<< View SCS Blog

Common Parylene Problems

January 6, 2022

In addition to cracking, several associated issues may interfere with the successful coating of Parylene films. Due to its chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process, Parylene forms a structurally continuous film covering a PCB or similar assembly. In CVD, the interaction of vapor-phase chemical reactants formulates a non-volatile solid film on a substrate, which is useful for a variety of applications like corrosion resistance, erosion defense and high-temperature protection.

In contrast to competing wet coating processes, Parylene does not exhibit issues related to liquids like capillary flow or meniscus. Additionally, it will not bridge across substrate features, pool in lower areas of the assembly’s topography or pull away from the component’s edges. This combination of application advantages is instrumental in establishing Parylene’s overall superiority compared to such liquid coatings as acrylic, epoxy, silicone and urethane. Nevertheless, Parylene films are confronted by several failure mechanisms that need to be managed if coating processes are to be successfully implemented.

Issues that Complicate Parylene Coating

Contaminants: A clean surface is necessary to ensure the successful application and performance of Parylene films. Contaminated surfaces do not support adhesion and are conducive to delamination. Visually undetectable ionic contaminants are capable of short-circuiting the assembly beneath the conformal film, as well as instigating corrosion that can damage the Parylene coating. Most ionic contaminants can be removed by cleansing with purified water. Nonionic contaminants are visible along the assembly’s surface before Parylene application. Because their presence attracts debris and foreign matter, they limit Parylene adherence, causing peeling, cracking or other performance dysfunction. They’re generally organic compounds like greases, oils or hand lotion, although rosin and silicone are also non-ionic. They generally can be removed with solvents and surfactants.

Delamination: Proper adhesion of Parylene to the substrate surface is critical to its role as a conformal coating. One problem can be Parylene’s underlying chemical structure, which can interfere with dependable surface interface, constraining adhesion with some materials. The resulting delamination separates the conformal coating from the substrate, producing a poor, unacceptable finish characterized by torn, unattached and non-conformal coating. Even where surface exposure is incomplete, uncovering even some segments of the assembly negates the objective of conformal coating. Removal of masking materials, materials incompatibility or unclean substrate surfaces may instigate delamination and subsequent lack of Parylene adhesion. Appropriate coordination between the grade of Parylene coating and the substrate material generates reliable adhesion and lamination. In these cases, altering either the coating type or modifying the surface energy better assures adherence. Working with a Parylene type, maintaining the materials’ compatibility with the substrate and displaying applicable moisture impermeability is important, as is surface cleanliness. The objective is to transform the interaction of surface energies so they better support adhesion. SCS’ advanced adhesion promotion technologies help increase adhesion and prevent delamination compared to common adhesion promotion materials.

Limited throughput: The Parylene manufacturing process is valuable because of the quality of coatings it generates and it is exceptionally controllable and repeatable, delivering extremely consistent results from batch to batch. However, CVD is also time-consuming, varying between 8-24 hours, and generally confined to small-batch production, reducing the total quantity of product coated during any single coating session. To mitigate production and delivery delays, close coordination between the coating service provider and customers is imperative. The coating of mass-production quantities is feasible through effective collaboration and efficient supply chain processes.

Masking/prep: Gaseous Parylene can permeate all surfaces of the substrate. Assuring the coating does not adhere to undesignated areas can require labor-intensive masking and preparation that further impact the completion of production procedures.

Outgassing: This is the gaseous emission from a processed layer of coating film exposed to either heat or reduced air pressure, or both. Fortunately, Parylene has very low levels of outgassing.

Solder joint defects: Depending on their properties and application processes, conformal coatings can increase assembly solder joint fatigue. If improperly applied to the component, Parylene can increase solder joint fatigue by about a factor of three/

Tin whiskers: The growth of spikey, whisker-like protrusions along the surfaces of metal components, believed to be encouraged by mechanically and thermally induced stresses. Responsible for assembly arcing and short circuits. Although Parylene is very effective in limiting tin whisker growth, the condition can develop if film application is inadequate.

Weak metal adhesion: Parylene adhesion to noble metals such gold, silver or stainless steel is poor. This is a problem, for example, because gold’s superior conductivity properties make it a common element in many of today’s PCBs. Although several methods of adhesion promotion can significantly enhance Parylene’s metal adhesion, they generally increase costs substantially because they are either labor-intensive or require specialized materials to generate desired product outcomes.

Summary

The overall superiority of Parylene as a conformal coating is verified by both the literature and practical application. However, its performance efficiency can be critically affected by the conditions discussed above. Selecting the appropriate Parylene type and applying coating thicknesses suitable for the specific assembly, its materials and intended uses can effectively mitigate these issues.