Conformal coating spray for PCB protection from moisture is essential for any electronics deployed in India’s challenging climate — especially in coastal cities like Mumbai and Chennai where humidity regularly exceeds 80%, or in industrial environments with chemical vapour exposure. Without protection, even well-designed PCBs fail prematurely due to corrosion, surface leakage currents, and electrochemical migration. This guide covers conformal coating types, application methods, and the best options available in India.
Table of Contents
- Why Conformal Coating Matters in India
- Types of Conformal Coatings
- Application Methods
- Masking Areas Before Coating
- Curing and Inspection
- Best Conformal Coatings Available in India
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Conformal Coating Matters in India
India’s climate presents some of the most challenging conditions for unprotected electronics. The monsoon season (June–September) brings 70–100% relative humidity across most of the country. Coastal areas maintain high humidity year-round. Industrial areas add corrosive gases (H2S, SO2) to the atmosphere. Agricultural areas expose electronics to fertiliser vapours and dust.
Unprotected PCBs in these environments suffer from surface leakage current (reducing insulation resistance between tracks), dendritic growth (metallic whiskers that cause shorts), pad corrosion (increasing contact resistance), and solder joint oxidation (causing intermittent connections over time).
Conformal coating prevents all of these by creating a protective barrier over the PCB surface, following (conforming to) the board’s contours and component topography.
Types of Conformal Coatings
Acrylic (IPC designation: AR): Most popular type. Easy to apply, good humidity protection, excellent electrical properties, and reworkable — can be removed with acetone or dedicated remover. Suitable for most consumer and commercial electronics applications. Slightly less resistant to chemicals and solvents than other types.
Silicone (SR): Excellent temperature resistance (-65°C to +200°C), superior humidity resistance, and good vibration damping. Cannot be removed easily — requires specialised silicone removal compounds. Best for automotive, outdoor, and high-temperature applications.
Urethane/Polyurethane (UR): Good chemical resistance and abrasion resistance. More difficult to rework than acrylic. Often used in industrial and automotive applications where chemical exposure is expected.
Epoxy (ER): Excellent chemical and solvent resistance. Essentially irreversible — cannot be reworked without destroying the PCB. Used only where maximum protection justifies no-rework consequences.
For most Indian hobbyist and product applications: acrylic conformal coating in aerosol spray is the best balance of protection, ease of application, and reworkability.
Application Methods
Aerosol spray (most common for hobbyists): Spray cans apply a thin, even coating with minimal setup. Techniques:
- Hold can 15–25cm from PCB
- Apply in thin, even strokes — 2–3 passes are better than one thick coat
- Overlap each pass by 50% for complete coverage
- Allow 5–10 minutes between coats
- Apply in a well-ventilated area — most coatings contain solvents
Brush application: For touch-ups and targeted application. Use dedicated conformal coating brushes (natural bristle); synthetic brushes may dissolve in the coating solvent. Build up thin coats rather than one thick application.
Dipping: Submerge the PCB in a tank of coating material. Most thorough coverage including all surfaces and underneath components. Requires masking of all connectors and through-holes. Used in production environments.
Masking Areas Before Coating
Never coat these areas:
- All connectors and sockets (coating prevents electrical contact)
- Test points (coating prevents probing)
- Adjustment potentiometers and variable components
- High-voltage isolation gaps (coating may bridge and reduce creepage distance)
- Heat-generating components that need airflow (large power resistors, transistors)
Masking materials: Standard masking tape (₹50–₹200), rubber or plastic plug inserts for connector openings, UV-curable masking dot stickers (₹200–₹500) that can be peeled off after coating.
Curing and Inspection
Most acrylic coatings air-dry in 20–30 minutes at room temperature and fully cure in 24 hours. Speed up with a heat gun on low setting or in an oven at 40–50°C for 30 minutes.
Inspection under UV light: Most professional conformal coatings contain UV-fluorescent additives. Under a 365nm UV lamp, the coating glows bright blue or green — uncoated areas appear dark. This is the professional method for verifying complete coverage, especially under components and in corners.
Best Conformal Coatings Available in India
Electrolube HPA (₹800–₹1,500): Professional-grade acrylic conformal coating from Electrolube (UK brand, available in India). UV-traceable, reworkable. The go-to choice for serious Indian electronics manufacturers.
MG Chemicals 422B (₹600–₹1,200): Clear acrylic, spray can. Available on Amazon India and from electronics distributors. Good quality for the price.
CRC 2-26 (₹500–₹900): Multipurpose moisture-inhibiting compound. Not a true conformal coating but provides good short-term protection. Widely available in Indian hardware stores.
Indian alternatives (₹200–₹600): Several Indian brands (Ambersil, Ferret) supply conformal coating sprays. Adequate for non-critical applications at lower cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does conformal coating affect heat dissipation?
Thin coatings (25–75µm) have minimal effect on heat dissipation for most components. Avoid coating power resistors, linear regulators, and MOSFETs that rely on convection cooling — leave these components unmasked or apply coating only to their non-thermal surfaces.
Can I apply conformal coating to an assembled PCB with electrolytic capacitors?
Yes, but avoid the vent (small hole) in the top of electrolytic capacitors — coating over this prevents pressure relief and can cause the capacitor to bulge or fail. Leave a small uncoated area around the capacitor’s vent.
How thick should the conformal coating be?
IPC-A-610 specifies 25–75µm (0.001–0.003 inch) for most conformal coating types. Too thin provides inadequate protection; too thick causes stress on components during thermal cycling. Three thin coats of aerosol spray typically achieve the right thickness.
Can I rework a board after applying acrylic conformal coating?
Yes — acrylic coatings dissolve readily in acetone, isopropyl alcohol, or dedicated conformal coating remover. Apply solvent with a cotton swab to the area to be reworked, allow to soften, then remove with a stiff brush. Clean thoroughly with IPA before resoldering.
Is conformal coating necessary for indoor electronics in India?
For electronics near windows, in kitchens (steam), bathrooms (humidity), or non-air-conditioned spaces in humid regions of India — yes, coating is strongly recommended. For climate-controlled offices and homes, conformal coating extends life but may not be critical. For products shipped and used across India’s diverse climates, always coat.
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