Support and Encapsulating Materials Updated
Support and Encapsulating Materials Updated
Support and Encapsulating Materials Updated
- Protective coating
- Tubing and sleeving materials
- Adhesive materials
- Insulating materials
- Plating circuits boards materials
- Metalized ceramics
- Etching and cleaning
- Stability of materials
➢ Protective coating
A protective coating is a layer of material applied to the surface of another material with the
intent of inhibiting or preventing corrosion. A protective coating may be metallic or non-metallic.
Protective coatings are applied using a variety of methods, and can be used for many other
purposes besides corrosion prevention.
Commonly used materials in non-metallic protective coatings include polymers, epoxies and
polyurethanes.
Materials used for metallic protective coatings include zinc, aluminum and chromium.
A zinc coating over steel is an example of a reactive protective coating. The zinc reacts with the
atmosphere more readily than the steel, thus preventing the oxidation of the steel.
A protective coating can be painted on, sprayed on, plated on or even welded onto a material.
✓ Polymer coatings are commonly sprayed on.
✓ Zinc protective coatings are typically applied by the electroplating or hot dipping method.
A protective coating is not necessarily limited to corrosion prevention. It can also be used to
increase a material's wear resistance and aesthetic appeal. A protective coating can provide
water resistance or electrical properties that the material did not have prior to the protective
coating being applied.
➢ Tubing and sleeving materials
An electrical sleeve is a braided, knitted, woven or extruded tube used to slip over bare or weakly
insulated conductors in an electric assembly
Importance of electrical tubing and sleeving
i) Increased Safety- With cables laying everywhere and connecting to outlets potentially
still activated, the possibility of tripping, getting electrocuted or other kinds of
workplace injuries, increases immensely.
ii) Cut Down on Wasted Time & Frustration-With different color jackets, more bundled
cables (with sleeving or cable ties) and easier to track connectors, maintenance
becomes not only quicker but much less stressful.
iii) Increased Strength & Shelf Life - Adding electrical tubing or sleeving to an application
enables the wire to withstand much harsher environments, overall extending that
products shelf life immensely. This is very important for applications involving
manufacturing and extreme heat, because of how harsh the surrounding
environments are.
iv) Increased organization/ Keep Your Work Environment Cleaner & Organized - Similar
to cutting down on wasted time, using different sleeving and tubing helps with
organization/identification and keeping your workplace presentable.
Types of Protective Sleeving
There are numerous types of protective sleeving which are differentiated by construction and
application.
Type Description
Sleeving Material
Protective sleeving can be made of one or more materials, each of which features different
strengths and weaknesses.
• Aluminum has excellent electrical and thermal conductivity and high resistance to
oxidation.
• Brass features good strength, temperature resistance, and low magnetic
permeability.
• Copper is a ductile, malleable metal which is an excellent conductor of heat and
electricity.
• Polymers represent a diverse group of materials, including fiberglass, polyester,
nylon, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC). Polymer sleeving is typically flexible, versatile, and
able to withstand high- and low-pressure conditions.
• Rubber and synthetic rubber exhibit high abrasion, chemical, and fluid resistance.
• Steels, including stainless steel, are chemical and corrosion resistant and can
withstand relatively high pressures.
Types of Tubing
i) Non-shrink Tubing offers tremendous dielectric strength, is available in PVC with features
such as zipper, convoluted, corrugated, spiral, spaghetti and braided
ii) Heat Shrink Tubing – The wires and cables are placed inside the tube as heat is applied so
that it will contract to form a tight fit while providing mechanical strength and insulation
properties.
iii) Spiral Wraps are also used to protect and bundle cables within machine design. They are
also reusable and provide easy accessibility to replace and maintain the encased wires.
➢ Adhesive materials
Adhesive is any non-metallic substance applied to one or both surfaces of two separate items
that binds them together and resists their separation.
The use of adhesives offers certain advantages over other binding techniques such as sewing,
mechanical fastenings, or welding. These include;
It is used not only for protection against electrical short circuits but also for mechanical
protection, support and thermal isolation.
Ceramics are generally made by taking mixtures of clay, earthen elements, powders, and water
and shaping them into desired forms. Once the ceramic has been shaped, it is fired in a high
temperature oven known as a kiln. Often, ceramics are covered in decorative, waterproof, paint-
like substances known as glazes.
This category of materials includes things like tile, bricks, plates, glass, and toilets.
Ceramics can be found in products like watches (quartz tuning forks-the time keeping devices in
watches), snow skies (piezoelectric-ceramics that stress when a voltage is applied to them),
automobiles (sparkplugs and ceramic engine parts found in racecars), and phone lines. They can
also be found on space shuttles, appliances (enamel coatings), and airplanes (nose cones).
Typically, they will demonstrate excellent strength and hardness properties; however, they are
often brittle in nature.
Ceramics can also be formed to serve as electrically conductive materials, objects allowing
electricity to pass through their mass, or insulators, materials preventing the flow of electricity.
When ceramics are used in circuits, they must be metalized first, that is, a layer of metal film that
is firmly bonded to the ceramics but not easy to be melted is applied to the ceramic surface to
make it conductive, and then welded with metal leads or other metal conductive layers
connected to become one.
Etching is the process of removing one or more layers of materials from a thin film on a substrate.
1. Material Selection - Virtually any metal can be chemically etched. Typical metals include:
Steel and stainless steels, Copper and its alloys, Nickel and its alloys, Aluminium, Titanium.
2. Pre-clean - Once a metal has been selected, it is chemically cleaned and degreased to
remove debris, waxes and rolling oils, all of which could negatively affect the next step.
3. Lamination - A light-sensitive photoresist is applied to the sheet. Good adhesion is
essential for highly repeatable, blemish-free components.
4. Printing - The component design is transferred to the photoresist by exposing the sheet
to ultraviolet (UV) light through a photo-tool mask.
5. Developing - The unexposed photoresist is removed to reveal the raw material. The
hardened resist will protect the part during etching.
6. Etching - Etchant chemistry, typically ferric chloride, is sprayed onto the developed sheet.
The etch-time is determined by skilled technicians taking account of variables such as
metal type, grade, thickness and size, all of which affect the end result.
7. Stripping - The remaining photoresist is removed from the sheet, revealing the final
etched components.
8. Visual and dimensional inspection - The components are visually and dimensionally
inspected using state-of-the-art optical inspection equipment.
9. Finishing - Etching can be combined with other processes including: Plating, Forming,
Electropolishing, Passivation, Heat treatment, Brazing and diffusion bonding.
➢ Stability of materials
Refers to a property of materials and substances that allows them to maintain their original
characteristics and properties throughout their intended use.
Those materials that normally have the capacity to resist changes in their chemical composition,
despite exposure to air, water, and heat as encountered in fire emergencies are referred to as
stable materials.