There are several good reasons for potting electronics. Embedding the circuit board into a potting compound gives environmental protection against water ingress and corrosion due to moisture in the air or caustic chemicals and gasses (sulphur in particular attacks the copper used in the components and PCB tracks). Potting also gives protection against the effects of mechanical shock and vibration, supporting and cushioning delicate or fragile components such as the brittle ferrites used in transformer cores. It also supports and takes much of the strain away from the PCB pins, so that the strength of the pin connection to the circuit board is not reliant only on the solder joints.
Potting also replaces the air around a converter PCB with a highly insulating medium1 , avoiding arc-over within the power supply with over-voltage stress, particularly at high altitudes, and the effects of pollution such as moisture, dust and dirt which could reduce the insulation between the input and output, or allow tracking to occur across surfaces. Thermally conductive potting materials also reduce hot-spots within the converter, conducting heat away to the case and levelling-out the thermal gradients, to reduce temperature-difference stress on the components. Finally, potting offers fire protection (UL94-V0) because once cured, the compound will not ignite or maintain a flame.
A potted DC/DC converter also has an extended storage and operating lifetime. The materials used in RECOM’s products have a ten-year shelf-life and we occasionally get requests for replacement converters for products that were manufactured in the 1990’s and have been operational for decades. This longevity is partly due to the hermetic seal of the potting compound which maintains a clean, stable environment for the electronic components used in the converter.
1 The epoxy potting compound that RECOM uses for the majority of its DC/DC converters has an voltage withstand capability of 15kV/mm of solid material.
Potting also replaces the air around a converter PCB with a highly insulating medium1 , avoiding arc-over within the power supply with over-voltage stress, particularly at high altitudes, and the effects of pollution such as moisture, dust and dirt which could reduce the insulation between the input and output, or allow tracking to occur across surfaces. Thermally conductive potting materials also reduce hot-spots within the converter, conducting heat away to the case and levelling-out the thermal gradients, to reduce temperature-difference stress on the components. Finally, potting offers fire protection (UL94-V0) because once cured, the compound will not ignite or maintain a flame.
A potted DC/DC converter also has an extended storage and operating lifetime. The materials used in RECOM’s products have a ten-year shelf-life and we occasionally get requests for replacement converters for products that were manufactured in the 1990’s and have been operational for decades. This longevity is partly due to the hermetic seal of the potting compound which maintains a clean, stable environment for the electronic components used in the converter.
1 The epoxy potting compound that RECOM uses for the majority of its DC/DC converters has an voltage withstand capability of 15kV/mm of solid material.