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.
MIL-HDBK-263: ESD Control Handbook & Implementation Guide
When MIL-STD-1686 tells you what ESD control requirements to meet, MIL-HDBK-263 tells you how to actually meet them. This handbook is the practical companion to military ESD standards, providing the technical background, implementation guidance, and design considerations that engineers need to build effective ESD protection into their programs and products.
I’ve referenced MIL-HDBK-263 countless times when designing ESD-protected workstations, developing handling procedures, and troubleshooting ESD-related failures. While it’s officially a handbook rather than a mandatory standard, the information it contains is invaluable for anyone serious about protecting sensitive electronics from electrostatic discharge.
What Is MIL-HDBK-263?
MIL-HDBK-263 is the U.S. Department of Defense handbook titled “Electrostatic Discharge Control Handbook for Protection of Electrical and Electronic Parts, Assemblies, and Equipment.” The handbook provides comprehensive technical guidance for understanding ESD phenomena, implementing control programs, designing ESD-protected facilities, and integrating ESD protection into electronic designs.
The current version, MIL-HDBK-263B, serves as a companion document to MIL-STD-1686 (the mandatory ESD control program standard). While MIL-STD-1686 establishes requirements, MIL-HDBK-263 explains the science behind those requirements and provides practical implementation guidance.
Purpose of MIL-HDBK-263
Function
Description
Technical background
Explains ESD physics and damage mechanisms
Implementation guidance
How to meet MIL-STD-1686 requirements
Design information
Facility and circuit-level ESD protection
Best practices
Industry-proven methods and techniques
Reference data
Component sensitivities, material properties
Relationship to Other ESD Documents
Document
Role
Relationship to MIL-HDBK-263
MIL-STD-1686
Mandatory requirements
MIL-HDBK-263 provides implementation guidance
ANSI/ESD S20.20
Commercial standard
Similar scope, MIL-HDBK-263 is more detailed
ESD TR53
Test methods
MIL-HDBK-263 references for verification
MIL-HDBK-263
Implementation guidance
Primary handbook
MIL-HDBK-263 ESD Fundamentals
The handbook provides essential background on electrostatic phenomena that every engineer handling sensitive electronics should understand.
How Static Electricity Is Generated
Generation Mechanism
Description
Common Sources
Triboelectric charging
Contact and separation of materials
Walking, material handling, tape removal
Induction
Charge redistribution from nearby field
Approaching charged objects
Conduction
Direct charge transfer
Touching charged surfaces
Corona discharge
Ionization from high fields
High-voltage equipment
Triboelectric Series
MIL-HDBK-263 includes the triboelectric series showing which materials tend to charge positive or negative when contacted:
Material
Charge Tendency
Human hands
Strong positive
Glass
Positive
Nylon
Positive
Wool
Positive
Paper
Slightly positive
Cotton
Near neutral
Steel
Near neutral
Wood
Slightly negative
Rubber
Negative
PVC
Strong negative
Teflon
Strong negative
Silicone
Strong negative
Materials farther apart on the series generate more charge when contacted. This explains why handling electronics while wearing synthetic clothing creates significant ESD risk.
Charge Generation Examples
Activity
Typical Voltage Generated
Walking across carpet
1,500 – 35,000V
Walking across vinyl floor
250 – 12,000V
Worker at bench
700 – 6,000V
Picking up bag from bench
1,200 – 20,000V
Removing tape from PCB
5,000 – 20,000V
Foam cushion (sitting/rising)
1,800 – 18,000V
Note that humidity significantly affects these values—low humidity (10-20% RH) produces the higher voltages, while higher humidity (65-90% RH) produces the lower values.
ESD Damage Mechanisms
Mechanism
Description
Result
Oxide punch-through
Gate oxide breakdown
Permanent short
Junction damage
PN junction degradation
Leakage increase
Metallization melt
Conductor vaporization
Open circuits
Contact spiking
Metal migration through junction
Shorts, leakage
Latent defect
Partial damage weakening device
Delayed failure
MIL-HDBK-263 ESD Models and Testing
The handbook explains the ESD models used to characterize component sensitivity and test ESD protection.
Human Body Model (HBM)
The HBM simulates a person discharging through a device:
Parameter
HBM Specification
Capacitance
100 pF
Resistance
1500 ohms
Rise time
2-10 ns
Decay time
~150 ns
Peak current (2kV)
~1.33 A
Machine Model (MM)
The MM simulates discharge from equipment or tools:
Parameter
MM Specification
Capacitance
200 pF
Resistance
~0 ohms (low)
Rise time
<1 ns
Peak current (200V)
~3.5 A
Charged Device Model (CDM)
The CDM simulates a charged device discharging to ground:
Parameter
CDM Specification
Capacitance
Device-dependent
Resistance
Very low
Rise time
<400 ps
Duration
<2 ns
Peak current
Very high (>10A possible)
CDM events are particularly damaging because of their extremely fast rise times and high peak currents. Modern ICs with thin gate oxides are increasingly susceptible to CDM damage.
Component Sensitivity Classifications
HBM Class
Voltage Range
Handling Requirements
Class 0
<250V
Maximum control, continuous monitoring
Class 1A
250V – <500V
Enhanced controls
Class 1B
500V – <1000V
Standard military controls
Class 1C
1000V – <2000V
Standard controls
Class 2
2000V – <4000V
Basic controls
Class 3
≥4000V
Minimal controls needed
MIL-HDBK-263 Facility Design Guidance
The handbook provides detailed guidance for designing ESD-protected areas.
EPA Design Elements
Element
Purpose
MIL-HDBK-263 Guidance
Flooring
Personnel grounding
Static dissipative, <10⁹ ohms to ground
Work surfaces
Safe handling area
Static dissipative or conductive
Grounding
Common reference
Single-point ground system
Ionization
Neutralize insulators
Where grounding isn’t possible
Humidity
Reduce charge generation
40-60% RH optimal
Air flow
Minimize particle charging
Control velocity and filtration
Grounding System Design
Component
Requirement
Purpose
Equipment ground
<1 ohm to building ground
Safety and ESD reference
Common point ground
<25 ohms to equipment ground
ESD reference point
Work surface ground
<10⁹ ohms to common point
Controlled dissipation
Personnel ground
<35 megohms to common point
Safe personnel discharge
Floor ground
<10⁹ ohms to common point
Mobile worker grounding
Workstation Configuration
MIL-HDBK-263 recommends specific workstation configurations:
Component
Specification
Verification
Work surface mat
10⁶ – 10⁹ ohms surface resistance
Weekly measurement
Wrist strap
750K – 35M ohms total path
Each use or continuous
Common point ground
Connection to building ground
Annual verification
Tool grounding
All metal tools grounded
Periodic check
Ionizer (if used)
Balanced within ±50V
Per manufacturer spec
MIL-HDBK-263 Handling Procedures
The handbook provides comprehensive guidance for handling ESDS items throughout their lifecycle.
Receiving and Inspection
Step
Procedure
Purpose
Verify packaging
Check for ESD labels, damage
Ensure protection integrity
Open in EPA
Remove from outer packaging in EPA only
Prevent exposure
Inspect contents
Verify inner ESD packaging
Confirm protection
Document
Record lot, date, condition
Traceability
Store properly
ESD-protective containers
Continued protection
Assembly and Manufacturing
Requirement
Implementation
Personnel grounding
Verified before each operation
Work surface grounding
Continuous connection
Tool grounding
Soldering irons, tweezers, etc.
Component handling
Minimize contact with leads
Board handling
Touch edges only, use fixtures
Ionization
For operations involving insulators
Testing and Inspection
Consideration
Guidance
Test equipment
Grounded, ESD-safe probes
Fixtures
Static dissipative materials
Handler/prober
Grounded contact points
Visual inspection
Non-charging lighting, surfaces
Automated handling
Ionization at charge-generating points
Storage Requirements
Storage Type
Requirements
Short-term (in EPA)
Covered, dissipative containers
Long-term
Shielding bags, humidity control
Warehouse
Climate controlled, ESD packaging
Field storage
Original or equivalent packaging
MIL-HDBK-263 Circuit Design for ESD Protection
Beyond handling procedures, the handbook addresses designing ESD protection into circuits themselves.
Input Protection Strategies
Protection Method
Application
Considerations
Diode clamps
Input pins
Forward drop, capacitance
Zener diodes
Voltage limiting
Clamping voltage selection
TVS diodes
Transient suppression
Response time, capacitance
Resistor limiting
Current reduction
Signal impact
Spark gaps
High-energy events
Breakdown voltage
PCB Layout for ESD Protection
Technique
Purpose
Implementation
Guard rings
Prevent surface arcing
Ground ring around sensitive nodes
Spacing
Voltage standoff
Minimum creepage distances
Routing
Minimize coupling
Keep sensitive traces short
Ground planes
Provide discharge path
Solid planes under I/O areas
Protection placement
Minimize protected area
Clamps near connectors
Connector and I/O Protection
Guideline
Rationale
Protect all external connections
Entry points for ESD events
Place protection close to connector
Minimize protected trace length
Use low-capacitance devices
Preserve signal integrity
Consider surge requirements
ESD + other transients
Test to appropriate levels
Verify protection effectiveness
MIL-HDBK-263 Training Guidance
The handbook emphasizes training as fundamental to ESD control effectiveness.
Training Program Elements
Element
Content
Basic awareness
What ESD is, why it matters
Damage mechanisms
How ESD damages components
Program requirements
Facility-specific procedures
Hands-on practice
Equipment use, proper techniques
Verification methods
Self-checking, compliance
Refresher training
Periodic updates and reinforcement
Training Effectiveness Indicators
Indicator
Target
Measurement
Audit findings
Decreasing trend
Audit results
ESD-related rejects
Declining rate
Quality data
Training compliance
100% current
Training records
Employee awareness
High knowledge
Assessments
MIL-HDBK-263 Verification and Measurement
The handbook provides guidance on verifying ESD control effectiveness.
Measurement Requirements
Item
Measurement
Acceptable Range
Work surface resistance
Point-to-point, point-to-ground
10⁶ – 10⁹ ohms
Floor resistance
Point-to-point, point-to-ground
<10⁹ ohms
Wrist strap resistance
Strap plus cord
750K – 35M ohms
Heel strap resistance
Through footwear/floor
<35M ohms
Garment resistance
Point-to-point
<10¹¹ ohms
Ionizer balance
Offset voltage
±50V or better
Ionizer discharge time
1000V to 100V decay
<20 seconds typical
Test Equipment Requirements
Equipment
Purpose
Calibration
Megohmmeter
Resistance measurements
Annual minimum
Wrist strap tester
Personnel grounding
Annual minimum
Charged plate monitor
Ionizer verification
Annual minimum
Surface resistivity meter
Material qualification
Annual minimum
Electrostatic fieldmeter
Voltage measurement
Annual minimum
Verification Schedule Recommendations
Item
Frequency
Rationale
Wrist straps
Each use or continuous
High failure rate, critical control
Work surfaces
Weekly to monthly
Contamination effects
Flooring
Monthly to quarterly
Slower degradation
Ionizers
Per manufacturer
Performance drift
Grounding system
Annually
Stable if properly installed
Packaging materials
Incoming
Verify supplier compliance
MIL-HDBK-263 Packaging Guidance
The handbook provides extensive guidance on ESD-protective packaging.
What is the difference between MIL-HDBK-263 and MIL-STD-1686?
MIL-STD-1686 is the mandatory standard that establishes ESD control program requirements for military contracts—it tells you what you must do. MIL-HDBK-263 is a non-mandatory handbook that provides technical background, implementation guidance, and best practices—it tells you how to do it and why. When a military contract requires ESD control, MIL-STD-1686 compliance is mandatory. MIL-HDBK-263 supports that compliance by providing the detailed technical information needed to implement an effective program. Think of MIL-STD-1686 as the “what” and MIL-HDBK-263 as the “how.” Engineers designing ESD programs should use both documents together.
How does humidity affect ESD risk according to MIL-HDBK-263?
MIL-HDBK-263 extensively discusses humidity’s role in ESD control. Higher humidity (above 40-50% RH) reduces charge generation because moisture on surfaces provides a conductive path that allows charges to dissipate. However, the handbook cautions against relying solely on humidity for ESD control because charges can still generate and damage components even at high humidity, humidity varies with weather and HVAC systems creating inconsistent protection, sensitive components can be damaged by charges that develop even in humid conditions, and many production environments cannot maintain high humidity. The handbook recommends maintaining 40-60% RH as part of a comprehensive ESD program, but emphasizes that humidity control supplements rather than replaces other controls like grounding, ionization, and proper handling procedures.
What guidance does MIL-HDBK-263 provide for automated handling equipment?
MIL-HDBK-263 addresses automated equipment ESD risks extensively. Key guidance includes grounding all conductive parts of equipment that contact devices, using ionization at points where devices separate from surfaces (which generates CDM events), selecting materials carefully for handlers, chutes, and contact surfaces, controlling air flow velocity to minimize triboelectric charging, verifying equipment grounding and ionizer function regularly, and considering CDM protection since automated equipment often causes CDM events. The handbook emphasizes that automated equipment can create more severe ESD events than manual handling because of the rapid movement and separation of devices from surfaces. Equipment qualification should include ESD testing to verify that handling doesn’t generate damaging discharges.
How should ESD-sensitive items be marked according to MIL-HDBK-263?
MIL-HDBK-263 provides guidance on ESD sensitivity marking to ensure proper handling throughout the supply chain. The standard ESD susceptibility symbol (the hand with the line through it and triangle) should appear on packages containing ESDS items, containers and bags used for storage, documents and paperwork accompanying shipments, and EPA entrances and workstations. Marking should include the sensitivity classification when practical so handlers understand the protection level required. The handbook also addresses situations where component size prevents direct marking—in these cases, the immediate packaging must be marked. Clear, consistent marking throughout the supply chain ensures that everyone handling the items understands ESD precautions are required.
Does MIL-HDBK-263 address ESD protection in field maintenance environments?
Yes, MIL-HDBK-263 includes guidance for field and depot maintenance environments where permanent EPA infrastructure may not be available. Key recommendations include using portable ESD control kits containing work surface mats, wrist straps, grounding cords, and portable ionizers, establishing temporary EPAs with defined boundaries and grounding points, training field personnel on ESD awareness and portable equipment use, maintaining ESD-protective packaging until items reach the controlled work area, verifying grounding effectiveness before beginning work, and using field-appropriate test equipment to verify ESD controls. The handbook acknowledges that field conditions can’t match permanent facility controls, so emphasis is placed on personnel training, portable equipment, and maintaining packaging protection as long as possible.
Practical Application of MIL-HDBK-263
The real value of MIL-HDBK-263 comes from applying its guidance to your specific situation:
Use it for program development. When building an ESD control program, the handbook provides the technical foundation for understanding why each control element matters.
Reference it for facility design. The grounding system design, workstation configuration, and material selection guidance helps create effective EPAs.
Apply it to troubleshooting. When ESD-related failures occur, the handbook’s explanation of damage mechanisms helps identify root causes.
Support training development. The technical background sections provide content for training programs that go beyond “follow the rules.”
Guide design decisions. Circuit designers benefit from the protection strategy and layout guidance.
MIL-HDBK-263 bridges the gap between ESD standards requirements and practical implementation. For engineers responsible for protecting sensitive military electronics, it’s an essential reference that transforms mandatory requirements into effective protection programs.
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.