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.
What Is a PCB Laminate? Types, Properties & How to Choose — Complete PCB Laminate Guide
Every printed circuit board starts life as a sheet of laminate. It is the foundation that holds everything else together — the copper traces, the plated vias, the solder mask, the components. Yet laminate selection is one of those areas where a lot of engineers grab whatever their fabricator stocks by default and call it a day. That works fine until the board starts failing thermal cycling, dropping signal at 10 GHz, or delaminating during lead-free reflow.
This PCB laminate guide covers what laminates actually are, how they are built, which types are available, which properties actually matter for your application, and how to make a confident material selection decision before you spin a single board.
A PCB laminate is the base substrate material used in the construction of a printed circuit board. It is a composite sheet — typically layers of woven or non-woven reinforcement material (glass fiber being most common) impregnated with a resin system, then pressed together under heat and pressure until the resin cures into a rigid, solid panel. Copper foil is bonded to one or both sides during this process, giving you what the industry calls a copper-clad laminate (CCL).
The laminate serves three simultaneous functions: it provides mechanical support for all the components and copper features on the board, it acts as an electrical insulator preventing unintended current flow between layers, and it establishes the dielectric environment through which your signals propagate. Get the laminate wrong and you can undermine all three of those functions at once.
Laminate vs. Prepreg — What Is the Difference?
These two terms cause confusion constantly. Here is the short version: a core (also called a laminate) is a fully cured, rigid dielectric sheet with copper foil already bonded to both faces. Prepreg (short for pre-impregnated) is the same fiberglass-and-resin material, but in a partially cured, semi-rigid state. In a multilayer PCB stack-up, cores form the inner signal and plane layers, while prepregs fill the spaces between them and bond everything together in the final lamination press. Both are made from the same material families, and both Dk and Df values are specified separately for each.
How PCB Laminates Are Manufactured
The manufacturing process begins at the material supplier, not the PCB fabricator. Glass fabric is coated with liquid resin and passed through a treater oven at carefully controlled temperatures to achieve a specific degree of cure — this produces prepreg. Multiple sheets of prepreg are then stacked with copper foil on each side and pressed in a heated hydraulic press at temperatures typically between 170°C and 190°C and pressures of 200 to 400 psi for 60 to 90 minutes. The result is a fully cured, copper-clad laminate panel.
The resin content, glass weave style, number of plies, and cure cycle all directly influence the final electrical and mechanical properties. A laminate made with 65% resin content will have meaningfully different Dk and Df values from the same material family at 50% resin content. This is why resin content percentage matters and why stack-up planning cannot rely purely on datasheet nominal values.
Types of PCB Laminate Materials
The designation of a laminate comes primarily from its resin system. Here is a practical breakdown of the main families you will encounter, from the ubiquitous to the specialist.
FR-4 — The Industry Workhorse
FR-4 is a glass-reinforced epoxy laminate whose name tells you exactly what it is: Flame Retardant Grade 4. It is a composite of woven E-glass fabric impregnated with epoxy resin, typically brominated to achieve flame retardancy. It holds the dominant market position in PCB manufacturing for very good reasons — good strength-to-weight ratio, excellent electrical insulation, wide fabricator availability, standardized thicknesses, and a price point that makes every other material look expensive by comparison.
Standard FR-4 has a glass transition temperature (Tg) in the range of 130–140°C, a Dk of roughly 4.2–4.7 (frequency dependent), and a Df of approximately 0.015–0.022. For consumer electronics, industrial controls, power supplies, and anything not specifically involving multi-gigabit serial links or RF, it is entirely appropriate. The limitations only start to bite when you push into high frequencies, demand very tight impedance tolerances across temperature, or expose the board to repeated lead-free reflow cycles.
High-Tg FR-4 — The Lead-Free Era Upgrade
When the industry moved to lead-free soldering under RoHS, the reflow peak temperatures climbed from roughly 235°C (SnPb) to 260°C (SAC alloys). Standard Tg FR-4 at 130–140°C no longer had adequate margin. High-Tg FR-4 — using modified epoxy resin systems — delivers Tg values of 170–180°C and decomposition temperatures (Td) of 340°C or higher. It processes identically to standard FR-4 at the fabricator, costs modestly more, and is now essentially the default choice for anything involving lead-free assembly, multilayer boards, or automotive applications.
BT Epoxy (Bismaleimide Triazine)
BT epoxy laminates, often abbreviated as BT or BT/epoxy blends, are known for outstanding thermal and electrical properties combined with excellent moisture resistance. They maintain bond strength at high temperatures and exhibit excellent electromigration resistance, which is why they are the material of choice for IC packaging substrates, including the substrates under BGA packages. Tg values typically exceed 180°C. They are primarily used for multilayer PCBs in applications where dimensional stability and resistance to thermal degradation under harsh conditions are critical.
Polyimide — The Extreme Environment Specialist
Polyimide is where you go when FR-4 — even high-Tg FR-4 — is no longer sufficient. With Tg values exceeding 200°C and continuous operating temperature capability well above what any epoxy system can offer, polyimide is the laminate of choice for aerospace avionics, military electronics, downhole drilling equipment, and any application where the board may see sustained temperatures above 150°C. It also has superior chemical resistance and is the base film for flexible and rigid-flex PCBs, where its combination of thermal performance and flexibility is unmatched.
The trade-offs are real: polyimide is significantly more expensive than FR-4, has higher moisture absorption than some competing high-performance laminates, and requires more careful handling and processing. But for applications that genuinely need its thermal ceiling, there is no substitute.
PTFE Laminates — The RF and Microwave Standard
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), commonly known by the DuPont trade name Teflon, is essentially non-polar at the molecular level. That property translates directly into the lowest dissipation factor of any commercial laminate family — Df values as low as 0.0001 to 0.0020. For RF, microwave, and millimeter-wave designs, this makes PTFE the gold standard. Rogers RT/duroid series and Taconic TLX series are well-known pure PTFE laminate products used in satellite communications, radar, phased array antennas, and any application operating above roughly 10 GHz where FR-4 level losses are simply unacceptable.
The limitations of PTFE are on the mechanical and fabrication side. Pure PTFE has a high coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE), which creates concerns about plated through-hole reliability in thick multilayer boards. It also requires specific drilling parameters and plasma treatment of hole walls before plating. These are manageable, but they add fabrication complexity and cost.
Hydrocarbon Ceramic Laminates — The Practical RF Middle Ground
Rogers RO4000 series, and similar hydrocarbon-ceramic laminates from Isola, Ventec, and others, occupy the space between standard FR-4 and pure PTFE. They deliver RF-grade electrical performance — Df values around 0.003 to 0.004 — while processing with standard FR-4 fabrication techniques. No special drilling treatment, no high-temperature bonding films, standard multilayer lamination cycles. The RO4350B, with Dk of approximately 3.48 and Df of 0.0037 at 10 GHz, has become one of the most widely used materials in 5G infrastructure and automotive radar designs.
Arlon PCB laminates represent another important player in this space, with product lines spanning PTFE/ceramic and polyimide-based systems for military, aerospace, and high-frequency commercial applications, including Df values as low as 0.0006 in their specialty RF grades.
Metal-Core Laminates (MCPCB)
Metal-core PCBs use an aluminum or copper base layer as the substrate in place of the dielectric core. The thermal conductivity of aluminum metal-core laminates is typically 1–3 W/m·K, compared to 0.2–0.3 W/m·K for standard FR-4, making them the primary choice for high-power LED lighting, automotive lighting modules, and power converter applications where heat dissipation is the dominant engineering concern rather than signal integrity.
CEM-1 and CEM-3
Composite Epoxy Material grades 1 and 3 use a mix of woven glass fabric and cellulose paper (CEM-1) or a core of non-woven glass mat (CEM-3) impregnated with epoxy resin. CEM-3 is a popular and substantially cheaper alternative to FR-4 for single-sided and double-sided PCBs in cost-sensitive consumer applications. It does not offer the mechanical robustness or stability of FR-4, but it serves well for many low-density, cost-sensitive designs.
PCB Laminate Types at a Glance
Laminate Type
Tg (°C)
Dk @ 10 GHz
Df @ 10 GHz
Typical Application
Standard FR-4
130–140
4.2–4.7
0.015–0.022
Consumer electronics, general digital
High-Tg FR-4
170–180
4.0–4.5
0.012–0.018
Automotive, industrial, lead-free multilayer
BT Epoxy
>180
~3.9
~0.013
IC packaging substrates, BGA, multilayer
Polyimide
>200
~3.5
~0.010
Aerospace, military, flex/rigid-flex
Rogers RO4350B
>280 (thermoset)
~3.48
~0.0037
RF/microwave, 5G, automotive radar
Rogers RT/duroid 5880
—
~2.20
~0.0009
mmWave, satellite, phased arrays
Arlon PCB (specialty)
varies
2.4–10.2
0.0006–0.003
Mil/aero, microwave, phased array radar
Metal Core (MCPCB)
N/A
N/A
N/A
Power LEDs, high-power converters
CEM-3
~110–130
~4.5
~0.025
Low-cost consumer, single/double-sided
Critical PCB Laminate Properties Explained
Every laminate datasheet throws a wall of numbers at you. Here are the ones that actually drive design decisions.
Electrical Properties
Dielectric Constant (Dk / εr) determines how fast signals propagate through the substrate and directly controls the geometry needed to achieve a target characteristic impedance. Lower Dk means faster signal propagation and, for a given impedance target, narrower traces. Dk decreases with increasing frequency, and it varies with resin content and temperature — all important for accurate stack-up modeling.
Dissipation Factor (Df / tan δ) quantifies how much signal energy the dielectric converts to heat. It is the primary driver of dielectric attenuation loss, and it increases with frequency. For designs above 5 GHz, Df becomes the dominant loss mechanism and the most important single electrical property to evaluate.
Dielectric Breakdown Voltage (DBV) defines how much voltage the dielectric can withstand before arcing. Relevant for power PCBs and high-voltage circuits, but generally not a concern for low-voltage digital designs.
Thermal Properties
Glass Transition Temperature (Tg) is the temperature at which the resin transitions from a rigid glassy state to a softer, rubbery state. Below Tg, the laminate behaves as a stable, predictable material. Above Tg, the CTE increases dramatically, mechanical properties degrade, and the board becomes susceptible to deformation and via stress. For lead-free assembly with multiple reflow cycles, Tg of at least 170°C is the practical minimum.
Decomposition Temperature (Td) is the temperature at which the resin begins to chemically break down and release gases. For standard FR-4, Td is typically above 300°C. For lead-free assembly peaking at 260°C with rework cycles, you want meaningful margin above this — hence why Td is often specified for advanced designs in addition to Tg.
Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) describes dimensional change with temperature. The Z-axis CTE (through the board thickness) is most critical for via reliability. A mismatch between the CTE of the laminate and the copper in a plated via creates mechanical fatigue stress with every thermal cycle, eventually cracking the via barrel. For HDI boards, thick multilayer constructions, and automotive applications with wide temperature cycling, low Z-axis CTE is essential.
Thermal Conductivity matters primarily for power electronics and LED applications. Standard FR-4 at 0.2–0.3 W/m·K is a poor thermal conductor. Metal-core laminates and ceramic-filled systems solve this for high-power applications.
Mechanical Properties
Peel Strength is the force required to peel the copper foil from the laminate. Adequate peel strength ensures that traces and pads remain bonded through thermal cycling, chemical processing, and mechanical stress during assembly.
Flexural Strength matters for flexible and rigid-flex PCBs, and also for any board that will experience vibration or mechanical shock in service.
Moisture Absorption affects both dimensional stability and electrical properties. Standard FR-4 has moisture absorption of 0.10–0.20%, which is generally acceptable. However, for RF designs or high-frequency circuits where even small changes in Dk and Df degrade performance, low moisture absorption — a characteristic of PTFE-based laminates — is an important selection criterion.
Key PCB Laminate Properties Summary Table
Property
Why It Matters
Key Design Concern
Dk (Dielectric Constant)
Signal propagation speed and impedance
Stack-up modeling, trace width
Df (Dissipation Factor)
Signal loss as heat
Insertion loss budget at GHz frequencies
Tg (Glass Transition Temp)
Thermal stability ceiling
Lead-free assembly, operating temperature
Td (Decomposition Temp)
Chemical stability limit
Multiple reflow cycles, rework
Z-axis CTE
Via reliability under thermal cycling
High-layer-count, automotive, HDI
Thermal Conductivity
Heat dissipation capability
LED, power electronics
Moisture Absorption
Electrical stability in humid conditions
RF designs, outdoor environments
Peel Strength
Copper adhesion integrity
Fine-pitch features, assembly stress
How to Choose the Right PCB Laminate — A Practical Framework
There is no universal best laminate. The right choice depends on what your board needs to survive and perform. Here is a structured approach.
Step 1 — Define Your Hardest Constraint First
Start with your toughest single constraint and let that determine the material family. If your hardest constraint is signal loss at 28 GHz, you are in PTFE or hydrocarbon-ceramic territory regardless of what everything else suggests. If your hardest constraint is surviving 150°C ambient temperature, you need polyimide or high-Tg BT epoxy. If your hardest constraint is cost and your signals are below 1 GHz, standard FR-4 is almost certainly the right answer.
Step 2 — Check Operating Temperature vs. Tg
Your operating temperature needs to be comfortably below Tg. For lead-free assembly, that means Tg ≥ 170°C for any multilayer board. For automotive underhood applications (engine control units, transmission controllers), sustained temperatures of 125–150°C mean you should target Tg of at least 170–180°C with appropriate margin. For aerospace or military environments from -55°C to 125°C cycling, polyimide or ceramic-filled laminates are appropriate.
Step 3 — Evaluate Your Signal Frequency and Loss Budget
For general digital designs with signals below 1 GHz, standard or high-Tg FR-4 is fine. As you climb in frequency, modified epoxy systems (Isola FR408HR, Panasonic Megtron 6) become cost-effective options. Above roughly 6–10 GHz, you need hydrocarbon-ceramic or PTFE-based materials. For mmWave designs above 24 GHz, only PTFE or equivalent ultra-low-Df materials will work.
Step 4 — Consider Your Fabricator’s Capabilities
This step is overlooked far too often. Specialty laminates — PTFE especially — require specific drilling parameters, special through-hole preparation processes, and different handling. Not all fabricators stock or are qualified to process every material. The suppliers of specialty materials such as PTFE-ceramic, high Tg, and polyimides — Rogers, Arlon, Taconic, and Isola — have been producing these materials for decades, but your PCB manufacturer needs to have experience working with them too. Consulting your PCB supplier on material selection early in the design process, before you lock the stack-up, prevents expensive surprises at the quoting stage.
Step 5 — Cross-Check Availability and UL Listing
In some instances, your product may require a UL marking applied to the PCB. Many suppliers do not carry UL certification for specialty materials due to the high cost of certification and low purchase volumes. Depending on your material choice, there could be availability, additional cost, or fabrication constraints waiting for you that you are not prepared for. Locking this down during the design phase — not after you have sent Gerbers to the fab — is important.
PCB Laminate Selection Decision Guide
Application Type
Frequency / Speed
Recommended Laminate Family
Consumer electronics, general PCB
< 1 GHz / < 1 Gbps
Standard or High-Tg FR-4
Industrial, automotive (non-RF)
< 5 GHz / < 10 Gbps
High-Tg FR-4, Modified Epoxy
High-speed digital (SERDES, PCIe Gen 4/5)
5–28 GHz / 10–56 Gbps
Low-loss Modified Epoxy (Megtron 6, FR408HR)
RF / Microwave / 5G sub-6 GHz
1–10 GHz
Hydrocarbon-Ceramic (RO4350B, Arlon AR1000)
mmWave / Automotive Radar / Satellite
> 10 GHz
PTFE-based (RT/duroid, TLX, Arlon AD series)
Flex / Rigid-Flex
varies
Polyimide film + RA copper
High-power LED, power converters
N/A
Metal-Core (MCPCB)
Aerospace / Military extreme environment
varies
Polyimide, Ceramic-filled
Useful PCB Laminate Resources
Resource
Type
Access
Rogers Corporation Laminate Selector
Interactive material selector with full datasheets
1. What is the most commonly used PCB laminate, and why?
FR-4 is by far the most widely used PCB laminate in the industry. Its dominance comes from a combination of good all-around electrical and mechanical performance, excellent flame retardancy, a well-established and universally available manufacturing ecosystem, and a cost level that no other laminate family can match at scale. For the majority of electronics applications — consumer products, industrial controls, computing, communications hardware below a few GHz — FR-4 delivers everything you need. The limitations only become relevant when you push into high-frequency RF, extreme temperatures, or very high-speed serial links.
2. When should I upgrade from standard FR-4 to a high-Tg material?
As a practical rule: any time your board will go through lead-free assembly (SAC305 reflow at 260°C peak), especially in a multilayer construction, high-Tg FR-4 with Tg ≥ 170°C is the safer choice. For automotive applications exposed to sustained operating temperatures above 100°C, or any board that will undergo multiple rework cycles with hot-air stations, high-Tg materials provide meaningful reliability margin over standard FR-4 without any change in fabrication process or significant cost penalty.
3. Can I mix different laminate materials in the same PCB stack-up?
Yes, and it is a common and legitimate design strategy. Hybrid stack-ups allow you to use a premium low-loss material (such as Rogers RO4350B) only on the outer layers where your RF or high-speed signals run, while using cost-effective high-Tg FR-4 for inner power and ground planes. This approach significantly reduces material cost compared to an all-premium board while still meeting electrical performance requirements. The key considerations are CTE compatibility between the different layers and ensuring your fabricator has experience laminating hybrid constructions. Not all fabs do this routinely, so discuss it with them before committing to the design.
4. What does Tg actually mean in practice for my PCB design?
Tg is the glass transition temperature — the point at which the resin shifts from a hard, glassy state to a softer, more rubbery state. Below Tg, the material is mechanically stable and thermally predictable. Above Tg, the CTE of the laminate increases dramatically (often by 3 to 5 times), putting significant stress on plated through-holes and interlayer connections. The Tg of your laminate must be significantly higher than both your assembly reflow peak temperature and your maximum operating temperature. Running a board regularly at or above its laminate’s Tg will cause premature failure through delamination, via barrel cracking, and degradation of electrical properties.
5. How do I read a laminate datasheet to compare materials accurately?
Focus on four things: first, check which test method was used for Dk and Df (IPC-TM-650 method number, resonator type) because different methods give different numbers for the same material. Second, check the frequency at which Dk and Df were measured — a Df measured at 1 MHz tells you nothing useful if you are designing for 10 GHz. Third, check the resin content of the test sample, as Dk and Df vary significantly with resin-to-glass ratio. Fourth, note whether values were measured on dry specimens or after moisture conditioning. When comparing two competing materials, only a side-by-side comparison using the same test method, same frequency, and same conditioning is meaningful. If a vendor cannot provide frequency-specific data at your operating frequency, ask for it — any serious laminate manufacturer will have it.
Key Takeaways
Every PCB laminate decision is an engineering trade-off between electrical performance, thermal capability, mechanical properties, manufacturability, and cost. The material families available today cover an enormous range — from basic FR-4 that serves billions of boards every year to exotic PTFE composites engineered for satellite radar operating well above 100 GHz.
The most important discipline is to define your hardest design constraint first, then let that drive your material family selection. Consult your fabricator early, verify that your chosen material is in stock and qualified at your manufacturer, and always pull datasheets that report Dk and Df at your actual operating frequency — not at 1 MHz. Material selection made thoughtfully in the first week of a project costs nothing. Material-driven re-spins made after compliance testing costs everything.
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.