°C
IPC TM-650 2.4.41
CTE — Z-axis
~54
ppm/°C
IPC TM-650 2.4.41
Thermal Conductivity
>0.50
W/m·K
ASTM C518
Decomposition Temperature (Td)
>300
°C
TGA
Water Absorption
<0.02
%
IPC TM-650 2.6.2
Flammability
V-0
—
UL 94
Operating Temperature
−55 to +125
°C
—
The X-axis CTE of approximately 9 ppm/°C is notably low. Copper sits at approximately 17 ppm/°C, and this mismatch between the laminate and copper drives thermal fatigue in solder joints and BGA connections. An X-axis CTE closer to copper’s value would minimize that fatigue, but 9 ppm/°C is still considerably better than unfilled PTFE laminates, which often run 40–100 ppm/°C in X/Y.
The thermal conductivity of >0.50 W/m·K is an important differentiator for power amplifier applications. Higher thermal conductivity moves heat away from transistors and passive components faster, reducing hotspot temperatures at a given power level. For tower-mounted amplifiers and tower-mounted booster amplifiers running continuous high-power output, that improved thermal conductivity is a meaningful system reliability factor — not just a spec sheet footnote.
The Z-axis CTE of approximately 54 ppm/°C, while higher than X/Y values as expected, is dramatically better than the 150–250 ppm/°C Z-axis CTE of traditional unfilled PTFE/glass laminates. That reduced Z-axis expansion significantly improves plated through-hole barrel reliability over thermal cycling — a critical reliability factor for outdoor antenna equipment with 15–20 year design life requirements.
Mechanical Properties
Property
Value
Units
Peel Strength (1 oz copper)
≥4.0
N/mm
Flexural Modulus
~2,200
MPa
Water Absorption (24h)
<0.02
%
Flammability
V-0
UL 94
High copper peel strength is flagged as a key attribute of AD300C, and it matters in production. Panel-level processing — lamination, etching, solder mask application — applies mechanical stress to the copper-dielectric interface repeatedly. Inadequate peel strength shows up as lifted pads, delamination under thermal shock, or trace adhesion failures in field returns. The strong copper bond strength of AD300C reduces these failure modes.
Available Configurations for Arlon AD300
Dielectric Thicknesses
AD Series laminates including AD300 are available in a standard range of dielectric thicknesses from 0.015″ to 0.062″. Thicker dielectrics can be developed to meet customer requirements for high-volume programs.
Thickness (inches)
Thickness (mm)
Common Application
0.015″
0.381
Compact patch antennas, thin feed structures
0.020″
0.508
Antenna arrays, filter structures
0.030″
0.762
Microstrip feed networks, power dividers
0.060″
1.524
Thick feed boards, combiner networks
0.062″
1.575
Standard panel feed network boards
Copper Foil Options
Foil Type
Surface Finish
Primary Use Case
ED (Electrodeposited)
Standard roughness
General microwave circuits
S1 (Special Smooth)
Low profile, smooth
PIM-critical base station antenna designs
IM Series
High peel strength
Applications needing robust adhesion
Reverse Treated ED
Enhanced bonding
High-power amplifier boards
For any design where PIM specification is in the acceptance criteria, the S1 foil is the mandatory choice. Specifying AD300C with standard ED copper and then attempting to pass a −165 dBc PIM test will produce consistent failures.
Arlon AD300 vs. Competing RF Laminates at Dk ~3.0
The Dk 3.0 laminate space is more competitive than the 2.5 space because it also overlaps with ceramic hydrocarbon thermoset materials like Rogers RO4535B and Isola IS680. Here is how AD300C positions against its direct competitors:
Material
Dk (10 GHz)
Df (10 GHz)
Z-CTE (ppm/°C)
TCEr (ppm/°C)
PIM
Processing
Cost
Arlon AD300C
2.97 ±0.05
~0.0020
~54
−25
Excellent (S1)
PTFE process
Medium
Arlon AD300A
3.00 ±0.04
~0.0023
~60
Higher
Good
PTFE process
Medium-Low
Rogers RT/duroid 6002
2.94 ±0.04
0.0012
~95
−12
Moderate
PTFE process
High
Rogers RO4535B
3.50
0.0015
~31
—
Moderate
FR4-compatible
Medium
Taconic TLY-3
2.33
0.0009
~237
—
Low
PTFE process
Medium-High
Isola IS680 AG338
3.38
0.0025
~38
—
Moderate
Modified FR4
Low-Med
AD300C vs. RT/duroid 6002: RT/duroid 6002 has a lower Df (0.0012 vs. ~0.0020) and a marginally better nominal Dk tolerance, making it the superior loss performer for the most demanding low-loss designs. However, its Z-axis CTE of approximately 95 ppm/°C is nearly double that of AD300C, which creates more PTH fatigue risk over thermal cycling. RT/duroid 6002 also carries a significant cost premium. For base station antenna work where PIM performance and cost-effective volume manufacturing matter more than absolute minimum insertion loss, AD300C is the stronger choice. For satellite and aerospace low-noise receive chains where every tenth of a dB counts, RT/duroid 6002 earns its price.
AD300C vs. AD300A: Both are from the same AD Series family with similar architecture. AD300C is the current generation with improved Df, lower TCEr (−25 ppm/°C vs. higher values in AD300A), and better overall CTE performance. Unless you’re maintaining design compatibility with a legacy AD300A board, there’s no reason to specify AD300A in new designs.
AD300C vs. RO4535B: RO4535B operates on a ceramic hydrocarbon thermoset platform — it can be processed on FR4-compatible equipment, which is its main advantage. Its Z-axis CTE of ~31 ppm/°C is excellent. However, for PIM-critical applications, PTFE-based materials like AD300C generally show better PIM behavior than ceramic hydrocarbon thermosets. If your fab can’t run PTFE materials, RO4535B is a reasonable alternative; if PIM is the spec driver and your fab has PTFE capability, AD300C wins.
Arlon AD300 PCB Design Considerations
Impedance Calculation and Design Dk
When calculating trace widths for 50Ω microstrip or stripline on AD300C, use a design Dk of 3.00 rather than the nominal measured value of 2.97. The small offset accounts for the real-world contribution of copper foil roughness to effective Dk — smooth copper foils present a slightly lower effective Dk contribution, but the standard practice of using the round nominal value gives you a consistent starting point that experienced PTFE fabs expect.
For 50Ω microstrip on 0.030″ (0.762 mm) AD300C with 1 oz copper, trace width will land in the range of approximately 1.7–1.9 mm — noticeably narrower than the 2.0–2.4 mm you’d get on AD250C or AD255C at the same thickness. That trace width reduction is the practical miniaturization benefit of the higher Dk, and it’s the core reason designers choose AD300 over the 2.5 Dk materials when space is the constraint.
Always verify final trace dimensions with a calibrated electromagnetic field solver. Closed-form microstrip equations become less accurate at the geometry scales used in microwave design, and at GHz frequencies even a 50 µm trace width deviation from target produces measurable impedance error.
Stackup Design for Multilayer AD300C Boards
Multilayer AD300C boards require PTFE-compatible bonding materials at all layer interfaces. Standard FR4 prepreg is not compatible — the cure temperature and material flow characteristics are mismatched with PTFE laminates, producing adhesion failures and delamination at layer interfaces under thermal excursion. Rogers offers compatible bonding plies for the AD Series, and FEP adhesive films are also used in practice.
For hybrid stackups that mix AD300C RF layers with FR4 or other thermoset dielectric layers for digital and power routing, the press cycle must be carefully engineered to handle both material systems simultaneously. This requires direct engagement with your PCB fabricator early in the stackup design process — not a note on the fabrication drawing.
Drilling and PTFE-Specific Processing
PTFE’s soft, viscoelastic nature makes drilling fundamentally different from FR4. The material compresses and smears around the drill bit if parameters aren’t tuned for PTFE behavior. Signs of inadequate drilling include hole wall smearing, rough barrel surfaces, and delamination around drill entry points. Experienced PTFE fabricators use sharp carbide tooling, lower spindle speeds than FR4, and controlled retract rates.
Through-hole preparation before copper plating is the single most important process step in PTFE PCB fabrication. The fluoropolymer surface of the hole wall is non-stick — copper doesn’t adhere to it without surface activation. Plasma etching using a CF4/O2 chemistry (or sodium naphthalene chemical etch as an alternative) breaks up the fluorine bonds at the hole wall surface, creating active anchoring sites for the subsequent electroless copper plating. Any shop building AD300C boards that doesn’t have a documented PTH etch activation step is not running a compliant PTFE process, and PTH reliability failures in field service are the predictable result.
PCB Layout Best Practices for Power Amplifier Designs
AD300C’s improved thermal conductivity compared to the AD250/AD255 Series makes it specifically well-suited for power amplifier PCBs. When designing PA boards on AD300C, a few layout considerations help extract the full thermal benefit:
Place ground via arrays under and around high-power transistor footprints. The thermal via array creates a low-resistance thermal path from the transistor drain pad through the copper, down through the laminate vias, to a heatsink or ground plane that conducts heat away from the active junction. Via diameter, pitch, and fill (solid copper or plated hollow) all affect the effective thermal resistance — model this in a thermal simulation before finalizing the layout.
Use wide copper pours on ground and power planes rather than minimal trace routing. In RF power designs, copper fill serves double duty: it defines the return current path for transmission lines and provides a distributed thermal sink. Copper pour should extend right to the edge of keep-outs around sensitive traces where the return current distribution allows.
Smooth bends on high-power RF transmission lines reduce current crowding at corners, which keeps local temperature rise uniform along the line and also reduces PIM contributions from geometric discontinuities. Use radius bends on all high-power signal paths — 45° chamfers are the minimum, curved bends are preferred.
Transition to Connectors and Housings
AD300C boards in tower-mounted amplifier and antenna feed applications typically connect to SMA, N-type, or 4.3-10 connectors via coaxial feed-throughs or edge-launch configurations. These transitions are a significant source of impedance mismatch and PIM if not properly designed. Use a via fence around connector landing pads to enforce consistent ground reference. Keep connector pad geometry matched to the standard footprint — deviating from manufacturer-recommended land patterns introduces stub effects that degrade return loss at the upper end of the frequency range.
Typical Applications of Arlon AD300
The typical applications for AD300C include base station antennas, power amplifiers (PA), tower mounted amplifiers (TMA) and tower mounted booster amplifiers (TMB), antenna feed networks, RF passive components, and multimedia transmission systems.
In practice, the specific use cases where engineers consistently reach for AD300 family materials include the following:
Base Station Antenna Feed Networks: The corporate feed structures inside panel antennas for 4G LTE and 5G NR base stations are the core application. The Dk 3.0 value produces more compact trace geometries than Dk 2.5 materials, enabling denser feed structures within the physical envelope of the antenna panel.
Tower-Mounted Amplifiers (TMA) and Tower-Mounted Booster Amplifiers (TMB): The elevated thermal conductivity of AD300C makes it specifically appropriate for power amplifier boards running continuous output. TMAs and TMBs mount on the tower directly below the antenna to minimize feeder losses, and they operate in outdoor environments with wide temperature swings. AD300C’s low TCEr, high thermal conductivity, and robust PTH reliability directly address the reliability requirements of this application.
77 GHz Automotive Radar: The AD300 laminate provides ultra-low X-Y CTE for reliable plated through holes up to 77 GHz. That extended frequency range, combined with low loss and moisture stability, makes it one of the Arlon AD Series materials that finds use in automotive ADAS radar front-end antenna PCBs.
GNSS, GPS, and SDARS Patch Antennas: Patch antennas resonating at GPS (1.575 GHz), GLONASS (1.602 GHz), and SDARS (2.3 GHz) frequencies benefit from AD300C’s miniaturization advantage — at Dk 3.0, patch element sizes are smaller than at Dk 2.5, making it easier to fit within constrained enclosures.
RF Passive Components: Power dividers, couplers, baluns, and filters built on AD300C benefit from the material’s tight Dk tolerance and phase stability across temperature, both of which translate directly into component performance consistency across production lots and operating conditions.
Useful Technical Resources for Arlon AD300
Resource
Description
Link
Rogers AD Series Datasheet (full family)
Official Rogers/Arlon datasheet covering AD250C through AD350A
Q1: What is the difference between Arlon AD300, AD300A, and AD300C?
AD300 (original), AD300A, and AD300C represent three generations of the same base material concept — woven fiberglass-reinforced PTFE composite with microdispersed ceramic filler at a nominal Dk of 3.0. AD300A was the second generation, offering lower cost construction and improved CTE and dissipation factor versus the original. AD300C is the current third-generation product, with further improvements: lower Df, lowest-in-class TCEr of −25 ppm/°C, improved CTE in all axes (including X/Y values as low as 9–15 ppm/°C), and higher thermal conductivity. Unless you’re maintaining compatibility with an existing AD300A legacy design, AD300C is the correct choice for any new design.
Q2: How does the Dk 3.0 of AD300 affect trace dimensions compared to Dk 2.5 materials like AD250C?
Higher dielectric constant produces narrower traces for the same target impedance at the same substrate thickness. For a 50Ω microstrip line on 0.030″ substrate, AD300C with Dk ~3.0 produces a trace width roughly 15–20% narrower than AD250C with Dk 2.50. That reduction in trace width translates into more compact feed network layouts, smaller power divider and coupler structures, and smaller patch antenna elements — all advantages when board real estate is constrained. The trade-off is a small increase in conductor loss, since narrower traces have higher resistive loss per unit length. In most base station and amplifier applications, the miniaturization benefit outweighs this loss penalty.
Q3: What makes AD300C suitable for power amplifier applications specifically?
Three properties work together for PA applications. First, the higher thermal conductivity (>0.50 W/m·K) transfers heat away from transistor junctions more efficiently than lower Dk materials with lower thermal conductivity. Second, the tight Dk tolerance (±0.05) and low TCEr (−25 ppm/°C) ensure impedance matching networks and output filters maintain their tuned response across the amplifier’s operating temperature range — critical for maintaining linearity and output power flatness. Third, the Dk 3.0 value allows more compact impedance matching structures, reducing the transmission line lengths between transistor and load, which reduces the insertion loss of the matching network itself.
Q4: Can AD300C be processed by a standard FR4 PCB shop?
No. AD300C is a PTFE-based laminate and requires PTFE-specific processing throughout the fabrication sequence. This includes tuned drilling parameters with sharp carbide tooling and adjusted speeds to avoid hole wall smearing, plasma or sodium naphthalene etch activation of through-hole barrel surfaces before electroless copper plating, PTFE-compatible bonding films for multilayer lamination (not FR4 prepreg), and lamination press cycles with different temperature and pressure profiles than FR4. A shop without documented, active PTFE process experience should not be building AD300C boards. Before releasing your design to a new shop, ask specifically about their PTFE qualification history and request examples of past AD Series jobs.
Q5: What frequency range is Arlon AD300 suitable for?
AD300 family materials are suited for RF and microwave applications from low GHz frequencies through millimeter wave. Arlon AD300 specifically provides reliable performance for plated through holes up to 77 GHz, making it one of the AD Series materials used in automotive radar applications at 77 GHz in addition to the more common base station frequency range of 700 MHz to 6 GHz. The dissipation factor of AD300C remains low and well-controlled through microwave frequencies, and the tight Dk tolerance supports consistent impedance at all frequencies within its operating range. For frequencies above 77 GHz, dedicated mmWave laminates with lower Df and tighter process controls are more appropriate.
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.