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.
Arlon CLTE Laminate: The Complete Engineer’s Guide to Low Thermal Expansion PTFE/Ceramic PCBs
If you’ve ever watched a phased array radar antenna fail mid-mission because the board substrate couldn’t hold its dimensional tolerances under thermal cycling, you’ll understand exactly why Arlon CLTE laminate exists. This isn’t just another high-frequency substrate — it’s a material engineered specifically for situations where expansion, loss, and dielectric instability are failure modes, not inconveniences.
This guide breaks down everything a working PCB engineer needs to know about Arlon CLTE laminate: what it’s made of, why its properties matter, how the full CLTE product family stacks up, how to process it without ruining it, and where it genuinely outperforms the alternatives.
CLTE is a ceramic powder-filled and woven micro fiberglass reinforced PTFE composite engineered to produce a stable, low water absorption laminate with a nominal Dielectric Constant of 2.98. The name “CLTE” is shorthand for Controlled Linear Thermal Expansion — and that name is doing a lot of work. The entire design philosophy behind this material centers on keeping thermal expansion in check, particularly in the Z-axis where plated through-hole (PTH) reliability lives and dies.
Arlon’s proprietary formulation for CLTE materials creates a reduced Z-direction thermal expansion (nearer to the expansion rate for copper metal), improving plated through hole reliability. That single design decision — matching Z-axis CTE to copper — is what makes CLTE so compelling for high-layer-count boards that go through aggressive thermal cycling.
Pure PTFE on its own is electrically excellent but mechanically soft. PTFE PCB laminates are not pure PTFE but PTFE-based composites, because PTFE is lubricating and uneasy for copper layers to bond, and its stiffness and thermal resistance need reinforcing. Ceramics, glass fiber, glass, or woven glass are added to PTFE to reinforce the substrate. In the CLTE formulation, the ceramic filler is the key ingredient that controls both thermal expansion and dielectric constant stability simultaneously — a two-for-one that’s difficult to achieve with glass/PTFE alone.
Why Thermal Expansion Control Matters in High-Reliability PCBs
Before diving deeper into specs, it’s worth spending a moment on why CTE matters so much in the first place. FR-4 has a Z-axis CTE of roughly 50–70 ppm/°C. Copper, by contrast, expands at about 17 ppm/°C. Every time a board heats up and cools down, that mismatch generates stress on plated through-holes and vias. Do it enough times — through assembly reflow, operational temperature cycles, and environmental extremes — and those vias crack.
In avionics, satellite electronics, and defense radar systems, “enough times” can be thousands of cycles over a 20-year service life. FR-4 simply isn’t up to that task. CLTE’s Z-axis CTE of approximately 34 ppm/°C is a substantial improvement, and CLTE-XT pushes that even lower — which we’ll cover shortly.
The X and Y planar expansion matters just as much for another reason: dimensional stability during multilayer fabrication. Large-format boards with tight registration tolerances cannot afford substrate that moves unpredictably during lamination. CLTE laminates provide matched X-Y CTE properties and low Z-axis expansion to minimize thermomechanical stresses in high-layer-count aerospace and defense boards.
Arlon CLTE Laminate: Core Electrical and Mechanical Properties
Here is a summary of typical properties for standard Arlon CLTE laminate. These figures represent typical production values and should not be used as specification limits — always consult the official Arlon datasheet for design work.
Property
Typical Value
Test Method
Dielectric Constant (Dk)
2.98 @ 10 GHz
IPC-TM-650 2.5.5.5
Dissipation Factor (Df)
0.0025 @ 10 GHz
IPC-TM-650 2.5.5.5
CTE X-axis
~10 ppm/°C
IPC-TM-650 2.4.41
CTE Y-axis
~12 ppm/°C
IPC-TM-650 2.4.41
CTE Z-axis
~34 ppm/°C
IPC-TM-650 2.4.41
Thermal Conductivity
~0.7 W/mK
ASTM C-177
Water Absorption
< 0.10%
IPC-TM-650 2.6.2
Peel Strength (1 oz Cu)
> 5.0 lb/in
IPC-TM-650 2.4.8
Flammability
UL 94 V-0
UL 94
A few things stand out in that table. The loss tangent of 0.0025 retains the low-loss character typical of PTFE composites. The water absorption below 0.10% is critical for outdoor and airborne applications where humidity exposure is unavoidable. And that combination of X/Y CTE values around 10–12 ppm/°C means the board tracks copper fairly closely in the plane, reducing stress at component attach points.
The CLTE Product Family Explained
Arlon didn’t stop at a single CLTE formulation. Over the years, they’ve developed a full family of variants targeting specific performance niches. Understanding the differences lets you pick the right grade for your application without overpaying for performance you don’t need.
CLTE (Standard)
The baseline product. Excellent for most RF/microwave applications where stable Dk and low loss are the primary requirements. Available with 1/2, 1, or 2 oz electrodeposited copper, with rolled copper foil as an option. Can also be supplied bonded to a heavy metal ground plane (aluminum, brass, or copper) for applications requiring heat sinking.
Applications include radar manifolds, phased array antennas, microwave feed networks, PAs, LNAs, LNBs, and satellite electronics. It has excellent temperature stability (DK remains unchanged with temperature and CTE is also very small). It can be made into 64 layers at most on global communication satellites.
CLTE-XT (Extended Performance)
CLTE-XT has the lowest loss, lowest thermal expansion, highest phase stability, and lowest moisture absorption of any product in its class. This is the grade you reach for when the standard CLTE isn’t tight enough.
CLTE-XT is a micro-dispersed ceramic PTFE composite utilizing a woven fiberglass reinforcement to provide the highest degree of stability, critical in multi-layer designs. Key differentiators include a loss tangent down to 0.0012 — approximately half that of standard CLTE — and tighter tolerances on both dielectric constant and thickness.
Property
CLTE
CLTE-XT
Dielectric Constant
2.98
~2.94–3.00
Loss Tangent (Df)
~0.0025
~0.0012
Phase Stability vs. Temp
Good
Excellent
Moisture Absorption
< 0.10%
Lower
Dk/Df Tolerance
Standard
Tightest in class
Target Applications
General RF/microwave
Defense, space, phase-sensitive
CLTE-XT is aimed squarely at defense microwave and RF applications, phased array radar, CNI (communication, navigation and identification) systems, SIGINT, satellite, and any application where phase errors from material drift translate directly into system performance degradation.
CLTE-LC (Low Cost)
Arlon’s CLTE-LC is a ceramic-filled, woven fiberglass reinforced PTFE composite engineered to produce a dimensionally and electrically stable, low water absorption laminate with a nominal dielectric constant of 2.94. It is designed to offer all of the same properties and functionality as Arlon’s CLTE, but, in most cases, at a reduced cost.
CLTE-LC is engineered to minimize the change in Er caused by the second order phase transition of the molecular structure of PTFE at 19°C. This temperature stability simplifies circuit design and optimizes circuit performance in many microwave applications, such as phased array antennas.
If your application doesn’t require the full performance envelope of standard CLTE or CLTE-XT, CLTE-LC is worth evaluating. You get most of the same dimensional and electrical stability at a lower material cost.
CLTE-P (Bonding Ply / Prepreg)
CLTE-P is the prepreg/bonding system designed specifically for multilayer assemblies using CLTE series laminates. The Prepreg material consists of woven fiberglass fabric coated with a proprietary resin formulation that is matched in DK to the CLTE-XT and CLTE laminates. As received, the thickness of pre-preg is approximately 0.0032″. After lamination, the thickness is compressed to approximately 0.0024″.
This Dk-matching is crucial. If your bonding ply has a different dielectric constant than your core laminate, you’ll get layer-to-layer Dk variation that complicates impedance control in buried microstrip and stripline structures. Using CLTE-P eliminates that variable entirely.
CLTE-AT
CLTE-AT is another variant in the family. The “AT” designation relates to its dielectric constant and temperature stability characteristics. It uses the same CLTE-P prepreg system for multilayer construction and is compatible with standard PTFE board fabrication processes.
How Arlon CLTE Laminate Compares to Competing Substrates
One of the most common questions from engineers evaluating CLTE is how it stacks up against Rogers equivalents and other PTFE/ceramic composites.
Material
Manufacturer
Dk
Df
Z-CTE (ppm/°C)
Notable Strength
Arlon CLTE
Arlon
2.98
0.0025
~34
Dimensional stability, processability
Arlon CLTE-XT
Arlon
~2.94–3.00
0.0012
Lower than CLTE
Phase stability, lowest loss in class
Rogers RO3003
Rogers
3.00
0.0013
17
Ultra-low loss, tightest CTE
Taconic TLY-5
Taconic
2.17
0.0009
~250
Very low Dk, low loss
Arlon TC350
Arlon
3.50
0.0020
~17
Best thermal conductivity
FR-4 (typical)
Various
~4.3–4.8
~0.020
~50–70
Cost, availability
For most applications up to 40 GHz, Arlon microwave materials perform comparably to Rogers at potentially lower cost. That’s a practical observation most engineers working with production volumes will appreciate. The performance gap between CLTE and Rogers RO3003 is meaningful in the most demanding phase-sensitive applications, but for a significant portion of radar and antenna work, CLTE delivers what you actually need.
The TC350 comparison is interesting for power-dense designs. TC350, a ceramic-filled PTFE and woven fiberglass laminate, is notable for its excellent thermal conductivity (1.0 W/mK), which is considered best-in-class, and helps in effective heat dissipation and management. If your amplifier board is hitting thermal limits, TC350 might be a better pick than CLTE. But if phase stability and dimensional consistency across temperature are the driving requirements, CLTE and CLTE-XT remain the go-to choices.
Applications Where Arlon CLTE Laminate Truly Excels
Phased Array Radar Systems
Phased array antennas are probably the single most demanding application for substrate stability. The entire beam-steering principle depends on tightly controlled phase relationships between antenna elements. If the substrate shifts Dk with temperature, your phase relationships drift — and your beam goes where it shouldn’t. CLTE-XT’s phase stability across temperature is specifically engineered for this problem.
Satellite and Space Electronics
CLTE can be made into 64 layers at most on global communication satellites. High layer counts in space electronics demand extraordinary dimensional registration precision across every lamination step. There’s no room for material movement, and the thermal cycling environment in orbit — from cryogenic shadow temperatures to direct sun exposure — is more extreme than almost any ground-based application.
Military Communications and CNI Systems
Defense CNI (communication, navigation and identification) systems operate in environments that would destroy most commercial PCB materials. Arlon CLTE’s qualification history with military programs makes it a known quantity in defense procurement, which matters as much as the electrical performance in these programs.
Base Station Antennas and Power Amplifier Boards
Arlon microwave materials deliver the electrical performance needed in frequency-dependent circuit applications, including base station antennas, phased array radars, power amplifier boards, and communications systems. Commercial telecom is a high-volume market for CLTE, particularly as 5G infrastructure pushes operating frequencies into mmWave bands where substrate loss and dimensional stability become critical.
Microwave Feed Networks and Combiners
Feed networks for large antenna arrays are another sweet spot for CLTE. These are essentially precision microwave structures where impedance uniformity across dozens or hundreds of paths determines the antenna’s radiation pattern quality. Tight Dk tolerance and excellent thickness control make CLTE a reliable choice for these designs.
Fabricating Arlon CLTE Laminate: What PCB Shops Need to Know
Processing PTFE-based materials is genuinely different from FR-4, and getting it wrong is expensive. Here are the critical fabrication considerations for Arlon CLTE laminate.
Drilling
Drill CLTE materials using highly polished carbide tools. It is not recommended to use repointed tools. Panels can be drilled in stacks based on total thickness. PTFE’s softness and the ceramic filler’s hardness create a challenging combination. The ceramic particles are abrasive — they’ll wear tools faster than glass/PTFE alone. Highly polished tools reduce PTFE smearing into the drill hole, which is important for clean hole walls and reliable plating adhesion.
Etching
Conventional ammoniacal or cupric etchants may be used to remove unwanted copper. No exotic chemistry needed here — standard copper etchants work fine. The PTFE substrate is chemically inert to typical PCB process chemicals, which is actually one of the processing advantages over some competing materials.
Multilayer Bonding with CLTE-P
Multilayer CLTE assembly requires attention to temperature control. CLTE-P requires a lamination temperature of 565°F/296°C to allow sufficient flow of resin. It is not recommended for bonding layers involving more than ½ ounce copper. The high lamination temperature means peripheral materials — press padding, separator foils — must be rated for these temperatures. Standard FR-4 press setups often need modification.
Heat up and cool down rates matter significantly with CLTE-P because it’s thermoplastic in nature. Rushed cooling can introduce dimensional stress into the laminated assembly. Pressure must be maintained throughout both the heating and cooling cycles.
Pre-Bake Before Soldering
Bake CLTE boards for one or two hours at 225–250°F (110°C–120°C) prior to solder leveling. Any residual moisture absorbed during storage or processing needs to be driven out before exposing the board to solder temperatures. CLTE’s low moisture absorption (<0.10%) means this is less critical than with FR-4, but it’s still good practice, especially for boards that will go into hot air solder leveling (HASL).
Surface Treatment and Copper Adhesion
Adhesion to the copper surface can be improved with an aggressive (i.e. ammonium persulfate) micro-etch prior to bonding. Black or Brown Oxide processes are not recommended for CLTE multilayer bonding due to the high temperatures reached during lamination — these oxide processes can degrade at CLTE-P’s 288–300°C bonding temperatures.
Storage
Store the material flat in a cool dry area away from direct sunlight, avoiding material contamination. Keep bonding material in its original package after opening. PTFE materials can deform under their own weight if stored vertically in warm conditions. Keep panels horizontal, cool, and dry.
Understanding Dk Stability: The PTFE Phase Transition Problem
One detail that’s easy to overlook in CLTE’s design story is the management of PTFE’s inherent phase transition at around 19°C. Pure PTFE undergoes a crystalline phase transition at this temperature that causes a slight, abrupt change in its dielectric constant. In a temperature-swept environment, this shows up as a discontinuity in the Dk vs. temperature curve — which translates directly into a phase step in your RF circuit.
CLTE-LC is engineered to minimize the change in Er caused by the second order phase transition of the molecular structure of PTFE at 19°C. This temperature stability simplifies circuit design and optimizes circuit performance in many microwave applications, such as phased array antennas. This same engineering principle applies throughout the CLTE family — the ceramic filler essentially stabilizes the PTFE matrix, suppressing the phase transition’s effect on electrical properties.
For engineers designing systems that operate across this temperature range (outdoor ground-based radar, airborne systems flying between altitudes), this suppression of the 19°C anomaly is a real, measurable benefit that pure PTFE laminates simply don’t provide.
Arlon CLTE Laminate vs. FR-4: When the Upgrade Justifies the Cost
The cost premium for CLTE over FR-4 is real — typically several times higher per panel — and it’s a legitimate question to ask whether you actually need it. Here’s a straightforward framework:
You probably need CLTE (or similar) if:
Operating frequency is above 1–2 GHz and signal loss matters
The design requires stable impedance across a temperature range wider than ±20°C
Plated through-holes will experience more than a few hundred thermal cycles
Layer count exceeds 8–10 layers with tight registration requirements
Phase matching across multiple signal paths is a performance requirement
FR-4 is likely adequate if:
Operating below 500 MHz with loose loss budget
Single or low layer count without demanding CTE requirements
Cost is the primary driver and the application is non-critical
No thermal cycling environment in service
FR-4 works fine for most consumer electronics operating below a few hundred MHz. But push it into the GHz range, subject it to repeated thermal cycling, or try to maintain tight impedance tolerances, and you’ll quickly see its limitations.
Resources for Engineers Working with Arlon CLTE Laminate
The following resources are directly useful when specifying or fabricating with Arlon CLTE laminate:
Resource
Description
Where to Find
Arlon CLTE Datasheet
Official typical properties, processing guidelines
Available from Arlon Technical Service or authorized distributors
PCBSync Arlon PCB Guide
Comprehensive overview of the full Arlon PCB material portfolio
pcbsync.com
For material samples and quick-turn prototyping, Arlon provides fast sample and quick-turn prototyping services to help designers and fabricators evaluate new materials, typically delivering material samples in 1–2 days.
Contact Arlon Technical Service directly at substrates@arlonmed.com for specific process questions, custom panel sizes, or copper weight options not listed in standard datasheets.
Frequently Asked Questions About Arlon CLTE Laminate
Q1: What does “CLTE” actually stand for?
CLTE stands for Controlled Linear Thermal Expansion. The name directly communicates the core design objective: a PTFE/ceramic composite substrate whose thermal expansion is managed and controlled — particularly in the Z-axis — to match copper more closely than conventional PTFE laminates. This controlled expansion is what makes CLTE suitable for high-reliability multilayer PCBs in thermally demanding environments.
Q2: How do I choose between CLTE, CLTE-XT, and CLTE-LC?
Think of it as a performance/cost spectrum. CLTE-XT is the highest performer: tightest tolerances, lowest loss tangent (~0.0012), best phase stability — use this for defense, space, and phase-critical applications where no compromise is acceptable. CLTE (standard) handles the majority of RF/microwave applications: radar, satellite, telecom base station, antenna feed networks. CLTE-LC offers all the same properties and functionality as Arlon’s CLTE but at reduced cost in most cases — the right choice when budget matters and you don’t need the full CLTE-XT performance envelope. If uncertain, start with standard CLTE — it covers a broad range of demanding applications without the cost premium of the XT.
Q3: Can Arlon CLTE laminate be processed on standard FR-4 PCB equipment?
Mostly yes, with important modifications. CLTE materials used in stripline or microstrip applications can be processed using conventional PTFE board fabrication processes and techniques. CLTE can be processed using typical FR-4 process parameters with few in-line changes. The main differences are drilling (use fresh, polished carbide tools; avoid re-pointed bits due to ceramic filler wear), multilayer bonding (CLTE-P requires 288–300°C lamination — above standard FR-4 press temperatures), and pre-bake before HASL. Shops that already run Rogers PTFE materials will find CLTE very familiar.
Q4: What copper foil options are available for Arlon CLTE laminate?
CLTE laminates are supplied with 1/2, 1 or 2 ounce electrodeposited copper on both sides. Other copper weights and rolled copper foil are available. Rolled copper foil (also called wrought copper) is worth considering for the highest-frequency applications because its smoother surface reduces skin-effect-related insertion loss at microwave frequencies. For most applications, standard electrodeposited copper is adequate.
Q5: How does Arlon CLTE laminate perform in terms of moisture and environmental stability?
Extremely well. Water absorption below 0.10% is one of CLTE’s headline properties, and it translates directly into stable electrical performance in outdoor, airborne, and marine environments. Moisture uptake in PCB substrates causes two problems: mechanical swelling (which disturbs dimensional tolerances and layer registration) and dielectric constant shift (because water has a Dk of ~80, even small amounts absorbed into the substrate raise effective Dk noticeably). CLTE’s combination of PTFE’s inherent hydrophobicity and the ceramic filler essentially eliminates this problem for practical purposes.
Final Thoughts from the Bench
Arlon CLTE laminate occupies a well-defined and important position in the high-reliability PCB materials landscape. It’s not the cheapest substrate, and it’s not always the lowest-loss option available — but it consistently delivers a combination of dimensional stability, Dk thermal stability, low water absorption, and processability that few competing materials match across the full range of demanding RF and defense applications.
The CLTE family’s depth — from the standard grade through CLTE-XT for the most demanding phase-sensitive defense work, down to CLTE-LC for cost-conscious designs that still need real performance — means there’s a CLTE variant for most situations where FR-4 simply isn’t good enough.
For engineers working on phased array radar, satellite feed networks, military communications, or any multilayer microwave design where the board needs to survive real-world temperature extremes without changing its electrical character, Arlon CLTE laminate deserves a serious look. The 60-cycle plated via failure mode that haunts FR-4 at 60+ thermal cycles simply doesn’t apply here — and in the end, that’s the most important reliability story CLTE tells.
For a broader look at the full Arlon material portfolio beyond CLTE — including polyimide series for extreme temperature applications and the TC350 for thermal management — visit the complete Arlon PCB materials guide.
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.