Helen Frankenthaler PCB Circuit Board R&D Center

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Rigid-Flex PCB Manufacturing | IPC-6013 Class 3, 3D Integration, Dynamic Bend Reliability

Mission-critical rigid-flex circuits with IPC-6013 Class 3 capability

Mission-critical rigid-flex circuits with IPC-6013 Class 3 capability, 3D space optimization, connector elimination and superior signal integrity. Typical registration ±25–50 μm (plus/minus twenty-five to fifty micrometers) with impedance control ±5% (plus/minus five percent).

  • AS9100 & ISO 13485 Capable
  • IPC-6013 Class 3 Workmanship
  • 3D Design Integration
  • Dynamic & Static Flex Proven
  • Rapid Prototyping to Volume

Integrating Form and Function for Advanced Electronics

Eliminate connectors and cables; improve SI and reliability

Rigid-flex PCBs combine flex PCB and FR-4 technology to eliminate fragile interconnects and enable compact 3D architectures. By removing board-to-board connectors—common failure points—systems gain reduced weight, fewer assembly steps and tighter signal-integrity margins. Typical builds deliver assembly cost savings of 15–25% (fifteen to twenty-five percent) and enhanced long-term reliability compared with traditional rigid + cable harness designs.

We optimize bend radius, copper balancing and coverlay window geometry to minimize strain at rigid-to-flex transitions. For high-density BGAs, we integrate HDI microvias and via-in-pad structures to preserve routing channels while keeping flex areas stress-free. See our IPC Class 3 workmanship guide for aerospace and medical acceptance criteria.

Critical Risk: Excessive copper thickness or asymmetric stackup at the rigid-flex junction can cause layer delamination, cracked vias or conductor fatigue after dynamic bending. Improper adhesive flow or mismatched CTE (coefficient of thermal expansion) between PI and FR-4 leads to Z-axis warpage and open circuits under thermal cycling.

Our Solution: We perform DFM reviews with FEA bend-simulation to verify strain < 0.3% (less than zero point three percent) across the flex region. Staggered trace routing, teardrops and coverlay fillets relieve stress; minimum bend radius follows R ≥ 10× t (ten times the material thickness). Controlled lamination under lamination process control and post-cure ensures adhesive uniformity and peel strength. For high-speed differential pairs, impedance tuning per impedance-control guide maintains 90 Ω ± 5% (ninety ohms plus/minus five percent) continuity across flex transitions.

For ultra-reliable dynamic applications—foldable devices, avionics harnesses, and wearable electronics—rigid-flex architectures can be combined with High-Tg PCBs for superior thermal endurance or ceramic PCB interposers for hybrid mechanical support. Learn more in our signal-integrity design and flex-assembly tutorials.

  • Connector and harness elimination for higher reliability
  • 3D packaging freedom with reduced volume and weight
  • Improved signal integrity from shorter interconnects
  • Static and dynamic bend options with tuned stackups
  • Natural handoff to turnkey box build

Precision Manufacturing for Complex Rigid-Flex Designs

Specialized lamination, laser microvias, controlled-depth routing

Rigid-flex fabrication requires bonding dissimilar materials (FR-4 and polyimide) without entrapment or delamination. We use staged-pressure vacuum lamination with bondply and coverlay control; polyimide cores are prepared with plasma for adhesion while preserving Ra smoothness. UV-laser drills form microvias down to 75–100 μm (seventy-five to one hundred micrometers) with depth control ±5 μm (plus/minus five). Controlled-depth routing precisely exposes flex areas from rigid panels.

Quality gates include dynamic bend tests (thousands to millions of cycles), thermal shock −40↔+125 °C (minus forty to plus one hundred twenty-five), and microsections of transition zones. Learn more in our thermal shock testing overview and PCB manufacturing guide.

  • Specialized lamination for FR-4/PI stacks
  • Laser drilling/ablation for high-precision features
  • Controlled-depth routing in transition windows
  • Dynamic bend and thermal shock validation
  • Full turnkey SMT + system integration available
IPC-6013 Class 2/3 with comprehensive materials and processes
ParameterStandard CapabilityAdvanced CapabilityStandard
Layer Count2–12 layers total (rigid 2–20; flex 1–8)Up to 30+ layers (rigid ≥30; flex ≥8)IPC-6013
Base MaterialsFR-4 Tg 150–170 °C (one hundred fifty to one hundred seventy), Polyimide (PI)High-Tg FR-4, LCP, adhesiveless PI, low-loss laminatesIPC-4101/4204
Board Thickness0.4–3.2 mm (zero point four to three point two)0.2 mm flex to 5.0 mm rigid (zero point two to five point zero)IPC-A-600
Copper Weight0.5–2 oz (seventeen to seventy micrometers)Up to 6 oz (up to six; rigid sections)IPC-4562
Min Trace/Space75/75 μm (3/3 mil; seventy-five by seventy-five)50/50 μm (2/2 mil; fifty by fifty)IPC-2223
Min Hole Size0.15 mm (six mil) mechanical0.075 mm (three mil) laser microviaIPC-2222
Stiffener MaterialsPolyimide, FR-4Stainless steel, aluminumDesign specific
Min Bend Radius10× flex thickness (dynamic; ten times)6× flex thickness (static; six times, 1–2 layers)IPC-2223
Impedance Control±10% (plus/minus ten percent)±5% (plus/minus five percent) with TDRIPC-2141
Surface FinishENIG, OSP, Immersion SilverENEPIG, Hard/Soft GoldIPC-4552/4556
Quality TestingE-test, AOI, dimensional checksDynamic flex testing, TDR, thermal cycling/shockIPC-9252
CertificationsISO 9001, UL, RoHS/REACHAS9100, ISO 13485, IATF 16949Industry standards
Lead Time7–15 days (seven to fifteen)≈5 days (approximately five) quick-turnProduction schedule
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Critical Rigid-Flex Design Considerations

Keep copper features perpendicular to bend lines, avoid vias and pads in dynamic flex areas, and offset traces between layers to distribute strain. Use staggered or bookbinder layer lengths for multilayer flex to prevent inner-radius compression. Observe minimum radius rules (e.g., ten times flex thickness for dynamic) and add anti-pad/relief features near transitions. For fundamentals, see IPC 2221/2223 design notes and our flex PCB page.

Need Expert Design Review?

Our engineering team provides free DFM analysis and optimization recommendations

Specialized Rigid-Flex Process Flow

Typical flow: flex core imaging → coverlay/bondply prep → inner-layer AOI → staged lamination with rigid cores → laser microvia and controlled-depth routing → finish and final inspection. Registration is verified at each stage; plasma desmear cleans PI holes; X-ray confirms via targets. Reference our manufacturing guide for step-by-step controls.

Materials & Stackup Optimization

Choose adhesiveless PI for dynamic flex (better ductility), adhesive-based PI for cost-sensitive static bends, and high-Tg FR-4 for thermal margin. For RF or ultra-low loss, consider LCP or low-loss cores. Add PI/FR-4 stiffeners under components in flex areas to prevent solder-joint fatigue during SMT. For high-speed routing from rigid to flex, coordinate with our high-speed PCB team.

Quality & Reliability Validation

We apply AOI, flying-probe/E-test, microsections of flex-rigid transitions, dynamic bend fatigue, and thermal shock −40↔+125 °C (minus forty to plus one hundred twenty-five). Impedance coupons verify ±5% (plus/minus five percent) tolerance when specified. Full MES traceability links material lots, process parameters and test data—see thermal shock testing for methodology.

Applications & System-Level Integration

Aerospace/Defense: avionics, gimbals, payloads.

Medical: implantables and imaging under ISO 13485 controls.

Automotive: camera/sensor modules and lighting—see automotive PCB. For enclosure, labeling and fulfillment, hand off to box build services.

Engineering Assurance & Certifications

Experience: connector-less architectures with validated bend life; Expertise: coverlay windowing, bookbinder stacks, laser microvias, and controlled-depth routing; Authoritativeness: IPC-6013 Class 3 documentation and audits; Trustworthiness: MES traceability from lot to unit level with reports on AOI/E-test/microsections and mechanical cycling.

  • Controls: lamination windows, PI plasma, microvia depth, routing depth
  • Traceability: digital traveler with lot certificates
  • Validation: dynamic bend, thermal shock/cycle, TDR coupons
When should I choose rigid-flex over rigid boards with cables?

When space and reliability are critical, and connector/cable failures are unacceptable. Rigid-flex reduces interconnects, improves signal integrity with shorter paths, and often lowers total system cost despite higher board cost.

What is a bookbinder construction and when is it used?

A multilayer flex technique where outer layers are progressively longer around a bend (like pages of a book) to reduce strain and prevent copper buckling—ideal for tight bends with multiple flex layers.

How do you set minimum bend radius?

Base it on total flex thickness and copper count. As a rule of thumb: dynamic bends ≈ ten times flex thickness; static bends can be six times for 1–2 layer flex, with proper strain relief and coverlay design.

Can components be mounted on flex sections?

Prefer rigid areas for dynamic designs. For static flex, add FR-4 or PI stiffeners under components to support SMT and limit strain at solder joints.

Do you support high-speed controlled impedance in rigid-flex?

Yes—model stackups and validate with TDR coupons for ±5% tolerance. Coordinate rigid-to-flex transitions with our high-speed PCB team for return-path continuity.

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