Alumina ceramic thermal conductivity determines how efficiently heat transfers through your PCB substrate. As electronics shrink and power densities increase, managing heat becomes critical. This article explores everything about alumina’s thermal properties and how to optimize them for your PCB applications.
Many engineers struggle with overheating issues in high-power circuits. Have you faced these common challenges?
The good news is that proper material selection and design can solve these problems. Here’s how we address these challenges at EBest Circuit (Best Technology):
With 19 years of expertise, EBest Circuit (Best Technology) specializes in high-performance ceramic PCBs, including alumina, aluminum nitride (AlN), DPC, DBC, and LTCC/HTCC solutions. As a trusted partner for industries ranging from power electronics to medical devices, we combine cutting-edge processes with rigorous quality control to deliver superior thermal management (up to 40 W/mK alumina substrates), precision manufacturing (50μm line widths, 100μm vias), rapid prototyping, full turnkey solutions from design to assembly. Pls contact us at pcb@frankenthalerfoundation.org for any special ceramic PCB requirements. A deep understanding of our clients’ needs is very much part of the value we create.
Alumina ceramic thermal conductivity refers to how well Al₂O₃ transfers heat. Typical values range from 20-40 W/mK for commercial grades, with high-purity versions reaching up to 40 W/mK. This makes it significantly better than FR4(0.3 W/mK) but less conductive than aluminum nitride (140-180 W/mK).
Alumina’s thermal performance stems from its crystalline structure. The tightly packed oxygen and aluminum ions form an efficient phonon transport path. Three key structural factors affect conductivity:
In PCB applications, we typically see:
The thermal conductivity difference between alumina (Al₂O₃) and aluminum nitride (AlN) stems from their atomic structures:
Aluminum nitride (AlN) outperforms alumina significantly:
Practical Implications
Our Recommendation
Calculating thermal conductivity involves multiple approaches:
1. Steady-State Methods (Best for Bulk Materials)
Use Fourier’s Law with measured parameters:
k = (Q × L) / (A × ΔT) Where: k = thermal conductivity (W/mK) Q = heat input (W) L = sample thickness (m) A = cross-sectional area (m²) ΔT = temperature difference (K)
2. Transient Methods (Better for Thin Samples)
Laser flash analysis measures thermal diffusivity (α): k = α × ρ × Cp Where: ρ = density (kg/m³) Cp = specific heat (J/kg·K)
3. Empirical Correlations
For alumina ceramics, we often use: k = 40 - 0.05T - 0.0002T² (for 96% Al₂O₃) Where T is temperature in °C
Practical Calculation Example:
For a 1mm thick alumina PCB (96% purity) dissipating 50W over 10cm² area with 20°C temperature rise: k = (50 × 0.001) / (0.001 × 20) = 25 W/mK
Alumina’s thermal conductivity shows predictable temperature dependence:
PCB Design Implications:
Alumina’s thermal expansion coefficient (CTE) of 7.3 ppm/K provides exceptional dimensional stability. This low expansion comes from strong ionic bonds in the crystal structure.
ΔL = α × L₀ × ΔT Where: ΔL = length change (m) α = CTE (7.3×10⁻⁶/K for alumina) L₀ = original length (m) ΔT = temperature change (K)
A 100mm alumina PCB heated from 25°C to 125°C: ΔL = 7.3×10⁻⁶ × 0.1 × 100 = 0.073mm
Effective thermal management impacts five key performance areas:
Our data shows optimized alumina PCBs can:
Alumina PCBs combine unique thermal, electrical, and mechanical properties:
Finally, alumina ceramic PCBs offer exceptional manufacturing advantages including excellent dimensional stability, strong chemical resistance, and seamless compatibility with thick-film processes.
We implement these proven methods for better thermal performance: