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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-4203 Explained: Complete Guide to Coverlay and Bonding Materials for Flex PCBs
A flex circuit failure during thermal cycling traced back to coverlay delamination. The adhesive thickness was insufficient to encapsulate the copper traces, leaving voids that allowed moisture ingress. The specification simply called out “polyimide coverlay” without any reference to adhesive thickness, adhesive type, or an actual material standard. This ambiguity cost weeks of debugging and a complete production restart.
IPC-4203 prevents these problems by establishing standardized specifications for coverlay and bonding materials used in flexible printed circuits. This standard covers adhesive-coated dielectric films for outer layer protection (coverlay) and adhesive bonding films used to laminate inner layers together (bondply). Understanding IPC-4203 ensures proper material specification and reliable flex circuit performance.
This guide explains what IPC-4203 covers, the differences between coverlay and flexible solder mask, how to select the right materials, and how to specify them correctly.
What Is IPC-4203? Understanding the Coverlay and Bondply Standard
IPC-4203, officially titled “Cover and Bonding Material for Flexible Printed Circuitry,” establishes the classification system, qualification requirements, and quality conformance standards for adhesive-coated dielectric films used in flex circuit fabrication. The current version is IPC-4203B, released in March 2018 as a 38-page document.
The standard covers two primary material categories: coverlay films that protect outer circuit layers, and bondply films that bond inner layers together in multilayer constructions. Both material types consist of flexible dielectric films coated with adhesive on one or both sides.
Dielectric film with adhesive on one side for outer layer protection
Bondply
Dielectric film with adhesive on both sides for inner layer bonding
Adhesive bonding films
Unsupported adhesive films for lamination
Supported adhesive films
Carrier-backed adhesive films
IPC-4203 Coverlay vs Flexible Solder Mask
One of the most common questions in flex circuit design is when to use coverlay versus flexible solder mask. Both protect outer circuit layers, but they differ significantly in composition, capabilities, and design rules.
Material Composition Differences
Property
Coverlay (IPC-4203)
Flexible Solder Mask (IPC-SM-840)
Form
Solid film + adhesive
Liquid coating
Base material
Polyimide film
Epoxy-based with flex agent
Adhesive
Acrylic or epoxy
Not applicable
Application method
Laminated under heat/pressure
Screen printed or sprayed
Opening formation
Mechanically cut (drill, laser, punch)
Photo-imaged
Design Rule Comparison
Design Parameter
Coverlay
Flexible Solder Mask
Minimum dam width
10 mils (0.25 mm)
4 mils (0.1 mm)
Minimum opening size
0.6 mm typical
Much smaller possible
Feature resolution
Limited by mechanical cutting
High (photo-imaging)
Annular ring
Larger required
Standard
Fine-pitch capability
Limited
Good
When to Use Coverlay vs Solder Mask
Application
Recommended Material
Reason
Dynamic flex zones
Coverlay
Superior flex life and durability
Tight bend radius
Coverlay
Better mechanical properties
Fine-pitch SMT areas
Flexible solder mask
Better feature resolution
Rigidized component areas
Flexible solder mask
Finer design rules
EMI shield attachment
Coverlay
Adhesive bonds to shield material
ZIF connector fingers
Coverlay
Required for stiffener adhesion
Many rigid-flex designs use both materials: coverlay in flexible areas where bend reliability is critical, and flexible solder mask in rigidized component areas where fine-pitch SMT features require tighter design rules.
IPC-4203 Coverlay Material Types
Coverlay materials consist of a polyimide film layer bonded to an adhesive layer. The adhesive type and thickness significantly affect performance and processing.
Adhesive Types in IPC-4203
Adhesive Type
Properties
Best For
Acrylic
Flexible, reworkable, good peel strength
General-purpose flex, dynamic applications
Epoxy
Higher bond strength, more rigid
High-reliability, harsh environments
Modified acrylic
Enhanced temperature resistance
Lead-free reflow compatible
Common IPC-4203 Coverlay Constructions
Film Thickness
Adhesive Thickness
Total Thickness
Application
0.5 mil (12.5 µm)
0.5 mil (12.5 µm)
1.0 mil (25 µm)
Ultra-thin, tight bend
1.0 mil (25 µm)
1.0 mil (25 µm)
2.0 mil (50 µm)
Standard (most common)
1.0 mil (25 µm)
2.0 mil (50 µm)
3.0 mil (75 µm)
Heavy copper (2 oz)
2.0 mil (50 µm)
1.0 mil (25 µm)
3.0 mil (75 µm)
Higher dielectric strength
The most common coverlay construction is 1 mil polyimide film with 1 mil adhesive (1:1 ratio), providing a good balance of flexibility, protection, and cost.
IPC-4203 Bondply Materials for Multilayer Flex
Bondply materials bond multiple flex layers together in multilayer flexible and rigid-flex constructions. These materials have adhesive on both sides of a dielectric carrier film.
Bondply Construction
Component
Description
Dielectric film
Polyimide carrier (typically 0.5-1.0 mil)
Adhesive (top)
B-staged acrylic or epoxy
Adhesive (bottom)
B-staged acrylic or epoxy
Function
Bonds conductive layers from different cores
Bondply vs Prepreg
Property
Bondply (IPC-4203)
Prepreg (IPC-4101)
Flexibility
High
Low (glass reinforced)
Use in flex areas
Yes
No
Use in rigid areas
Limited
Yes
Material
Polyimide + adhesive
Glass + resin
Sheet Adhesive (Unsupported)
IPC-4203 also covers unsupported adhesive films—pure adhesive without a dielectric carrier. These are used for applications like stiffener attachment where a dielectric layer is not needed.
Thickness
Application
0.5 mil (12.5 µm)
Thin bonding applications
1.0 mil (25 µm)
Standard stiffener attachment
2.0 mil (50 µm)
Heavy copper encapsulation
3.0 mil (75 µm)
Gap filling, uneven surfaces
IPC-4203 Slash Sheet System: How to Specify Materials
Like other IPC material standards, IPC-4203 uses a slash sheet system to identify specific material types. Each slash sheet defines requirements for a particular combination of dielectric and adhesive materials.
Understanding IPC-4203 Slash Sheet Designations
The nonspecific designation format for design drawings:
IPC-4203/S
Where S is the specification sheet number.
Slash Sheet
Material Type
IPC-4203/1
Polyimide coverlay with acrylic adhesive
IPC-4203/18
Unsupported acrylic adhesive bonding film
IPC-4203/26
PTFE/ceramic coverlay with adhesive (high-frequency)
IPC-4203 Designation Example
A typical nonspecific designation on a master drawing:
IPC-4203/1
This indicates polyimide coverlay with acrylic adhesive. The fabricator then selects a specific material (such as DuPont Pyralux FR or Pyralux LF) that conforms to this specification.
Specific Designation Format
For purchase orders and detailed fabrication specifications, IPC-4203 provides an extended designation format:
IPC-4203/S – C1E2M3/3
Parameter
Description
/S
Specification sheet number
C1
Dielectric type designation
E2
Dielectric thickness code
M3
Adhesive type designation
/3
Adhesive thickness code
Commercial Materials Mapped to IPC-4203
Commercial Product
IPC-4203 Slash Sheet
Description
DuPont Pyralux FR Coverlay
IPC-4203/1
Flame retardant polyimide coverlay
DuPont Pyralux LF Coverlay
IPC-4203/1
Low-flow polyimide coverlay
DuPont Pyralux LF Sheet Adhesive
IPC-4203/18
Unsupported acrylic adhesive
IPC-4203 Coverlay Thickness Selection Guide
Selecting the correct coverlay thickness requires matching the adhesive thickness to copper weight and considering bend radius requirements.
Adhesive Thickness Rule
The fundamental rule for coverlay adhesive selection:
Minimum 1 mil (25 µm) of adhesive per 1 oz (35 µm) of copper
Finished Copper Weight
Minimum Adhesive Thickness
0.5 oz (17.5 µm)
0.5 mil (12.5 µm)
1.0 oz (35 µm)
1.0 mil (25 µm)
2.0 oz (70 µm)
2.0 mil (50 µm)
Insufficient adhesive results in incomplete encapsulation, voids, and potential delamination. Excessive adhesive causes squeeze-out into openings, creating solderability issues.
Bend Radius Considerations
Application
Coverlay Selection
Static bend (install once)
Standard 1 mil/1 mil
Dynamic flex (repeated bending)
Thinner film preferred
Tight bend radius (<1 mm)
0.5 mil/0.5 mil
Controlled impedance
Consider dielectric thickness impact
Post-Lamination Thickness
During lamination, adhesive flows to fill spaces between traces. The finished thickness is less than the sum of individual material thicknesses because adhesive is consumed during encapsulation. Account for this when calculating final stack-up thickness.
IPC-4203 Design Considerations for Coverlay Openings
Coverlay openings for pads and vias are created mechanically, which imposes design constraints different from photo-imaged solder mask.
Opening Formation Methods
Method
Application
Typical Feature Size
NC drilling
Round openings
>0.6 mm
Routing
Complex shapes
>0.8 mm
Laser cutting
Fine features
>0.3 mm
Punch and die
High volume
>0.6 mm
IPC-4203 Coverlay Design Rules
Parameter
Minimum Value
Notes
Minimum dam width
10 mils (0.25 mm)
Prevents web breakage
Minimum opening
0.6 mm
Depends on method
Annular ring
Larger than solder mask
Allows for squeeze-out
Overlap on traces
0.4 mm typical
Ensures encapsulation
Ganged Openings
For fine-pitch components where individual pad openings would violate minimum web requirements, multiple openings are combined into larger “ganged” openings.
Situation
Solution
Fine-pitch QFP/QFN
Gang all pads into single opening
Close-spaced vias
Combine into oval or slot opening
BGA arrays
Large rectangular opening
Adhesive Squeeze-Out
During lamination, some adhesive flows into openings. Design rules must account for this:
Consideration
Guideline
Pad size allowance
Add 0.1-0.15 mm to opening size
Isolated features
Not possible (would fall out after cutting)
Island features
Must be connected to main coverlay area
IPC-4203 vs IPC-4202 vs IPC-4204: Related Flex Standards
Understanding how IPC-4203 relates to other flexible circuit material standards ensures complete and correct material specification.
IPC Flexible Circuit Material Standards Comparison
Standard
Covers
Primary Use
IPC-4202
Base dielectrics
Unclad flexible films
IPC-4203
Coverlay and bondply
Cover films, adhesive bonding
IPC-4204
Metal-clad dielectrics
Copper-clad flex laminates
IPC-SM-840
Solder mask
Liquid photo-imageable coatings
When to Reference Each Standard
Design Element
Applicable Standard
Base film (unclad)
IPC-4202
Copper-clad laminate
IPC-4204
Outer layer protection (film)
IPC-4203
Outer layer protection (liquid)
IPC-SM-840
Inner layer bonding (flex areas)
IPC-4203
Inner layer bonding (rigid areas)
IPC-4101
Useful Resources for IPC-4203 Implementation
Official IPC Standards:
IPC-4203B Cover and Bonding Material for Flexible Printed Circuitry (shop.ipc.org)
IPC-2223 Sectional Design Standard for Flexible Printed Boards
IPC-6013 Qualification and Performance Specification for Flexible Printed Boards
IPC-SM-840 Qualification and Performance of Permanent Solder Mask
Material Manufacturer Resources:
DuPont Pyralux FR Coverlay Technical Data Sheet
DuPont Pyralux LF Coverlay Technical Data Sheet
DuPont Pyralux LF Sheet Adhesive Data Sheet
Panasonic FELIOS Coverlay Product Guide
ThinFlex Coverlay Materials Catalog
Related Test Methods:
IPC-TM-650 Test Methods Manual
IPC-TM-650 2.4.9 Peel Strength
IPC-TM-650 2.3.17.1 Adhesive Flow
Frequently Asked Questions About IPC-4203
What is the difference between coverlay and bondply in IPC-4203?
Coverlay and bondply serve different functions in flex circuit construction. Coverlay has adhesive on one side and is used to protect outer circuit layers—it is the flex circuit equivalent of solder mask. Bondply has adhesive on both sides and is used between inner layers to bond multiple flex cores together in multilayer constructions. Both materials are specified under IPC-4203, but they use different slash sheets. DuPont Pyralux FR Coverlay conforms to IPC-4203/1, while Pyralux LF Sheet Adhesive (used as bondply) conforms to IPC-4203/18.
How do I determine the correct coverlay adhesive thickness?
The fundamental rule is 1 mil (25 µm) of adhesive per 1 oz of copper. This ensures sufficient adhesive to completely encapsulate the copper traces without leaving voids. For 1 oz copper, use 1 mil adhesive minimum. For 2 oz copper, use 2 mil adhesive minimum. Insufficient adhesive leads to delamination and reliability problems; excessive adhesive causes squeeze-out into pad openings. The most common coverlay construction is 1 mil polyimide with 1 mil adhesive, suitable for circuits with 1 oz or lighter copper.
Can I use flexible solder mask instead of coverlay for all flex circuits?
No. Flexible solder mask works well for rigidized component areas where fine-pitch features require tight design rules, but coverlay is strongly preferred for flexible areas that will bend. Coverlay provides superior flex life, better mechanical protection, and higher dielectric strength. Additionally, some materials like EMI shields, polyimide stiffeners, and ZIF connector reinforcements require coverlay because they do not adhere properly to solder mask. Many designs use both: coverlay in bend areas and solder mask in component areas.
Why does coverlay have larger minimum dam widths than solder mask?
Coverlay openings are created mechanically (drilling, routing, laser cutting) rather than photo-imaging. This limits feature resolution and minimum web thickness. Thin webs between coverlay openings are easily damaged during processing, and insufficient adhesive in thin web areas may not create proper lamination bonds. The 10 mil (0.25 mm) minimum dam width ensures structural integrity and reliable adhesive bonding. Photo-imaged solder mask can achieve 4 mil dams because the liquid material is patterned in place without mechanical cutting.
How do I specify IPC-4203 coverlay on my drawing?
Use the nonspecific designation “IPC-4203/1” for standard polyimide coverlay with acrylic adhesive. Add notes specifying polyimide thickness, adhesive thickness, and any special requirements. For example: “Coverlay per IPC-4203/1, 1 mil polyimide, 1 mil adhesive.” Do not specify coverlay by brand name alone. The fabricator will select a material (Pyralux FR, Panasonic FELIOS, etc.) that meets the IPC-4203/1 requirements. For sheet adhesive used as bondply, specify IPC-4203/18 with the required adhesive thickness.
Applying IPC-4203 in Your Flex Circuit Designs
Proper coverlay and bondply specification is essential for flex circuit reliability. IPC-4203 provides the framework for clearly communicating material requirements, ensuring that protective films perform correctly throughout the product lifecycle.
For most flex circuits, polyimide coverlay per IPC-4203/1 with 1 mil film and 1 mil adhesive provides the best balance of protection, flexibility, and cost. Adjust adhesive thickness upward for heavier copper or downward for tighter bend requirements. Use flexible solder mask in rigidized areas where fine-pitch components require tighter design rules, but always use coverlay in dynamic flex zones.
Remember the key design rules: 10 mil minimum dam width, gang fine-pitch features into larger openings, and ensure sufficient overlap on all traces. Account for adhesive squeeze-out when sizing openings, and specify at least 1 mil of adhesive per ounce of copper to ensure complete encapsulation.
Understanding IPC-4203 means understanding the complete flex circuit material system. Combined with IPC-4202 for base dielectrics, IPC-4204 for copper-clad laminates, and IPC-2223 for design standards, these specifications create reliable flexible circuits for demanding applications.
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.