Zbotic Logo Zbotic Logo
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Sale
  • 3D Print Service
  • PCB Service
  • B2B
  • Blogs
  • Contact Us
0 0

View Wishlist Add all to cart

0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: ₹0.00

View cartCheckout

  • Shop
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Reseller
  • Blogs
020 69134444
1800 209 0998
[email protected]
Help Desk
Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin YouTube
Zbotic Logo Zbotic Logo
0 0

View Wishlist Add all to cart

0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: ₹0.00

View cartCheckout

All departments
  • 3D Print Service
  • 3D Printer
  • Batteries & Chargers
  • Development Boards
  • Drone Parts
  • EBike parts
  • Sensor Modules
  • Electronic Components
  • Electronic Modules
  • IoT and Wireless
  • Mechanical Parts and Workbench Tools
  • Motors & Drivers & Pumps & Actuators
  • DIY and Robot Kits
  • Show more
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Sale
  • 3D Print Service
  • PCB Service
  • B2B
  • Blogs
  • Contact Us
Return to previous page
Home PCB Manufacturing

PCB Thermal Management: Heat Dissipation Techniques

PCB Thermal Management: Heat Dissipation Techniques

April 1, 2026 /Posted by / 0

Thermal management determines the reliability and lifespan of your PCB. Every electronic component generates heat, and if that heat is not effectively dissipated, junction temperatures rise above safe limits — causing performance degradation, premature ageing, and eventually failure. In India’s hot climate (ambient temperatures reaching 45-50°C in summer), thermal design is even more critical than in temperate regions. This guide covers heat dissipation techniques from trace-level copper design to board-level and system-level thermal solutions.

Table of Contents

  • Thermal Design Basics
  • Copper Area for Heat Spreading
  • Thermal Via Arrays
  • Exposed Pad Design
  • PCB-Mounted Heatsinks
  • Airflow Considerations
  • Thermal Simulation Tools
  • Frequently Asked Questions

Thermal Design Basics

Heat flows from hot to cold through three mechanisms:

  • Conduction: Through the copper traces, planes, and PCB substrate. Copper is an excellent conductor (400 W/mK). FR-4 is a poor conductor (0.3 W/mK through thickness, 0.8 W/mK in-plane)
  • Convection: From the board surface to the surrounding air. Natural convection provides about 5-25 W/m²K; forced air provides 25-250 W/m²K
  • Radiation: Electromagnetic radiation from hot surfaces. Significant only at high temperatures (above 100°C) or in vacuum

The thermal resistance chain: Junction → Package → PCB → Air (or heatsink). Each element adds thermal resistance. The goal is to minimise the total thermal resistance from the hottest junction to the ambient air.

🛒 Recommended: Noel 60W Soldering Iron — Starting at ₹197 on Zbotic.

Copper Area for Heat Spreading

Copper planes and pour areas are your primary heat spreading mechanism on a PCB:

  • A copper plane 10x larger than the component footprint reduces thermal resistance by approximately 50% compared to minimum copper
  • Use 2oz copper for power layers to double the thermal spreading capacity
  • Connect the component’s thermal pad to copper pour on both board sides using thermal vias
  • For voltage regulators, the copper area surrounding the component IS the heatsink — size it accordingly
Copper Area (cm²) Approximate Thermal Resistance (°C/W) Suitable For
1 (1oz, single side) 60-80 Low-power ICs (under 0.5W)
4 (1oz, single side) 35-45 Moderate power (0.5-1W)
10 (1oz, both sides) 20-30 Power regulators (1-2W)
25 (2oz, both sides) 10-15 Power MOSFETs (2-5W)

Thermal Via Arrays

Thermal vias transfer heat from the top copper layer (under the component) to the bottom copper layer and inner planes:

Parameter Recommended
Drill diameter 0.3mm
Via pitch 1.0-1.2mm
Array size Match the thermal pad footprint
Plating Standard PTH (filled vias for via-in-pad)

Each 0.3mm thermal via has approximately 50-70°C/W thermal resistance. A 3×3 array (9 vias) brings this down to about 6-8°C/W — a significant improvement. Place vias in a grid pattern under the entire exposed thermal pad.

Solder wicking prevention: During reflow, solder paste can wick through thermal vias, leaving voids under the thermal pad. Solutions: tent the bottom side with solder mask, or use via plugging (epoxy fill). For production, via plugging is recommended; for prototypes, bottom-side tenting is sufficient.

🛒 Recommended: FR4 Copper Clad Double Side PCB — Starting at ₹16.30 on Zbotic.

Exposed Pad Design

Many modern ICs (QFN, DFN, DPAK, D2PAK) have an exposed thermal pad on the bottom that must be soldered to the PCB for heat dissipation:

  • Pad size: Match the manufacturer’s recommended land pattern exactly. Over-sizing wastes space; under-sizing reduces thermal contact
  • Solder paste coverage: Apply solder paste to 50-70% of the thermal pad area using a windowed stencil pattern. Full coverage traps air bubbles (voiding)
  • Stencil aperture: Use a grid of small rectangular openings instead of one large opening. This reduces voiding to below 25%
  • Via-in-pad: Place thermal vias directly in the pad area. For production, use filled and capped vias. For prototypes, use standard vias with bottom-side tenting

PCB-Mounted Heatsinks

When copper area and thermal vias are insufficient, add external heatsinks:

  • Clip-on heatsinks: Aluminium fin heatsinks that clip onto IC packages (TO-220, TO-247). Thermal resistance 5-15°C/W depending on size
  • Adhesive heatsinks: Small aluminium blocks with thermal adhesive for surface-mount packages. Common for voltage regulators and Raspberry Pi SoCs
  • Board-mounted fins: Extruded aluminium heatsinks soldered to the PCB. Used for high-power LED boards and power supply modules
  • Thermal interface material: Use thermal pads (1-3 W/mK) or thermal paste (4-8 W/mK) between the component and heatsink. Never mount a heatsink without thermal interface material — the air gap adds significant thermal resistance
🛒 Recommended: Bosch GHG 180 Heat Gun 1800W — Starting at ₹2,346 on Zbotic.

Airflow Considerations

  • Natural convection: Orient the board vertically if possible — hot air rises naturally, creating convective airflow across the board surface
  • Forced convection: Even a small fan (40mm) reduces thermal resistance by 3-5x compared to natural convection. Position fans to blow across the hottest components
  • Component spacing: Space hot components at least 10mm apart to avoid thermal interaction. Place them near the air inlet (cool side) of the enclosure
  • Ventilation holes: Include ventilation openings in the enclosure above and below hot components. Inlet at the bottom, outlet at the top follows natural convection direction
  • Operating environment: In India, design for 50°C ambient (worst case summer, un-air-conditioned enclosure). Your thermal solution must keep junction temperatures within limits at this ambient

Thermal Simulation Tools

  • Saturn PCB Toolkit (free): Calculates trace temperature rise based on current, width, and copper weight. Good for quick checks
  • Altium PDN Analyzer: Includes thermal analysis of copper fills and traces
  • SimScale (free tier): Cloud-based CFD simulation for enclosure-level thermal analysis
  • ANSYS Icepak: Professional thermal simulation tool for PCB and enclosure analysis (expensive but accurate)
  • Quick estimation: For each watt dissipated, a 1oz copper area of approximately 10cm² on both sides keeps the temperature rise below 40°C in still air at room temperature
🛒 Recommended: TE-801 LED Magnifier PCB Stand — Starting at ₹418 on Zbotic.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my PCB needs thermal management?

Calculate the total power dissipation (sum of voltage drop × current for each component). If total dissipation exceeds 1W on a small board (under 50cm²) or 5W on a larger board, you need deliberate thermal design. Also check individual component datasheets — if the thermal pad or package thermal resistance requires more than 20cm² of copper for safe operation, plan for it in your layout.

Can I use aluminium PCBs instead of FR-4?

Yes, metal-core PCBs (MCPCB) use an aluminium substrate that conducts heat 100x better than FR-4. They are standard for LED lighting and power converters. The cost is 2-3x that of FR-4, and they are limited to 1-2 layers. Suitable when you need to dissipate more than 5W from a small board area.

What temperature is too hot for a PCB component?

Most semiconductor ICs are rated for 85°C or 125°C junction temperature (check the datasheet). Electrolytic capacitors degrade significantly above 85°C — every 10°C increase halves their lifespan. LEDs lose brightness above 80°C junction temperature. As a general rule, design for component surfaces below 70°C in a 50°C ambient.

How many thermal vias do I need?

As many as physically fit under the thermal pad. A 3×3 array (9 vias) is the practical minimum for QFN packages. For power MOSFETs in D2PAK or TO-263 packages, use 12-20 vias. The diminishing returns kick in around 15-20 vias — adding more provides marginal improvement.

Should I use 2oz copper just for thermal reasons?

If your design dissipates more than 2W in a localised area and copper area is limited, 2oz copper provides a worthwhile improvement. The 2x thickness doubles the in-plane thermal conductivity of the copper layer. For distributed low-power designs (under 1W total), 1oz copper with adequate ground pour is sufficient.

Get copper clad boards, soldering tools, and thermal management supplies at Zbotic PCB & Prototyping — shipping across India.

Tags: heat dissipation, PCB, PCB manufacturing, thermal management, Thermal Vias
Share Post
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
Record Player Preamp: Phono St...
blog record player preamp phono stage for turntables 614781
blog led infinity mirror depth illusion art project 614786
LED Infinity Mirror: Depth Ill...

Related posts

Svg%3E
Read more

PCB Industry India: Market Size, Players, and Trends 2026

April 1, 2026 0
India’s PCB industry is at an inflection point. Driven by government initiatives like Make in India and PLI (Production Linked... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

PCB Certification: UL, CE, and RoHS Compliance India

April 1, 2026 0
Electronics products sold commercially in India and internationally must meet safety, environmental, and electromagnetic compatibility standards. Understanding which certifications your... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

PCB Storage: Moisture Sensitivity and Shelf Life

April 1, 2026 0
Improper PCB storage leads to moisture absorption, copper oxidation, and solderability degradation — all of which cause assembly defects and... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

PCB Depaneling: Router, Laser, and Punch Methods

April 1, 2026 0
Depaneling separates individual PCBs from the manufacturing panel after assembly. The method you choose affects board edge quality, component stress,... Continue reading
Svg%3E
Read more

PCB Pick and Place: Component Feeder Setup

April 1, 2026 0
Pick and place machines are the workhorses of SMT assembly, placing hundreds to thousands of components per hour with sub-millimetre... Continue reading

Add comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Linkedin Youtube

Get the latest deals and more.

Download on Google Play Download on the App Store

Call us: 020 69134444 / 1800 209 0998

Monday - Saturday 09:30 AM - 06:00 PM
For Technical Supports Email: [email protected]
For Sales / Enquiries Email: [email protected]

  • My Account

    • Cart

    • Wishlist

    • Checkout

    • My Orders

    • Track Order

    • My Account

  • Information

    • FAQs

    • Blogs

    • Career

    • About Us

    • Contact Us

    • Payment Options

  • Policies

    • Privacy Policy

    • Terms & Conditions

    • GST Input Tax Credit

    • Shipping Return Policy

    • E-Waste Collection Points

    • Our Sitemap

© Zbotic.in is registered trademark of Moxie Supply Pvt Ltd – All Rights Reserved
Login
Use Phone Number
Use Email Address
Not a member yet? Register Now
Reset Password
Use Phone Number
Use Email Address
Register
Already a member? Login Now