Designing a flex PCB for wearable electronics requires a different approach than traditional rigid board design. Flexible printed circuits bend, fold, and conform to body contours, making them essential for smartwatches, fitness bands, medical sensors, and other wearable devices. This guide covers the design rules, material options, and manufacturing considerations for flex PCBs in India.
Table of Contents
- What is a Flex PCB
- Types of Flex Circuits
- Material Selection
- Design Rules for Flex
- Bend Radius and Reliability
- Connector and Termination Options
- Manufacturing in India
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
What is a Flex PCB
A flex PCB uses a flexible substrate (typically polyimide/Kapton) instead of rigid FR4 fibreglass. This allows the circuit to bend, twist, and conform to irregular shapes. In wearable electronics, flex PCBs reduce weight, save space, and improve comfort when worn against the skin.
Flex circuits are used in smartphones (connecting the screen to the mainboard), medical patches (ECG monitors), fitness trackers, and hearing aids. Their ability to fold into tight spaces makes them indispensable in modern miniaturised electronics.
Types of Flex Circuits
- Single-sided flex: Copper on one side of the polyimide. Simplest and cheapest. Good for LED strips and simple sensor connections
- Double-sided flex: Copper on both sides with through-hole vias. Supports more complex routing
- Multi-layer flex: Three or more copper layers. Used for complex circuits in tight spaces
- Rigid-flex: Combines rigid sections (for component mounting) with flex sections (for interconnection). The best of both worlds for wearables
- Sculptured flex: Variable copper thickness for impedance control and current handling
Material Selection
Key materials in flex PCB construction:
- Polyimide (Kapton): The standard flex substrate. Temperature range -269 to +400 degrees C. Excellent chemical resistance and flexibility
- Adhesive-based vs adhesiveless: Adhesiveless constructions are thinner and more flexible but costlier. For dynamic flex (repeated bending), adhesiveless is preferred
- Copper: Rolled annealed (RA) copper bends better than electrodeposited (ED) copper. Always specify RA for dynamic flex applications
- Coverlay: Polyimide film laminated over the copper, replacing solder mask. More flexible than liquid solder mask
- Stiffeners: FR4 or stainless steel stiffeners bonded to specific areas where components are soldered or connectors are attached
Design Rules for Flex
Flex PCB design differs from rigid boards in several critical ways:
- Trace routing: Route traces perpendicular to the bend axis whenever possible. Never route traces at 45 degrees across a bend zone
- Trace width: Wider traces survive bending better. Minimum 0.1mm, but 0.15mm or wider is recommended for dynamic flex
- Stagger traces: On double-sided flex, offset traces on top and bottom layers so they do not stack directly above each other in bend areas
- No vias in bend areas: Vias create stress points that crack during bending. Place all vias in rigid or non-bending sections
- Teardrop pads: Add teardrops where traces meet pads to prevent cracking at the junction
- Copper hatching: In large copper areas within bend zones, use a hatched fill instead of solid copper to maintain flexibility
Bend Radius and Reliability
The minimum bend radius depends on the type of flex:
| Application | Min Bend Radius | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Install-to-fit (one time) | 6x thickness | Bent once during assembly |
| Dynamic flex (<1000 cycles) | 12x thickness | Laptop hinge, wearable strap |
| High-cycle dynamic (>10,000) | 25x thickness | Requires RA copper |
For a typical 0.2mm thick single-sided flex, the minimum one-time bend radius is 1.2mm. For dynamic bending, this increases to 2.4mm or 5mm depending on cycle count.
Connector and Termination Options
- ZIF connectors: Zero Insertion Force connectors are the standard for flex-to-rigid connections. Available in 0.5mm and 1.0mm pitch
- Solder tabs: Direct soldering of flex cable ends to a rigid board. Cheapest option but not reusable
- ACF bonding: Anisotropic Conductive Film for fine-pitch display connections
- Crimped connectors: For high-current applications where soldering is not suitable
- Stiffener-backed SMD: Mount SMD connectors on stiffened sections of the flex for mechanical strength
Manufacturing in India
Flex PCB manufacturing options for Indian designers:
- Indian manufacturers: PCBPower, Lion Circuits, and AT&S India handle flex and rigid-flex boards. Lead times are 2-4 weeks for prototypes
- Chinese manufacturers: PCBWay, JLCPCB, and Elecrow offer flex PCBs at lower prices with 1-2 week manufacturing time
- Pricing: Flex PCBs cost 3-10x more than rigid PCBs of the same size. A 50x50mm single-sided flex starts at around ₹500-1,000 per piece for prototype quantities
- Rigid-flex: Expect 5-15x rigid PCB costs due to the complex manufacturing process
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I design flex PCBs in EasyEDA or KiCad?
Yes, both tools support flex PCB design. Define the board outline as the flex shape, mark bend areas in the documentation layer, and specify flex-specific design rules. Some designers use Altium for its dedicated flex design features.
Are flex PCBs washable for wearables?
With proper conformal coating and waterproof encapsulation, flex PCBs can survive sweat and light washing. For fully waterproof wearables, use potting compound or silicone encapsulation.
What is the minimum order for flex PCBs?
Most manufacturers accept orders of 5-10 pieces for prototypes. Some Chinese services offer as few as 1-2 pieces, though at higher per-unit cost.
Conclusion
Flex PCBs unlock design possibilities that rigid boards simply cannot achieve. For wearable electronics, they provide the conformability, lightness, and compact form factor that users demand. Start with a rigid prototype to validate your circuit, then transition to flex for the final product. Work closely with your manufacturer on material selection and bend radius requirements to ensure reliability.
Prototype your wearable design with our compact development boards before moving to custom flex PCBs.
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